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  • made the J11dameat that air operatlau would be bleffediw or lmpntdeat. He c:oald aot re-ria the strike aircraft la Korea la Ume faor could tba USS ENTERPRISE aet it• aircraft over Woaaaa bay la time). BeJoacl &bat, the poor weather. pool' late
  • of a number of Soviet-trained supporters, has attained virtu­ ally complete control of the Korean Labor (i.e., Communist) Party and the government. The so-called "Yenan clique," made up of Koreans who had been associated with Com­ munist China before 1945, has
  • to a collective force is that .it is alli~nce-wide in its responsibilities, embraces . both SAC and theater fo.r ces, and operates in a way that associates in some way, if only in a final report to NAC, all NATO members in its activity. · GROUP 3 Downgraded at 12
  • AHNO~CED COMPOSEDOF PRO~INENT PAN~~ANIANS OF SOME DISTINCTION. ~ PRESS CENSORSHIP IS BEING RELAXED. PRO-ARIAS NEWSPAPERS VERE PERMITTED TO RESI.ME PUBLICATION NOVEMBERt. BASIC CONSTITtrrIONAL GUARANTEES RE~AIN SUSPENDED, BUT ~ANY ARIAS SUPPORTERS
  • , newspapers carried epecial front page articles and editorials and published text Ankrah'a congratulatory message for July Fourth to President Johnson. Ghana TIMES probably best summed up mood by saying there "no doubt that people of Ghana like people of U.S
  • . The editor's October 20, 1967 WIRE SER VICE DISPATCH 21 note preceding this dispatch must be used if the dispatch NOTE -- This dispatch was filed to The Associated Press by an correspondent who reports for Communist newspapers from Communist from
  • responsible are worried because their policy so directly supports a major Viet Cong effort. SE:CRET NQDIS - -~ 'j -7The newspaper Tu Do, a staunch supporter of political parties, views the election as an opportunity for the parties to re-emerge
  • to the French, and (3) our overall negotiating stance. There is a further reason for early Presidential involvement. Some of your advisers -- notably Acheson and Ball -- are a bit shellshocked from newspaper stories sug_g esting that they are at odds with you
  • tbe price l.ovel to no more than~. Such etrtngent credit control.a lfill force the Tt.ll"ldsh Gove-~nt to give greater emphasis to increasing tax. revenues alld./or radueing non-essential expendi.tu..~a. The State· Econosic Enterprises are a. major
  • play a key role here; in any case we want a .friendly India at the time Nehru goes .. The e.-oea~tic;,~. ln essence Chet wants to give _some new momentum to our India enterprise, which has stalled as the Chicom attack of last £all re-ceded
  • that some of the four-digit serials may be associated with rear service work and can reasonably expect an unknown number of men to be assigned to these tasks. I. Using the same movement factors, we have estimated the time required for the serials to arrive
  • local capital market, including a better market for Venezuelan Government obligations. 5. Urge Venezuela efforts to stimulate private enterprises. to continue investment and intensify and private its 6. Encourage the Venezuelan Government to create
  • There and plus a These enterprises. source of support for science. The total fWlds expended on these institutions amounted to approximately the equivalent of which went to public institutions. for administration, including of $4. 5 million, l\.fost
  • to the Association of Foreign Correspondents» Ky indicated that Article 20 is a safeguard against the possibility of irresponsible action by the Convention, and he said flatly that it is needed. Reaction to this statement has so far been remarkably subdued. Much
  • able to those in advanced industrial nations of the West. The mass media are highly com ,­ petitive even though dominated to a consider­ based on able extent by three organizations nationally distributed daily newspapers: Asahi (circulation 4.1 million
  • . January31 The President met with Representatives of the National Association of Attorneys General in the Cabinet Room at the White House. • • • Herschel Newsom, Master of the Grange, presented a special award to the President for service to rural America
  • has been the major single to a growth of output and that of growth is associated of this per year; The data also suggest that has been declining and in the more recent percent· been only 2½/per year. 'l"ite d:e.ta contributing the of the 28
