Word: zagreb
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...combined Penn-Cornell team registered a stunning upset over Oxford-Cambridge, 8 to 7. (In these meets, only first places count in the scoring.) Meanwhile, Herb Elliott of Cambridge, who will join the English for the meet here, was a discouraging fifth in an 800-meter race in Zagreb, Yugoslavia...
...Marshal Tito likes to preserve his neutrality by playing East against West. But culturally, Yugoslavia has made her choice clear: freedom. The bold, abstract expressionism of Yugoslav painters has put them in the van of the avantgarde. Last week, during a week-long festival of international contemporary music in Zagreb, Yugoslav composers proved that they were as ready to accept far-out modernism as were their comrades at the easel. Sell-out audiences loudly approved...
...Milan Radio Orchestra, a concert of atonal chamber works by France's Parrenin Quartet, an opera by Germany's Werner Egk. The tone of the festival reflected Tito's promise of a free hand, but Chief Organizer Milko Keleman, 37, an instructor in composition at Zagreb Conservatory, was understandably anxious when Cultural Relations Commissar Drago Vucinic showed up for a concert of electronic works played by the Cologne Ensemble for New Music...
...recent opinion poll of the 3,300 students at Zagreb University confirmed the party's worries. Though fear of official displeasure probably distorted the results in the regime's favor (43.6% of the students thought Yugoslavia the world's most democratic country), 32.8% thought the system had "crippling" flaws. In defining democracy, 28.4% said it meant citizens deciding all questions for themselves, 25% said freedom of expression was necessary, and only 19% gave the orthodox answer of "workers' self-government." Only 52.5% subscribed unconditionally to the tenets of Marxism-considerably less enthusiasm than the students show...
...this sallow, unsmiling man. "I do not want steps taken against Stepinac," he is reported to have said afterward. "He has a martyr complex." But the outspoken archbishop was getting to be too much of a hero; people began to kneel as he passed on his daily walks through Zagreb...