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...Food and clothing are rationed and can only be bought in minimal quantities with the Ration Book. Fresh milk and poultry are only sold to children and aged people, and many days they are not sold. Many people, especially children, walk barefooted on the streets because there are no shoes at shoe stores or because they have torn the only pair they are given for six months. To see someone wearing a coat and tie is a rare thing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CUBA | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...Stop distributing those papers!" roared Ghana's Information Minister Nathaniel Azaroc Welbeck, banging his gavel as if it were a shoe. Before him, in the auditorium of the Kwame Nkrumah Ideological Institute at Winneba, a fishing village west of Accra, the Fourth Afro-Asian Peoples Solidarity Conference sat assembled in sober splendor. But not in unity. Despite Nkrumah's keynote speech calling for brotherhood among all "anti-imperialist, anticolonialist, anti-neocolonialist and anti-racialist" movements, Conference Chairman Welbeck admitted sadly: "Some of the delegates are quarreling among themselves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ghana: Solidarity Forever? | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...Johnson landslide was not much of a landslide in California. Barry Goldwater got 41% of the vote there which is a lot more than his 32% in New York, 24% in Massachusetts, or 34% in Michigan. And another darling of the California Right won a major upset victory: soft-shoe artist and United States Senator George Murphy...

Author: By Michael D. Barone, | Title: The California Right | 5/18/1965 | See Source »

...Sixpence in Her Shoe, McGinley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: May 14, 1965 | 5/14/1965 | See Source »

Seven months ago, Nikita Khrushchev was bounced as boss of the Soviet Union for such character flaws as "phrasemongering." There hasn't been a phrase mongered or a shoe banged within the Kremlin's henna walls since. Where flamboyant Nikita rarely made an unpublicized move, his successors, Leonid Brezhnev and Aleksei Kosygin, go about their business so self-effacingly that days go by without the slightest mention of them in the Soviet press...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia: The Quiet Men | 5/14/1965 | See Source »

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