Word: rusk
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...hours before last week's signing of the limited nuclear test ban agreement in Moscow, a jovial Nikita Khrushchev met in his Kremlin office with U.S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Beamed the Soviet Premier: "This treaty we are going to sign this afternoon is, as they say, just what the doctor ordered...
...Washington apartment one night last week, Vermont's Republican Senator George Aiken learned that the President of the U.S., the Secretary of State, and several lesser New Frontiersmen had been trying for hours to reach him. Aiken hurriedly put through a call to Secretary of State Dean Rusk. The President, said Rusk, wanted Aiken to join the U.S. delegation going to Moscow for this week's formal signing of the nuclear test ban treaty (see THE WORLD). The Senator hesitated. "Will I be committed to anything?" he asked. "Will I have to sign anything?" Only after...
Status Seekers. With Secretary of State Dean Rusk and British Foreign Secretary Lord Home in Moscow this week for the formal treaty signing, oth er nations are only too eager to join hands and sign, too. Ironically, they are all non-nuclear powers, and except for a handful, they will never have a nucle ar capability. At week's end the following had agreed to sign: Afghanistan, Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Denmark, East Germany, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Finland, India, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Laos, Li beria, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Soma lia, the U.A.R...
Meanwhile the West continued its somewhat halting ring-around-the-rock-ets. Arriving in Moscow (his first visit), Dean Rusk struck a neorealistic note: "This test ban is an important event. It could become a historic event. That depends upon what follows." Then he settled down with Britain's Lord Home and Russia's Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko for a series of conferences to see where, after the opening sequence of the test ban, the new Moscow script might lead...
...measures directed at a relaxation of tension." How It Happened. There was no doubt that the Russians now wanted a test ban agreement. The U.S. had first suggested the limited ban at Geneva last year, and the Russians turned it down flat. In May, when Secretary of State Dean Rusk returned from a NATO meeting in Ottawa, he received an urgent call from Russian Ambassador. Anatoly Dobrynin, asking to see him. The two men spent the afternoon in a launch floating down the Potomac; it was then that Dobrynin hinted at Russian readiness for serious test ban talks...