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  • !ing:. Boorstin .. ' ' . .,_, Original OAIID Number: 424 Row: Section:· Shelf: 48 ~ 6 \ Position: Stack: 1 v 1HE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN (jjjl
  • · ·president had just suspended. tire1 to tanan ~r ~n e1 . emoy s. 'b'li .. When the Soviet Union colcrall_c. Thus, ~uSSI3 dissolved_ Its old The party's suspensior. was for six tialloyalist. "We have a respons1 1·ty, new or parhament w1th ta~k~ and .•s n?w
  • next January to reflect economic developments during 1993. By making the adjustment, the President preserves the optiun to adjust - or not to adjust - a year from now. It is important to preserve this option. If the economy performs worse ~expected
  • : Speechwriting- Boorstin . ·· Original OA/ID Number: 421 .. Row: Section: · · Shelf: Position: 48 ~ 1 ! 5 Stack: v •,. 7/5/94, 10 AM PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON REMARKS TO THE EMBASSY COMMUNITY - BONN JULY 11, 1994 Hillary and I
  • - Boorstin Original OAIID Number: 422 Section: Row: 48 . Shelf:· Position:.· Stack: ~ 5 2 v •. . A. i_...., ., 10/12/94' 2 p.~. : ... ' . . . PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON . · RE~RKS T(i THE PORTUGUESE.- AMERICAN COMMUNITY . J'H
  • REMARKSBYANTHONYLAKE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR NATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS AT DINNER IN,HONOR OF VITALY CHURKIN AND DONALD PAYNE THE AMERICAN CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL LEADERSHIP WASHINGTON, D.C. MAY 3,1995 I am delighted to join the American Center
  • Majali, Mr. President, Mr. Speaker, members· of the Parliament: I am grateful to King Hussein and the people of Jordan for welcoming me to your beautiful capital and for opening . your homes to me. And I am glad to have the opportunity to accept Your
  • ) 546-4400 The Thomas A. Roe ·Institute for Economic Policy .Studies March 5, 1993 THE CLINTON CHALLENGE ANSWERED INTRODUCTION President Bill Clinton has issued a challenge to critics of his economic plan. He is asking those who believe
  • talks. In the meantime, we will continue working with others at the United Nations to develop effective sanctions. In recent days, I have consulted with President Kim of South Korea, Prime Minister Hata of Japan, President· Yeltsin of Russia and others
  • placed public finances on a more sustainable base. In 1991, the "Convertibility Law" pegged the peso at par with the U.S. dollar and made deficits illegal at the federal level. The Argentine Government has initiated export promotion measures, including
  • . I thank all of you for your continuous efforts and dedication. Keep up the good work. PRESIDENT CLINTON DEPARTURE FROM ITALY DRAFT PUBLIC STATEMENT Hillary and .I are very grateful for the warm welcome we received in Italy. enjoy all the Our time
  • \: .. ' . \ ·: -. :·. /' PRESID,ENT WILLiA'M JEFFERSON CLINTON · REMARKS AT MEETING W:ITH SENATOR GEORGE MITCHELL DEC.J!:MBER l, 1994 .. . .., . ·' THE WHITE HOUSE' , I',' • - ., > ' \' ( ' . ' . ' '. I
  • the bureaucracy will soon be forgotten. Action 6: Demand from Congress the elimination of legislative limits on the number and functions of political appointees, and reduce the Executive Office of the President staff by 25 percent. You will need to maintain
  • : " .... .................... ·NOV 25 '94 13:55 GOLDMAN SACHS -----~ .,. .. ~ •' P.3 -~ Draft Romarks of the President Summit of the Americas We meet at a unique moment of opportunity for our hemisphere and tor our planet. A
  • imagery technology developed for the Cold War and now being used to aid in natural disaster relief You have proved that no one does it better than the American intelligence community. As long as I'm President, that's not going to change. Whenever
