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Congress of the United States on the Administration of the FOREIGN AGENTS REGISTRATION ACT of 1g38, as amended for the Calendar Tear 1968
Transcript

Congress of the United Stateson the Administration of the

FOREIGN AGENTS REGISTRATION ACTof 1g38, as amended

for the Calendar Tear 1968

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE

Text of Report 1

Appendix I 38Alphabetical list of all registrantswhose registrations were in activestatus at any time during thecalendar year 1968.

Appendix II 52Listing according to geographicalarea or nationality field ofregistrants whose statements werein active status at any timeduring the calendar year 1968.

Appendix III 169Alphabetical list of short-formregistrants in active statusduring the calendar year 1968.

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $1.50

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REPORT OF THE ATTORNEY GENERALTO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES

ON THE ADMINISTRATION OF THEFOREIGN AGENTS REGISTRATION ACT OF 1938, AS AMENDED

FOR THE CALENDAR YEAR 1968

TO THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES

OF AMERICA IN CONGRESS ASSEMBLED:

I have the honor to report on the administrationof the Foreign Agents Registration Act of 1938, as amended,pursuant to Section 11 of that Act, which requires theAttorney General from time to time to report to the Congressconcerning the administration of the Act, as well as thenature, source and content of political propaganda dissemi-nated or distributed by agents of foreign principalsregistered under the Act.

It has been the policy of the Department since1950 to prepare a report each year. This report covers theadministration and enforcement of the Foreign AgentsRegistration Act for the calendar year 1968.

STATISTICAL SUMMARY

In 1968, fifty-two new registration statementswere filed and 74 registrations were terminated, resultingin a total of 446 active registrations on file as ofDecember 31, 1968. There were 344 short-form registrationstatements filed by individuals as officers, directors,employees or other persons rendering assistance to aregistrant for or in the interest of the registrant'sforeign principal.

During this same year, 103 amendments werefiled to correct deficiencies in registration statementson file. The staff of the Registration Section reviewed759 supplemental statements and processed 7,208 pieces ofboth incoming and outgoing correspondence which involvedother government agencies, registrants and the general public.

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ADMINISTRATION AND ENFORCEMENT

The Department employs normal administrativeprocedures to effect compliance with the Act, and all investi-gations are conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.A careful review of all statements and exhibits filed producedmany requests by the Department for additional information orother corrective action from registrants, and as indicatedabove, resulted in the submission of 103 amendments to state-ments on file. As an additional result of these procedures,no prosecutive action for wilful violations of the Act wasrequired to be initiated during the year,

The Department has also continued the practiceof disseminating copies of registration statements andsupplements thereto to interested departments and agenciesof the Federal Government as well as to certain Congressionalcommittees.

NATURE, SOURCE AND CONTENT OF POLITICAL PROPAGANDA

The following is an analysis of the principal trendsnoted during 1968 in the propaganda material disseminatedwithin the United States in the English language on behalfof foreign principals and geographical areas listed below.Principal publications are set forth together with the approxi-mate circulation figures per issue.

During the year 1968, 4,663 dissemination reportswere filed in connection with the distribution of 17,781different pieces of propaganda which were submitted with thereports.

Arab States

I. The League of Arab States, which is composed ofAlgeria, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, SaudiArabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Republic, and Yemen,maintains the Arab Information Center (AIC), 405 LexingtonAvenue, New York, New York, with branches located in Washington,D. C., Chicago, San Francisco, and Dallas. The two principalpublications of the AIC, in addition to press releases andpamphlets, are Arab News and Views, a monthly news sheet(23,000); and Arab World, a bimonthly magazine (18,200).

AIC publications placed primary emphasis on criti-cizing Israeli conduct following the Arab-Israeli fighting inJune, 1967. In the May, 1968 issue, Arab World stated that withIsrael continuing "its campaign to eradicate every trace ofArab Palestine, the existence of the Palestinian people has

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become the key issue in the Middle East." The AIC claimedthat before a compromise between the Arabs and Israelis ispossible, the Israeli leaders must give up their chauvinisticaims and recognize the rights of the Palestinian Arabs. TheArabs emphasized that it was intolerable that the Palestinianswere living under what they called conditions of strictmilitary control and "mass terror."

With the Arab refugee question being the key to anegotiated peace in the eyes of the League, AIC editorialscharged that Israel refused to provide for the refugees andthus refused to negotiate. With reference to a United Nationsrefugee resolution calling upon Israel to repatriate or compen-sate the refugees, the Arabs charged that "Israel has sincerepudiated its responsibility toward those it uprooted andhas turned a deaf ear toward each renewed United Nationsappeal." In support of the Arab position demanding an endto the "forced occupation of Arab land" and subjugation ofArab people, Arab World quoted Sir Anthony Nutting, GreatBritain's Minister of State and Foreign Affairs, as appealingto the United States to "use (its) influence on Israel toaccept an honorable peace" as had been offered by the Arabs.

To further emphasize its claim that Israel onlywanted war and disdained peace, the AIC often accused theIsraelis of consistent terrorist attacks. United Arab Republicspokesman, Muhammed Hassan el-Zayyat is reported to have statedthat "We are faced with a persistent, arrogant refusal byIsrael to live by anything but force."

The Israeli "aggression," the Arabs claim, is aresult of Western imperialism and world Zionism. The Arabssee the very formation of the Israeli state as a result ofEuropean colonialism which has now progressed to a point whereIsrael is "a Western outpost in Eastern lands," with no hopein sight for a lessening of Arab-Israeli tensions until Israelthrows off Western influence and domination. Gamal Abdul Nasseris reported to have stated that "the Israeli enemy, supportedby world Zionism and world imperialism, is not satisfied withits 1948 aggrandizement, but wants further expansion."

II. The Palestine Arab Delegation (PAD), 441Lexington Avenue, New York, New York, representing theLebanon-based Arab Higher Committee for Palestine, dissemi-nated intermittent press releases and letters to United Nationsand United States officials (average circulation of 800).

Releases of the PAD continuously attacked the UnitedStates, Great Britain and Secretary U Thant of the UnitedNations for what it considered to be inaction and Zionist

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favoritism. One release, a letter to Secretary U Thant,entitled "Diary of Crimes by Zionist Jews in the Gaza Strip,"charged U Thant with failing to implement the Security Council'sresolution calling upon Israel to "insure the safety, welfareand security" of the Palestinian Arab refugees.

United Nations Ambassador Goldberg and Vice PresidentHubert Humphrey bore the brunt of the PAD attacks upon theUnited States. The Arabs accused Vice President Humphrey ofsupporting the Jews merely to gain the large Jewish vote inthe United States, while Ambassador Goldberg allegedly con-trived "to divert the deliberations of the Security Council"in its attempt to eliminate what the Arabs saw as Israeliaggression.

In general, the PAD reported the United States to be"privy and (an) accessory to the Zionist war of aggression ofJune, 1967" and described the United States Government as"committed to obstructing any action taken against the Zionistaggressors by the United Nations."

III. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO),801 Second Avenue, New York, New York, representing the organi-zation of the same name in Cairo, Egypt, distributed pamphlets,press releases and an infrequent newsletter entitled Palestine Issue (8,000).

The PLO, like other Arab sources, emphasized thetheme of Israeli oppression in the occupied Arab lands andthe United Nations ineffective handling of the situation.In Palestine Issue the PLO stated "the Arab people know thatbecause of the prejudice of the United States and someWestern powers, the Security Council will never implement itsresolutions against 'Criminal Israel' . . ." and that the"Arab Palestine people have been experiencing bias, neglectand injustice at the hands of the United Nations." The actionthat was taken by the United Nations was likewise attackedand its resolutions were condemned by the PLO as demandingtoo much of the Arabs and too little of the Israelis. To aUnited Nations resolution calling upon the Arabs to respectthe territorial integrity and political independence of Israelin return for withdrawal of Israeli forces from the occupiedArab lands, a PLO editorial in Palestine Issue responded,"And who on earth would think that people with sane mindswould ask the Arab people to accept such an insane resolution"?The attitude of the Organization is that since the presenttroubles are a result of criminal Zionist expansionism, theArabs should be asked to give up nothing. The Arabs drew acomparison between Israel and Hitler's Germany claiming that"Hitler's goal was a Nazi Empire in Europe and the Israeligoal is a Zionist Empire in the Middle East."

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With regard to the issue of the Arab refugees, thePLO declared that since the United Nations had failed tofind a solution for settling the refugees, perhaps force wasthe only answer, and it frequently extolled the efforts ofthe "Fedayeen" or Arab freedom fighters to "liberate ArabPalestine from Israel."

IV. Information pertaining to Saudi Arabia wasdistributed through the public relations firm of Hill & Knowlton,Inc., 150 East 42nd Street, New York, New York. This firmoccasionally issues press releases on the Kingdom and dis-tributes an infrequent news sheet (average circulation of1,000).

Most articles on Saudi Arabia dealt primarily withwhat one article termed "the_gk4nt strides toward modernizationnow taking place in the rapidly developing nation of SaudiArabia." An official document of the Saudi Arabian MonetaryAgency is reported to have claimed extensive increases inSaudi Arabian productivity for the year 1967. Over 1,000 milesof new roadway were completed; exports had increased from$939.2 million to $1.7 billion; and the oil industry continuedto grow.

Although Saudi Arabia is oil-rich, it is water-poor,and of special interest in publication dealing with SaudiArabia is the new desalination project in which the role ofAmerican technological aid was greatly publicized. Ultimately,the articles report, the sea and United States aid willcontribute to a better life for the Saudi Arabs.

The articles further stated that Saudi Arabia owesa great deal to United States influence for helping the"modern renaissance" in Saudi Arabia to evolve. Besidesimporting many American products, Saudi Arabian officialsadmit to also importing many American ideas such as modernarchitecture and television which is "helping brighten andbroaden the lives of Saudi Arabs."

Australia

The Australian News & Information Bureau, 636 FifthAvenue, New York, New York, distributed the Australian DailyNews (415), Australian News Weekly Roundup (1,947), AustralianMonthly Finance and Commerce Notes (206), and two other monthlypublications, the Australian Science Newsletter (83), and theAustralian Agricultural Newsletter (85).

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The consistent theme developed in most of the Bureau'spublications was that Australia is a growing nation interestedin her rapidly developing world prestige and in the defenseand security of Southeast Asia and the Pacific.

On the domestic scene, the Australians claimed thatthe size of their nation's economy could double within thenext thirteen years. Mr. John Gorton, the Australian PrimeMinister, described the nation's 1968-1969 budget as a welfarebudget. Assuring the people of the nation's defense posture, Mr.Gorton continued to say, "In the years ahead, the amountspent on defense will grow in volume. Australia's capacityto fight will grow and the industrial capacity to back thefighting forces will also expand. Defense will not beneglected." The budget was reportedly designed to meet manyneeds such as building population, strengthening industry,developing resources, and improving education and technology.The Government seemed to be making an attempt to solve theage-old "guns or butter" dilemma by claiming that meetingthese needs would improve Australia's ability to defendherself. In short, Nr. Gorton said that "the main objective(of the budget) was to ensure a healthY and balanced growthof the economy so that the goals set in defense, in development,and in social welfare would be attained."

Placing further emphasis on defense, the WeeklyRoundup paid particular attention to Mr. Allen Fairhill,Minister of Defense, who spoke before the Australian House ofRepresentatives on May 2, 1968. Mr. Fairhill portrayedSoutheast Asia as a very critial area and claimed that itwas in Australia's own present and long-term interests thatthe nation take part in peace keeping efforts there. Mr. Fairhillcalled for Australian promotion of regional cooperationarrangements between the Indonesian and Malaysian Islands.On the question of Vietnam, Mr. Fairhill said that Australiashould pledge its full support of United States efforts. Healso made reference to President Johnson's partial bombinghalt in March and stated that Australia would be prepared tosupport even further reductions in United States bombing ofNorth Vietnam. When President Johnson halted all bombing ofNorth Vietnam in November, Prime Minister Gorton is reportedto have said that Australia "had consistently supported PresidentJohnson in his refusal to accept advice" to stop the bombing.Now, however, since the cessation "held out hopes for peace,"the Australian Government believed that there were good groundsfor the President's decision and "we sincerely hope it will beproved right by future events."

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In December, the Australians hailed the SouthVietnamese Government's decision to attend the expanded peacetalks in Paris as a necessary step toward peace in Vietnam.The Prime Minister said that he was pleased that South Vietnamdecided to attend because "Australia had always regarded itas essential that the position of South Vietnam be safeguardedin moves to end the war in Vietnam."

Belgium

The Belgian Information Service, 50 RockefellerPlaza, New York, New York, distributed occasional pressreleases and the monthly pamphlets Belgian News (800) andMemo from Belgium (800).

A substantial amount of the material published bythe Belgian Information Service dealt with the cultural aspectsof Belgium. Certain topics covered were the Belgian marketof antique works of art, archaeological efforts by Belgianscientists, and the national library of Belgium. Many publi-cations dealt with education, transportation, economics andsocial work in Belgium.

Other Information Service releases were concernedwith describing the Belgian Government and electoral system.One press release entitled "The Composition of the BelgianGovernment" gave an historical view of the composition ofthe Belgian Cabinet and then proceeded with a detailed biographyof the present cabinet members. Another informative releasediscussed the Belgian electoral system which is based onproportional representation and compulsory voting. There arethree major political parties in Belgium: the Social ChristianParty; the Belgian Socialist Party; and the Party for Libertyand Progress. The major partisan issues tend to revolvearound religion and language differences, as Belgium is abi-lingual country split between French and Dutch speakingpeoples.

The Communist Party in Belgium is described as beingnot very important and split between pro-Peking and pro-Moscowforces.

Biafra

The Office of the Special Representative of theRepublic of Biafra, 342 Madison Avenue, Suite 814, New York,distributed occasional press releases on behalf of the Republicof Biafra.

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News from Biafra centered entirely on the Nigeria-Biafra war and on what Biafra termed the genocide that Nigeriawas committing against Biafra. In early news releases theBiafran Office centered its attacks on Great Britain, theUnited States and the Soviet Union, for allegedly supportingNigeria in her effort to put down the Biafran revolution.Great Britain bore the brunt of the attack with Biafra claimingthat there was no doubt that British "mercenaries are servingin the Nigerian Army, Air Force and Navy; yet people have shuttheir eyes to these facts because they have sold theirconsciences to Lagos." Biafran spokeemen further warned thatthe day that British troops entered Biafran territorialwaters would be "taken as the day that Britain declared waron Biafra." They claimed that it was a "strange marriage ofconvenience" with both Great Britain and the Soviet Unionsupporting Nigeria and supplying her with arms.

Biafra's attacks on the United States did not allegeany direct involvement by this country, but were concernedwith her refusal to take any positive action to aid Biafra.Biafra often asked the United States to persuade Britain toremove her supposed troops and supplies from Biafra. Dr.K. 0. Mbadiwe, Biafran special envoy, urged that "The UnitedStates should use its moral weight to see that the bloodshedof the Nigeria-Biafra war stops." At the same time, heexpressed his deep disappointment at the "attitude of completeindifference which America officially adopts."

In many news releases Biafran spokesmen cited theinability of the United Nations to take any action towardstopping the war, but claimed that Great Britain, the UnitedStates and the Soviet Union were at fault for this in thatthey joined together to hold the world body "in ransom." InMarch, Dr. Mbadiwe urged the United Nations to adopt a threepoint program to end the war. He called for the United Nationsto:

"(1) persuade Great Britain and Russia to withdrawall military supplies and personnel from Nigeria;

(2) to use its good offices to get the two warringgroups to stop the war and get to the conference table;

(3) to get the International Red Cross to assert,with United Nations backing, its right to move medicalsupplies to Biafra."

