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  • , and Indian languages are spoken in some rural areas. The predominant religion is Roman Catholic. the Communists controlled the agrarian and labor movements, held many key posts in the government, were predominant in the government's political parties
  • , the •~dress for pz:ia_oQ.ers 0£ war mail: Cam1>!or O.S.A~ Pilots Captured in Democratic Repui,llc of:· Vletnam. c/o General Post Office, Hanoi, DllVN. DEC -1ASS FED E.O. 12958 Sec 3 6 NLJ qg,33i_ · . · By (!,b- , NA RA Date ~ 1
  • in African Affairs. He does not wish to take up the post of Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs. He has several outside offers but would prefer to continue to work in the Government. _-?t - -' t • I I .~i., ' ' The dispatch of the attached letter to Ed
  • scene. From the day in 1916 when he took up a post as Attache in the American Embassy ~t("~~~~~~- in Berlin, to the leadership of negotiations to expand and liberalize world trade....which he was exercising to the day of his death.- he participated
  • . On the occasion of the Twentieth .Anniversary of the Marshall Plan I wish to assure you, Mr. President, that the generou.s American aid and imaginative leadership £or post-war European recovery is still warmly cherished by the Icelandic people. Bja.rni
  • ". Page........!_0 f telegram 10,_ _U;.,.;S;..,;;UN;..;;.;_,;;;,,;.NEW;;;;.;;;;......;Y:;..;O;..,;;RK.::.;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ~ post-removal verification in Cuba i tself. Forty-two mi s s i les is a plausible nl.DD.ber and not inconsistent wi t
  • wounded, 13 of whom required evacuation. At 10:00 AM, an observation post located an active enemy mortar site two kilometers southwest of Khe Sanh. A mortar missio:-.. was fired with excellent target coverage. At 1:00 PM, a mortar mission wa-s fired
  • this duty. At least half of the RD cadres have been with- 9Xawn to assist ;!.n tp.e 9-efepse of towns or cities·. RF and PF posts outside ominous ract .units in itself~- withdrawing In short, of cities are many scattere~ to towns or cities 9ut
  • to a truce in Quang Tri, th~ DMZ, in at least part of North Vietnam at this time. \ The latest example of their • aggressive intentions is the overrunning today of the far post at Ban Houei Sane on Highway 9· in Laos west of Khe Sanh. By his accelerated
  • interest after·the it and the Italians pressures I to move ahead only if we, the Germans, the are ready from Moscow and from local A movement followed by retreat ment at all. post-election Early so that opportunity. German election
  • a businessman epts a post government has been a co tinu­ ing rec rring problem. Cert%in it is .one tha deserves the constructi e interest and fiorts of Congress. In the ctober 1965 issue of un's Re­ view ther appears an intervl' w on this subject wit Adm. Lewis
  • O STS (Additional addresses^) iJ A A P IE R C E ARROW In lie u of not yet available detailed wrap-up of P IE R C E ARROW re ly . operation, posts shouldKai§r on following ite m s contained w ire le ss file »» * '■* •., fo r inform ation
  • 9 / 10. But if this timing does not suit, then I think we should aim at a post-Moscow exchange, in which case I could come over, say, on July 15. Any of these dates would satisfactorily avoid any clash with De Gaulle's Soviet trip (June ZO - July Z
  • armed forces and our Embassy, these reporters can move .freely over the face of that tormented country, holding a magnifying glass to every wart and wrinkle. For South Viet-Nam, Mr. Speaker, is indeed what Ward Just of the Washington Post called
  • . Although Quat has told me that no decisions have been taken, the press and our informants have it that the Council confirmed General "Little" Minh as Commander-in-Chief (he holds this post now on an "Acting" basis), selected General Huynh Van Cao as Chief
  • was passed after Selma. In each case, the administration moved promptly; the President's post-Selma speech to a joint session of the Congress was one of the finest moments in American political·history. -- The present national mood of shock and sorrow
  • where the subject of post-Wo~ld War II peace treaties was being discussed.) Senator Fulbright's main point, however, was not o~e of precedent but rather the following. He asserted t:.at if the North Vietnamese prove to be unyielding and i~ ef=ect adopt
  • of the Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff. He has fulfilled these sensitive posts with the highest distinction. He has been especially useful in insuring that the views of the Joint Chiefs of Staff were known and understood in the White House. He performed with great