A furious Icelandic government today suspended the island's whale catch to avoid what it said were U.S. plans to impose a crippling boycott on Icelandic fish products, the country's main source of income.
Congratulations on your editorial.
Thank God we have Ronald Reagan making decisions about our future instead of cartoonist Paul Conrad, NBC's John Chancellor and your editorial writers.
The naivete of the American people, including the media, is limitless.
A vast majority of Americans should have known long ago that the conference on arms control in Iceland would fail.
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Quoting from a Soviet record of the Reykjavik summit, a high Foreign Ministry official said Saturday that President Reagan had agreed to scrap all nuclear weapons by 1996 as the Kremlin said Soviet leader Mikhail S.
The government of Iceland, stung by criticism that it is anti-Jewish, Tuesday granted permission
Your editorial (Oct. 14) was right.
Leaders of three center-right parties in Iceland on Wednesday hammered out an agreement for a new
I was thoroughly amused by the naivete displayed in your editorial.
The Administration's argument that SDI has automatic merit simply because the Soviets oppose it is patently absurd.
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Iceland's smokers, subject since the start of the year to Europe's most stringent anti-smoking laws, now face the threat of a tobacco boycott by angry cigarette manufacturers.
Thank you for your editorial (Oct. 14), "Still a Chance."
Soviet leader Mikhail S.
In regard to the "failure" of the Reykjavik summit, there is more reason for optimism than there is for criticism.
President Reagan outfoxed the foxy Soviet leader at the Reykjavik meeting by refusing to surrender the U.S. secret weapon program--the Strategic Defense Initiative--for pie-in-the-sky, unreliable Soviet promises.
President Reagan arrived in rainy Iceland today, promising frank talk without guarantee of success