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  • . Santiago Toast at Frei dinner: . Themes Strength of Chilean democratic ins ti tut ions. Fo:r;ward-looking policies of President Frei: "Revolution in Freedom" at home and leadership abroad in econ­ omic integration, arms limitation, port enclave
  • -Communist world. The government in Moscow is even now b~ginning slowly to accept the fact that its people want private automobiles and decent homes and privacy and travel. Let us be clear. There is nothing that has happened over these three years which
  • .__ la pllltllc thl• tecllalcal fact Ila• pla,.. or pr•n••· ... er ■ tuMllac of eltller n1n••lea WWRo•tow:rba ACUOJ! Sir >-....,.,.., •-••c••• tile lonae• Prime Mlalalu el 1... 1a, baa ,-r,msl _.. ,,,,. .... u .. ,-1ea .. amc. •1•• ,- • CT•~ B
  • or Description: The Price of Freedom Publisher: National Home Library Association Title of Series/Chapter/Article: Edition: Volume Number: Issue Number: Date of Publication: 1940 Page Numbers: 106 pages 1-GGG. THE PRICE OF FREEDOM HE NRY A. WALLACK
  • both 11attacks 11 and "reprisals" and referred to frontier incidents "including Harib. 11 Sir Patrick Dean said that would be tolerable. (Throughout exercise harder line being taken by UK Embassy here in discussions with Burdett than Dean with Stevenson
  • threat to _its stability. At home, we have to contend both with the national impatience of · our people and with the repercussions on the Presidential campaign which will arise from a stalemate. As long as we continue at least the present limited bombing
  • REFERREDTO " • THE DOMESTIC ANDSOCIAL PROBLEMS AT HOME,THE MASSIVEDEFICIT IN·. OURBUDGET,THE 10 PER CENTSURCHARGE, THE-IMPAIRINGIMPACTOF THIS WAR ON OUR ABILITY TO COPEWITH PROBLEMS IN NATOAND THE MIDDLE -· POLICY BY • .·EAST, AND THE SIGNIFICANTLACKOF
  • " • THE DOMESTIC ANDSOCIAL PROBLEMS AT HOME,THE MASSIVEDEFICIT IN·. OURBUDGET,THE 10 PER CENTSURCHARGE, THE-IMPAIRINGIMPACTOF THIS WAR ON OUR ABILITY TO COPEWITH PROBLEMS IN NATOAND THE MIDDLE -· POLICY BY • .·EAST, AND THE SIGNIFICANTLACKOF SUPPORT FOR OURVIETNAM
  • ~UARY 27, 1933 AMENDED BY ~AW NO. '+j8 DATEDJUNE 21, I 946 • F'Of.< SMALL! ARMS (SHOTGUN~,. PISTOLS ANo HUNTING. GUNS, SIX t11LLI11ETERS OR. L.ESSI 1.!lCENSE TO, PURCHASE :-!UST13E OST A I ~ED FROM Cl-1l EF OF POL.I CE • l ~, HOME O 1 STRICT WHO· • I
  • .. .... o,,T-;-"'T("'I H(\i°'I } ',..,p ·-;--, - '\ --~ · 'D ,... ,.., ,,t'.:J .. 1 V ' .Jr . ,\ >' SIR r-iI ,..-., / I ··1'1)1". ·1t . i.J ! '~: .LL 0 ~ 1--,L; -ft._; i!!..), ,:)-:'rt t-,-;_) fl ....; Li l!-! i ~ . t_;t ~ { ,r,. t. 1 ~ ,:·1 .L; i:... ~ 1 1
  • of $1,000,000 o provide int e p· eside:it 1 s discre io 11for emergencies affecting ·n'"erest, secur·ty, or efe sew c may arise at home or abroad." used a most e irely byte President for o. estic emergencies. i volve the reside t fairy explicitly in ai ing
  • sorties would be requi~ed. Casualties would probably number in the hundreds, ~nd homes in the village areas wo~ld be destroyed. Loss of the domestic rice would force Hanoi to import between 175,000-750,000 tons (depending on the success of the flooding
  • , he recommends two more steps: L Instruct Ambassador Thompson to follow up with Dobrynin i n M oscow, givin _him the b oad outli es of ou aircraft decision, unde rlining_ your d e sir e t o a oid a new round in the arms rac an d ur ging s m "ndication
  • SIR FATHICK jEAN. ITEM DEENMAJE IGJCWNTUES~AYTO U THA~T HJ1w1 BllEJJt rn,,_ foal! IMF% ., IF I repet die ..... Bill,... pqee , .. a IINaly tllat a, fl.rat Yiatt to GNaee occt1n oa of•• pl ... ... jl ... th of hie ••••h7 INIWilla
  • planning of The Sea Ranch, a second home community on the Sonoma coast. He is in charge of the plan to revitalize the major portion of the towntown and civic core of Kansas City, Missouri, and his plan for the $2-million reconstruction of eiqht blocks
