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  • and their various subsidiary and front organizations which are operating in the Free World •• •All of these situations call for an even more vigorous effort on our part to supplement present activ­ ities and to develop further programs of action, overt and covert
  • Association were planning to bomb several puhlic huildings in that city, including the police department headquarters. The Hill P~~iation ts a militant Negro action group in the predominantly Negro Hill section of New Haven. On Novemher 23, 1967, police
  • or whether it was an incipient rebellion kept ·localized by actions on the part of civil and police authorities. The problem of categorizing events is further complicated when we attempt to define them in. terms of the intentions and attitudes of various
  • America a GP o3 o END - SEC,ftEJi' . ....· -.- ., . ··­ -~·. ... . -~ --i- J OUTGOING TELEGRAM INDICATE: 0 COWct O~ARGE Department of State IO SECREI n2 ACTION: Amembassy ATHENS kr 17 6 41 PH '66 ANKARA NICOSIA STATE (, 15
  • . The President said he believed he made progress with Kosygin on problems in Latin America. The President said he told Kosygin that the export of Cuban Communists into other Latin American countries would not be acceptable to the United States. The President said
  • -~ -ATHENS ., 3EING~ AS REPORTED . 4398 WE HAVE UNLOADED MAP -ARRIVALS . . lKIS ~EEK?:ND . IN US-CONTROLED DOCK . AND . .: :. HAVE SO INFOR )1Eu~ GENERAL S?ANDI.DAKIS. _· · HE · VERY RELUCTANTLY CONCURRED HJ ACTION -. AND UNDERST~ii~ms wE ARE STRUGGLING
  • . Mary Jo Cook June 16. 1967 TO: John Crlewell FROM: Okamoto 1 ba,re ordered a few color yo~r new office. blow-up• for We are etriYia1 for sometblD& unueual. but dignified. U you don•t like them. we can try aaaia. DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL 1730
  • and a single control element. Each game will include a United States (Blue) and Soviet (Red) team which will be divided into senior and action-level components. Control will represent third nations, treaty organizations, fate, nature and other influencing
  • deliberately instigated, much lower than it might otherwise be . • l 1. 4 The above constitutes, in can help keep things under better a year or two from though, I must stress that action that will change the such that there are fewer But you already know
  • been done (Indonesia, the Philippines,·Thailand). What has been done is only a beginning and we are taking vigorous action on a number of fronts to stimulate the interest of the governments in the area in population policies and programs. The Bureau
  • .............. Summary of BETA.I ............ Summary of BETAII ......... Conclusion ............... A-1 A-2 A-8 A-15 thru. thru thru A-2 A-7 A-15 thru A-19 thru thru B-3 B-29 Senior Critique . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-1 • thru Action-level Critique .......... C
  • , ?Om 6~~3 . ,. 2~!~~1:~~. TELEGRAM Department of Stq~e 0 O
  • . He stated that he had acted as a coordinator between the Christian Democratic Movement and the New York Police in January 1961, and was now the New Orleans delegate for this group. He said that the nineteen men had been sent to him by Laureano Batista
  • . TO SET A DEADLINE BY WHI CH TIME THE US WOULD BE REQUIRED TO TP1KE GERTA N ACTIONS TO MEET GREECE vS ~EEDS WHAT I S NEEDED IS P TIENCE AND UNDERSTANDING THAT WE ARE DEALING WITH CO MPLEX rssu~s WHICH IN VOLVE THE BASIC INTEREST OF GREECE, US
  • the1n °to take into explicit and clue account ah:craft noise whenever it ·is relevant to any of theb p:rogran•o or to action in which th~y· mny pa.1·tlcipate, and to cooperate with the Sec1·etarie• of the Depa.rtme11t of Tranapol'tation and the D-epa.rtm
  • TELEGR / ~~GE ~ 01 - 2 3 :t 7 l I Z ATHENS 03683 ..... . \ 2 I ACTION SS 30 ·· 'l, !NF'O /030 W - - - - • • - ~ "1 w • ~ - ~31630Z FEB 68 ; · ,M AMEMBASSY ATHENS 'O SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY ~589 INFO AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 850
  • . return, by the US to a "Fortress America f, philo­ sophy. This could lead to a shift away from reliance on US protection and is likely to induce non­ nuclear nations to initiate nuclear programs. Deployment of ABMsystems by both the US and USSR might
  • the wars this Nation has fought. Today, there are 95 million motor vehicles in the U.S.; by 1990 there will he at least 156 million cars, trucks and buses on America's streets and highways. The Federal Highway Administration estimates that it will take
  • :01D1n11Dlty and the SOTerameat. pd 1 wW brlat you letter to hb atteatloa WMD be retara ■• Eleaaor A.. Coaaor• (Mb ■) Secretary to Dr. Her-, Dr. Edwla E. Molae Preaicieat The Matlaematlcal A ■ •oelatioa of America Le...~llow Hall Hanar• UalYer•lty CambrW1e
  • didn 1t actually run it. Full text of proposal follows: '20 PAGE 01 ATHENS 02400 l~1 242038Z 44 ACTiON SS 35 w INFO sso 00,NSCE 00,cco 00,/035 Z 241953Z NOV ·67 ZFf-4 FM AMEM3ASSY ATHENS TO SECSTATE WASHDC 3864 USMISSION USUN 188 AMEMBASSY
  • visually to repre1ent the problems of the $29 billion deficit. The plcturee were taken by simple double exposure on the fllm. Thl1 means that 1 took about half a roll of ju1t the blackboard, rewound the film in the camera and then took action plcture1
  • to States. THIS It is // S INTELLIGENCE information; its securit ust be maintained accordance with COMMUNICATIONS TELLIGENCE REGULATI be taken on any COMMUNICATIONS may be contained herein, regardless of the advan ed, unless such action is first approved