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N - Nc
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N, MARTIN WEINSTE1
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Nabeyama, Sadachika
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NABOKOV, VLADIMIR
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NACEL, ERNEST
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NADLE, Mexican Maverick \ MARIENE
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NADLER, ALAN
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Naft, Stephen
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NAFTALIS, GARY P.
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NAGEL, ERNEST
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Nakamura, Kikuo
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NAOI, TAKEO
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Japan at the Polls
(December 1960)
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Political spectrum altered only by shift in Opposition Japan at the Polls By Takeo Naoi TOKYO ON SUNDAY, November 20, Japan went to the polls to elect a new House of Representatives and to...
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Behind the Japanese Riots
(June 1960)
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Behind the Japanese Riots Kishi is the symbol of an unpopular militarism and a controversy over democracy TOKYO ALTHOUGH THE U.S.-Japanese mutual security pact has been automatically ratified in...
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'New Course' in Japanese Trade Unionism
(April 1960)
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Labor reaffirms traditional union goals of improving workers' economic conditions NEW COURSE' IN JAPANESE TRADE UNIONISM By Takeo Naoi TOKYO AFTER DEFEATS in the elections last summer, the...
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A New Party in Japan
(February 1960)
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By Takeo Naoi A New Party in Japan Democratic Socialists oppose conservatives and leftists TOKYO JANUARY 24 was an inadvertently symbolic day in Japanese politics. It was the day that Premier...
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JAPAN AFTER THE RIOTS
(December 1959)
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Vehement public reaction to violent demonstration against Japan-U. S. treaty revision weakens leftist labor movement and bolsters country's democratic forces JAPAN AFTER THE RIOTS By Takeo...
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Japan Debates Defense Pact
(September 1959)
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Left -wing opposition groups agitate against revision Japan Debates Defense Pact By Takeo Naoi TOKYO APOLITICAL STORM is brewing around the issue of revising the Japan-United States Security...
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Socialst Setback in Japan
(June 1959)
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Recent electoral defeats reflect disenchantment with the party's leftist foreign and domestic policies Socialist Setback in Japan By Takeo Naoi TOKYO PREMIER NOBUSUKE KISHI'S Liberal Democrats...
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Japan Stands Pat
(June 1958)
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Conservatives win new mandate Japan Stands Pat By Takeo Naoi Tokyo Japan's ruling conservative party, the Liberal-Democrats, lost three seats while the opposition Socialists gained eight in May...
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Why Japan Is Only Half-Modern
(October 1957)
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The Occidental apparatus and the old Why Japan Is Tokyo Almost every visitor from abroad, driving from the airport to the center of this city, murmurs to himself: "This isn't Asia; it's Europe.''...
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The Tokyo Conference
(May 1957)
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By Takeo Naoi THE Economists gather to Tokyo Twenty-eight leading economists from a dozen countries held a week-long conference in Tokyo last month to explore problems of economic growth in...
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Ishibashi of Japan
(January 1957)
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Two New Prime Ministers ISHIBASHI OF JAPAN Publisher, a newcomer to politics, introduced Keynes to Japan By Takeo Ncioi Tokyo Late in December, Tanzan Ishi-bashi was elected president of Japan's...
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THE DILEMMA OF JAPANESE SOCIALISTS
(September 1956)
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THE DILEMMA OF JAPANESE SOCIALISTS By Takeo Naoi Tokyo The Japanese Socialist party scored a significant victory in the July elections, which chose half the membership of the 250-member Upper...
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Japanese Delegations Flock to Red China
(June 1956)
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Japanese Delegations Flock to Red China By Takeo Naoi Tokyo The number of Japanese visitors to Communist countries in 1955 was more than three times as great as in 1954. According to the Peking...
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Japan Achieves Socialist Unity
(October 1955)
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Left and Right parties merge to form nation's largest opposition movement JAPAN ACHIEVES SOCIALIST UNITY By Takeo Naoi Tokyo Japanese Socialist unity, long heralded, became a reality on the...
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JAPAN'S COMMUNISTS GO 'LOVABLE' AGAIN
(September 1955)
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JAPAN'S COMMUNISTS GO 'LOVABLE' AGAIN After five years of underground activity, the party has decided to scrap its 'nuclear self-defense corps' and 'act within the law' to reach the masses By...
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JAPAN TALKS PEACE WITH RUSSIA
(June 1955)
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Japan Talks Peace with Moscow Behind the London negotiations By Takeo Naoi Tokyo Japan opened peace talks in London with Soviet Russia this month, some six months after the Kremlin first broached...
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After Japan's Election:
(March 1955)
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AFTER JAPAN'S ELECTION Premier Ichiro Hatoyama scored a personal triumph By Takeo Naoi TOKYO NOW THAT the excitement of the general elections has died down, it is apparent that Ichiro Hatoyama...
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Report from Japan:
(October 1954)
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Report from Japan SOCIALIST SPLIT WIDENS By Takeo Naoi TOKYO THE RECENT visit here by seven members of the British Labor-party delegation returning from a tour of Russia and Red China--Clement...
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'Yoshida Must Go!'
(June 1954)
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By Takeo Naoi 'YOSHIDA MUST GO!' Even his own party is voicing demands for the ouster of Japan's Prime Minister Tokyo On June 3, the night before Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida was to start on...
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Japan's Shaky Economy
(March 1954)
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Strikes stirred up by pro-Communist unions are now proving very dangerous to Japan's Shaky Economy By Takeo Naoi Tokyo Japanese industrial and mining production increased 19 per cent last year,...
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Japan's Rosenberg Case
(February 1954)
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JAPAN'S ROSENBERG CASE Japanese Communists are having a propaganda field day with the Matsukawa railroad case, in which a passenger train was sabotaged and three engineers were killed By Takeo...
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JAPANESE SOCIALISTS SPLIT
(March 1950)
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Japanese Socialists Split Three-Way Division Will Aid Rightists, Communists By TAKEO NAOI New Leader Correspondent in Japan TOKYO. ON JANUARY 16, Chairman Tetsu Katayama told the delegates...
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JAPANESE REDS AROUSE LABOR, PLAN FALL COUP
(August 1949)
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Japanese Reds Arouse Labor, Plan Fall Coup By TAKEO NAOI New Leader Correspondent in Japan TOKYO. JAPAN'S UNRELENTING LABOR STRIFE may be the prelude to a full-scale communist attempt at...
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RUSSIA REPATRIATES JAP PW'S
(July 1949)
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Russia Repatriates Jap PW's Returned Prisoners Are Indoctrinated Communists By Takeo Naoi New Leader Correspondent in Japan RUSSIA BEGAN HER CURRENT SWEEP through lh« Far Ea»t fay accepting end...
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THE NOVELTY OF DEMOCRACY
(April 1949)
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REPORT FROM JAPAN: THE NOVELTY OF DEMOCRACY By Takeo Naoi New Leader Tokyo Correspondent LORD AND VASSAL, master and servant, superior and inferior, official and subject, senior and junior,...
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NARAYAN, JAYAPRAKASH
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Nash, Hon. Walter
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NASH, KARL E. MEYER \ GEORGE AND PATRICIA
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Nash, Walter
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NASTINGS, MALCOLM
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Nasu, Kiyoshi
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Nathan, M. T.
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NATHAN, ROBERT R.
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NAVASKY, VICTOR
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NAVASKY, VICTOR S.
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