  • been a new ; round of concessions by the Government of President Chandrika Ban.daranaike Kumaratunga to the 1 Tamil Tigers, the separatist guerril!Ia group that grew out of widespread grievances against what was seen as routine discrimination against
  • : ... · ·. . . · .. •...· · · ·, ., · · · '. · . -.' : · · , . a · · '.' ' "' :• As we saw in Indonesia at th~:APEC S~mniit, President Clinton is. committed to· - .- creating .jobs and reaf growth in. this country by breaking
  • of developments,. of course .t:his past . YE1ar with the· Summit of Americas, ~i:th the restoring · democracy: to·· Haiti, ._and with_ 9-n expanded trading relationship. 1 I , • I . , •·, ' • ' ' , I ' • . Why' is 'the.' President so popular
  • Stands Address at the World Conference on Human Rights, Vienna, Austria, June 14, 1993. headed the U.S. Government's first interagency group on human rights under President Carter, who is with us today. President Carter will be hank you, Mr. Chairman
  • , respectful, understanding when we don't agree, not letting each disagreement get in the way of our overall relationship. It's not just Yeltsin and I who have such a relationship. The Vice President and Prime Minister Chemomyrdin have developed a strong
  • .... ·-----·--·-~----· \ ·-· .. - ~-~:: "':'~ ________ ....__ ______ --:- highlighihow iitistrating thee hatd "aid Jim Norausky. vice president is not only for Westerners but of ~nsportation for AliiOCO Corp.'s Amoco former Soviet republics ..Earlit ID.{f ReporteTI of THE WALL.......,. JoUJU
  • of the democratically elected government of President Jean- Betrand Aristid. Clinton should encourage other nations to demand the neutralization of the Haitian armed forces. He should also more aggressively enforce the U.S. embargo against Haiti until Aristid returns
  • , and as recently as mid-october not even the hotel bookings had been made in Miami fur the incoming Latins.. One ·fact symbolises the administration's level ofinterest. Mr Clinton can claim some credit fur NAFTA. Yet in nearly two years the president who has just
  • ·, however;.· two developments.-~·led the· President-··. .to. decide to'' 'drop that> :o'pposi ti:on ~: One' was' the ·.fact that, ~~e ' ' ' ·. '"I . ' . ''vietnamese· have COntinued to WOrk With -u's iri' ·effbrts tO reso_J,v~ ,. -·. ,, , · ,'__ ca~e
  • ~dership·inpromotlng. s~struned :gl:obai :economic :growth ·that ... will lead to more jobsJor our workers... Last year, PreSident .Clinton fought hard-·· , .. ··.:for NAFTA, and we're already seeing ·positive economic results fro111. that-historic' . . agreement
  • ,. ' - --~- • . t::J ~- THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary (Memphis, Tenne~see) · For Immediate Release Novemb~r 13, 1993 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE 86TH ANNUAL HOLY CONVOCATION OF THE CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST Mason Temple Church Of God In Christ
  • ,, ., Staff Office-Individual:. '' Speechwriting;. Boorstin ' . - : ," ,, •, .. Original OAIIDNumber: 420 ' ,, Row: 48 '' Section:. Shelf: k> 4 Position: 3 .·stack: v - 6/30/95 4 p.m. ANTHONY LAKE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR NATIONAL
  • -Boorstin Original OA/ID Number: 413 ·Row: 48 Section: Shelf: Position: Stack: 2 2 v '. ·. THREE DIFFERENT CASES . T hese three scenarios show how the tax bills ofhypothetical taxpayers could changeif President Qi1Jion's proposals are enacted
  • -President Clinton -has decided to extend to China Most Favored Nation .MFN-eligibility "'fer Gflffia again this year. As he did last year, the President he took this step because .China's economic and strategic importance to the United States requires
  • .. Original OA/ID Number: 423 Row: Section: Shelf: Position: Stack: 48 ~ 5 3 v THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary For Immediate Release May 8, 1995 STATEMENT BY THE PRESS SECRETARY President Clinton signed an Executive Order yesterday