In April of 1968, the Government of Biafra announcedthat it agreed to attend a peace conference proposed by GreatBritain, but that it would not accept the proposed meetingplace of London. It demanded that the conference be held in

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an African capital city and not in Great Britain since itfelt that Britain was not really neutral, and that she hadhidden intentions to retain control over Nigeria, originallyone "of her own creations."

By the early summer months, the theme of Biafranpropaganda changed from that of attacking foreign powers toexpressing intense anxiety over the possible extinction ofthe Biafran Ibos. Biafra began to call upon voluntarypressure groups to force their governments to aid her in herfight against Nigeria whose "goal was not peace but des-truction" and genocide. It became a war of starvation.Biafra claimed that Nigeria was poisoning what little foodthe Ibos did have and that Great Britain was clearly supportingNigeria's political aims by demanding that all relief foodand other aid be channeled through Nigerian inspection. InJuly, Biafran officials charged that Nigeria was committing agenocide by slowly eliminating the Ibo people and that "sixthousand men, women and children die every day of hungeralone. By the end of August, one million Biafrans will havedied of hunger."

Biafra presented a peace proposal based on threesteps. First, it proposed an immediate cease fire with thecease fire line policed by an "International Force." Secondly,it called for an immediate removal of the "economic blockademounted by Nigeria against Biafra." The third step was acall for a conference with Nigeria to discuss economiccooperation, compensation for war losses to both sides andthe holding of a plebiscite to determine the true wishes ofthe people in the disputed area.

Brazil

The Brazilian Government Trade Bureau, 551 FifthAvenue, New York, New York, distributed the monthly publicationBrazilian Bulletin.

Information from Brazil focused primarily on thereported increase in stability of the Brazilian economy andpolitical structure. A United States Embassy study was citedand was reported to have stated that today's Brazil has "morestable political and economic conditions" than ever before andmore progress in the future is very likely.

President Costa e Silva declared that beside over-coming a recession in early 1967, Brazil had gone on to setnew records in economic achievement in 1968, due to increasedindustrialization. Brazilian Bulletin often discussed the

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subject of industrialization and its primary stimulus, govern-ment incentives. As reported, "Incentives offered by theGovernment apply in four categories: investment in certainindustrial sectors; agricultural investment; price stabilizingenterprises; and regional investment." 'What this industriali-zation and improvement meant to Brazil was a shift in theproduction possibilities curve of its economy. There was asubstantial rise in the amount of manufactured goods producedwhile the volume of raw materials processed remained the sameeven though their prices fell on the world market.

There was an unexpected slight rise in import volumeand fall in the amount of materials exported from Brazil, butby May, Brazil was experiencing a more favorable balance oftrade with imports dropping by about 6%. The earlier balancewas explained as being a result of increased importation ofmachinery and other capital needed in Brazil's industrializationeffort and less European demand for Brazilian agricultural goods.

In July, Brazilian Bulletin discussed a speech byFinance Minister Delfim Neto in which he listed the five maingoals of Brazil's economic program. These were:

"1. Employment and production at full capacity2. Stimulation of market growth3. Keep the inflation rate going down4. Even out regional income disparities5. Keep the balance of payments healthy."

In the realm of international relations, news fromBrazil revolved around the theme that there are great in-equalities in the world with the less developed countriesat the mercy of the more wealthy nations. Brazilian ForeignMinister Pinto is reported to have stated that "The gulfbetween developed and developing countries has never beenso wide." Mr. Pinto complained that the "cooperation fromthe wealthy countries has fallen short of expectations."During another speech he suggested that ways be found so thattrade would "cease to be a means of exploitation of the pro-duction effort of the less developed countries" and urgedadoption of a system of guarantees for raw material pricesin world trade.

Chile

The Embassy of Chile, Washington, D. C., distributeda fortnightly publication entitled News from Chile.

Agrarian reform, a new Plan for ConstitutionalReform, and rebuilding the economy were common subjects ofthe Chilean Embassy's newsletters.

Rafael Moreno, Executive Vice President of theChilean Agrarian Reform Corporation divided the reform processinto six points. These points were:

1. Preservation of democracy in the nation2. Increase in production3. Create communities of farmers who work the same

land they cultivated as farm laborers4. Rapid process of agrarian reform in accordance

with the capacity of the country5. A system that recognizes the private property

of the beneficiaries6. To operate in a system of cooperatives.

The Plan for Constitutional Reform was reportedlydrafted in order to "solve conflicts between the Executive andLegislative branches; to establish the obligation that everynew Government submit in the first six months of its mandatea legal program Bill; and leaves to the Executive the initiativeconcerning all public expenditures." Chilean President Freiclaimed that this reform was necessary in order to give theExecutive sufficient power to solve the nation's economicproblems. Other than these reforms, the Plan provided forthe acceleration of the passage of laws and authorizes thePresident to dissolve the Congress once during his adminis-tration.

The objectives of the economic program in Chile werepronounced in November, 1968 by Minister of Finance AndresZaldivar. This program was intended to: "break the lowrhythm of productive growth; diminish the rate of inflation;provide a more equitable distribution of the fruits of develop-ment and property; organize and bring about the participationof the community in the various activities of society; andmake more complete the national sovereignty by greater economicindependence."

As the year 1968 came to an end, President Frei helda news conference that was reported upon by the Embassy ofChile. After stressing the economic and political reformwhich had taken place in Chile in 1968, the President wenton to say that he considered that Chile's relations with herneighbor nations had improved and that he felt that 1969 wouldshow increased trade and understanding between Chile and othernations. He concluded the conference by stating, "Our nationis going through a stage of vitality, with great creativeimpulse, and progress such as never has been attained before."

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China (People's Republic of)

Publications from the People's Republic of Chinawere distributed in the United States by two registrants:Henry Noyes (dba China Books and Periodicals), 2929 24thStreet, San Francisco, California; and David Rosen (dba ChinaPublications), 95 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Amongthe major periodicals distributed were the weekly news magazinePeking Review (1,770); the monthly magazines China Pictorial (775), China Reconstructs (775), Chinese Literature (237),and China's Medicine (70); and a monthly newsletter Letterfrom China (200). Also, printed in Chinese, were the dailynewspaper Renmin Ribao (134) and Renmin Huabao, a monthlymagazine (320). In addition, a number of books, pamphlets,posters and records were distributed to various recipients.

Three topics were recurrent in Communist Chinesepublications in 1968. The thoughts of Mao Tse-tung, the warin Vietnam and the so-called United States imperialist threatwere extensively discussed in nearly every Red Chinese publi-cation.

The thoughts of Mao, his photographs, and hisliterary works dominated Communist Chinese literature. Mao's"cultural revolution," described as a mass movement of theproletariat to seize power from the capitalist bourgeoisie,was proclaimed a great success in 1968. Steady gains inagricultural production, industry and science were reportedand the claim was made that all these achievements were madewithout incurring any debt. The most significant claim madeby Red Chinese propagandists, however, was that this advance-ment and success was a result of "Mao's great inspiration."Letter from China described the cultural revolution, a productof Mao's thought, as the "time when the thought of Mao Tse-tungwas established around the world on a scale no system ofrevolutionary ideas ever reached before."

In September, the cultural revolution was reportedto be "in high gear." This was a result of the allegedsuccess of Red China's agricultural communes, which "are thebasic unit of rural China." It was stated in Letter from Chinathat the communes "are a brilliant invention which greatlyincreases the country's efficiency in farming and all amenitiesof rural life and makes China unbeatable in any defensive war."

Finally, the cultural revolution entered the fieldof education. This new line in education is reportedly basedon three tenets: All schools from the primary to collegeshould be directly controlled and led by the working class;

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in all schools, political study is basic and Mao's works areemphasized; students will be drawn from the ranks of workersand peasants and upon graduation will continue to be workersand peasants.

A favorite target of Red Chinese propaganda in 1968was the United States and the capitalist economic system.Chinese publications often expressed China's constant "fearof the threat of armed encirclement" of China, with the UnitedStates as the designer and leader of the plan. The UnitedStates was commonly characterized as the world's foremostimperialist agressor with China being "the center of worldrevolution and of the struggle against U. S. imperialism."Letter from China claimed that "the world's peoples moveinexorably towards confrontation with U. S. imperialism,towards a world anti-imperialist front." This same newsletteroften exploited domestic problems in the United States sayingthat "U. S. imperialism faces an explosive situation at homeas well as abroad." It contended that Americans can no longerfeel secure for the "powerful struggle of the American Blackpeople erupted last summer into violence" and characterizedthe disruption as a "rebellion that U. S. monopoly capitalismcannot resolve." In May, China Pictorial carried an eightpage fold-out offering its support to what it termed the"Afro-American Struggle Against Violent Repression." Alongwith many photographs of rioting in American cities, it printeda statement by Mao Tse-tung who proclaimed, "On behalf of theChinese people, I hereby express resolute support for the juststruggle of the black people in the United States."

Another trouble spot for the United States, Vietnam,was also a much discussed topic in Chinese propaganda. Communistpublications lent full support to North Vietnam and the NationalLiberation Front (NLF) and predicted the inevitable defeat ofthe United States with statements such as, "The splendid featsof the Front for National Liberation . . . show the people'sforces growing from strength to strength and the forces ofaggression approaching their doom." The Tet Offensive wasdescribed as a great victory "Unprecedented in military history."In November, Letter from China claimed that President Johnson's •bombing halt in North Vietnam almost won the United StatesPresidential election for Vice President Humphrey, bat "Likehis earlier announcement of 'limited bombing' in parts of NorthVietnam, this was a fake." The Vietnam war was viewed by theCommunists as another prime example of the United States, apowerful nation, using its powers for destruction and aggression.

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China (Republic of, Taiwan)

Material concerning the Republic of China is dis-tributed in the United States by the Chinese InformationService which maintains offices at 100 West 32nd Street, NewYork, New York, and at 141 Battery Street, San Francisco,California. The principal publications were Free China Weekly,a newspaper (7,500); News from China, a daily news release(220); Background on China (214); Report on Mainland China(113) and intermittent feature sheets. In addition, theInformation Service is engaged in the production and distri-bution of brief documentary films for television, distributedto approximately 100 television stations.

Again as in previous years, reports of events takingplace in Mainland China dominated the Nationalist Chinesepublications. Each edition of Free China Weekly carried asection called "What's happening on the mainland," whichconsistently reported any events on the mainland which wouldappear damaging to the regime of Mao Tse-tung. Typical topicsin this section were: "Famine"; "Persecution"; "Murder";"Subversion"; "Resistance"; and "Sabotage". This publicationand Report on Mainland China also carried many articlespredicting the overthrow of Mao's regime. In October it wasreported that "All-out war against Mao Tse-tung and ChineseCommunism was expected to erupt at any time and that theTaiwan Government would be prepared to provide support to the"700 million enslaved Chinese on the mainland." Severalreasons for the pending overthrow were reported. The NationalistChinese claimed that Mao's ideas were contrary to Chinesetradition and had not been acceptect. Mao had broken manypromises in the past nineteen years and his power was supposedlyjust about exhausted. Besides this, the claim was made thatlife on the mainland has been made "atrocious" by the Communistsand that "more than 3,000 bodies were found floating on theWest River following a series of factional clashes and armedfights between the supporters and opponents of Mao Tse-tungin Kwangsi and Kwangtung provinces." In an address to thepeople of Taiwan, in October, President Chiang Kai-shekdeclared, "Our National Revolution continues, perseveres, anddevelops. It has brought Mao Tse-tung to realization thathis rule of violence and despotism is doomed." The Chinesefurther claimed that the survival of the free world dependsupon the end of Mao's Communist regime and the liberation ofthe Chinese mainland.

In international relations, the Nationalist Chineseplaced primary emphasis on the upholding of the United Nationscharter and the preservation of her legal status as United

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Nations representative of China. Another international goalof China, as expressed in Free China Weekly is the "enhancementof the free world's understanding of the ultimate success ofour counterattack and collapse of the Chinese Communistregime."

Of special interest to the Nationalist Chinese in1968 was their relationship with the United States. Taiwanfrequently urged more cooperation between the two allies anddeclared that the Chinese Cultural Renaissance Movement, amovement designed to counter Mao's Cultural Revolution, ispartially designed to "help the general public in the U. S.better understand the Republic of China and what the Chinesepeople on Taiwan are doing." The Republic of China oftenurged that she and the United States work together to oustMao's regime and in November, after President Nixon's election,it was reported that the Taiwan Government hoped that the newPresident would adopt a firm position against Communism,although no dramatic changes in American foreign policy wereexpected. Information Service publications frequently ex-pressed their firm support of the United States efforts inVietnam but also voiced their doubts about the possiblesuccess of the Paris peace talks and the related bombing haltin North Vietnam.

In the realm of domestic affairs, the ChineseCultural Renaissance Movement held the spotlight, and wastermed the "most powerful and most important weapon in thecultural and ideological war against Communism." The Move-ment was initiated by President Chiang Kai-shek in 1965 toipromote a new and modern China based on democratic principals.Of major importance to this program is the promotion ofscientific, technical, and industrial development in thecountry. In November, the President expressed his satisfactionover the Movement's achievements over the past three years. Inthe February issue of Background on China, Prime MinisterC. K. Yen was reported as saying that the goal of Taiwan'spolitical and social construction was to "transform it intoa land of democracy, freedom, prosperity and happiness andthus become better equipped to wage its political war torecover the mainland."

Cuba

Cuban publications were distributed by Robert Brauer,761 Ninth Avenue North, St. Petersburg, Florida. Materialdisseminated in 1968 included Granma, a weekly newspaper withSpanish and English editions (18 each); Bohemia (Spanish), aweekly magazine (18); and Cuba (Spanish), a monthly magazine(18).

357-453 0-69-2

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The year 1968 was known in Cuba as the "Year of theHeroic Guerrilla." Fidel Castro's revolution and his fightagainst "counterrevolutionaries," the war in Vietnam and theactivities of other South American revolutionaries such asChe Guevara were frequent topics in the Cuban publications.

In September, the newspaper Granma carried the textof one of Castro's speeches in which he praised the successof his revolution and resulting regime, and claimed that"Our country is becoming a society of workers, manual orbrain workers, revolutionary students and combatants." TheCuban leader continued, "We must point out that today therevolution can feel satisfied with the great efforts that havebeen made in the province of Havana in productive work aswell as in the ideological field."

Castro saw counterrevolutionary activities as aserious threat to the success of his revolution. He calledthe counterrevolutionaries products of imperialism and oftenlinked their activities to the United States and especiallyto the Central Intelligence Agency. He vowed that "beforethe Revolution ceases to be, not one single counterrevolutionarywill remain with his head on his shoulders in this country."

In July, Castro dedicated the 15th anniversary ofhis revolution to the Bolivian revolutionary, Che Guevara.Castro called him "the strongest defender of man's conscienceas an instrument of development in the Revolution . .Granma reported that Che Guevara's campaign in Bolivia hadnot ended with his death. The newspaper carried a speech byInti Peredo, a top official in Guevara's guerrilla organizationwho proclaimed that "Guerrilla warfare in Bolivia is not dead.It has just begun." When in July, the diary of Che Guevarawas first distributed, Granma reported that the Cuban peoplegave the book a warm reception, calling it "a valued gift tothe people."

Keeping in line with its support of the "HeroicGuerrilla," Cuban propaganda frequently praised the Vietnameseguerrilla and the North Vietnamese people in the battle againstwhat Granma termed the "Yankee genocide in Vietnam." Aneditorial pronounced that "our Party and our Government con-gratulate the Vietnamese people and their vanguard organizationsfor the victories obtained in the revolutionary struggle, andwe once more reiterate . . . unconditional solidarity of theCuban Revolution with the heroic struggle of the people ofVietnam." In November, Granma reported on the Second SymposiumAgainst Yankee Genocide in Vietnam which was held in Cuba. It

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quoted Melba Hernandez, president of the Symposium OrganizingCommittee, as saying that the United States "began by killingin order to win and now they are bent on killing and destroyingsimply because they cannot win . . . " The general declarationof this Committee was that "Yankee imperialism employs itsmilitary power to destroy an entire people."