  • by such an unorthodox diplomatist.. His aboundi ng vitality, inquisitive ab sorption of briefs, informality, boisterousness, already amaze, ins pi re, · or appall his staff, as they did those previously associated with him in official life. O n t he Hustings, h e
  • with Otto Hahn. In 1917 Professor Meitner was entrusted with the organization of a Depart­ ment of Radioactivity at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute. A number of radioactive isotopes were discovered by Lise Meitner and her associates, e.g., AcCij, ThCq
  • , scheduled for January, will employ the familiar format of senior as well as action level teams. It will ex­ confron­ amine problems associated with a Sino-Indian senior tation circa 1970 with three late afternoon meetings held at five day intervals followed
  • the home front. Economic conditions were parlous. In the face of war-engendered uncertainties "businessmen shrank from large enterprises ••• The currency had been inflated by the paper issues of many banks. Stocks were selling far below the prices of twelve
  • of this morning's newspapers carried headline 'People Demand Punishment ·o f Criminals. ' It is _p ossible that an •example' will be made of some of the pilots, but I am inclined to the hopeful thought that,. despite the hate-filled anti-American atmosphere
  • the people." The currert cultural campaign is largely directed against what might be broadly termed today's class of scholar-officials, who are or are suspected of being the carriers of that ?ld culture -- not only scholars and educators, but also newspaper
  • ,~ - ~ - - - - . - : - - , ~~ - - - - - r , - - ., - .J ., ..◄ • f ... ~ ! ' : \ I I ' ' ll . •I _.,.... I, -... _________________ ~~J~ . I 1 ~~~~~4ll- ~~- ENOENT NEWSPAPER if Y~~, :ATURDAY, JANUARY. 14, 1967 A.n Act·of Courage President Johnson has said so little
  • provision for their continued operation. · Much private business and industrial enterprise has been destroyed, and what remains has been demoralized. Funds 'Which earlier would have gone to economic development have, since projects and to the military
  • Thurmond expressed his opposition to the NPT. man Findley questioned the wisdom of secret negotiations the Soviet Union-on disarmament. Congress­ with Today's newspapers generally carry favorable editorial and_ columnist comments. We and the Agencies
  • -missile systems could be considered simultaneously with a solution of the problem of offensive means of delivering nuclear weapons and in close association with the problem of general and complete disarmament. If the Government of the U.S.A. has any
  • and apologetic. T iis contrasts with the strong, even brute.l measures, used to su,:press the food riots. Early in ~ch a.t an inf'ormaJ. meeting ·with Members of' the Press .Asso­ Association, ~tr·s. ciation of India ~d the Foreign Corresponaents Gandhi responded
  • ) lie in: low capability and know-how to translate advanced ... t.echnological developments into profitable enterprise; size of companies and markets; low capital investment per worker and weak incentives to use capital intensive technology due to low
  • to you. He did this in order to keep an offensive advertisement out of the newspapers, and I am sure you will agree that it is best to close the circuit by having the letter come under your eye. I have acknowledged the letter from Eisenhower and the one
  • in priYB.te enterprise. " (Emphaaia aupplied.) (Section 1, Atomic Energy Act of 1954, Public Law 83-703.·) The 1954 Act ha.a for lta purpose the carrying providing for a number of programs including: out of the above policlea by • • •• . "a program for Oo
  • principles: First, the enterprise should be organized at ome distance from the Govern­ ment; that is, we might indicate that we thottght it a helpful idea and be available to provide material, but the job of organization would have to be done by private
  • of scientific talent, arc lavished on an effort that could well be aborted in midstride by Soviet enterprise and realism. There is a crying need for a reap­ praisal of our space aims, for more specificpublic information, especial­ ly since statemcnu from those
  • MATTERS, SOVIET MILITARY COMMANDERS HAVE FORCIBLY OCCUPIED AND CLOSED CERTAIN NEWSPAPERS