  • 5200 Ma,.20, 1948 The Honorable Wright Patman 120.3 House Office Building Washington 25, D. C. Dear Sir: Enclosed herewith is our check No. 31,301 in the amount of $2000.00 as an advance against royal.ties on your book "Our American Government
  • Robinson, a Negro, was in favor of the boycott during its early stages but is now opposed to the boycott and favors discontinuing it. Following the meeting on Janua~y 23, 1968, a shotgun blast was fired into his home. General Robinson's wife
  • supplies quickly into the ha.nds of the refugees, placed a ba.n on luxury !ECRET /NO DIS ~C ,Zf."t I NO DIS -3- construction, and started the rebuilding of homes. 2. Resumption of aggressive offensive operations. It is essential that this should
  • magnificent morale at home. Read the following paragraphs from the Bunker-Abrams cable: "Maintaining the morale, fighting spirit and momentum of U.S. and ARVN forces is absolutely essential. Directives have gone out on the U.S. and GVN side to intensify our
  • \'\. for· the. actiQtl. Was SiVei.1 a.a the. nintet~11al t:.1n~eat 1:0 tl·i& .country• s pubU.c ord$r and securi.tyn (In tsl1
  • Chancellor Klaua. &Ad talkiaa poblt ■ Om- relatima■ with A1Utl'ia are 1ood. problema. There are no major bilateral Klau i• in political difficulty at home. Hi ■ People'• Party which took office in 1966 followtaa twenty year ■ of coalition acw•rameat
  • be ml•-interpreted •• •apportin1 Bahamian hldepeadwe. I •uu••t we take care of thi• problem by imtiq U. K. Ambaa•ador, Sir Patrick Dean. to accompany Pilldliq here. Thi• would alao be in keepiDa with normal practice and UK wi•he•. W. W. R.o•tow
  • soldier ~ who was on board. I wanted these servicemen who had behaved themselves veey well to be able to celebrate In response to your appeal, Christmas at_ home. I have also ordered the release wounded soldier who had jumped from a helicopter
  • know at home; the determination to vote may well be a further sympton of a des1re to go ahead toward orderly government and generally away from terror and violence. These local elections, therefore, if successfully carried out, can be a sharp blow
  • to the home morale and favorable to that of the enem;y. 2. France neglected the problem completely. 3. Germany began building a large and expert morale service during the first war which was never allowed to. lapse, but expanded on a tremendous scale
  • , and left 565 homeless . On September 9 they mortared a refugee camp 40 kilometers north of the province capital, wounding 12 and destroying five homes. In addition to the killed and wounded, a total of .363 homes, one school, and one hospital have been
  • me in the Tenth District for homes , for farm improvements , and flood control, for the development of power and for the beautification or your capitol city have been well spent . I a.m ashamed of not one single cent of the sixty million dollars
  • , Immediate pci1tlcal fut u:·e !'est on the rraclion cf the voter~ back home while th f\y cleYc te their entire time and eUortl--- - - - - - - ' - - - - - - -- 0L;;, th e moment. This Senator 1mlit.fcal to UNIONTOWN, PENNSYLVANlA, SATURDAY, JllNE 22
  • an assessment of recent d v lopments in Czechoslovakia. Approve ____ Disapprove ___ _ Discussion: Ambassador Beam arrived in Washington on April 9 for consul~ tation and regular home leave. He plans to be in the Washington area until mid-May, when he
  • on September 5 At Tab A Secretary Rusk recommends that you invite Prime 1,tHnister Paasio of Finland to visit yon here on September s. on his way home from EXPO '67. (We -don't know whether Paaslo would be able to accept. Even ii he doesn.'t. Rusk thinks it wou