Word: programing
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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...second part of the program. Yoichi Yokoburi, journalist for the Kyoto News Bureau and a left-wing socialist, said the Tokyo riots were the result of widespread hatred of the pending security treaty, and even more perhaps, anger at the "Fascist-like actions of the Kishi regimo," which used "police force in the Diet chamber to bring about ratification." The days of rioting were not Communist-inspired, he told the audience...
Denouncing "premature nationhood," Elliott outlined a three-point program for cultural aid. A nation, he noted, first must be educated to discharge its international responsibilities and to develop its own resources. The United States then should combat Communist "pug-washing," fostering open forum discussion to develop responsible opinion. As the third objective, this nation should act "to better create a middle class power" of technicians and administrators in backward areas...
...Minister is emotional but intelligent. Though she was educated in a Roman Catholic convent and sends her three children to Catholic schools, she is a practicing Buddhist and Ceylon's chief advocate of birth control. She took office promising to ''carry out my husband's program" - the main trouble with this being that her husband never really...
...fashion-signature, it is simplicity." . . . Reminding televiewers that the last echo of rigged TV quiz shows has not yet died away, a Manhattan grand jury called in onetime Quizling Elfrida von Nardroff, 34, winner of $220,500 on NBC's extinct, discredited Twenty One program, to tell what, if anything, she knew about sure-fire answers. As she left the hearing. Elfrida was asked by a pack of local newshounds what had happened at the session. Replied ex-Answer Girl Nardroff: ''I'm sorry; I can't tell you anything." Pleaded one reporter: "Elfrida, this...
...queues outside got longer and longer. Guggenheim began to wonder whether the museum should not offer more to the public in the form of more popular lectures, art courses, films and concerts. To such a purist as Sweeney, this was the last straw: Guggenheim's program, he felt, would only result in the museum's squandering its resources at the expense of its primary obligation, the acquisition and display of great...