  • ..... ; r--------------~~ -------------- --------~- -------- - 7/5/94, 9 am PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON STATEMENT TO THE EMBASSY COMMUNITY - WARSAW JULY 7, 1994 Hillary and I are delighted to be in Warsaw, and we have enjoyed your hospitality
  • the secret industrial producmer Soviet republics, it is an rights and developing countries difAccording to United Nations figand repression. tion plans to the schedule for sweep. ferently than you do in the West. You ures, this is one of the poorest devel
  • for the purpose of digitization. To see the full publication please search online or visit the Clinton Presidential Library's Research Room. SPEECH BY PRESIDENT SOEHARTO OF THE REPUBLIC OF INDONESIA AT THE STATE DINNER HOSTED IN HONOUR OF H.E. THE PRESIDENT
  • ; Original OA/ID Number: 413 Row: 48 Section: ~ Shelf: . 2 Position: Stack: 2 v Wilkie draft of 2/17/93 · 1:00 p.m. Remarks on the "New Direction" President William J. Clinton St. Louis, Missouri February 18, 1993 I want to thank my friends Dick
  • in cals"- carloads of gun·tOting youths country. - are now back in the streets of Where once there was the "big· Mogadishu. It can also be seen in man rule" of President Mobutu Sese parts of West Africa. where lighting Seko, there is now what some Zairians
  • of the Union January 28, 1992 Mr. Speaker and Mr. President, distinguished Members of Congress, honored guests, and fellow citizens: Thank you very much for that warm reception. You know, with the big buildup this address has had, I wanted to make sure it would
  • end up like Haiti, where a last-minute negotiated settlement avoided bloodshed. The odds of the first scenario remain high. Each side has reason to hope the other will flinch first. · Republicans are confident they can force the president to accept
  • - Boorstin Original OAIID Number: \ 424 Row: Section: Shelf: Position: Stack: 48 ~ 6 1 v 7/10/95 9:30p.m. PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON ANNOUNCEMENT OF NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS WITH VIETNAM THE WHITE HOUSE JULY 11, 1995 Today, I am
  • that. Bill Clinton, Putting People First: A National Economic Strategy for America EXECUTIVE SUMMARY . first the bad news. Before you make a single decision on how "to radically change the way government operates," President-elect Clinton, you could become
  • the mission through to its projected completion in February, 1996, when a newly-elected Haitian President is inaugurated. • Prior to handing over the mission to the United Nations, we have also made great progress in removing weapons from the hands of those
  • For Immediate Release July 26, 1994 ., REMARKS BY PRESIDENT _CLINTON, PRIME MINISTER RABIN OF ISRAEL AND KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN AT STATE DEPARTMENT RECEPTION The State Department 9:25 P.M. EDT PRESIDENT CLINTON: Thank you very much, Mr. Secretary. Thank you
  • there are t,he continuing fight between Japan develop .those future products: . .. "good managed prices and bad manand the United States over automoRepresentatives,' of Fuji in the'.· ag~d prices."'Referring to Fuji and' · bi~es ~ the profits involved
  • " is the new maxim for development; it shows a revolution in the consciousness of this hemisphere. We must interlace the strands of our financial, transportation, energy, and telecommunications systems to weave a hemispheric fabric interconnecting· our
  • ILLBGAL IMMIGRATION The President announced today'his intention to provide an additional $172.5 million in resources in FY 94 to strengthen current enforcement programs to combat illegal immigration •. -... The Administration's initiatives address illegal
  • · districts is tucked awav in the en1 ergy and '''ater development bill due to hit i the House floor today. Perhaps worse. its passage would halt a long-{)vc:rdue etfon to stop pJckln(! the ~kets of the nation's tax· payers for purely local projects. Should
