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  • -- 4:30 PM Mr. President: I know .b.ow you feel about atalf travel, puticularlJ now. But I thoupt you ■hollld know about one proposition lavolviAa Ed Hamilton. As you know, Hamilton'• pariah include ■ India and PakistaA. He know■ the terralll &Ad
  • heavily on travelers with modest incomes and woul.d have very rough, 1t not impossible, going 1n the Consrcss. 17. As e.n interim alternative t o tald n~ unilateral action 111 thG trooe and t ourist fields, we propose t ho.t you ecnd a strone; t eam te keJ
  • are for 2, 000 persons to be recruited in each Province, with emphasis on the cities. The recovery committee now has two teams traveling in the provinces, explaining government policies, carrying back emergency requests, and getting a first-hand view
  • culminating lR st October in a spectacular march on the Pentagon. Reaction in Vie tnam was out of proportion with what took place in the United States. While Vietnamese Nationalists grew worried Comr:iunists and fellow-travellers exuberated, convinc ed
  • has ousted· the Stalinst Novotny and many of his followers. The press hc!,s been extraordinarily unrestrained and public discussion virtually free. I Czechoslovakia s New Action Program calls for greater personal freedom (including travel abroad
  • activity traveled all I believe in Washington I acquired and the ordinary cultivation a certain react as a progressive reputation careful and neutral advantage many others strengthened to be a sympathetic discomfort superficial insight
  • delegations, at international conferences in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, Uruguay, England, Belgium, Spain, Ireland, and the Soviet Union. He has made more than 30 visits to Ireland and traveled throughout that country investigating opportunities for United
  • a list of high-ranking offenders. -- Severe GVN reaction may reflect Thieu-Huong disagreement on this issue but should not obscure advances being rn ~ against corruption. . -- Eight Assembly delegations travelling abroad show increased efforts to tell
  • ~-~. RETURNING PHILIPPINE CONGRESSIONAL· JUN~ETEERS, ~OVT OF'FICIALS, AND OTHER TRAVELERS ALSO HAVE UNDOUBTEDLY PASSED ON TO HIM ~.L-1-~NCL.:1'.NOd> I:SSA..lJ,S.E At-TI Q.ti :!llJH U:t.E:.iJ~ lLl.P.J?.INE.S.~·-OEtEC.lE-0: }N.' US GOVT AND __PRJY,ATE _A_}l,Q_ f
  • ' ·:RSPORTS ALMOSt (!NIVERS ALL Y COYI PLAIN OF TRAVEL . (''.P~S!R.I.CT°IONS ON ROADS, CUR FEWS, AND LARGE NUMBER Of EV AC UEES t\HAMPER1 NG .RETURN -TO ~.JORAL CY. HOWEVER, I N DANANG, MARKETS . ·~OPENED ' YESTERDAY .t\ ND CURFEW RELAXED TO . 19 00 T0 · 0 700
  • previous regulations-­ for example, restrictions on travel by journalists, doctors, and the like to China--shows that we do benefit on balance with the press, Congressmen and academics from moves of this sort. Risks of Change 9. Commerce and Treasury
  • .;cu, Fil"tst Do2-ut-; Mi.mater of 1:'oreien Allair1, travelled to VTashl.:igton in Ja:r..ua~y '!.9l~aacl :retvra.d ".vith propoeals re:;a!:'detl by the R-u::.-:.a.."li.m ?~1·ty foa.da=.»tif u ~nco'.ll'agin6 • kecc.V&S~\i. w:::.:;; then .. g:cz.t tc lta