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  • ..·- IN;.ERCONTINENTAL U. F. 0. RESEARCH INSTITUTE ORIGINATOR OF PROJECT-G COOPIERATION OF ALL ANO DIAIICTO .. COLMAN 0" THE ANALYTIC NETWORK - /GLOBE/, NATIONS, FOR THIE U.F.O. ONLY GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE INFORMATION. 315-150
  • Reserve Bank of Boston, Boston, Mass. ER.PF, Armand G., New York City FAm, Marvin, American University, Wash., D.C. FALK, Adrian, Bay Area Rapid Transit, SFran., Calif. FELDMAN., Myer, Wash., D.C. FITCH, Lyle c., Institute of Public Administration, New
  • - - unmistakably simultaneously the - - reduce the in the face of Soviet threats. with limited in annual without as we can reasonably build-up open to the Free concessions is aimed as far ahead they one and not the of the globe where that the non
  • collar and sleeves of white silk. 37. Weinberg Silk suit••• white ribbed••• sleeveless••• and underneath a beige silk bMuse. Rembrandt White linen coat. o. o no sleeves•• o fastened with black globes. o o over a straight black linen dress, falling
  • campaign against foreign spies. He was an official U. S. War Correspondent in the Korea, Inda-China War, with assimilated rank of Colonel, U. S. Army. His syndicated column, "After Hours" circles the globe ... other writings appear in Saturday Evening Post
  • in trans­ portation and a new policy for our merchant marine. I will ask for funds to study high-speed rail transportation between urban centers. We will begin with test projects between Washington and Boston. On high-speed trains, passengers could travel
  • 13, 1966 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: ACTION Heart Operation for Dominican Boy You will be interested in a moving story in which our Embassy and militaryfurces in the DR and the Boston Children's Hospital Medical Center worked together
  • ratings for three successive years. According to the April 15, 1958, issue of the "Boston Globe," John P. Gardiner, a retired State Department Foreign Service employee, had appealed a ten-dollar fine imposed on him after his con­ viction on a charge
  • ooun­ independence of America, 1a an event that all Ohtiatendom. It baa, to a vast extent, those civil and religious libertiea, engages the of oontinent, whioh are unknown in any other of the globe! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •o my
  • 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
  • Globe &: Mail editorial on Pears on' s troubles of last week, and the other is a report from Ralph Bunche about the troubles J:hat U Thant is having in delivering his Vietnamese message to Hanoi, Peking, and the Viet Cong. ~Jf) ~ McG. B. Copy
  • parts of the globe, no matter how close or far apart their political views may be. In a way, the light touch of Yuki may have been a genius bit of Presidential diplomacy. If Yuki didn't make it into the President's office, he was usually invited out
  • parts of the globe, no matter how close or far apart their political views may be. In a way, the light touch of Yuki may have been a genius bit of Presidential diplomacy. If Yuki didn't make it into the President's office, he was usually invited out
  • , 1964) .. .. ··.'· ;,,_::'}":·~ school distric~ a public accomodations .,.,, •I. 'J • I endorsed bill. So. I've done something about it. 11 (Goldwater to the Republican' .:1 '. .., Convention's Platform Committee, July 10, . ' .. ;J •' a. I 1964; Boston
  • that will be powered by a linear induction motor. And next Monday, we will accept delivery of two jet-powered trains capable of speeds up to 170 miles an hour. We will use them in a two-year test between Boston and New York to discover whether-people who say they love
  • Committee. June 16, 1942 El1.ot1 Knox and the President. Mrs. Reid - Ingersoll-then the columDiste perhaps. Telephone talk with Ingersoll. June 16, 1942 This man sees only high class people in New York City, Boston, Phila­ delphia, Pittsburgh
  • , INt. CORD MEYER, JR.-Boaton, Maas. formerly U.S.M.C. PAUL MOORE, JR.-New York. N. Y. formerly A.U.S. RICHARD L. NEUBERGER-Portland, Ore. formerly A.U.S. PAUL C. SMITH-5an Franclaco, Calif. formerly U.S.M.C. DIGGORY VENN-Boston, Mass. formerly U.S.M.C
  • to weapons that ~~ show up in northern lati­ t We need a globe-girdling 1y1tcm, KaRning all directions and sufficiently. accurate to pinpoint a satellite 10 that we could 1CDdup a defensive vehicle to intercept iL 1J • Pioneer ;,.,;e,tor aatcllitc1, poised
  • WlllfflTTT 7 'fiamber of fommerce "'- ~ ~ ./ • BARWICK. BOSTON• COOLIDGE• MEIGS• OCHLOCKNEE • PAVO• THOMASVILLE EISENHOVffRPLAZA,THOMASVILLE,GEORGIA• THOMASVILLE - THOMAS COUNTY Popul at i on: Approxi mat el y 21, 000 - Cit y Approximately 37,000
  • and development by DOT Office of High Speed GroundTransportation-----------------------------------------------TurboTrainsdesigned for service between Boston and New York ----------­ Table I-Summary of Coast Guard's search and rescue workload, fiscal year 1967
  • , including geo­ graphy, history, government, economy, and culture.) Parkes, Henry Bamford, A History of Mexico, Boston, Houghton, 3d ed., rev. and enl., 1960. (Standard and readable. Political history with sympathetic insight and wealth of inter­ pretation
  • . Ellen Kelly, Miss Hope Marindin, Mrs. Marion Massen, Mrs. Louise Pompeo, Miss Jane Powers, Mrs. Mimi Ross, Miss Betty J. Sinclair, Mrs. Nancy Stewart, Miss Sone A. Takahara, Mrs. Jo Ann Williams, Miss Jane Zinsmeister. cover photo by BERNIE BOSTON I
  • quarters which will arguments of the globe, The country meant to be preliminar_y for, from this way problem? may be general in each capital; each case is unique. of course, What follows proliferation Although some of those policies quite
  • the earth to explore the universe beyond, man can orbit satellites to send our voices or televise our activities to all peoples of this globe. : -·} ;:_~ / ~/ Here are examples of what satellite communications have already meant in terms of hum.an
  • origins quota system. That system is incompatible with our basic American tradition. Over the years the ancestors beings - - have migrated to these American attitude has been to ask what are his personal qualities. from every quarter of the globe. varied
  • been in its sends a widening world is closer whole history. ring in the cataclys~ic knit and A discovery of success nature more interrelated or a success around the globe white of the than it in one part a local of SERVICESE Page 5
  • )-"President Johnson defined his goals last night in his address to a joint session of Congress. Near the end of his appeal for voting rirhts for all Americans, he said: "This is the richest and most powerful country which ever occupied this globe. The might
  • deal of information from satellite photography. That has been in the paper. We have made enormous progress in that regard. These satellites are flying all the time around the globe. So are the soviet satellites. One interesting bit in that regard