  • murder this week of a prominent television journalist and executive, Vladislav Listyev, is a tragic but important sign of the rapid development of Russian television. Big new money and markets have attracted graft and crime, but they are also creating
  • For Immediate Release February 17, 1993 ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE JOINT SESSION OF CONGRESS The Capitol 9:10 P.M. EST THE PRESIDENT: Mr. President, Mr. Speaker, members of the House and the Senate, distinguished Americans here as visitors in this Chamber
  • economic reforms, along with more recent goals such as promoting private· investment and protecting the environment. As the goals embrace almost all development issues, they are, as Lewis Preston, the Bank's president, has pointed out: '"a vision that all
  • . ., ,. .. ·' ':.I' • ·,, /. '•' •,', ·'.' ,._ ' ' ··,,.'' ' • • ., D/EX9400757 i' UNITED STATES ARMS CONTROL AND DISARMAMENT AGENCY Washington, D.C. 20451 OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR August 15, 1994 MEMORANDUM TO: Special Assistant to the President - Bob
  • three consecutive years of improvement in the deficit for the first time since Harry Truman was president. Shrinking that deficit is like paying down our credit cards; it isn't pleasant, but it has to be done. When. the naysayers, doomgangers
  • Mr. Mas's Mercedes, -with bodyguards, is years ago as a penniless refugee and often seen in the southwest Miami suburbs, has amassed not only a net worth of where he lives in a walled -compound. He more than $80 million but also im- ; presides over
  • ... .. . - .. '~ . \ •.· ~ ' ·, . ~ ' ',' . ,. ·.··_USA-BIAS.- - .. ' ' ' . ' -1 . ·. ' ' I , r ,•, I··. ',I . ' . '. '' •, .. '. . · 700 N~ FairfaxSt~t, Suite 502. ·'Dr. Brian M.. a.Jnpbell, .President" . · AleXandria, VA 11314 Thomas E. Stalnaker, Research Dlm;wr · .. · Th
  • too far, allowing the safety net -- as one rich Canadian puts it -- to turn into a hammock. For more striking is the change on the American side. Americans last year elected a president who is·now busily trying to "reinvent" government, extend
  • · was no development," says Die Verde!: a of Europe's first man. who trod the very scu·s shoulders. Nicolae holding a scepter. former coal miner who served as premter same plains as the Treasure or Wisdom Elena holding a baby. for three years beginning in 1979
  • Administration Local Rail Service Assistance Federal Maritime Administration Office of the Secretary (Transportation) Office of the Inspector General (Transportation) National Transportation Safety Board Function 450 - Community and Regional Development HUD
  • by one, ·old dictatorships and tyrannies are 9iving way. As President Clinton told the nations of the.world on September 26, •More nations have chosen democracy than ever before, more have chosen free markets and economic justice, more have embraced
  • OAIID Number: 419 Row: Section: Shelf: !Position: Stack: 48 ~ 4 2 v ~, President William Jefferson Clinton Address Before a Joint Session of~~on~~ess State of the Union: DRAFT ~~AN 8 AfQ: January 25, 1994 25 Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President
  • : Hallelujah! ·. · ·~In the Past, Congress and presidents · For years, Botder. Patrol agents here Ita~ ignored theil' resj,onSibility to en- : . led a frustrating Gisteiiee: .TheY were lor~·. federaldriunigration ··laws, which shortchanged
  • -Individual: Speechwriting- Boorstin Original OA/ID Number: .. 423 Row: Section: Shelf: Position: 48 6 5 3 ·Stack: v i• L 5/10/95 11:00 p.m. PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON REMARKS AT TARAS SHEVCHENKO _UNIVERSITY KIEV, UKRAINE. MAY 11,1995
  • in millions of dollars) FUNCTION 01:22PM · 1994-97 ' Total 1997 · SAVINGS OPTIONS PROGRAMS THAT DON'T WORK OR ARE NO LONGER NEEDED Funds Approprlatect to the President 150 Eiminate Certain Private Sector Development Programs in AID... . '-10 -30 -81
