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  • the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy. School records in Pasadena, California, describe the assailant, Sirhan Sirhan, as "friendly, cooperative, and well mannered". He has had little association with other members of his family, few male associates
  • . \ ·, \ ' ' \ \ Sincerely. \ \ Lee C. White Associate Special Couo.sel to the j'residont Mr,. Berllal."d F.. Schmid Managing Director lnters-tate Commerce Vlubington, D. - . Com.mis·sioti £. f.\\Jt.O oc,1 196
  • : A. AID concessionary 2. loans for Jamaica; B. The level of PL 480 assistance. Meanwhile o October 19 Ambassador met and pressed early 3. for answers. Informing Prime Minister upon Washington Shearer instructions into Within account
  • undertakes••••" (3) He emphazied importance of preserving present wording of aommt~ment~ If any change made, he would have to return to 30-nuntbtrard of citrus growers association whom he described as vigorously opposed to any change'in present /UK
  • in .May. Froi1 & television :c believe quo~ss, atone wa.ll and 1ind thay've of bringing tha~ lJa. 't:.m.sshot right 11 J~n infinitely Press fired orgru::d.zedo" larger inteI.View, teem of least. &t yo1.1 In taJJ,ing ~eJ.Ga~e
  • . Presidents I should like to add my thanks to that ot the President ot th~tional Association ot Social Worker• tor your goodness in granting the delegates ot our Special A■Nably on Haan Rights an opportun­ \ iV to Met vi th you on -.rch 24th. The announceaent
  • organiza­ tions of Federal executives in other cities. These Associations are established and devoted to improving interagency and intergovernmental cooperation. Their level of achievement has risen during the past year, and I am optimistic
  • - .3 Ar-tJVJeop Police Car No. 2 Press Pool Car Entourage Cars other V.I.P. C.ira (See Auto1110b1le Assignments tor Hotorcade details) 10:,30 a.m. Leave Karachi Airport tor tha President's 10:SS a.m. Arrive Presidont's 10to:5Sa.m.} House
  • the Vice-President and Lt.-Gen. W. A. Burki to their Car. The cars move in the following order: Advance Police Pilot 0 Cameramen Vans 0 Jeep (O.C., M.P.) 0 0 MP O MP 0 MP 0 MP Car No. 1 • Police Escort Jeep 0 MP O MP 0 MP O MP Army Jeep Police Car 2 Press
  • he must appear UN latest Monday December 9. Plans departur~ from Rio Saturday December 7 0145 ETA New York Idlewild 1155 Argentine Air lines Flight 35 0.. ,, He apparently does not expect be met by friends on arrival. Anticipates press may seek
  • (A. I. D. or P. L. 480), association and mobilization "Economic Planning the other two- ~oreign assistance record Perhaps_ one- set in 1965. The methods with Prime in 1967 and 1968. ·the policy measures The previous ancl of these A. I. D
  • ends opens Room; greets Planning Press is members. meeting. report responds his remarks; ceremony ends. ' 'I' ,, I I '. • I / ~ ' , ,., I I I,. , WORD COUNT: Draft Remarks Secretary 240 for the President Cohen, M-i
  • , President, Reed Roller Bit Company, Houston, Texas Robert S. Stevenson, President, Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co. , Milwaukee, Wisc. Hudson G. Stoddard, Associate, Earl Newsom & Co., New Yor, N. Y. Fla~ger F. Tannery, President, Frito-Lay, Inc., Dallas
  • colony of Aden. !Wlofor the la,t four years~ ot poisonous gas, the Associated' Recently, the important tribe bettlretdltinlthe Republlcan,Press reported. The committee of Usaimat, making up one:-third· Nlfmbein Sanaaacl • ~.oc»-i said that it urgently
  • • • In the field. His chief preoccupati011, however, and the development with which his name was most often associated was the lifting fuselage or airfoil fuselage design. More than one-ha.lf of Mr. Burnelll's patents wer, related to this development, and moet ol
  • ~ the Nation's • lingering bal3:nce-of-payments· problem, in light of t~e reduction _in foreign exchange drains associated with Government expenditures in Southeast Asia. . . a as RESOURCES AND PRIORITIES FOR THE LONGER RUN The chcii~esamong alternative
  • , 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
  • and reasoned although because hand and who as well. for the United front, indeed as befitted a close of policy have been read into no positions, and Bundy through friendly. in 1939-41--and associated diffe·rent was largely terms, any
  • Catherine Feuer Wurster* University of California at Berkeley Saul B. Klaman National Association of Mltual &wing's Ea.nks Paul Ilvisaker Ford Foundation Ralph E. McGill 'i'be Atlanta Constitution ***** Bichard Goodwin White House Liaison • Deceased
  • to Kansas City and Minneapolis. We've got a kind of nasty problem here. Sol Estes case. The man, Battle Hales, w~o was the nasty inside who not only planted misstatements vhil.e I testif;i:ed longevity but actually and even hel.d a)press same room
