Word: swap
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...thoughts soon diverged from Freud's, and with surprising pugnacity, the two analysts began their attacks on each other. Jung, in this book, prefers to discuss the conflict mainly in terms of the salient dreams that defined it for him. Whenever the two got together to swap dreams, Freud would invariably find parricidal elements in Jung's dream scenes. Freud, Jung says, began to smother him with paternalism-Freud the Father, Jung the Son-but he was obsessed with the idea that there was murder in Jung's heart. Once, when Jung told Freud of a dream...
...behind Donovan in the prisoner swap was, as usual, Attorney General Robert Kennedy. Bobby felt deeply about the capture of the three CIA men -and he thought that Castro did not realize the importance of his catch. Said he, several months ago, to newsmen who had got wind of the agents' capture: "Men's lives are at stake. Castro can only guess who he's got-don't help him by publishing a story...
...Hook. Last week all three, along with 18 other Americans held by Castro for various reasons, were back in the U.S. In a swap negotiated by New York Lawyer (and unsuccessful 1962 Democratic nominee for the Senate) James B. Donovan, the U.S. gave up four Castro thugs. Three had been caught in a plot to start tossing sabotage bombs around New York. The fourth, Francisco ("The Hook") Molina del Rio, 31, was the one the U.S. most disliked to let go. A pro-Castro gunman, he got into a shooting melee with anti-Castro Cubans in a New York restaurant...
...Numbers Game. In that sense, the U.S. probably came out well ahead in dealing with Castro. But in the present state of U.S. sensitivity on the subject of Cuba, the swap could only cause controversy. And there was plenty of that already. For one thing, Bobby Kennedy, leaving a reception in Manhattan's Metropolitan Club, was gibed at by a young Cuban exile for the U.S. crackdown on hit-and-run raids against Castro. Bobby turned on him, snapping that the exiles' action amounts to "spit...
...talk about trading with both East and West, Brazil has not found much to swap with the East. Last year's imports and exports amounted to $95.6 million, or about 3.6% of Brazil's foreign trade, while $950 million, or 36%, was with the U.S. Yet Brazilians still feel that the Soviet bloc offers a "high-potentiality market," and after nearly four months of palaver, they have signed a treaty to sell an awful lot of coffee and other products to Russia...