Word: tito
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...brush-clean, flag-bedecked Belgrade last week came an emperor, two kings and two princes, three foreign ministers, six prime ministers and nine presidents.-Representing 23 countries, they had been invited by Yugoslavia's President Tito for a Conference of Unaligned Nations...
President Tito was sparing nothing to provide a tidy setting for his big show, scheduled to open this week, starring at least 16 neutralist heads of state, 7 Premiers and a chorus of other assorted high dignitaries. It was all Tito's idea, conceived during a tour of new African nations last spring, approved by the U.A.R.'s Gamal Abdel Nasser, and sanctified by Indonesia's Sukarno. India's Jawaharlal Nehru also gave his blessing, though at first he was afraid that a meeting of so many unaligned nations might be misinterpreted as the formation...
Washington is anxious to see how seriously the Berlin crisis affects the conference. Nehru's temporary dismissal of the whole Western case on Berlin was both irritating and sobering. Tito not long ago declared himself in accord with Russia "on the majority of important questions.'' (Yugoslavia was the first nation outside the East bloc to extend formal diplomatic recognition to Communist East Germany...
...Like Tito." Jagan's main hope to knit his fractured country together is massive aid from abroad. With Cuba, he has a deal to export rice and timber in return for a Castro-confiscated printing plant. But to the U.S., he cooed that he does not intend to fulfill an old pledge to nationalize the sugar and bauxite industries. When final independence is won, he intends to join the Organization of American States. He wants to travel to the U.S. this fall to talk over his share of the Alliance for Progress with President Kennedy, and sees no reason...
...Knows All." Ostensibly, Bowles was off to attend a series of regional State Department conferences in Nigeria, Cyprus and India, with a couple of side visits to see Yugoslavia's Tito and Burma's Premier U Nu. At each stop he briefed local public officials and newsmen on U.S. determination in Berlin and about the U.S. switch from massive retaliation to what he called flexible defense...