  • the Bush Administration, the deficit has.doubled, adding $1.5 trillion in national debt in four years -- more than any President in history, · accumulating almost as much debt in four years as was rolled up in the eight years of the Reagan/Bush
  • by an American president. We are making more than 150 difficult, painful reductions which will cut federal spending by 246 billion dollars. We are eliminating programs that are no longer needed, such as nuclear power research and development. We are slashing
  • ·' . •, ·.;., . ' . . .. :,, ' . - .. . ' - . ' . . ·.) .' .·' . '- . ._.,, ' \ •' . l· ·. _,.· . l' ·. .. ·.· ' . PRESIDENT ·WTI...LIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON . . REMARKs ON HAm . .· u~s.s~,:EISENHOWER- NORFOLK; VIRGINIA . . . OCTOBER 6,.1994 . ,· ·.. . . ' ', ' t "• \ ·T~·the·men and women ·ofthe'U.S.-S. Eiseriho~erbattle
  • --------------- Withdrawal/Redaction Sheet Clinton Library DOCUMENT NO. AND TYPE 001. memo SUBJECTffiTLE DATE Peter Spiro to Samuel Berger; re: Radio Democracy- Statement by President Clinton ( 1 page) 07/21/1994 RESTRICTION p 1/b(l) COLLECTION: Clinton Presidential
  • Corps volunteers and aid fairs. Kazakh President Nursultan Na· workers stationed in Kazakhstan. And the zarbayev visited Tehran in 1992 and told French; Gennans. and British recently Iranian President Hashemi. Rafsanjani that Central Asian republics
  • -Individual: Speechwriting- Boorstin .• .. Original OAIID Number: 421 ~ Row: Section: Shelf: Position: 48 6 5 1 I Stack: v 7/23/94, 6 pm PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON REMARKS AT DINNER HONORING KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN AND PRIME MINISTER
  • ·Original OA/ID Number: 423 Row: Section: Shelf: Position: Stack: 48 ~ 5 J v . -.- ·- .. ··• _· ..• ·. -·.·· ~ .·~.· . ... .. ... . .· ·.· .. · .. .... : .... President William Jefferson Clinton Press Availability with Prime
  • >!!famia, t.'lc 5uu:ess or failure of the operation likely .,;u ~ffect President Clinton's P"litica' fortunes in the nation's most populous state. Mounting a credible border enforr.emr:nt j)i"'l>-:::a here is all i.ite more: difficollt because expectations
  • - Boorstin Original OAIID Number:. 422 Row: 48 Section: 1..- ~ .• .Shelf: 5 Position: 2 Stack: ·V 1118/94, 3 .pm PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON ADDRESS TO THE 75TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE GEORGETOWN SCHOOL OF FOREIGN SERVICE . WASHINGTON, D.C
  • Bilateral .. ' ,.., . ' .. : ·Staff Office-Individual: ,. Speech~itil)g- Boorstin •.'' Original OAIID Nvmber: '· •' 421 . . . •· Row: 48 ~· ·Position: Section:· Shelf: 5 1 Stack: t '•.' v ' : : . .. 7/5/94, 5 p.m. PRESIDENT
  • ..... ' . ··Case Number: 2006-0460-F ·. '· ·. MARKER This is not a. textual record. This is used as .an ·adrninistrativ~ marker by~ t4e Cl.inton Presid~ntial Library ·staff. . . Folqer Title: SOTU 1994.- Economic Agenda
  • Valley, who now is killed the reform act otherwise. President Clinton's budget direcGrowers have often gotten tor. their way. In fact, the commission During 1985 and 1986, as the that studied the farmworker deal concluded it was "consistent
  • , no one regarded it as a pa:&cc c!Dmment . But it pew uul developed .md. ~ ADd upcm it there was bailt a bigisr, a better, a more poract lmiCJD. ~ ·.AI the UN COmmem0111111 its Fifti.Bth Am:Jhtenmy, il still provides hope fbr the fumre of mnldnd, just
  • of the most popular persons in all of Lithuania. By his words and deeds he has developed a reputation for integrity and unmatched mord1 authority in his field of endeavor. His activities serve as an example of un~ selfish assistance to Lithuania and exemplify
  • ," said · gle invention or~ tbe irgument goes, Owens in an interview." . . . but from a range of rapidly developing Their intellectual godfather m this tecbnologies that inWlve more powerful venture is An~w Marshall, a 73sen5ors and computers, radar