When discussing the invasion of Czechoslovakia bythe Warsaw Pact nations, Cuba staunchly supported the invasion.Fidel Castro is reported to have stated in an address concerningthese events that Czechoslovakia was moving toward a counter-revolutionary situation, toward the United States and towardcapitalism, and that the invasion was necessary to preventthis from taking place.

Cuban publications also displayed sympathy for theblack militant movement in the United States. It was reportedthat George Mason Murray, Minister of Education of the BlackPanther Party, said while in Havana that it was the CubanRevolution and Che Guevara that inspired the black movementin the United States. Granma professed that "It is clearthat the U. S. blackman's struggle today is for liberty,because blacks constitute a colonialized people within theimperialist society."

There is little reference in Cuban publications tothe many hijackings of United States planes to Cuba. Theseincidents were usually only dealt with by a brief statementsetting forth the name of the airline, the plane's destinationand the number of people aboard. There was very little dis-cussion of the hijackers themselves or of what took placewhile the aircraft remained in Cuba.

Ghana

The Ghana Information Services, 565 Fifth Avenue,New York, New York, disseminated Ghana Today, a biweeklynews magazine (2,000) and Ghana Review, an occasional magazine.

Announcements emanating from Ghana early in theyear were very optimistic and predicted greater stability andgrowth for the country which had recently overthrown its rulerKwame Nkrumah. One frequent prediction was the nation'sreturn to civilian rule which was reported to be the "supremeand central objective" of the National Liberation Council (NLC),the ruling body of Ghana. General Ankrah, head of the NLC alsoannounced that the country was making great progress towardsrevitalizing the economy and "promoting good neighborlinesstowards friendly people who live around us."

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The Information Services were much concerned with thenation's development since the ousting of Nkrumah. On thesecond anniversary of the revolution, in February, one entireissue of Ghana Today was devoted to describing Ghana'sachievements under the two year old National LiberationCouncil. The Information Services claimed that "within thesetwo years, far-reaching decisions have had to be taken in anattempt to correct the injustices of the past and effect thelong-awaited changes in the economic, social and politicallife of this country." It contrasted the hard times underthe Nkrumah regime to the "comparative freedom and justicewhich are once again evident in Ghanian society." In supportof this statement the Information Services reported that theNLC had restored personal rights and that democratic rule isnow being realized in Ghana under its new constitution.

Of special interest to the Ghanians is their newCo-operative Movement in agricultural production. This planwhich Ghana Today calls the "fourth sector of the nationaleconomy" is reported to have taken a leading role in theeconomic reconstruction of the country by improving livingstandards and increasing the agricultural productivity ofGhana. The Information Services declared that the NLC "isdoing its best to promote an efficient and truly co-operativemovement whose activities will be purely economic and willnot be allowed to get itself involved in politics."

Information Services publications contained muchpraise for the NLC and its efforts to develop a democraticgovernment based on a parliamentary system. Of primaryimportance to the Ghanians was the establishment of theConstitutional Commission and the Manpower Board. TheCommission was to draft a constitution based on individualrights and a free electoral system, while the Manpower Boardwas established to develop the educational and occupationaltraining systems at all levels in the country, in order toprepare the people for popular government. Other reportedgovernmental achievements were: the reorganization of thePublic Service; the establishment of the Income Commission;and the creation of a public library system, the DefenseCouncil and the Press Council. Finally, in June, the NLC setSeptember 30, 1969 as the date that civilian government wouldbe installed in Ghana.

In the realm of international relations, the Infor-mation Services praised its nation's efforts to rebuild itsrelations with all nations of the world under the banner of"non-alignment and balanced neutrality." To substantiate itsclaim of better relations, Ghana cited its participation in

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the Organization for African Unity, its acceptance of a WestAfrican Economic Community, and trips by General Ankrah toCanada, the United States and Great Britain. The mainobjective of Ghanian foreign policy was reported to be thepromotion of unity and understanding in Africa, and Ghanafelt that the best vehicle for this move would be closereconomic ties between the African countries.

In regard to the racial question which seemed tobe plaguing many of her neighbors, Ghana stated that sheopposes "racialism in all its forms" and strives to establishequal rights for all men. The Information Services continued"we have denounced in no uncertain terms, South Africa'sapartheid policy (and) we have every reason to congratulateourselves that racial discrimination does not exist" in Ghana.

Great Britain

Information on Great Britain was filed by tworegistrants in 1968. The British Information Services, 835Third Avenue, New York, New York, distributed a wide varietyof material. Its regular publications were: Today's BritishPapers, a daily news sheet (601); British Record, a bimonthlypolitical and economic news sheet (7,938); and several infor-mation papers and pamphlets of varying circulation. TheBritish-American Chamber of Commerce, 655 Madison Avenue,New York, New York, distributed British-American Trade News,a biannual magazine (9,000) and several news sheets and lettersto public officials.

A great many articles in British Information Servicespublications in 1958 concerned Great Britain's strugglingeconomy. In January, it was reported by the British Recordthat only eight weeks after the British Government had devaluedthe pound, it was planning further economic measures to builda balance of payments surplus by shifting British economicresources into the export industry. The newsletter declaredthat in the wake of devaluation the independent and authori-tative National Institute of Economic and Social Researchforcasted an eventual balance of payments surplus of over$2 billion.

The first economic proposal to be announced was acut in public expenditure by $720 million in 1968-1969 andalmost $1 billion in 1969-1970, to make this money availableto the export industry. The next element of this plan "tomake devaluation work," the nation's budget, was presented inMarch and was described as a "tough budget." It called for a

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$2.2 billion increase in taxes. The British Governmentbelieved that these measures to restrict consumption wereharsh, but that they paid off. In November, Chancellor ofthe Exchequer, Mr. Roy Jenkins, reported that the Britishbalance of payments deficit had been reduced from $1.2 billionto $300 million and foreign confidence in sterling had beensubstantially restored. Mr. Jenkins termed the trend a"growing buoyancy" in the economy.

In foreign affairs British publications portrayedthe nation as being most concerned with defense, the Commcn-wealth of Nations, and her other former colonies. In November,the British Record discussed a speech by Mr. Denis Healey,British Defense Minister, who outlined the Government'sreaction to the Czechoslovak crisis in relation to Britian'sdefense. Mr. Healey offered the opinion that the Czech incidentproved beyond doubt the need for NATO and necessitated therevaluation of that organization's ability to preserve thesecurity and freedom of the Western nations. Mr. Healey saidthat "Britain's security depends above all on peace in Europe"and that peace in Europe depends on a strong NATO.

In 1968 the British Government implied that it wasa mistake for the nation to attempt to exercise unlimitedpower in every part of the world. This type of activity wasjust too much of a strain on British resources. In the wordsof Mr. Michael Stewart, Secretary of State for Foreign andCommonwealth Affairs, "The way in which Britain must lookafter her interests and fulfill her duty to mankind must beby active participation in the U. N., the Commonwealth ofNations and NATO." In line with this policy, it was announcedin January that British forces would be withdrawn from Malaysiaand Singapore by the end of 1971 and in September, that theformer colony of Swaziland had become independent.

Of particular interest to Britain in the realm offoreign affairs in 1968 was her relations with the secessionistcolony of Rhodesia. In October, the Information Servicespublished "Rhodesia White Paper" which set forth six principleswhich the British Government regarded as minimum requirementsupon which it would base a settlement and grant Rhodesia itsindependence. These are as follows:

1. Unimpeded progress toward majority rule2. Guarantees against retrogressive amendments of

the Constitution3. Immediate improvement of the political status

of the African population

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4. Progress toward ending racial discrimination5. Proof that any basis proposed for independence

was acceptable to all the people of Rhodesia6. No oppression of the majority by the minority

or of the minority by the majority.

India

The Information Service of the Embassy of India,National Press Building, 529 14th Street, N. W., Washington,D. C., disseminates two regular publications, India News, aweekly newspaper and Foreign Affairs Record, a monthly magazine.It also distributes an occasional news sheet, Indiagram, andsome press releases.

Overcoming political, economic and social instabilitywas of prime importance to India in 1968. India News reportedupon the Indian Prime Minister's speech to Parliament whenshe "appealed to all political parties to evolve a 'commondenominator of approach and understanding' on issues of majornational importance and to dedicate themselves to building afirm democratic base in the country." Mrs. Gandhi statedthat the government was willing to work with all politicalinterests in solving the major national problems such as foodshortages, economic difficulties and the issue of the Indianofficial language. The Prime Minister said that India'sproblems could be overcome through cooperative effort withinthe framework of planned economic development. In her ownwords, "We are pursuing a middle path (in economic theory).No matter what are the difficulties in agriculture, industry,public sector or in the private sector, we have to overcomethem intelligently and within the broad framework of plannedeconomic development." She saw progress through cooperationand planning possible because of her "unlimited faith" inthe goodness and decency of the Indian people.

Of special interest to the Indians was the nation'srelations with her neighbor, Pakistan. In April, the PrimeMinister is reported to have stated that India had great hopesof improving her relations with Pakistan. She said that pastbitterness between the two countries should be forgotten. ThePrime Minister expressed her belief that both had many problemsin common and that they should work cooperatively to solve them.Mrs. Gandhi said that India "accepts Pakistan as an independentsovereign state" and that the two nations should try toappreciate rather than exploit each other's problems. Re-lations between India and Pakistan did not improve much in 1968,however, and India constantly charged in her publications that"despite all provocations . . . India had always endeavored toreach peaceful settlement of all our differences." She claimedthat this was unilateral action on India's part.

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India's relations with Red China were also quitestrained in 1968. Indian publications frequently expressedthe fear that their borders were in danger of Chineseincursions, and in June, it was reported by India News thatthe Indian Government had charged the Communist Chinese withpromoting an "insidious propaganda offensive" aimed atinciting subversive elements in North-Eastern India to over-throw the Indian Government. Defense Minister Swaran Singhclaimed that India had consistently attempted to settledisputes with Red China by peaceful means, but that "Chinacontinues hostilities." In August, Nawab Ali Yavar, IndianAmbassador to the United States, called relations betweenthe United States and India "very good." He cited certaindifferences between the two countries but characterized themas natural and unimportant. Referring to recent talks betweenhis Government and the United States, the Ambassador had onlypraise, calling the discussions "a very welcome breakthroughin our relations."

Indonesia

The Embassy of Indonesia, 2020 Massachusetts Avenue,N. W., Washington, D. C., distributed the biweekly newsrelease Indonesian News and Views, and a bimonthly magazinecalled Focus on Indonesia.

Publications from Indonesia placed their primaryattention upon the country's efforts to revitalize her economy.In January, General Soeharto, Acting President of the Republic,voiced his determination "to practice the rule of law and thelaw of economics as the essential elements in the courseof development of the national economy."

In February, the Government listed a number offields of national activities to serve as the major vehiclesfor progress toward economic stability. Several of the moreimportant areas of concern were:

1. food production, supply, and distribution2. clothing3. preparations for the start of a five-year

National Development Plan4. promotion of foreign trade and development5. rural development6. re-enforcement of law and order.

On March 27, 1968, General Soeharto was appointedPresident of the Republic of Indonesia. The Provisional People'sAssembly declared this act necessary because the establishmentof economic and political stability in the country demanded thepowers of a full president.

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General Soeharto, on June 6, announced the formationof a new cabinet. He referred to it as the "DevelopmentCabinet" and its main tasks were as follows:

1. to create political and economic stabilization2. to draft and implement the five-year development

plan3. to hold general elections4. to restore order and security.

It was expressed that if Indonesia became economicallyand politically stable, the nation could become the "mainanchor for peace and security in Southeast Asia." This claimwas used by the Indonesians as a rationale for improving theirrelations with the United States and for seeking aid from theAmerican Government.

Israel

Four registrants distributed information in 1968 onbehalf of Israel. The Jewish Agency-American Section, 515Park Avenue, New York, New York, distributed The Israel Digest,a biweekly news magazine (8,000); Israel Among the Nations, awall newspaper for classroom use; press releases (average 125);and other miscellaneous publications. The Israel InformationServices, 11 East 70th Street, New York, New York, distributedNews from Israel, a biweekly newsletter (6,000); press releases(average 1,500); and occasional pamphlets (average 6,700).The Services also distributed radio broadcasts entitled:Vistas of Israel (weekly); Israel Press Review (weekly);Israel Almanac (bimonthly); and Passover in Israel.

Israel Communications, Inc., 477 Madison Avenue,New York, New York and Ruder & Finn, Inc., 130 East 59thStreet, New York, New York, distributed occasional pressreleases of a cultural and commercial nature.

The aftermath of the June, 1967 war with the Arabnations, continuing Arab terrorist attacks in Israel, andIsrael's plans for peace were themes dominating Israeli publi-cations in 1968.

In October, The Israel Digest reported 1968 to heone of Israel's best years on record, in terms of economicperformance. Budget Chief Moshe Zandberg predicted that"Output will increase this year by 13 per cent, investmentsby 25 per cent, exports by 18 per cent . . . and prices by only2.5 per cent." Mr. Zandberg called the economy successfullybalanced in that an abundance of imports induced rapid economicgrowth, while at the same time low production costs buoyedexports.

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Israel viewed its "reunification of Jerusalem" afterthe June war as one of its major achievements of 1968. TheGovernment's first steps were to remove all physical barriersbetween the Israeli and former Arab sectors of the city, andthey then made many attempts at modernization in the Holy City.In January, The Israel Digest reported vast improvements inthe city's roads, sanitation and water supply. The articlecontinued its praise of the reunification program by stressingthat Arab-Jewish relations were improving and the Arab standardof living was on the rise.

Throughout the year, Israeli publications reportedmany incidents involving Arab terrorists. When a terroristband struck the Israeli capital, Tel Aviv, Mayor MordechaiNamir called for calm in the city and an end to violencewhich erupted following a series of bomb explosions. Israelipolice took many of the city's Arab residents into protectivecustody as the search for the Arab terrorists, described as"young hotheads," took place. This action was reportedlytaken in order to preserve the generally "good relationsbetween (Tel Aviv's) Jewish and Arab residents."

Many violations of the June, 1967 cease-fire agreementand incursions, into its territory, especially by the Jordanians,were also frequently reported by Israel. Referring to aJordanian artillery attack in February, Israeli Premier LeviEshkol declared, "IAire shall not acquiesce in a situation inwhich the Jordanian forces can open fire whenever they feelso inclined." He continued to emphasize that "we preferredrestraint (to armed rebuttal) in the hope that wisdom wouldprevail (but) I suggest that the rulers of Jordan carefullyconsider their ways."

"We shall regard the readiness of the Arab Govern-ments to sit down with us face to face as a test of theiractual desire to make peace," so declared Israel's ForeignMinister, Abba Eban in February, as reported by The Israel Digest. Mr. Eban stressed that Israel wished to see an endto war and 'hostility with the Arabs, and that this end couldonly be accomplished by direct talks between the Arabs andIsraelis, held under United Nations auspices.

In May, Mr. Israel Galili, Israel's Minister incharge of Information, reaffirmed the nation's stand for directtalks when he announced that the pre-June, 1967 national bordersin the Middle East no longer existed, that Israel was not aboutto withdraw from the present cease-fire lines and that face-to-face Arab-Israeli talks were necessary to re-establish andsecure the borders.

