Word: indonesians
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...walk a neutral course down the shaky sidewalk of Southeast Asia. In its uncertainty, it makes a policy of staring haughtily at friendly nods of recognition. Last week a U.S. offer of a mere $8,000,000 worth of technical and economic aid was enough to send the Indonesian parliament into a dither of protests that might yet bring the government tumbling down, cradle...
Rachmat Suroyo of the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated last night at a forum sponsored by the Harvard Liberal Union that the only way for the U.S. to pull its foreign policy out of the impasse that has developed in Southeast Asia is to work for the independence of the countries there, try to raise their standards of living, and encourage them to form independent policies...
Aiming to present a "primarily educational" discussion on southeast Asia as background before trouble breaks out in that area, the Harvard Liberal Union will feature Rupert Emerson '21, professor of Government, and Rochmat Suroyo, a member of the Indonesian Foreign Ministry, at 8 p.m. on Tuesday at Emerson D. The talk is entitled, "Southeast Asia: The Next Battleground...
Suroyo, presently attending the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, was with guerrillas in Java during the Second World War. He will attempt to give the point of view of the Indonesian people...
...price was a compromise. The U.S. wanted to pay $1.12; the British producers wanted $1.25. Since Malaya produces 34% of the world's tin, the new price may well establish the price pattern for Bolivian and Indonesian metal. In any case, the new flow of tin from Malaya will ease the drain on the U.S. stockpile...