  • . ' .. . . ·' Staf~ Office-Individual: Speec writing- Boorstin · · . ' I brig nal OAIID Number: 422 .'·I .. Row: Section: 48 ~ - ,. . . , '; ' .. Shelf: Position: 5 2 " ' . Stack: v •· 12/7/94, ] pm PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON REMARKS
  • . · b~use d~mo~racie~ ,.. We prom1 Locracy ·I . . . . ·.... ~eighbor~ ·.· . ··.. ·. · • · ; tradi~g· make good and reliable . .. . . . . . . .. . - . ... . • p-artners. Develop~ent promotes democracy ~d de~ocracy promotes deve~oprrient. ,Strong
  • Two: Riga/Freedom Square Praises Baltic heroes and urges them to stay the course. Historic moment: first U.S. President on free Baltic soil. Honors the heroes of independence, reasserts the bonds between our nations. Pledges continued security
  • , including prominent ; human rights activists and politi1 cians, holding them from several 1day!\ to as long ~s a year. Moshood 1Abiola is still being held after his ar1rest last summer when he declared , him'self president on the one-year : anniversary
  • a very strong reluctance to changing the Constitution. page five, paragraph one Recommended small change: " •.• our people have the opportunity, and seize the opportunity ••• " paragraph five It is worth mentioning, as the President often does
  • ~day~ I. thlnk ~ · the $erne. of. openness is important; That is'the main me·ssage that theFirst Lady·has . tried to conv~y in her meetings on this issue. Th~'·Preside~t's.AdVisory ~omprlttee on Human Radiation .Experimen~- is the model we _are striving
  • : .. Speechwriting- Boorstin ' ' •. Original OAIID Number: 423 Row: Section: shelf: Position: 48 ~ 5 3. · Stack: v .. ,, 1 draft f 5 P. m. ~ 5/30/95 s. .President William J ... Cl-inton · DeP.arture ·.Talking., Po~nts Peterson·Air Force Base May 31
  • the Gulf, according serch Corp. of Dallas signed an agreement to Jonathan Kolber, president of Claridge last year with two Israeli companies to · Israel Inc., the Cliuidge affiliate that con~ examine prospects in a l,Soo-square-mile trois investment
  • - ized we had to develop sophisticated its continuing research at the Defense tidans w~o stridently champ!oned nu- decomml;sioning and waste han· Ministry seem to provide evidence of clear d1sa~mame~t dunng the dllng: Yet this explanation is not fully
  • · and banished her to rural exile, but they· · never tamed her. Last week the police were back, this time with the blessing of President Nel· son Mandela. They raided her Soweto mansion seeking evidence of bribe·tak· ing and influence-peddling. Democracy
  • language·training for the ethnic Russians and round tables that bring together the Estonian and ' Russian populations. More generally, we will .be looking at ways to target some of the initiatives that President Clinton announced earlier this year in Prague
Isolationism (Item)
  • Rehnquist said the legislahas served two six-year terms in the. uve development of the law indicates that · sena te from bemg 1tsted on the ballot as a Congress intended it tothat at onlv to a · . applv defendant who knows least one candidate
  • . ' _____ ....__ ·But the ascension of Republicans . By ALISON MITCHELL with tax-cutting agendas In Albany · After a year In which he received and Washington shattered Mr. Glullnatlonal attention for a moment of ani's chances of receiving additional · support for President Clinton
CIA - Changes (Item)
  • officers, at the time, resisted the modest Cuts reformers were proposing. Still, the reform agenda is clear for President Clinton's recently designated CIA director, retired Air Force general Michael CarnS, and for the various coinmissions and committees
  • : Speechwriting-: Boorstin . Original OA/ID Number: 423 Row: 48 ' · · Section: . Shelf: 5 Position: Stack: J v ,.· 5110/95 12 pm PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON ADDRESS TO THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE MOSCOW STATE UNIVERSITY MAY 10,1995 [Acknowledgments