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On October 8, Mr. Abba Eban presented Israel'snine-point peace plan to the United Nations which set forthIsrael's ideas on just what should be negotiated in the directtalks. These points are here summarized:

1. The cease-fire must be followed by a dulynegotiated, just and lasting peace.

2. The present cease-fire lines are to be replacedby permanent boundries.

3. An Arab-Israel pledge of mutual non-aggression.4. Guaranteed freedom of movement in the area

including free port facilities for Jordan on Israel'sMediterranean Coast.

5. Equality of navigation rights.6. A "Mid-East conference" to chart a five-year

plan to solve the refugee problem.7. A status for Jerusalem should be worked out

with regard to the universal nature of the Holy Places,"which should come under the responsibility of thosewho hold them in reverence."

8. Arab States should recognize the sovereignty,integrity and right to national existence of Israel, asexpressed in the November 22 United Nations resolution.

9. Regional cooperation and common approach toregional means and resources.

When this plan, as well as the direct talks werespurned by the Arab leaders, Premier Levi Eshkol insisted thatdespite the Arabs' refusal to negotiate, "Israel will persistin her efforts for coexistence with the Arabs," and willcontinue to do her utmost to prove her desire for improvedrelations.

In the realm of foreign relations with non-Arabnations, relations with the United States were of prime concernto Israel. In February, News from Israel carried a story onPremier Eshkol's visit to the United States. This visitreportedly reaffirmed "the traditionally close, friendly andcooperative ties which link the people of Israel and the U. S."

In December, on his return to Israel from New York,Defense Minister Moshe Dayan declared that he found in the UnitedStates no indication of any change in American policy towardIsrael. Mr. Dayan made these remarks as a rebuttal to Mr.-William Scranton the Middle East envoy of the then, President-elect Nixon. Mr. Dayan criticized Mr. Scranton for implyingthat any improvement in relations between the United Statesand the Arabs would be at Israel's expense.

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Japan

Several registrants representing Japanese tradeinterests distributed press releases, pamphlets and lettersto members of Congress and other government officials. Theseregistrants were: Japan Trade Center, 393 Fifth Avenue, NewYork, New York; United States-Japan Trade Council, 1000Connecticut Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C.; Japan SteelInformation Center, 230 Park Avenue, New York, New York and1000 Connecticut Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C.; The PublicRelations Board, 75 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois;Daniels & Houlihan, 1819 H Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.;Ruder & Finn International, Inc., 130 East 59th Street, NewYork, New York; and Donald Lerch & Co., Inc., 1522 K Street,N. W., Washington, D. C.

Japan's economy, her trade relations with the UnitedStates, and her concern with United States tariffs and importrestrictions were of deep concern to the Japanese in 1968.

Japan: Asia's Economic Miracle, a pamphlet dis-tributed by the United States-Japan Trade Council, discussedthree important reasons for what it termed the "dramaticrebirth" of Japan's economy. It cited:

"1. Japan's prewar foundation of economic strengthand industrial capacity.

2. The Japanese ancient traditions of untiringenergy, cooperation, and competitive skill.

3. Extensive investment of U. S. economic andmilitary assistance."

Most Japanese publications emphasized the thirdpoint, United States assistance, as being the most importantfactor in Japan's economic modernization. The Japan TradeCenter calling the two allies "Pacific Partners" stated thatAmerican technology, management skills and capital are behindJapan's modernization. The Trade Center continued to say thatthese "relations provide a fine example of the internationaldivision of labor, as well as a firm foundation for peace andfriendship."

The Japanese saw a threat to their United Statestrade relations, however, and as stated by Raymond Nathan, VicePresident of Ruder & Finn, Inc., "The threat of new trade barriersof whatever nature brings an automatic threat from our (theUnited States) trading partners for reciprocal restrictions."He called for the United States to avoid hampering trade byworking for freer trade among nations.

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Constantly aware of this threat, Japanese tradeorganizations frequently lobbied in Congress against proposedtariffs and other trade restrictions in the United States.Nelson A. Stitt, Director of the United States-Japan TradeCouncil, presented one such plea to the House Waysand MeansCommittee. Mr. Stitt stressed that bills to restrict tradenot only would injure Japan and other nations but would "alsopose a serious danger to the health of the United Stateseconomy." He claimed that a United States retreat into pro-tectionism would result in political consequences quitedamaging to Japanese-American relations and that any restrictivemeasures introduced by the United States would prompt retali-ation by Japan. Mr. Stitt concluded by saying that assistanceto less developed countries can be best achieved by "openingthe markets of industrialized nations on a non-discriminatorybasis" and that "Regional trade blocks are a step in the wrongdirection away from the multilateral reduction of tariffs andtrade barriers." In short, Mr. Stitt argued against importquotas, import surcharges, and other forms of trade restrictions.He called for the expansion of free trade and the maintainanceof multilateral trade principles. Similar pleas were made onbehalf of the Japanese textile, lumber and steel industries.

North Vietnam

On behalf of North Vietnam, Henry Noyes (dba ChinaBooks and Periodicals), 2929 24th Street, San Francisco,California, disseminated Vietnam Illustrated, a monthly magazine(350); Vietnam Courier, a weekly newspaper (375); and severalbooks and pamphlets.

North Vietnamese propaganda dealt entirely with thewar in Vietnam and the so-called "U. S. aggressor and puppettroops." The North Vietnamese position can be easily summarizedby quoting the Premier, Pham Van Dong when he said, "Decidedlythere is no question of paying any ransom to the robbers!Peace will immediately return if the U. S. Government endsthe war of aggression against our country, and withdraws U. S.and satellite troops from South Viet Nam." The Communistsboasted that they were succeeding in driving out the UnitedStates forces. In articles with titles such as "U. S. Failureis Obvious" and "All U. S. Crack Units Badly Mauled," theCommunist propagandists frequently listed alleged United Stateswar losses. In November, they listed 3,243 U. S. aircraftdowned and 143 U. S. ships sunk or damaged.

The North Vietnamese accredited the "United Statesfailure" to the courage of the People's Liberation ArmedForces (P.L.A.F. or Vietcong) and its political arm the

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National Front for Liberation (NLF) which they claimed arethe true representatives of the South Vietnamese people. Inthe North, the reported success of the North Vietnamese armedforces and the people's militia in shooting down United Statesplanes was cited as "living proof of the complete bankruptcyof the U. S. imperialism's 'air superiority'."

Besides extolling the success of the armed forces,Communist publications also paid tribute to the Vietnamesecivilians whom they viewed as just as important to the wareffort as were the soldiers. The war was referred to as the"people's war" in which the "entire people fight the enemy."The peasant's efforts in agriculture and industrial production,their desire to help repair war damaged harbors and roads,and their overall support of the armed forces were praisedby the North Vietnamese.

The Communists also gave extensive coverage to theunrest in the United States over the war in Vietnam. Withtitles such as "The Ground is Swelling Under the White House,"North Vietnamese publications exploited draft resistance,peace demonstrations, and rioting in the United States, sayingthat these occurances all indicated the American people'sdiscontent with the Government's war policy.

Pakistan

The Embassy of Pakistan distributes Pakistan Affairs,a biweekly news bulletin, Interim Report Series, a monthlyreport on economic developments, and occasional pamphlets.

The year 1968 marked the end of what Pakistan termedits "Development Decade." In April, the Embassy of Pakistanannounced that since 1958 Pakistan had been the scene ofnumerous reforms. It reported reforms in the areas ofagriculture, education, the Constitution, law, and privateforeign investment policy. The high priority item in Pakistan'sreform program was reported to be agriculture. Significantinvestments were made to provide improved irrigation and thefurther use of fertilizers. The Embassy boasted that Pakistanis one of the few nations in the world which has achievedthe goal of a five per cent annual increase in national incomewhich was set by the United Nations' own Development Decade1960-1970.

Despite this economic advancement, President MohammadAyub Khan was plagued with domestic unrest and civil dis-obedience. In November, rioting, led by Pakistanis who opposedthe President's policies, broke out in the country. Ayub Khan

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answered this disruption by saying, "Political parties arefree to present their programs to the people. There is onlyone condition: these political differences should not assumethe shape of lawlessness, violence, force and terrorism whichare unconstitutional, illegal and undemocratic methods."The President made five additional points in relation to thesedisturbances:

1. Immediate action is being taken to redress manylegitimate grievances.

2. Those who call for change should spell out theparticulars of some alternative program.

3. The present Government was established by thewill of the people and this legitimate existence willbe defended.

4. Internal strife provides "breeding grounds" forforeign conspiracies.

5. The elections are approaching and this willoffer the opposition the proper opportunity to work forchange.

On the international scene, Pakistan's relationswith India were of primary importance. President Ayub Khan saidin September, "We want to settle all our disputes with Indiain a peaceful manner. This has also been our policy inregard to the dispute about Jammu and Kashmir." Pakistanpersisted in her claim that these areas are not integral partsof India and that they deserve the right of self-determinationas to their political future. Pakistan held that thesedisputes must be solved before she could accept the so-calledno-war pact presented to her by India.

The Embassy reported relations with the United Statesto be friendly and cooperative, based on mutual recognitionof each other's interests.

Rhodesia

The Ian Smith Government of Rhodesia maintains theRhodesian Information Office at 2852 McGill Terrace, N. W.,Washington, D. C. Its publications consist of RhodesianCommentary, a biweekly publication (9,000); Rhodesian Viewpoint,a frequent two page sheet of general commentary (3,000);Press Comment on Rhodesia, periodic reprints from the AmericanPress concerning Rhodesia; and several informational pamphlets.The Information Office also makes available a number of filmsfor interested parties.

Air Rhodesia, 535 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York,distributed several maps and pamphlets promoting travel toRhodesia and offering advice to prospective travellers.

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'We Rhodesians believe that there is both a placeand a future for all Rhodesians -- both black and white. Anyother suggestion is unacceptable to us, as is anything otherthan genuine independence." This portion of a speech madeby Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith in November summarizesthe Rhodesian position in her running feud with Great Britain.Rhodesian independence, Great Britain's opposition to it, andthe resulting "war of economic sanctions" were topics permeatingRhodesian Information Office publications in 1968.

Early in the year the Prime Minister reported tohis people that their nation was every day gaining strength,wealth and experience. He stressed that Rhodesia had earnedthe respect of many nations of the world and was proving herability to exist as an independent nation. Great Britain,who had different ideas about Rhodesia's ability to sustainherself, and who had been the sponsor of the United Nationsresolution calling for stringent economic sanctions againstRhodesia, came under frequent attack from the InformationOffice. The sanctions involved a total embargo on all tradebetween Rhodesia and other nations and Rhodesian Viewpointtermed this action the "United Nations assault on Rhodesia."Despite these sanctions Rhodesia made its claim that it wasstill economically sound. Rhodesian Viewpoint quoted TheIllustrated London News as saying, "Rhodesia had come through.Three years of sanctions have proved that she can survive."

In November, the Information Office printed the textof Prime Minister Smith's address to the nation concerning hisGovernment's negotiations with Great Britain over a Rhodesianindependence settlement. Mr. Smith stressed that the negotiationshad met one major road block and had thus ended with littlesuccess. Smith declared that the British proposal for a"safeguard" by which the British Government could provideguarantees against retrogressive amendments to Rhodesia's_independence constitution was completely unacceptable to hisGovernment. Of this safeguard, which in effect provides theBritish with the power of veto over certain Rhodesian Parliamentlaw making decisions, Mr. Smith said the British Governmentwishes "to assume additional powers which are a derogation fromthe sovereignty of our Rhodesian Parliament. It is quiteclear in everybody's mind that what they are trying to do isto accede to our independence with the one hand, while at thesame time trying to take it away with the other."

In July, the Information Office reported Rhodesia'srelations with the United States becoming strained becauseof the signing of the United States Executive Order providingfor the application of tighter sanctions against Rhodesia in

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accordance with the United Nations Security Council resolutionof May 29. Later, in October, the Wheeling News Register(Wheeling, West Virginia) was quoted as saying, "It is anabsurd situation. We are demanding sanctions against a nationwhich is at peace with us. We have no business sticking ournose into the Rhodesian matter . . . What is more shocking isthe fact that the sanctions were invoked by the Presidentwithout consultation with Congress."

South Africa

The Information Service of South Africa, 655 MadisonAvenue, New York, New York, distributes several publicationsdealing with that country. Included are News from South Africa,a weekly sheet of general news items (8,300); South AfricanDigest, a weekly news magazine (18); South African Scope,a monthly magazine of general information (25,000); SouthAfrican Panorama, a monthly pictorial magazine (4,289); anda number of pamphlets distributed intermittently.

"Has the time not come for a change in attitudetoward South Africa?" questioned the South African Ambassadorto the United States, Mr. H. L. T. Taswell, in a speechpublished in South African Scope in December. Mr. Taswellwas expressing South Africa's feeling that for too many yearsshe had been the "international whipping boy" at the UnitedNations because many have condemned her racial policy ofapartheid. Mr. Taswell made the charge that South Africa'sstrongest critics were deeply involved themselves with racialstrife while his nation is "progressing, prospering andthriving in tranquility." "Our approach," he continued,"recognizes that people wish to run their own affairs with aform of government which fits in with their own customs andway of doing things." In these words Mr. Taswell stated SouthAfrica's rationalization for its policy of apartheid, orseparate development of the races. This policy was reportedlydesigned so that in those areas in which the interests of aparticular national group are predominant, the interestswould remain dominant in all respects. This was a frequenttopic in South African publications in 1968.

The Information Service reported that the SouthAfrican economy had grown successfully in 1968. Imports andexports were high, reflecting an active trading economy which"generated about 20 per cent of the (African) geographic incomeand (accounted) for about 40 per cent of its industrial pro-duction." In speaking of the economy, Ambassador Taswell againbrought the racial question into play and defended South Africaby claiming that "All sections of our community benefit from

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our prosperity." After citing several statistics to emphasizethe economic power of the South African black people, hecontinued, "one of our biggest problems is posed by thethousands of others who cross our borders illegally in orderto seek the (economic) benefit we have to offer." SouthAfrican Digest reported a slight rise in employment in 1968with a steady upward trend in wages and salaries in manu-facturing and a somewhat smaller rise in the mining andconstruction industries.

Information Service publications frequently stressedthat South Africa was successfully trying to better itsdiplomatic relations with "neighbouring Black states," withno regard to the South African policy of separate development.She allegedly had developed a special knowledge of Africanconditions and was anxious to use this knowledge to contributeto Africa generally. In 1968, South Africa's relations withthe United States were reported "friendly and well disposeddespite the insults (South Africans) have received from somepeople in senior positions" in the United States.

Spain

The Information Department of the Embassy of Spain,785 National Press Building, Washington, D. C., distributedthe monthly publication Spanish Newsletter.

Tourism, a frequent topic of the Spanish Newsletter,was in January reported to be "the most important exportindustry in Spain." Manuel Fraga Iribarne, Spanish Ministerof Information and Tourism, claimed that the devaluation ofthe Spanish peseta and the continuance of political tensionsin the eastern Mediterranean "are bound to shift large numbersof tourists toward Spain."

Another area of economic development of interestto the Spanish Newsletter was Spain's rising gross nationalproduct. The growth in constant-value pesetas of the grossnational product during the last four years was reported tobe 27.7 per cent. During the same period, gross formationof capital in Spain rose by 36.4 per cent. Similar increaseswere also reported in health and sanitary facilities and inthe attendance at educational centers. Spain also registereda more favorable balance of trade with exports increasing88.2 per cent while imports increased at a slower rate of77.9 per cent.