  • , as amended, November 14, 1967, Section 218, {a), p. 9. 17/ See A.I .D. Press Release 68-31, effective dated June 12, 1968. 18/ "Report on the Health and Sanitation Activities of the Agency for International Development, Department of State, for Fiscal
  • security planning. The emphasis in most games is on current or potential problems associated with inter­ national affairs. d. Games are often conducted with high level offi­ cials participating on "senior level" teams which review and discuss proposals
  • details on the.Jamaica Press Association is essentially are listed in the enclosure, th·s organization a professional group and has never registered under the Trade Unio La. The Embassy-questions whether this association should • listed in.the directory
  • . He is a 1955 graduate of the National War College. He is a member of the Georgia Bar Associati~n, Phi Beta Kappa ar.d Phil Delta Phi, as well as other professional and social clubs and associations. Ambassador Bennett delivered the 1966 Comrr.e
  • be instituted with a first-year effort of $4.6 million. Non-fuel minerals study The task force report concludes that, while there is not a pressing need for a study aimed at finding short-term remedies, there is need for a careful analytical appraisal
  • it did in the past. N~vertheleaa, it would have aome impact on his associates, e. g. , Colley and Beaubouef. In addition, there ia one ref ercnce by Martin homosexual". to a. man named W. Hardy Davia as a "•elf-confessed (207) .Z99. 300, 304, 313, 341
  • •• ',t \ .... ~--:•..,~~-,. . ...~. . l..• • . • . t.NITED PRESS BUREA-u·HERE RECEIVED WRITTEN COMMUNICATIONTHIS , AFTERNOON SIGNED BYJUAN DEDIOS MONCADAVIDAL, •EXECUTIVE OOMM ANDANTFALN GENERAL-STAFF• OFFERING TO EXCHANGECOL. , CHENAULTFOR '!ALL
  • the U.S. and Air Afrique countries. Senegal is scheduled first because it is the most important aviation country in the Air Afrique group and because Pan .American with Air Afrique, to and through Dakar not associated has operated services
  • of SIGMAI-66 was to examine some of the major issues, problems and questions associated with a deescalation of the war in Vietnam. The teams in SIGMAI-66 represented the United States (Blue), Republic of South Vietnam (Green), National Liberation Front
  • are responsible for inadequate coverage of many areas that need to be guarded. Responsibility for this development should be largely HEW. Development should be largely by industry, and direct ~osts associated with the development would be minimal. A variety
  • with good intent but bad results was in the wrong. 11 The United States ar~ China, (Third E.d., Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1971,)pp. 356-7. One can reflect on the validity of this view, and also on whether Americans, more than other Western
  • NORVASSHETHEAUTHOR• MAYI SUGGEST THATTHIS BE CHANGED BYANOTHER STAT[MENT r , , MIR. SINCENOTONLYI BUTMANY MEMBERS=OF THECOMMITTEE ONEDUCATION ( ' { ' ( LABOR,AREDEEPLY PERTURBEDBY.THIS·QUOTATION IN AND THE PRESS• RESPt~TJ'ULLY, • (''• ' ; : f ADAM C
  • IN THE SENATE OF THE UNI •D STATES Sam and then showed sympathy fo_rSukarno, should now be pressing Uncle Sam to defend Friday, October 22, 965 him against an Indonesian threat: EXTENSION OF REMARKS It is •a fortunate happenstance that Mr. SIMPSON. Mr. P
  • . of but moralism Kennedy / !:ly Americans and ir. the public as Ha==i::a::. . us for the s:..:c..:: act:..o~s 7 as was mear.~· -~• somet. ...... _i:ig r.,o::::-e9e::::-so:ial. it, nerve Anglo-Saxon ulti:wate associated . or Bri t.:..sh people
  • AMERICAN JEWISH JOINT l!PUSENTATtF DES rvt1'S l)E FRANCE DIStmB11rlOII COMMmEE, IMC. • JEWISH etr-~llll RECONSTRUCTION, INC. • INTERSSENVEllTJU:TUNGISRADJTISCHER JC1JtTUSGEMEINDCN %0HE or CEllMJUfY • ANGLO-JEWISH ASSOCIATION IN nn: ti. non:cnox s
  • ~~A~T h7 sY-_.now~~ were ·:,.''//-'/';i_ J T/folff; case-::.of ::muted At the was almost itself verbal other total, out of support~ extreme, France's at in policy choosing nonethel2ss istration resisted to the France be pressed
  • the poor in· ~ara-professional jobs. This program could be implemented in association with "community schools" • or city hospitals. 5. Innovation and competition are handmaidens, and the necessary reforms in American schools will only come through often
  • of aesthetic or health values. Aecthetic values that are extinguished by the objecti-::m.able sights and ::m-~ells in any r.-ia:rket. associated with 1Jolluted water are not subject to exchange It n1.ay be reaconable to think, however, that people in eeneral
  • were in a po~ition to protest the war. One ..itc1ell Goodman, a New York writer, v,as - 3 - ..CQNE Tj)ENT JAI \ ANTI-VIETNA 1 WAR DE110NS1 RATION 1 WASHINGTON,·D. C. OCTOBER20-22, 1967 at a press conference held at New York City on October 2, 1967