  • are currently conducting one probe directed at President Clinton's personal investment in the Whitewl!ter resort development in Arkansas and another focusing on allegations that Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy took prohibited gratuities from businesses regulated
  • __.:. and notOrious - politician iarited everybody from President Boris Yeltsinto a czarist honor guard in full battle dress to celebrate with him at Moscow's grandly decaying Budapest Restaurant. President Yeltsin declined to attend. But the czarists were out
  • your reaponaibility to the people ahead of every other interest_:] In the end, the people will be our judqe. To anyone who wonder• where we will draw the line, I aay that I will act as I have aa President for two yeara, puttin; every proposal
  • plaYwrigbt), politicians (including a president) and. journalists (a special tar· get)-have fallen victim ·to fundamentalist violence, as have thousands of ordinary AI· gerians, especially emancipated women. In March for eiwnple, . a 16-year-old' high school
  • · over, several developments have : made this trade more difficult to combat. The most important and most troubling aspect of the new assessment, senior officials said, is the finding that thousands of people a!· ready have left China en route
Great Powers (Item)
  • , it seems clear that the freedom of action gained by successful leadership was still very narrow; it is not hard to guess what would have happened to President Bush and his administration if the casualties of the Persian Gulf venture had reached the levels
  • Resources Development Roundtable END: 12:30 PM Bilateral-Japan w/POTUS Bilateral-Japan w/POTUS . 12:30PM 1:00PM POTUS Bilateral Lunch-Australia w/POTUS Luncheon host/Kantor Bilateral-Japan . Bilateral Lunch-Australia DATE KANTOR TIME 1:15PM BROWN
  • , is we'll get nowhere blaming_ our problems on immigrants, who have always come to this country just because it offers more opportunity for individual development than any other nation on earth. "Only in America," President Clinton said last week as he
  • •he became the first president of the . from 1929 to 194~ in Rostock,' Germany;' in . Jordan; Barbara C(~arline) (b. Feb! 21, . newly opened Leland Stanford Junior' Uni,' 1944 in Berlin,.af\d after. 1947 in· HambUrg. 1936,' .Houston, Texas,.- U.S
  • himself EWer more firinly in ' . ·command of wha~ amounts to. a'. ~;negotiated, ~evolution. II' Although h'e. won't take office until . : after the. April election, he has been ope~ating as a kind of shadow president for:.riearly· a yeai. · . No major go
  • •' ''' . ·..."· .· 1··' ,, " b - I I l890s-199Q~ 1910s ...: . · 4RS AND CAMPAIGNS AJOR VFW LEGISLATIVE EFFORTS ='W ORGANIZATIONAL DEVELOPMENT l920s _1930s · - " -1940s _. 19505 0 I ·.r'_ I 19605 . ·· .. 19705 ·' . !(:''"' \ rc· CLINTON
  • , for the first time as President, I have the honor of addressing the members of both houses of Congress. I am here to address the problem that is first on the minds of the members of America's families, who are watching us tonight from their homes all ac-ross ou
  • to move government;• as unusual tbat so!D~ne !;ike arCla against the Cali. leadership, MexiHe and U.S. offiCials said that Abrego be ope~y IDVlted. . . co-and its 2,000-mile border with Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo Drug traffickers are w1dely
  • throughoUt ~ea-are denionstraiing.thatsuccess often hinges on treating workers as as8ets to be deVeloped, ·not coststo. be cut. And they're d()ing it-with frontline ·workers· who :are not necessarily fol.Jt:..ye
  • Original OAIID Nutnber: 415 Row: Section: Shelf: Position: Stack: 48 ~ 3 1 v Gender Economics In Developing World, International Lenders !Are Targeting Women Their Projects, From S~lling . CharcoaltoRaisingCrops, Are Viewed as Safe Bets . __ ip