In the international sphere, the Spanish publicationsdealt primarily with the Gibralter question and Spain's disputewith the British Government over whether or not Spain should

- 33 -

regain the territory of Gibralter from Great Britain who holds"the Rock" under political control. In the words of Spain'sMinister of Foreign Affairs, Fernando M. Costiella, "We do notwish to absorb a people, nor make Spaniards of-the Gibraltarians,against their wishes. We desire only to recover the territoryof Spain on which the inhabitants of Gibralter may live, inpeace and freedom. . . " The Spaniards further accused theBritish Government of "encouraging the people of Gibralter todefend at the cost of their legitimate interests, the colonialand military interests of Great Britain."

Spanish reports of the nation's United Nationsactivities displayed the influence the Gibralter questionhad on the Spanish foreign policy. Spain supported the UnitedNations resolution calling for Spain and Great Britain tonegotiate procedures in safeguarding the "interests of theGibraltarians once the territorial integrity of Spain isrestored." When Great Britain failed to comply with thisresolution, Spain felt bound to abstain from voting on theUnited Nations nuclear non-proliferation proposal of whichGreat Britain was a co-sponsor.

In March, the Spanish Government announced that notwishing to delay the decolonization process, it had proposedthat Equitorial Guinea, a Spanish colony, would receive herindependence as soon as possible. Later, in August, theGovernment proclaimed that the Constitution of the Republicof Equatorial Guinea had been passed by referendum and thuslegalized. October 12, 1968 was announced as the day thatindependence would become effective for the new nation.

Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

Printed material emanating from the Soviet Union in1968 was disseminated by four organizations: Four ContinentBook Corporation, 156 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York;Imported Publications and Products, 1 Union Square, New York,New York; Cross World Books and Periodicals, 333 South WackerDrive, Chicago, Illinois; and Eastern News Distributors,Inc., 155 West 15th Street, New York, New York.---This materialconsisted of books, journals, periodicals, reviews; newspapers,pamphlets, etc. Included within this material are New Times,a weekly news journal (390); International Affairs, a monthlyjournal (345); Soviet Union (155), Soviet Woman (40) andCulture and Life (100), monthly pictorial magazines; Sputnik,a monthly digest (15,000); Soviet Military Review, a monthlymagazine; and Moscow News, a weekly newspaper (9,430).

New Times declared 1968 to be a year of achievementfor the Soviet Union:in all areas of life. Throughout theyear the Soviet press Carried many reports on the progress

- 34 -

made in building Communism and its resulting achievements.The country was characterized as being richer for theseaccomplishments as it pursued "a path illuminated by Lenin'sideas."

The Soviets hailed their achievements in industry,science, technology and agriculture as strong evidence of the"vast potential inherent in socialism." They said that beforethe October Revolution in 1917 Russia had lagged far behindthe United States in development but today the country is"competing on an equal footing" with the United States. Thisrapid growth was seen as proof of Communism's great potential.The year 1968 marked the end of the third year of the SovietUnion's current five-year development plan and it was reportedthat the third year goals had been attained ahead of time, inearly November. According to a New Times editorial in December,Russian national income was up by 7.2 per cent, industrialoutput had increased by 8.3 per cent and "Despite the un-favorable weather conditions in some areas, the grain harvestwas about 18 million tons more than in 1967."

Soviet foreign policy was reportedly based on thepeople's desire for peace throughout the world. A New Times editorial exclaimed, "throughout the years the Soviet Unionhas consistently pursued a Leninist foreign policy of peace,a policy fully endorsed by the Soviet people." The publicationfurther stressed in a later edition that the Soviet people's"thoughts are of peace, of the progress and triumph ofCommunism, of happiness and well-being not only for themselvesand their country but for all the peoples of the world." Thispolicy of peace is, according to the Communists, "based onrecognition of and respect for the equality and sovereigntyof all peoples, . . It is a policy aimed at ruling out wars,a policy standing on auard for peace and the security of thepeoples." In the Soviet point of view, however, 1968 wasnot a very encouraging year, as the prospects for peace werefew, and the "seats of war" many. The Soviets cited threesuch "seats." "In Asia such a seat is Vietnam, where theU. S. war is still going on. In Europe it is the aggressiveNATO bloc, spearheaded by West Germany. In the Middle Eastit is the Israeli aggression against the Arab countries, . .The Russians saw the elimination of these hotbeds as a pre-requisite to peace as proposed by their peace policy.

The Soviets often voiced their opinion that thereare other prerequisites to peace. Nuclear disarmament, thedismantling of foreign military bases, and acceptance of thenuclear non-proliferation treaty were all deemed necessary. Ofthe treaty it was said "it will undoubtedly play an importantpart in the efforts of the nations to ensure lasting peace."

- 35 -

Concerning the Soviet Union's actions in Czechoslovakia,for which it received severe criticism around the world, theSoviets claimed that they had acted in the best interest ofthe Czechoslovak people. The charge was made that the "anti-socialist forces sought to divert the Czechoslovak peoplefrom their socialist path, to restore a bourgeois order inthat country and sever it from the socialist community. Thingsreached a point when five socialist states saw no alternativebut to send troops to the assistance of the Czechslovakpeople."

"Nothing can bring the Vietnamese people to theirknees. There is no military solution for Washington. Thegreater the scale of the aggression, the heavier the defeatsinflicted on the aggressors." These three statements whichprefaced a _Soviet Communist editorial on Vietnam effectivelysummarize the Russian position on the Vietnam war. The editorialstressed that despite the United States having "met with apolitical fiasco and . . . heavy defeats on the battlefield,"it is continuing its aggression and threatens to extend thewar into other countries of the Indo-Chinese Peninsula.

Yugoslavia

The Yugoslav Information Center, 816 Fifth Avenue,New York, New York, distributes Yugoslav News Bulletin (2,100)and Yugoslav Facts and Views (2,100), intermittent news sheets;and several booklets.

News from the Information Center frequently portrayedanew image of Yugoslavia on the international scene. Theimage was one of a new and independent socialism based on whatYugoslavia's President Tito called "a highly developed awarenessof citizens." At a rally in November, Tito proclaimed, "Wereject any copying of some other path to socialism since welive under our own specific conditions and our people haveproved its capabilities in the great Liberation Struggle."

Yugoslavia presented itself as a follower of thepolicy of non-alignment, the substance of that policy beingbased on the following four "actions":

1. Yugoslav independence and freedom2. active and peaceful co-existence3. collective security against antagonistic power blocs4. abolishing all forms of economic exploitation.

When discussing the nuclear non-proliferation treatyin May, Yugoslav Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,

- 36 -

Marko Nikezic stated, "We consider the conclusion of an agree-ment to the prevention of further proliferation of nuclearweapons as useful and indispensable." He did, however,present these objections:

1. The treaty has no provision for disarmament2. There are no guarantees to non-nuclear nations

against attack from nuclear nations3. There is no elimination of the monopoly on

nuclear power in industry.

Despite these objections, Yugoslavia did proceed to vote infavor of the treaty in June.

Two areas of international tension were of greatimportance to the Yugoslays in 1968. The invasion ofCzechoslovakia and the war in Vietnam were frequentlycommented upon by the Information Center.

In July, the Central Committee of the League ofCommunists of Yugoslavia held "that the present changes inCzechoslovakia are primarily an expression of the objectiveneed to consolidate and further develop socialist socialrelations." The Committee made it clear that it supportedthe freedom and independence of the Czechs and opposed foreignintervention. The September 25, 1968 issue of Yugoslav Facts and Views, after the Warsaw Pact's invasion of Czechoslovakia,declared that "The Communists and other citizens of Yugoslaviahave in recent days overwhelmingly expressed their deepindignation and protest against the occupation of Czecho-slovakia."

In April, President Tito expressed his satisfactionover the United States decision to initiate a partial bombinghalt in North Vietnam, saying that it would lead to peacediscussions and eventually to a complete bombing halt. Herecalled Yugoslavia's attitudes toward the war, condemningAmerican intervention and bombing which the Yugoslays sawas contrary to the United Nations Charter.

In November, the Yugoslays hailed President Johnson'sdecision to stop all bombing of North Vietnam as a major andsignificant step toward peace. They felt assured that now apolitical solution could be found that would give the Vietnamesepeople the chance to decide their own destiny.

torney General

- 37 -

The principal purpose of Congress in enacting theForeign Agents Registration Act was to require public dis-closure by persons engaging in propaganda activities andother activities for or on behalf of foreign governments,foreign political parties, and other foreign principals, sothat the Government and the people of the United States maybe informed of the identity of such persons and may appraisetheir statements and actions in the light of their associationsand activities. The emphasis of the Department of Justice inits administration of the statute has been toward the achieve-ment of this purpose. In performing its functions, theDepartment has continued to rely upon its normal sources ofinformation and upon the investigative efforts of the FederalBureau of Investigation.

Registration under the Act does not imply recognitionby the United States Government either of the de jure existenceor legality of the foreign principal, nor does registrationindicate approval by the United States Government of thepropaganda material disseminated or of the activities of theregistered agent.

Respectfully submitted,

- 38 -

APPENDIXI

Alphabetical list of all registrants whose

registrations were in active status at

any time during the calendar year 1968

Indicates new registrationsfiled during 1968

(T) Indicates Termination

* A.C.D.M. Agency * Anestos, Harry P.

A.S. Nemir Associates Angola Office

Adams, J. Collier ANTARA (IndonesianNational Newsagency)

African National Congress(South Africa) Committee

African Research & DevelopmentCo., Inc. (T)

* Aguirre, Francisco

* Air Rhodesia

Albert M. Prosterman &Associates, Inc.

Albert Woodley Co., Inc.(The)

Alcott, Roger E.

Alianza Patriotica Nicaraguense

Alpine Tourist Commission

American Nord-Aviation, Inc.

American Surveys

Amtorg Trading Corporation

Arab Information Center

Aranow, Brodsky,Bohlinger, Einhorn &Dann (T)

Arau Associates, Inc.

Arkus, Istvan (T)

Arnold & Porter

Artkino Pictures, Inc.

* Associated PublicRelations Counselors,Inc. (T)

Association Films, Inc.

Atwater, Bradley Co., Inc.

Australian BroadcastingCommission

Australian TouristCommission

- 39 -

Australian News & InformationBureau

Austrian National TouristOffice

Austrian Trade Delegate inThe United States(Southern Office) (The)

Austrian Trade Delegate,Midwest Office

Austrian Trade Delegate,New York Office

Austrian Trade Delegate,Inlestcoast Office

Bacskai, Bela H.

Barbados Development andTourist Boards

Barnett, Vincent G.

Barry, Frank M.

Barsukov, Yuri V.

Bartlett & Partners, Inc.

Becker, Ralph E. (T)

Belgian Chamber of Commercein the United States, Inc.(The)

Belgian Information Service

Belgo-American DevelopmentCorporation

,Bell & Stanton, Inc.

Bennett Associates, Inc

Bennett, Newbery & Cowan

Bermuda Department ofTourism & TradeDevelopment

Bertram, Fred (T)

Borovik, Guenrikh A.

Bostelman Associates,Inc.

Boukstein, Maurice M.

Boykin & De Francis (T)

Brackman, Arnold C.

* Braden Toureast, Inc.

Brauer, Robert R.

British-American Chamberof Commerce (The)

* British ColumbiaGovernment, LosAngeles Office

British Columbia House

British InformationServices

British Travel Association

* Bronhill Associates, Inc.

Broniarek, Zygmunt (T)

Bronz, George

Brown, Charles H.

Brown, Francis L.

Buch, Mohammad Yusuf

- 40 -

Buchen Advertising, Inc.

Burgess, Dinklage & Sprung (T)

* Burson-Marsteller Associates

Cannon AdvertisingAssociates, Inc.

Capone, Ronald A.

Caribbean TravelAssociation

Casa de Portugal

Casey, Lane & Mittendorf

Cedok CzechoslovakTravel Bureau

Central African Airways (T)

Central American SugarCouncil (The)

Central Economic DevelopmentOrganization, Inc.

Central News Agency ofChina, New York Bureau

Central News Agency ofChina, San FranciscoBureau

Central News Agency ofChina, Washington Bureau

Central Parcel Service, Inc.

Chambers, Justice M.

Charles Von Loewenfeldt, Inc.

Checchi & Company

Chinese Information Service

Chinese InformationService, Pacific CoastBureau

Chinese Investment &Trade Office

Chirurg & Cairns, Inc. (T)

Choroszej, Walter R.

Clark, Charles Patrick (T)

Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen& Hamilton

* Clifton Counselors, Inc.

* Clinton E. Frank, Inc.

Clinton E. Frank - NewYork, Inc. (T)

Cloudman, Olin B.

Cobb, David

Collegial Society ofHungarian Veteransin the U.S.A. (T)

Colombia InformationService

Colombia National TouristBoard

Comite RegionalSinarquista en LosAngeles (T)

Communications Affiliates,Inc.

Compagnie des Bauxitesde Guinee

Compass Publications, Inc.

- 41 -

* Compton Advertising, Inc.

Consejo de LiberacionInterno de Armas(C.L.I.A.) (T)

Cooper, Harold

Cooper, Mitchell J.

Corporacion de Fomentode la Produccion deChile

Cortell, Jules (dba Infor-mation & Tourist Office,City of Duesseldorf)(T)

Cosmos Parcels ExpressCorporation

* Courtney & McCamant

Covington & Burling

Cox, Langford & Brown

Crossworld Books andPeriodicals, Inc.

Culbertson, Pendleton &Pendleton

Culic, Davor (T)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc.

* Daniels & Houlihan

Danish Information Office

Danish National TravelOffice

Danner, Richard G.

Davidson, I. Irving

Davis, Polk & Wardwell

Dawson, Donald R.

Dawson, Quinn, Riddell,Taylor & Davis

Deale, Valentine B.

de Garmo, McCaffery, Inc.

* de Guinzbourg, Victor

Delegation of theRevolutionary SocialChristian Party of theDominican Republic,New York (T)

Delson & Gordon

Development CounsellorsInternational, Ltd.

Development & ResourcesCorporation

Dittmann, Bruno

* Donald Lerch, Jr. &Co., Inc.

Dosmar, Kurt John (T)

Downs & Roosevelt, Inc.

Doyle Dane Bernbach, Inc.

Dube, Kotsho Lloyd

Dumbarton Associates, Inc.

East European TradeEnterprise, Inc. (T)

Eastern News Distributors,Inc.

Eastern Nigeria LiaisonOffice (T)

- 42 -

Edlow, Samuel

Edward Gottlieb &Associates, Ltd. (T)

EG&A International, Inc.

Eisenberg, Milton (T)

European Community, Infor-mation Service

European Free TradeAssociation, WashingtonInformation Office

European Travel Commission

* Fatoullah & Lazar, Inc.

FAM Book & TranslationService

Fawcett-Haynes PrintingCorporation

Feldman, Maurice

Fierst, Herbert A.

Films of the NationsDistributors, Inc. (T)

Financial Consultants, Inc.

Finnish National TravelOffice

Fisher, Roger

Fistere, John C.

* Ford, Peyton

Four Continent BookCorporation

France Actuelle

Fred Rosen Associates, Inc.

Freed, William H.

French BroadcastingSystem in NorthAmerica (The) (T)

French Expositions inthe U.S., Inc.

French Film Office

French Government TouristOffice

French National Railroads

* Frente De LibertacaoDe Mocambique

Fried, John H.E.

Friedmann Radio Broad-casting and AdvertisingCompany (T)

Fund For The Relief ofJordan (T)

Gadsby, Maguire &Hannah (T)

Galland, Kharasch, Calkins& Lippman

Ganju, Janki N. (T)

Gardner Advertising, Inc.

Gdynia America Line, Inc.

Geingob, Gottfried Hage

George Peabody &Associates, Inc.

George Uhe Company, Inc.

Gerechter, Gerhard G.

German American Chamberof Commerce, Inc.

