Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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...home, have turned to Ireland for a bountiful supply of workers. Besides Borden, twelve other U.S. firms, including Brunswick Corp., Standard Pressed Steel (electronic components) and Hallmark, have set up plants in Ireland. Nearly all the products from Irish plants are admitted duty-free to Great Britain, receive preferential treatment from Commonwealth nations...
...majority, "that every time a bus stops at a wholly independent roadside restaurant the act applies." But even this limited legal victory was gratifying to the N.A.A.C.P. Said a spokesman for the organization: "I assume it will mean an end to one more sector of embarrassment and second-class treatment for Negro travelers...
Ever since he became a civilian, Eatherly has been in and out of hospitals and in and out of trouble. Back home in Texas, he was picked up a couple of times for forgery. Then he was arrested for theft and sent to a VA hospital in Waco for treatment. When he got out, he tried robbing post offices and breaking into a drive-in grocery. Always, his war record got him off and he was sent back to the hospital for further treatment. But this fall the ex-pilot walked out of the Waco hospital once more...
...democratic army, its first officers obviously had to be veterans of the old Wehrmacht, nearly all of whom had been willing Nazi servants. Strauss set up a special "Inner Leadership" school in Koblenz where the officers were shown movies of Nazi atrocities, given handbooks on democratic treatment of subordinates. The government provided elaborate legal safeguards for the new soldier's rights and easily accessible channels through which he could air his citizen gripes. A West German soldier is told: "A command must not be followed if thereby a crime or offense might be committed." Last year the Bundeswehr...
Jailed three months ago on a technical charge of "social dissolution," i.e., stirring up trouble with Communist propaganda, Siqueiros is not striking because of poor treatment: he gets all the comforts, enjoyed himself immensely painting magnificent scenery for a prison show titled Lawyer, Take It Easy (see cut). The "justice" he demands concerns Mexico's somewhat baffling foreign policy. In what it proclaims publicly, the Mexican government appears to be among Castro's firmest friends; in its own affairs, however, no one cracks down harder on Communists and leftists-often illegally...