  • ........................................................ Community Dev. Banks•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Mass Transit. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••• Small Business Development ................................ EDA ............................................................... One
  • ("triple-base"), and Kansas is one of the states most impacted. STIMULUSPACKAGE: . + $20.3 million in Coriununity Development Block Grant funding, including: $2.3 million for Wichita, $L9 million for Kansas City, $L5 million for Topeka, and more
  • Trade --International Development --Monetary Policy --Foreign Policy --National Security --Intelligence =Banking Pensions --Domestic economic policy Insurance· --Transportation --Labor-management relations -Health, human and social services --Environment
  • . How Income might break down.;. Home lmprowement $227 Community block grants, economic development aid School: $1,429 and higher education, training Doctors dentists, medication, Insurance: $5,871· Education, vocational Costs'for Medicare
  • I am particularly pleased to be in Bonn. This is because of Bonn's huge contribution to the development of a democratic system in postwar Germany. Bonn has been a· symbol of the new Germany and its outstanding characteristics:· integration
  • have come a long. way in. tl).es'e. 2o. mqnt~s :. The. United State,s and Russia ·have developed ·a partnership~, tha.t is 'trap.E! forming r.ela.ti~ris ·between us and'_ building_ a' bet-ter. and saf~r wor'ld in the next".-cehtury
  • as unwanted burdens bave no inclination to help their clien~ and have no incentives to develop criminal trial skills. Lawyers can make more money doing almost an:, thing else. • The media_ have had a hand in pro- . longmg this lffibalance! The reporting of non
  • . . / in recession.· ' . ,· . ' .- · ...... A closer look spows that Asia's developing countries·:-· the·ASEAN countries and . 'China .,;_ are now our fastest-groWing markets .. In the past SlX -years our exports to China' and Singapore nearly doubled. ~xport
  • · . .. • '"";:--. . . I .• ·_,· ·marine to1;1ris~. The Araya expanse lends its~lf ,to the development of Wdter sites shared by Israel and Jordan to produce d-Unique blend of an arid' desert climate and water-b1ised recreational .and sports facilities. stic.demographic
  • steadily to a relatively small but growing num· A ragged line of curious youth the Sahara and Kalahari deserts. ber of Africans, energized by recent and local elders trails Laryea as Other developing regions such global enthusiasm for environmental he
  • - because virtUally all telephones, fax machines, modems and so on are designed to work with standard analog signals. l.S.D.N., developed in the early 1980's, was the first technology that . provided enough extra bandwidth, using the existing loop, to make
  • technologies by opening more than 100 Technology Extension Centers. • create a new network of community development banks and invest $1 billion to make the dream of enterprise zones real for cities and rural areas. tr '·1f .... " " ... CUTI'ING
  • ~EACTOR RESEARCH AND . DEVELOPMENT [SAVINGS: $820 MILLION (FY 1994-97)] i PRIVATIZE SUPERFUND FINANCING [SAVINGS: .$308 MILLION (FY 1994-9,7) ] : I 101 I . ' . . . i 102 SEC REGISTRATION FEES [SAVINGS:;I $203 MILLION (FY 1994-97)] , . . 103 SBA
  • people are still rare, however. was arrested. eviction· of residents to make way for The flurry of petitions shows the new real estate developments. In Government opponents today apinability of the government to snuff April, at least a couple of hundred
  • cmpin:. therL· I' n11 n;I!IH' lancuagl'- that woulJ lcaJ There is a Russian stmv ahout a ,ultan wh" Like Herder. I regard cosmopolitanism as empty. People can't develop unless they belong to a culture. Even it they rebel against it and transform