- 43 -

German American Chamberof Commerce of Chicago

German Federal Railroad

German National TouristOffice

Geyer, Oswald, Inc.

Ghana Information Services

Ginsburg & Feldman

Globe Parcel Service, Inc.

Goedkoop, Johan

* Goldstein, Robert S.

* Government of Ontario(New York Office)

Government of Ontario,Canada, Departmentof Commerce andDevelopment, IndustrialDevelopment Division (T)

Government of Ontario,Canada, Departmentof Economics andDevelopment, Tradeand Industry Branch (T)

Government of theProvince of Alberta,Canada, Los AngelesOffice

Grant Advertising, Inc.

Greek National TouvistOrganization

Gregg, Norman T. (T)

Gromeka, Vasily I.

Gubbins, Reynaldo

Guevorguian, Goratsi

Gumbs, Jeremiah

Guyana Public Relations &Information Office (T)

Haiti Government TouristBureau, Chicago (T)

Haiti Government TouristBureau, New York

Halco (Mining), Inc.

Hamel, Morgan, Park &Saunders (T)

Hank Meyer Associates,Inc.

Harold Gardner Associates,Inc. (T)

Harry W. Graff, Inc.

Harry W. Graff Inter-national Corp.

* Hart, Helen E.C.

* Harshe-Rotman andDruck, Inc.

Haseltine, Lake &Company

Heffner, Mary A.

Heidenreich, Curt

Henley, Lillian

Herbst, Margaret

Heyward Associates, Inc.

Hill & Knowlton, Inc.

- 44 -

* Hong Kong TouristAssociation

Howard, Bushrod B., Jr.

Hurtado, Charles V.

Hynning, Clifford J.

ICG Corporation

Imported Publications andProducts

Industrecon Associates, Inc.

Information Service ofSouth Africa

* International Board ofIndustrial Advisors

International PublicRelations Co., Ltd.,New York (dba JapanSteel InformationCenter)

Intourist, New York Office

Ipper, Pal

Irish Industrial DevelopmentAuthority

Irish Tourist Board

* Israel Communications, Inc.

Israel Government TouristOffice

Israel Information Services

Italian Government TravelOffice, New York

Italian Government TravelOffice, San Francisco

Italian State TouristOffice, Chicago

Jamaica IndustrialDevelopment Corporation

Jamaica ProgressiveLeague, Inc. (The)

* Jamaica Tourist Board

Jamaica Tourist Board,New York

James, Leonard G.

* James, Oscar S.

James F. Fox, Inc. (T)

* James N. JulianaAssociates, Inc.

James S. VlastoAssociates (T)

Japan BroadcastingCorporation

Japan National TouristOrganization

Japan Trade Center,Chicago

Japan Trade Center,Los Angeles

Japan Trade Center,New Orleans

Japan Trade Center,New York

Japan Trade Center,San Francisco

Japan Trade PromotionOffice

- 45 -

Junta de Cultura Espanola (T)

Kelly, Nason, Inc.

Khan, Khaibar

Kilduff, Malcolm M.

King, Philip F.

* Kingson, Justin I.

Kis, Csaba

Koehl, Landis & Landan, Inc.

Jeffrey, Donald Cameron (T)

Jenkins, Benjamin H., Jr.

Jewish Agency for Israel,American Section (The)

Jiougjda, Robertasse (T)

John A. Tetley Company,Inc.

Johnson, Robert Bruce

Joseph S. Gould Associates

Joyce, William R., Jr.

Jules Lippet Advertising,Inc.

Julian, Hubert F. (T)

Julius Klein PublicRelations, Inc. (T)

Kolakowski, Wladislaw(dba Poland PhilatelicAgency)

Kondrashov, Stanislav N.

* Koppe International Ltd.

Korea TouristAssociation (T)

Korea Trade PromotionCenter

Krainin, Harold L. (T)

Kramer, Charles (T)

Kuomintang of China,Headquarters inAmerica

Kurdyumov, Nikolai V.

Kuznetsov, Georgi A. (T)

* Lamken, Natalie (T)

Lampert Agency, Inc. (The)

* Laourintchioukas, Albertas

Lara, Francisco J.

Larranaga, Cipriano

Larson & Taylor (T)

Law, Robert H., III

* Lemeh, Charles Nwabueze

Lerman, Louis

Leva, Hawes, Symington,Martin & Oppenheimer

Lever, Michael

Lewis Company, Ltd. (The)

Lininger, Fred T.

Lipper, Jerome (T)

Lounz, Gregory

- 46 -

* Luckman, Michael C.

Lynch, Wilde & Company, Inc.

M. J. Jacobs, Inc.

Marathon InternationalProductions, Inc. (T)

Martin, Donald N. (dbaDonald N. Martin & Co.)

Massinga, Joseph C.

Mbaeva, Nathanael V.

McCann-Erickson, Inc.

McCrary, John Reagan (T)

Mexican GovernmentRailway System

Mexican GovernmentTourism Delegation,Dallas

Mexican GovernmentTourism Delegation,New Orleans

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,Chicago

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,Houston

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,Los Angeles

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,Miami

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,New York

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,San Antonio

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,San Diego

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,San Francisco

Mexican GovernmentTourism Department,Tucson

Mexican NationalTourist Council

Meyer, Hermine H.

Milbank, Tweed, Hadley& McCloy

* Miravete Madrazo, Jesus

Modern Talking PictureService, Inc.

Moment, Samuel

Montana, Vanni B.

Moroccan NationalTourist Office

Moscow Radio and Tele-vision, U.S. Bureau

Movimiento DemocrataCristiano de Cuba(Badue Branch) (T)

Movimiento DemocrataCristiano de Cuba(Christian DemocratMovement of Cuba) (T)

- 47 -

Movimiento Revolucionariodel Pueblo (in exile) (T)

Murase, Jiro

Murden & Company, Inc.

Mutch Haberman Joyce, Inc.

Muundjua, Festus U.

N. T. S. (NarodnoTrudovoy Soyuz),U. S. A. Branch

National Committee forLiberation of Slovakia

National DevelopmentInstitute of Nicaragua(INFONAC) (T)

National Film Board ofCanada

Needham, Harper & Steers,Inc.

Neeson, John V. (dbaNeeson InternationalCorp.)

Netherlands Chamber ofCommerce in the U. S.,Inc. (The)

Netherlands Chamber ofCommerce in the UnitedStates (for the PacificCoast States), Inc. (The)

Netherlands InformationService

Netherlands InformationService, Holland,Michigan

Netherlands InformationService, San Francisco

357-453 0-69-4

Netherlands NationalTourist Office

New South Wales Govern-ment Office

New York Bureau of theTelegraph Agency of theUSSR (TASS)

New York Committee ofInternational Committeeof Passenger Lines

New Zealand GovernmentTourist Office in theUnited States andCanada

Newman-Schulte, Inc.

Nordlinger, Riegelman,Benetar & Charney

Norwegian InformationService

Norwegian NationalTravel Office

Noyes, Henry H. (dbaChina Books &Periodicals)

O'Donnell, John A.

Office of Tibet (The)

Official BelgianTourist Bureau

Ogilvy & Mather, Inc.

Oliver-Beckman, Inc.

Package Express andTravel Agency, Inc.

Palestine Arab Dele-gation (The)

- 48 -

Palestine LiberationOrganization (The)

Pan-American CoffeeBureau

Panama Government TouristBureau

Panchartek, Miloslav

Partido QuisqueyanoDemocrata - New YorkBranch

Partido ReformistaDominican°, New YorkBranch

Partido Reformista -Filial de Puerto Rico

Partido RevolucionarioDominicano, New York

Partido RevolucionarioDominican°, PuertoRico (T)

Patton, Blow, Verrill,Brand & Boggs (T)

Pekao Trading Corporation

Penaco Information Services

Peter Rothholz Associates,Inc.

Philip Van Slyck, Inc.

Philippine Tourist andTravel Association

Phillips, Wendell

Podarogifts, Inc.

Polish Press Agency

Polish Press Agency,New York Office

* Polish Travel OfficeORBIS

Ponsart, Gaston A. (T)

Prather, Levenberg &Seeger

Prensa Latina

Pritchard WoodAssociates, Inc.

Probinsky, David

Public Relations Board,Inc. (The)

Purcell & Nelson (T)

Purrington & McConnell (T)

Putney, Twombly, Hall& Skidmore

Quebec Government House

Quinn & Quinn

R. J. Sullivan, Inc.

Rabinowitz & Boudin (T)

Ragan & Mason

Rhodesian InformationOffice

Richard La FondAdvertising, Inc.

Rincones, R. A.

Rittersporn, Bernard A.,Jr. (T)

Robert R. NathanAssociates, Inc.

- 49 -

* Robert S. GoldsteinEnterprises

Robert W. SchofieldAssociates, Inc.

Robinson, Jack R. (T)

* Romanian National TouristOffice

Rosen, David (dba ChinaPublications)

Ross, John C.

* Ross, Sherwood

Roy Blumenthal Inter-national Associates,Inc.

Ruder & Finn Incorporated

Rudick, Albert J.

* Sakai, Ruby C.

Samuel E. Stavisky &Associates, Inc.

Saunders, Gerald N. (T)

Savage, John (dba CrestProductions) (T)

Scandinavian Railways

Schoenfeld FilmDistributing Corp.

* Schpiro, Jerome (dbaBusiness Education Films)

Schweitzer, N. Tina (T)

Scott Runkle & Associates,Inc. (T)

Sega, Milan

Segarra, Michael A.

Segundo Frente Nacionaldel Escambrey-Alpha 66

Select Magazines, Inc.

Sestito, Larry A. (T)

* Shaposhnikov, Jury

Shaw, Pittman, Potts,Trowbridge & Madden

Shearman & Sterling

* Shishko, Irwin (dbaInternational Con-sultants Associated)

Siegel, Stanley Z.

Singapore InvestmentPromotion Center

Smith, Carleton (T)

Smith, Scheuermann &Jones (T)

Sobel Overseas Corp.

Solov, Liuba

Solter, Myron W.

Sontheimer & Company,Inc.

* South Africa Foundation

South African TouristCorporation

Spanish National TouristOffice, Chicago

Spanish National TouristOffice, New York

Spanish National TouristOffice, San Francisco

- 50 -

Steele, Donald D. (dbaInternational PublicRelations Co., Ltd.,San Francisco)

Swedish Chamber of Commerceof the United States ofAmerica, Inc. (The)

Swedish InformationService

Swedish National TravelOffice

Swiss National TouristOffice, New York

Swiss National TouristOffice, San Francisco

Sydney Morrell & Company,Inc.

T. 3. Ross and Associates,Inc.

Tamagna, Frank M.

Tanaka, H. William

Tanjug - Yugoslav NewsAgency

Taylor, William E.G.

Tea Council of theU.S.A., Inc.

Teixeira, Bernardo

Thomas J. DeeganCompany, Inc.

Tiderock Corporation(The) (T)

Till, Vladimir

* Todd, Arthur

Todd, Burt Kerr

Torczyner, Harry

Tourist Organizationof Thailand, NewYork Office

Tribune Films, Inc.

Trinidad & TobagoIndustrial DevelopmentCorporation

Turkish Tourism andInformation Office

U. S. Austroplan, Inc.

United Arab RepublicTourist and InformationCenter

United States - JapanTrade Council

United States NavigationCompany, Inc.

United States Office ofthe British BroadcastingCorporation

Stephen Goerl Associates,Inc.

Sterling Movies U.S.A., Inc.

* Stevens, Rosalind B. (T)

Stitt, Hemmendinger &Kennedy

Surinam Tourist Bureau

Surrey, Karasik, Gould& Greene

Swedish BroadcastingCorporation

- 51 -

United States ReliefParcel Service, Inc.

United World Films, Inc.

Utsch & Associates, Inc.

Van Brunt & Company

Vavin, Inc.

Venezuelan GovernmentTourist Bureau

Visson, Anatole

Von Blomberg, 1W. Frary

Von Hofmannsthal, Emilio

Von Nuremburg, Heinfried

Warren Weil PublicRelations

Washburn, StringerAssociates, Inc.

Washington ServiceAssociates

Wattawa, John

* Webster, Donald Dent

Wentworth, John B.

* Wilkinson, John

Wolff, Harry

Woo, Kyatang

World Muslim Congress

Wyse Advertising, Inc.

Yugoslav Information Center

Yugoslav State Tourist

Office

- 52 -

APPENDIX II

Listing according to geographical area or

nationality field of registrants whose statements

were in active status at any time during calendar year 1968

(T) Indicates termination

Column on left lists the registrant and registrationnumber, column on right lists the foreign principal, and

phrases in parentheses denote nature of agency relationship.

AFGHANISTAN

Robert R. Nathan Associates, Royal Government ofInc. - 352

Afghanistan, Kabul1218 16th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Economic consultants)

ALBANIA

FAM Book & TranslationService - 1511

69 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

Ndermarja Shtetnore eBotimeve, Tirana

(Publications purchasing agent)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Agensia Telegrafika (ATA),25 West 43rd Street

AlbaniaNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

- 53 -

ALGERIA

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of Algeria405 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Information office)

Shearman & Sterling - 187720 Exchange PlaceNew York, New York 10005

Societe Nationale deTransport et deCommercialisation desHydrocarbons (Govern-ment of Algeria)

Bureau Algerien deRecherches etd'Exploitations Minieres,Algiers

(Legal services

ANGOLA

Angola Office - 1517

Angola Revolutionary503 Fifth Avenue Government in Exile,New York, New York 10017

Leopoldville

(Information service offoreign political party)

ANGUILLA

Roger Fisher - 204120 Berkeley StreetCambridge, Massachusetts 02138

Provisional Government ofAnguilla

(Legal services)

Jeremiah Gumbs - 2047

People of Anguilla,5 Edgegrove Street

Mr. Ronald WebsterEdison, New Jersey 08817

(Public relations)

ARGENTINA

Communications Affiliates,Inc. - 1449

605 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10016

Government of Argentina,Buenos Aires

(Public relations and publicity)

- 54 -

ARGENTINA (Continued)

William R. Joyce, Jr. - 16471815 H Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

Argentine Naval Commission

(Legal services)

Culbertson, Pendleton &Pendleton - 1743

1155 15th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20005

Sociedad Mixta SiderurgiaArgentina, Buenos Aires

Embassy of ArgentinaThe Canned Meat ImportersAssociation, New York

(Legal services)

Cannon Advertising Associates, Aerolineas Argentinas,Inc. - 1945

Buenos Aires9 East 53rd StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

ARUBA

Hank Meyer Associates,Inc. - 1161

407 Lincoln RoadMiami Beach, Florida 33139

Executive Council of Islandof Aruba

(Tourism and public relations)

Michael A. Segarra - 1759

Government of Aruba804 Ponce de Leon AvenueMiramarSanturce, Puerto Rico

(Public relations)

AUSTRALIA

Australian BroadcastingCommission - 394

1270 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10020

Australian BroadcastingCommission, Sydney

(Official broadcasting service)

- 55 -

AUSTRALIA (Continued)

Australian News & InformationBureau - 418

636 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

Australian News & Infor-mation Bureau, Canberra

(Official information office)

Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen &

The Colonial Sugar RefiningHamilton - 503

Company, Ltd., Sydney1250 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legislative representative;legal services)

Development and Resources

Government of the StateCorporation - 969

of Western AustraliaOne Whitehall StreetNew York, New York 10004

(Resources consultant)

Australian Tourist Commission - Australian Tourist Commission,1032

Melbourne350 Post StreetSan Francisco, California 94108

(Official travel office)

Galland, Kharasch, Calkins &

Quantas Airways, Ltd.,Lippman - 1051

Sydney1824 R Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20009

(Legal services)

