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  • was plagued by indifference and actual discontent through­ out the war .•. Pennsylvania was so full of disaffection that it was the despair of the patriotic party ... upstate New York had long been indifferent and Tories abounded." 2 Even in Boston James
  • mother to Fort Bragg. With money raised from citizens in Santiago and our forces in Santo Domingo, they travelled on to Boston. The operation was performed on June 30 and has been successful. Dr. Gross tells us that Eduardo is progressing nicely
  • OF TnElR TRAVELING WAS CONE AT NlGl1T :Sf AUTOMJBILE. THE ROADS OVER WHIC.Y T~E'-:' TRAVELED WERE IN A BAD STATE OF' REPAIR ANO lN H'tNY PLACES COULD NOT 8E USO SY A • fcla .1 .s1~cctton I IN PAGE 2 Of 5 PAGES • VEH ICLE LARGER THAN A SMALL TRUCK
  • Washington officials can take pride. 4. Pacification - "Rural Construction" Minister Thang of "Rural Construction" traveled to the I, II, and IV Corps to meet the new and provisional rural :' construction committees consisting of corps and divisional
  • Chairman Martin and several other financial officials. From Washington he goes to Boston and New York for speeches and visits with the financial community. Mr. Jenkins will probably: 1. Outline to you his economic prospects. economic strategy
  • :__f?:..,.~.e..~~~~-~!.._other__ap_pearances_in 28 cities a~ Boston, New York, Chicago, Milwaukee, Los Angeles, To!fows: ___,____ ,. Palm Springs, Anaheim, Dallas, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Detroit, Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, San Diego, San
  • - Rio do Janeiro, Brazil ,'{;'~%~~ice ot the Selmtca:- 1a travel pla1lfJ to om- Aaibassadcrs in the teur countries. They were told to assume personal. responsibility fer ass1stmg the Senatcr As ;you :requested• I hlld and his party-. The Am.bassadars
  • Item, 1948 Boston Herald, 1950-54 Assistant Director, Information; U.S. Department of' Labor Assistant Secretary of Labor for International Affairs Labor Management Arbitrator . U.S. Representative to ILO Governing Body • Chairman, ILO Governing Body
  • travels. Saboteurs (presumably Viet Cong) sank three 150-ton sand-filled craft, blocking an important canal linking Saigon with the Mekong Delta area. The Canal carries large quantities of rice to market in Saigon. The Government of Sout~ Vietnam has
  • . Max is on the State Department payroll until 14 September, which carries him through this next period of travel and speech-making, and his suggestion is that he might take a little leave in the first part of September and then be available to begin
  • distillation of "proposals" and "counter-proposals" made in the course of these talks. 3. Further details will follow by separate cables. 4. Baggs and Ashmore undertake to keep this entire matter secret. They are travelling from here to Phnom Penh on ICC
  • . A number of other invitees were unable to corr-e because of conflicting engagements or because the snow­ storm interfered with their travel plans . The group showed deep interest in che propos2a Summit meeting. These are the highlights of ~he dis­ cussion
  • , to negotiate a stand-by agreement. Fiscal, as well as monetary require­ ments, will form a part of Ecuador's commitments ·under a new stand-by. An AID team is travelling to Quito on June 2, to . recommend to the Goverrµnent further actions in the financial
  • A 1 p. 2 pp-. (. A :7 1 47b report DATE ,~, llf,_ :f 7 7 - .J [probable duplicate of #48a, Internat ' l. Meetings & Travel ; "President's Trip to Guam (Conference) (II)," sanitized] 48 memo A 48a report A S 3 pp. _[_duplicate G--f-# rna
  • EVERYTHING WAS GOING FINE IN WASHINGTOJ AND IN ANS~ER TO A QUESTION REGARDING HIS TRAVEL!~ TO VI~TNA~ SOON, RE?LI D H~ HAO ONE MORETHI 'G TO TIE UP IN WASHItJGTON END PAGE ONE PAGE TWO CS F CR ET ·NO FOREIGN DISSE~INATION> BEFORE HE ao::s A1lD WILL TELL
  • . . Mr. Whitlam will fly to Boston today to see his son, Nicholas, graduate in arts at Harvard University. :P ~ Wednesday. Jcly 12, 196·7 7:-45 p.m. Herewith Amb. Bunker's weekly to you. W. W. :Rostow Salgon 893 DECI..ASSIFI ~ \"'' • ire r . A_9
  • . . · ·THE VOTERS TRAVELLED -· ro THE POLLS. I~· SAIGON, . .-POLLQP.i ,p.ND SUPPORTH!G. ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC OF VIET NAM . , · WHICH . UNIT~~G-~trERED THE CITY SO COMPLETELY AND. E"F:FECTIVEL '( . THA.T ELECTION DAY INCIDENTS 'WERE TOO SCATTERED, INFREQUENT -A~JD
  • will conclude his residence at the University of Virginia shortly after the first of the year. Sir Robert will probably travel from Charlottesville to Washington on the morning of December 13 for his appointment with you, and may remain in Washington overnight
  • Reply: Our travel measures are still under Congressiopal consideration, but the impact on Austria should be small. We are aware of European concern and interest in our balance of payments measures, and are glad that most of them see the need
  • ." · (From address before World Affairs Council, Boston, January 25, 1968) UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASS L• .1 ED 9 SENATOR ROBERT F. KENNEDY Senator Kennedy's affirmative suggestions about the war in Viet-Nam can be abstracted from his article i n ~ (November 28
  • CITE: CAP66966 · CONFIBENTIIC"'" . l NOV 11, 1966 VIA 13 !TOI SUBJECT INDIA TRIP 1. MARTIN ABEL AND ART - THOMPSON FROM IY STAFF WILL LEAVE AT 51l'6!J P.1. NOVEMBER 14 AND TRAVEL DIRECTLY TO INDIA • . EACH HAS HAD ·EXTENSIVE
  • the bridge closest to the Sierra - 3 the ''Paso del Norte as a memorial Bridge. It stands 11 to those who pioneered this area. The bridge which spans the Chamizal, the "Bridge that the cities travel 11 of the Americas. It is a reminder
  • HE 'L-OGKED FORWARO lff)iLY 10 SEEING TSE "!Pl~SI.'ll!NT IN ·-- ··: -;:; .-:-r:~ , .)IASH}ltGTON, f,1£ FE'ELS HE PROBASL Y MUST RETURN -HOME' AS HIS PEOPLE .. _ ~WDlllD NDT UNDERSTAND HIS TRAVELING IN .PARIS A.liD ._. .V.lSl.t'IJJG. THE -¥AIR
  • by linking him too closely to the USG at this ata1e . That makes sense. The one name you may not know is William Webater. He is retiring as Chairman of the New England Electric System in Boston and is considered one of the e lde r states men of the utility