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  • request ArnbassadorHarmanJoined 111e this 01ornlng to discuss to lsroel and the associated lsrc,ell support of -the .resumption of arms•del lverles to certain of the Arab . natlons. After a long conversation during which I expressed our need
  • ASSOCIATION CKOTRA) APPOINTED AMB ROK MISSION TOKYO, REPLACING PAE HI-HWAN. KIM WAS VICE MIN !STER FOREIGN AFFAIRS DURING LAST DAYS RHEE . CFN 2 3 NOT 4 KOTRA . . ,, PAGE THREE RUALOS·. 05EIX g H P I D E N T I A L . . REGIME
  • use of labor associated with the new varieties for instance -~-the new high yielding rice varieties require weeding -- is actually result- USDA 573-6a 11 ing in seasonal labor shortages in some rural locales in Asia. Wages paid farm laborers
  • schccl principal for seven entered lc,cal polit'ics as ·chairman of the· • ye·a.1:s and first He ·1eft te·a:ching for fullSwaziland 1'eaphers Association. time farming ·in 194 7, wh.e:n he ·also beccm~e ·active ·in the Swazi Cou.ncil I the traditional
  • did not wish to hold this letter up further. 2. Enclosed are: a. b. Two volumes of newspaper clippings of . your visit here; A copy of the official Government of P~kistan 1968 calendar. On the ~everse side of each month is a statemenf
  • rnaac"' ar.. exce!.!.cn .. p::e:se:n ..atim:. to the President and his colleagues. With no _hes~taticn at all, it v,a:.s agreed. that ,ve shoulci p:::-oceed immediately, the meeting wz.s adjo~rned,. and Ky, ·E~b Kerner and som.c of thei::- associates wcr
  • ORGANIZED IN JANUARY 1964; DR. -ARRIGO GUAR~If CONTE, ~HO HAS A LO~G HISTORY OF ASSOCIATION WITH CO~MUNISTS AND WAS AN ORGANIZER OF THE VANGUARDIA DE ACCIO N NACIONAL, A PRO-CASTRO REVOLUTIONARY GROUP; AND DR. GUSTAVO TEJADA MORM\N FORMER TREATY NEGOTIATOR
  • the DECLASSIFIED E.O. 129_o, Sec. 3.5 NSC Memo, 1130:95, sat Dept. Guidelin~ By clY NARA, Date './-t'/-94' SECRET EXDIS //:J..., / - 2 impression Hanoi is suspicious of his association with us. In response to Goldberg's query whether the Secretary General
  • , one helps an East Germani;: West German newspaper, who he said, confident that all legal lupri~ing the country 0 could g~ concehied the idea of ·such a i obstacles could be overcome. the way of Hungary. joint legislative session and proPQSed it tO West
  • PROBLEMS SITUATIONHAS CREATE~A~ONGCIVIL POPULATIO~.STRIKING IN TERMSOF IN MIDDLEOF TEI, VC FOUNDGVNAT ITS WEAKEST MOBILIZINGRESOURCES.OFFICIALSWEREON HOLIDAY ANDLACKOF NEWSPAPER ANDOTHERMEANSCOMMUNICATION MADEM03ILIZING GOVERNMENT ANDPEOPLEDIFFICULT
  • FOR NEWSPAPERS MARBLE FALLS, WHICH DEMAND READER INTEREST" TEXAS 4.27.42 Dear Mr. Lyndon: Wonder nearly every day · what part of the world you are in and what you are doing, but, as usual I put off my writing thinking that maybe my·kind thoughts
  • the following statement. ·r arrived in Corpus Christi, Texas on Friday~ January 1949 at 4: 25 p . m. at which time I immediately went to see Mr. Peter Dunne of the Dunne Funeral Home who is a director in the Texas Funeral Association. During the course of our
  • it useful, I should be pleased to send a personal representative to Addis Ababa to discuss ..these matters with you and your associates. I would choose a man in whom I have great personal c'?nfidence and who could accurately reflect my views. Perhaps
  • that,. and that is the next problem I would cite. Again and again, representatives of the executive have come before the Foreign Relations Committee to tell us in · -8closed session what we have already .read in our morning newspaper. Again and again, they have come
  • Your conversation with Kuznetsov shows progress on one important point but raises a numbe~ of questions on which I wish to coument. If we can see and count for ourselves departing missiles and associated equipment, that will be an important forward
  • .. THAT AMBASSADORGRONOUSKIMAY BE. CALLED ON..,. ~TO CONDU-CT.THE lt'lPRECISION WITH WffICH IT HAS DE\.tSERATELY . ! BEEN PHRASEDIN TtUS PARTICULAR No·rE IS PpSSIBLE OlCTATED.:.:BY=tH£.=. PROBLEMSHANOI 1'1LL HAVE 1N HANDLING THE QUESTIO» oF· • ~ :CHINESE ASSOCI~TION WITH THES
  • , , Premier · Ky. _contounding ' · . ' { • • reams, of. newspaper · . roportt:' by otopping down into a'.' ·s u'bordinato ·vice ·pr.'e°sidency as . ~ : . .:-·· ,..... •. . . ,· · absurd ex~.ggio!"at1ons _of. • •. • • • •; ' · .; . i-:hy
  • of L0C and . 7 (~-3{:fi associated targets is. a dynamic. and everchanging pattern.. . _ 1,;. /~ :/ .:/,,.,_.~· ....-.~:··.t.:., ·:··.· .. The enemy is not using stereotyped operations, conse•· -;·,;·~~--:>:,: •.•.. quently the weight of effort· on any
  • •. In. late November President Mendez Montenegl"o warned the leftlst­ d.o llllnated student association that he would not allow student groups to -o perate 1n the wtiversity with impunity. Mexico Pre-s ident Diaz Ordaz. in October sent troops to occupy
  • ASSOCIATES WHOWORKEDTOGETHER 1 . UORINe VAR WHICH WE HAVE HtLD FOR M.,ANY. YEARS AND WHICH VE PLANNED· • F"ORTHIS YEAR -VHENSHASTRIVISIT WASORIGINALLY SETTLED. I,WOULD T!-tEN RETREAT TO SECLUSION r>F ESSEX AND OCEAN SAIL-ING· dr~ND co~~ TO WASHINGTON AT END
  • -IL Associated Press Ticker (AP) '-8~~AL - MISCELLANEOUS (Cont'd) .-eofill'IlJEN'i'ThL - 8 SOURCE TITIE CIASS. NO. COPIES FREQUE?«:Y DISPOSITION British-Interno.tional Organizntions (Conmruni.stFront) u· l M::mthly IL British
  • ; nam.ely, that stories were appearing, allegedly .•, but we were confronted from Soviet sources; and we were confronted with a secom fact; r.amely, that . ~lmost every newspaper man who came into my office told me that his favorite So .. contact was telling