New South Wales Government

Premier's Department, NewOffice - 1276

South Wales Government,680 Fifth Avenue Sydney

New York, New York 10019

(Official tourist and industrialdevelopment office)

- 56 -

AUSTRALIA (Continued)

Charles H. Brown - 1470

The Colonial Sugar Refining2011 Eye Street, N.W. Company, Ltd., SydneyWashington, D. C. 20036

South Pacific Sugar Mills,Ltd., Fiji

(Legislative representative)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Commonwealth of Australia,19 West 44th Street

Department of Supply,New York, New York 10036

Melbourne

(Patent applications services)

Sydney Morrell & Company, Victoria Promotion TrustInc. - 1661

Fund, Melbourne152 East 78th StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Public relations)

Donald Dickinson Steele - 2030(dba International Public Rela-tion s Co., Ltd., San Francisco

703 Market StreetSan Francisco, California 94103

International PublicRelations Pty. Ltd.,Melbourne

(Public relations and advertising)

Schoenfeld Film Distributing Australian News & Infor-Corp. - 2056

mation Bureau220 West 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

AUSTRIA

Austrian National TouristOffice - 495

444 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Oesterreichische Fremden-verkehrswerbung, Vienna

Oesterreichische Bundesbahnen,Vienna

(Official tourist office)

- 57 -

AUSTRIA (Continued)

(T) Delson & Gordon - 502

Embassy of Austria230 Park Avenue Permanent Mission of Austria

New York, New York 10017

to the United Nations

(Legal services)

The Austrian Trade Delegate Austrian Federal Chamber

in the United States - 625

of Commerce, Vienna845 3rd AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Trade promotion)

The Austrian Trade Delegate, Austrian Federal ChamberWest Coast Office - 793

of Commerce, Vienna195 South Beverly DriveBeverly Hills, California 90212

(Trade promotion)

The Austrian Trade Delegate, Austrian Federal EconomicMidwest Office - 874

Chamber, Vienna332 South Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60604

(Trade promotion)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111880 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Austrian Federal PressOffice, Vienna

Austrian State TouristDepartment, Vienna

Oesterreichische NationalBank, Vienna

Austrian Chamber ofCommerce, Vienna

(Public relations)

(T) Carleton Smith - 1495

Austrian Federal Ministry14 East 68th Street

of Foreign Affairs,New York, New York 10021

Vienna

(Consultant)

- 58 -

AUSTRIA (Continued)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Austrian State Tourist38 West 32nd Street

DepartmentNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

(T) Kurt John Dosmar - 1832

Austrian Trade Delegate,230 West 79th Street

New YorkNew York, New York 10024

(Preparation of trade bulletin;trade promotion)

U.S. Austroplan, Inc. - 1982

Oesterreichische52 Vanderbilt Avenue

Plannungsgesellschaft,New York, New York 10017

m.b.h.

(Financing of engineering and constructionactivities abroad)

Roger E. Alcott - 1985

Hirtenberger Patronen -Diamond Hill Road

Zundhutchen-u-Metallwaren-Cumberland, Rhode Island 02864

fabrik AG., Austria

(Military sales agent)

The Austrian Trade Delegatein the United States(Southern Office) - 1986

1410 International Trade MartNew Orleans, Louisiana 70l30

Bundeskammer derGewerblichen Wirtschaft,Vienna

(Trade promotion)

BAHAMAS

Communications Affiliates,Inc. - 1449

605 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10016

Communications Affiliates(Bahamas) Limited onbehalf of the Governmentof the Bahama Islands

(Advertising; public relations;Research & Sales promotion)

- 59 -

BAHAMAS (Continued)

McCann-Erickson, Inc. - 1746485 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Communications Affiliates(Bahamas) Limited, onbehalf of the Governmentof the Bahama Islands

(Advertising and public relations)

'(T) John Reagan McCrary - 1996

Lynden O. Pindling, Nassau161 East 61st StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Public relations)

(T) Jack R. Robinson - 2001

Lynden O. Pindling, NassauCascade RoadStamford, Connecticut 06903

(Public relations)

David Probinsky - 2018

Progressive Liberal Party,5301 North Kendall Drive Bahamas

Miami, Florida 33156

(Public relations)

Olin B. Cloudman - 2031

Bahamas Government, Bahamas1701 First National Bank Bldg. Ministry of Tourism,Miami, Florida 33131

Nassau

(Tourist promotion)

BARBADOS

Quinn & Quinn - 1425

West Indies Sugar Association,723 Washington Bldg. Inc., BridgetownWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legislative representative andlegal services)

Peter Rothholz Associates, Barbados Tourist BoardInc. - 1692

Barbados Development Board369 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations and tourist promotion)

- 60 -

BARBADOS (Continued)

Van Brunt & Company,Advertising-Marketing,Inc. - 1704

711 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Barbados Tourist BoardBarbados Development Board

(Advertising agency)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Barbados Tourist Board38 West 32nd StreetNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

Barbados Development and

Government of BarbadosTourist Boards - 1995

801 Second AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Trade, Investment, and Tourist Promotion)

Peyton Ford - 2098

Government of Barbados1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

BELGIUM

Belgian Information Service - 405

Government of Belgium,50 Rockefeller Plaza

Ministry of Foreign AffairsNew York, New York 10020

(Official information office)

Official Belgian Tourist

Ministry of Transport,Bureau - 529

Brussels720 Fifth Avenue

Commissariat General auNew York, New York 10019

Tourisme, Brussels

(Official tourist office)

Cox, Langford & Brown - 746

Government of Belgium,1521 New Hampshire Avenue, N.W. EmbassyWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

- 61 -

BELGIUM (Continued

The Belgian Chamber ofCommerce in the UnitedStates, Inc. - 835

50 Rockefeller PlazaNew York, New York 10020

Kingdom of Belgium,Brussels

(Trade promotion)

Belgo-American DevelopmentCorporation - 1501

605 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10016

Societe d'Entreprise etd'Investissements duBeceka (SIBEKA)

Union Miniere du Haut-KatangaCompagnie du Congo pour le

Commerce et l'Industrie

(Information and industrialdevelopment services)

Richard La Fond Advertising, Official Belgian TouristInc. - 1606

Bureau505 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

Margaret Herbst - 1622101 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Office National desDebouches Agricoles etHorticoles, Brussels

Belgium's Finer Foods,Brussels

(Public relations; promotion of horticulturaland agricultural products)

Samuel Edlow - 1683Columbus International AirportSuite 214, Box 19827Airport StationColumbus, Ohio 43219

EURATOM, European AtomicEnergy Commission,Brussels

(General representative;nuclear materials)

- 62 -

BELGIUM (Continued)

Modern Talking PictureService, Inc. - 1803

1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

Belgian Ministry ofAgriculture - EconomicalServices, Brussels

(Film distribution)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Belgian Information Center,600 Madison Avenue New YorkNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

BERMUDA

Bermuda Department of Tourism &Trade Development - 430

610 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

The Bermuda Department ofTourism & Trade Development,Hamilton

(Official travel office)

(T) Hill and Knowlton, Inc. - 786

Government of Bermuda150 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

T.J. Ross and Associates, The Bermuda Trade DevelopmentInc. - 1400

Board, Hamilton405 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

Ragan & Mason - 1678

Department of Tourism &900 17th Street, N.W. Trade DevelopmentWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Modern Talking Picture Bermuda Trade DevelopmentService, Inc. - 1803

Board1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

- 63 -

BERMUDA (Continued)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Bermuda Trade Development38 West 32nd Street

BoardNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

BIAFRA

Surrey, Karasik, Gould &Greene - 1178

1156 15th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20005

Government of the Republicof Biafra

(Legal Services)

(T) Ruder & Finn, Inc. - 1481

Government of the Republic130 East 59th Street of BiafraNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

Eastern Nigeria Liaison

Republic of BiafraOffice - 2021

130 East 59th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Investment & Trade promotion)

Charles N. Lemeh - 2068

Republic of Biafra342 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Representative)

Robert S. Goldstein Enterprises

Republic of Biafra- 2078

13940 Sherman WayVan Nuys, California 91405

(Public relations)

Michael C. Luckman - 2112

Government of the58 East 55th Street

Republic of BiafraNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

357-453 0-69-5

- 64 -

BRAZIL

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

Government of Brazil, Riode Janeiro

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111

Government of Brazil,880 Third Avenue

Consulate General,New York, New York 10022

New York

(Public relations)

Shaw, Pittman, Potts, Government of Brazil,Trowbridge & Madden - 1226

Brazilian Aeronautical910 17th Street, N.W. Commission, Rio deWashington, D. C. 20006

Janeiro

(Legal counsel)

Lynch, Wilde & Company,Inc. - 1242

1346 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Central Electrica de Furnas,S.A., Rio de Janeiro

Centrais Electricas de MinasGerais, S.A., BeloHorizonte

Companhia Auxiliar deEmpresas EletricasBrasileiras, Rio de Janeiro

Centrais Eletricas Brasileiras,S.A. Eletrobras, Rio deJaneiro

(Administrative services)

A.S. Nemir Associates - 1524

Instituto do Acucar e doWarner Building

Alcool, Rio de JaneiroWashington, D. C. 20004

(Legislative representative;promotion of sugar interests)

(T) Samuel E. Stavisky & Associates, Sindicato da Industria deInc. - 1531

Cafe Soluvel, Sao Paulo1250 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Brazilian Coffee Institute,Washington, D. C. 20036

New York

(Public relations)

- 65 -

BRAZIL (Continued)

(T) Purrington & McConnell - 1800

United States of Brazil,52 Wall Street

Lloyd BrasileiroNew York, New York 10005

(Legal services)

Milbank, Tweed, Hadley &

Banco do Brasil, S.A.McCloy - 1839

I Chase Manhattan PlazaNew York, New York 10005

(Legal services)

(T) Gadsby & Hannah - 2008

Embassy of the United1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. States of BrazilWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

(T) Milton Eisenberg - 2042

Dominium International,1700 K Street, N.W. Inc., New YorkWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

(T) James S. Vlasto Associates - 2044

Dominium International,342 Madison Avenue Inc., New York

New York, New York 10017

(Public relations and publicity)

BRITISH HONDURAS

Quinn & Quinn - 1425

Belize Sugar Industries,723 Washington Bldg. Ltd., British HondurasWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legal services; Legislativerepresentative)

BRITISH WEST INDIES

(T) EG&A International, Inc. - 1584

Antigua Hotel Association485 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

- 66 -

BRITISH WEST INDIES (Continued)

Modern Talking Picture Service,Inc. - 1803

1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

St. Lucia Tourist Board,Castries

(Film distribution)

ICG Corporation - 2025122 East 76th StreetNew York, New York 10021

St, Vincent Tourist Board,St. Vincent

(Public relations; advertising)

Grant Advertising, Inc. - 2055

Cayman Islands10 South Riverside Plaza Tourist BoardChicago, Illinois 60606

(Advertising; tourist promotion)

BULGARIA

(T) Utsch & Associates, Inc. - 114115 Maiden LaneNew York, New York 10038

CORECOM, Office for Repre-sentations & Commerce,Sofia

(Sales agent and representative)

Cosmos Parcels Express KORECOM, SofiaCorp. - 1246 —

45 West 45th StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Parcel service)

FAM Book & Translation Hemus, SofiaService - 1511

69 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

(Publications purchasing agent)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Bulgarian Chamber of19 West 44th Street

Commerce, SofiaNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

- 67 -

BULGARIA (Continued)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Zentralfoto, Sofia25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

(T) M.J. Jacobs, Inc. - 1856

Balkantourist, Bulgaria270 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10916

(Advertising agency)

A.C.D.M. Agency - 2082

Bulgarian Tourist Office527 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising; public relations)

CANADA

National Film Board ofCanada - 437

680 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10019

National Film Board ofCanada, Ottawa

(Film promotion and distribution)

(T) Covington & Burling - 523

Government of Canada701 Union Trust Building The International NickelWashington, D. C. 20005

Company of Canada, Ltd.,Toronto

(Legal services)

(T) Government of Ontario, CanadaDepartment of Commerce andDevelopment, IndustrialDevelopment Division - 1382

680 Fifth Avenue, Room 1302New York, New York 10019

Government of Ontario,Canada

(Official economic information office)

- 68 -

CANADA

(T) Government of Ontario, CanadaDepartment of Economics andDevelopment, Trade andIndustry Branch - 1383

11 East Adams Street, Suite 705Chicago, Illinois 60603

Department of Economicsand Development,Ontario

(Trade information office)

Development Counsellors Nova Scotia Trade andInternational, Ltd. - 1421

Industry Department,20 East 46th Street

CanadaNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

Donald Roy Dawson - 1581

Government of Canada,P.O. Box 2092

Department of Trade andHonolulu, Hawaii 96805

Commerce, Ottawa

(Honorary commercial agent)

Herbert A. Fierst - 1590 Council of Forest Industries607 Ring Building of British Columbia,Washington, D. C. 20036 Canada

Joint Committee of Printingand Publishing Industriesof Canada

(Legislative representative)

Mitchell J. Cooper - 1615 Council of Forest Industries,1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Canada .Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legislative representative)

Government of the Province Government of the Provinceof Alberta, Canada - 1720 of Alberta, Canada

550 South Grand AvenueLos Angeles, California

(Official industrial development& tourist promotion office)

- 69 -

CANADA (Continued)

British Columbia House - 1782

Government of British599 Market Street

ColumbiaSan Francisco, California 94105

(Trade, investment and tourist promotion)

Quebec Government House - 178717 West 50th StreetNew York, New York 10020

Quebec Government, TheHonourable Daniel Johnson,Prime Minister of Quebec& Minister of Intergovern-mental Affairs

(Economic development office)

Modern Talking PictureService, Inc. - 1803

1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

Province of Nova ScotiaProvice of Ontario,

Department of Highwaysand Department of Tourism& Information

(Film distribution)

(T) Larson & Taylor - 18851625 Eye Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

The Superintendent ofPatents, Office ofAssistant Deputy MinisterDepartment of NationalDefense, Ottawa

(Patents applications and legal services)

United World Films, Inc. - 1952

Province of Quebec Tourist221 Park Avenue South

Bureau, New YorkNew York, New York 10003

(Film promotion)

R.J. Sullivan, Inc. - 1966

Province of Ontario,80 Park Avenue

Department of Economics,New York, New York 10016

Trade & Industry Branch

(Trade promotion)

(T) Edward Gottlieb & Associates

Canadian CentennialLtd. - 2061

Commission, Ottawa485 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

- 70 -

CANADA (Continued)

British Columbia Government,Los Angeles Office - 2084

8833 Sunset BoulevardLos Angeles, California 90069

Government of theProvince of BritishColumbia

(Travel promotion)

Government of Ontario - 2087

Government of Ontario,(New York Office)

Canada680 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10019

(Industrial & trade promotion)

CEYLON

Stephen Goerl Associates,Inc. - 644

48 East 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10017

Government Tourist Bureau,Colombo

(Advertising agency)

Tea Council of the U.S.A., Government of CeylonInc. - 1853

10 East 56th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Sales promotion)

CHILE

Corporacion de Foment() de laProduccion de Chile - 401

SO Pine StreetNew York, New York 10005

Corporacion de Fomento de laProduccion de Chile,Santiago

(Promotion of Chilean interests)

(T) Harold L. Krainin - 1942

Consul General of the295 Madison Avenue Republic of Chile, New York

New York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

- 71 -

CHINA

Kuomintang of China,Headquarters in America - 282

844 Stockton StreetSan Francisco, California 94108

Kuomintang of China, CentralCommittee, Taipei

(Political activities)

Central News Agency of China, Central News Agency of China,New York Bureau - 391

Taipei220 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Official news service)

Chinese Information Service - 402

Chinese Government Information100 West 32nd Street

Office, TaipeiNew York, New York 10001

(Official information office)

Central News Agency of China, Central News Agency of China,Washington Bureau - 621

Taipei549 National Press BuildingWashington, D. C. 20004

(Official news service)

Central News Agency of China, Central News Agency of China,San Francisco Bureau - 1025

Taipei681 Market Street, Room 348San Francisco, California 94105

(Official news service)

Nordlinger, Riegelman,Benetar & Charney - 1030

420 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Republic of China, TaipeiChinese EmbassyPermanent Mission of theRepublic of China to theUnited Nations

Chinese Consulate General,New York

Chinese Information Service,New York

Chinese GovernmentProcurement & ServicesMission, New York

(Legal services)

- 72 -

CHINA (Continued)

Henry H. Noyes - 1350(dba China Books andPeriodicals)

2929 24th StreetSan Francisco, California 94110

Guozi Shudian, Peking

(Importation and sale of publications)

Chinese Investment & Trade Industrial Development &Office - 1567

Investment Center, Taipei515 Madison Avenue Chinese EmbassyNew York, New York 10022

(Promotion of trade and industry)

(T) Sterling Movies U.S.A., Chinese News ServiceInc. - 1597

375 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

Liuba Solov - 1766

China Photo Service, Peking25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

David Rosen - 1824(dba China Publications)

95 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

Guozi Shudian, PekingPeace Book Company, Hong Kong

(Periodical distributor)

Chinese Information Service, Government InformationPacific Coast Bureau - 1969

Office, Taipei141 Battery Street, Room 455San Francisco, California 94111

(Official information service)

Myron W. Solter - 1970

Taiwan Mushroom Packers1750 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. United Export Corporation,Washington, D. C. 20006

Taipei

(Legal services)

- 73 -

COLOMBIA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406 Government of Colombia,120 Wall Street BogotaNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development, publicityand public relations)

(T) Covington & Burling - 523

Republic of Colombia701 Union Trust Building Flota Mercante Grancolombiana,

Washington, D. C. 20005

S.A., Bogota

(Legislative representative;legal services)

Development & ResourcesCorporation - 969

One Whitehall StreetNew York, New York 10004

Corporacion AutonomaRegional de la Sabana deBogota y de los Valles deUbata y Chiquinquira,Bogota

Corporacion AutonomaRegional del Cauca, Cali

Instituto Colombiana de laReforma Agraria, Bogota

(Resources consultant)

Doyle Dane Bernbach Inc. - 1066

National Federation of20 West 43rd Street

Coffee Growers ofNew York, New York 10036

Colombia, Bogota andNew York

(Advertising agency)

Colombia National Tourist

Empresa Colombiana deBoard - 1285

Turismo, S.A., Bogota140 East 57th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Tourist promotion)

Ruder & Finn, Inc. - 1481

Colombia Information130 East 59th Street

Service, New YorkNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

- 74 -

COLOMBIA (Continued)

(T) Chirurg & Cairns, Inc. - 1822

Colombia National Tourist641 Lexington Avenue Board, BogotaNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

Colombia Information Service - 1979 Colombian Center of the140 East 57th Street Republic of Colombia,New York, New York 10022 New York

(Official information office)

CONGO

(T) Gerald N. Saunders - 1838

The Government of the Congo,1751 Seminole Avenue LeopoldvilleBronx, New York 10461

(Personnel recruitment)

COSTA RICA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

Government of Costa Rica,San Jose

(Research, resource development, publicityand public relations)

The Central American Sugar Camara de Azucareros, SanCouncil - 1585

Jose108 East 66th StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Legislative representative; promotionof sugar interests)

CUBA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

Government of Cuba, Havana

(Research, resource development, publicityand public relations)

- 75 -

CUBA (Continued)

(T) Movimiento Democrata Cristianode Cuba (Christian DemocratMovement of Cuba) - 1498

1732 N.W. 7th StreetMiami, Florida 33136

Movimiento DemocrataCristiano, Undergroundin Cuba

(Political movement)

(T) Smith, Scheuermann & Jones - 1513

Republic of Cuba, Havana1006 Baronne Building305 Barrone StreetNew Orleans, Louisiana 70112

(Legal services)

(T) Movimiento Revolucionario del

Movimiento RevolucionarioPueblo (en el exilio) - 1516

del Pueblo - Underground2921 N.E. 2ni Court

in CubaMiami, Florida 33137

(Anti-Castro movement)

Prensa Latina - 1537

Prensa Latina, AgenciaUnited Nations Secretariat

InformativaBuilding, Room 367

Latinoamericana, HavanaNew York, New York 10017

(News agency)

Segundo Frente Nacional del

Segundo Frente Nacional delEscambrey - Alpha 66 - 1686

Escambrey, Cuba109 S.W. 12th AvenueMiami, Florida 33130

(Political activities)

(T) Rabinowitz & Boudin - 1734

Republic of Cuba and its30 East 42nd Street

instrumentalities, HavanaNew York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

(T) Movimiento Democrata Cristiana Movimiento Democrata de Cuba,de Cuba (Badue Branch) - 1863 (Underground)

2333 Biscayne BoulevardMiami, Florida 33137

(Political activities)

- 76 -

CUBA (Continued)

(T) Consejo de LiberacionInterno en Armas

- 18832228 Amsterdam AvenueNew York, New York 10032

Consejo de LiberacionInterno en Armas (C.L.I.A.)

(Political activities)

Robert R. Brauer - 1961761 9th Avenue NorthSt. Petersburg, Florida 33701

Senor Telesfore DiazPortillo, DirectorMinisterio de RelacionesExtoriores, Direccion deInformacion, Seccion deIntercambio y Distribucion,Havana

Sr. Jesus Jimenez,Permanent Mission of Cubato the United Nations,New York

Dr. Americo Cruz, Ambassadorof Cuba, Ottawa, Ontario,Canada

(Publications distributor)

CURACAO

Communications Affiliates,Inc. - 1449

605 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10016

Island Government ofCuracao

(Public relations & publicity)

Modern Talking Picture Service, Island Government ofInc. - 1803

Curacao, N.W.I.1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

Grant Advertising, Inc. - 2055

Island Government of10 South Riverside Plaza CuracaoChicago, Illinois 60606

(Advertising; Tourist promotion)

-- 77 --

CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Central Parcel Service,Inc. - 483

220 South State StreetChicago, Illinois 60604

Cedok, Czechoslovak TravelBureau, Prague

(Parcel forwarding service; travel service)

National Committee for Central Committee for the

Liberation of Slovakia - 657

Slovak Underground1065 National Press BuildingWashington, D. C. 20004

(Political activities)

Utsch & Associates, Inc. - 1141

TUZEK, Foreign Trade15 Maiden Lane Corporation, Prague

New York, New York 10038

(Sales agent and representative)

FAM Book & Translation Artia, Prague

Service - 151169 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

(Publications publicity agent)

David Cobb - 1512

Embassy of the Czechoslovak1819 H Street, N.W. Socialist RepublicWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Polytechna, Prague19 West 44th StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Czechopress, Prague25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

- 78 -

CZECHOSLOVAKIA (Continued)

Putney, Twombly, Hall &Skidmore - 1744

250 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10017

State Bank of Czechoslovakia,Prague

Pragoexport Foreign TradeCorp., Prague

Zivnostenska Hanka, PragueKovo Foreign Trade Corp.,

Prague

(Legal services)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

CEDOK, Czechoslovak Travel38 West 32nd Street

BureauNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

Vladimir Till - 1844

Czechoslovak News Agency,501 E Street, N.W. PragueWashington, D. C. 20004

(Correspondent)

Cedok Czechoslovak Travel

Cedok, PragueBureau - 1848

10 East 40th StreetNew York, New York 10016

(Official tourist office)

M.J. Jacobs, Inc. - 1856270 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10016

Rapid Advertising Agency,Prague

CEDOK, Czechoslovak TravelBureau, New York

LIGNA, Foreign TradingCorporation, Prague

Made-In Publicity, Prague

(Advertising agency)

(T) Ralph E. Becker - 1932

Centrotex, Prague1819 H Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

- 79 -

CZECHOSLOVAKIA (Continued)

Miloslav Panchartek - 1954

Czechoslovak Radio, Prague3001 Veazey Terrace, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

(Correspondent)

DAHOMEY

Ginsburg and Feldman - 540

Republic of Dahomey, New York1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

DENMARK

Danish Information Office - 470

Ministry of Foreign Affairs,280 Park Avenue

Government of Denmark,New York, New York 10017

Copenhagen

(Official information office)

) Covington & Burling - 523701 Union Trust BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

A.P. Moller, Managing ownerof Steamship Co.Svendborg, Ltd. andSteamship Co, of 1912Ltd., Copenhagen

Legal services)

Danish National Travel

National Travel AssociationOffice - 634 of Denmark, Copenhagen

505 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Travel office)

Scandinavian Railways - 736

Danish State Railways,630 Fifth Avenue Copenhagen

New York, New York 10020

(Ticket and information office)

357-453 0-69-6

- 80 -

DENMARK (Continued)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Danish National Travel Office38 West 32nd StreetNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Royal Danish Consulate .600 Madison Avenue General, San Francisco

New York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

Pan-American CoffeeBureau - 406

120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

Government of the DominicanRepublic, Santo Domingo

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

I. Irving Davidson - 886

President Joaquin1612 K Street, N.W. Balaguer, SantoWashington, D. C. 20006

Domingo

(Economic & resource development)

Partido Reformista Dominican°, Partido Reformista Dominican°New York Branch - 1687

2248 BroadwayNew York, New York

(Political activities)

(T) Partido Revolucionario

Partido RevolucionarioDominicano, Puerto Rico - 1777

Dominican°, Santo Domingo967 Alameda Street, Villa GranadaRio Piedras, Puerto Rico

(Political organization)

Partido Rpiormista - Filial

Partido Reformista de lade Puerto Rico - 1887

Republica Dominicana,252 Parque Street

Dominican RepublicRio Piedras, Puerto Rico

(Political activities)

- 81 -

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (Continued)

(T) Donald Cameron Jeffrey - 1904

National Committee of2700 Northeast 135th Street

Dominican RevolutionaryNorth Miami, Florida 33161

Party, Santo Domingo

(Public relations)

,(T) Delegation of the RevolutionarySocial Christian Party of theDominican Republic, NewYork - 1921

205 West 80th StreetNew York, New York 10024

Revolutionary SocialChristian Party, SantoDomingo

(Political activities)

Partido Revolucionario Partido Revolucionario

Dominicano - 1923

Dominicano, Santo165 West End Avenue

DomingoNew York, New York 10024

(Political activities)

Cannon Advertising Associates, Dominicana AirlinesInc. - 1945

9 East 53rd StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

_Partido_ Quipqueyano Demo.crata, Partido QuisequeyanoNew York Branch -2066 Democrata, Santo Domingo

75 Fort Washington AvenueNew York, New York 10032

(Political activities)

James N. Juliana Associates, Inc. Consejo Estatel del- 2083 Azucar, Santo

1908 Sunderland Place, N.W. DomingoWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legislative representative - sugar)

- 82 -

ECUADOR

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

Government of Ecuador,Quito

Quinn & Quinn - 1425723 Washington BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legislative representative

Washburn, StringerAssociates, Inc. - 1576

4622 Broad Branch Road, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

Compania Azucarera Valdez,S.A., Guayaquil

Sociedad Agricola Industrial,Guayaquil

and legal services)

Embassy of Ecuador

(Public relations)

EL SALVADOR

Robert R. Nathan Associates,Inc. - 352

1218 16th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Consejo Nacionale dePlanificacion y Coordina-cion Economica, SanSalvador

(Technical assistance foreconomic development)

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406 Government of El Salvador,120 Wall Street San SalvadorNew York, New York 10005

(Research, Resource development,publicity and public relations)

The Central American Sugar

Asociacion AzucareraCouncil - 1585

Salvadorena108 East 66th StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Promotion of sugar interests)

(T) Hamel, Morgan, Park & Asociacion Azucarera de ElSaunders - 1922 Salvador, San Salvador

888 17th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

- 83 -

EL SALVADOR (Continued)

Oliver-Beckman, Inc. - 2009748 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Tourist Institute of ElSalvador

(Tourist promotion)

FIJI

Burt Kerr Todd - 1988Foxley FarmLigonier, Pennsylvania 15658

Government of the Colonyof Fiji, Suva

(Business consultant)

FINLAND

Finnish National TravelOffice - 573

505 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Finnish Travel Association,Helsinki

Ministry of Communications,Helsinki

Finnish State Railways,Helsinki

(Official travel office)

(T) William Herzl Freed - 735

Consulate General of Finland30 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

John Wattawa 738

Finska Angfartygs1317 F Street, N.W. Aktiebolaget, HelsingforsWashington, D. C. 20004

(Legal services)

(T) Aranow, Brodsky, Bohlinger, Republic of FinlandEinhorn & Dann - 1731

122 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

- 84 -

FINLAND (Continued)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Embassy of Finland38 West 32nd StreetNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

FRANCE

French National Railroads - 335610 Fifth Avenue, Room 616New York, New York 10020

Societe Nationale des Cheminsde fer Francais, Paris

Compagnie International desWagons-Lits, Paris

Office Central des Cheminsde fer D'Outre-Mer, Paris

(Travel promotion)

French Government Tourist

Secretary of State forOffice - 364

Tourism, Paris610 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

(Official tourist office)

(T) French Broadcasting System - 479

Office de Radiodiffusion-1290 Avenue of the Americas

Television Francaise, ParisNew York, New York 10019

(Official broadcast service)

(T) Ginsburg and Feldman - 540

Commissariat a l'Energie1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Atomique, ParisWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Gregory Lounz - 593

La Documentation Francaise-11 East 45th Street

Editions de la PresidenceNew York, New York 10017

du Conseil, Paris

(Subscription agency)

France Actuelle - 759

Comite France Actuelle, Paris221 Southern BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

(Publication of information bulletin)

- 85 -

FRANCE (Continued)

French Film Office - 977

Centre National de la745 Fifth Avenue

Cinematographie, ParisNew York, New York 10022

(Film promotion)

Doyle Dane Bernbach, Inc. - 1066

French Government Tourist20 West 43rd Street

Office, New YorkNew York, New York 10036

(Advertising agency)

Vavin, Inc. - 1112

French Government Tourist236 East 46th Street

Office, New YorkNew York, New York 10017

Air France, New York

(Film production)

(T) Surrey, Karasik, Gould &

Union des Producteurs,Greene.- 1178

Cooperatives et1116 Woodward Building Industriels Laitiers,Washington, D. C. 20005

Paris

(Legal services)

(T) Gaston A. Ponsart - 1233

Comite Franc-Dollar, Paris1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Trade promotion; patent applications)

American Surveys - 1269

American Nord-Aviation, Inc.Headquarters Building Washington, D. C.2000 P Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Business relations counselors)

American Nord-Aviation, Inc. - 1452

Nord Aviation, S.A., France1145 19th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Sales and publications services)

- 86 -

FRANCE (Continued)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

SOTELEC, Paris19 West 44th Street

Gaz de France, ParisNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

Sterling Movies U.S.A., French National RailroadsInc. - 1597

Robert W. Schofield375 Park Avenue

Associates, Inc., for theNew York, New York 10022

Government of France

(Film distribution)

(T) George Peabody & Associates, VINCO, DieppeInc. - 1682

501 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Market survey)

Robert W. Schofield

Republic of FranceAssociates, Inc. - 1757

230 West 41st StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

(T) Burgess, Dinklage &

Centre National de laSprung - 1829

Recherche Scientifique,605 Third Avenue Paris

New York, New York 10016

(Legal services)

French Expositions in the

Comite Permanent des FoiresUnited States, Inc. - 1867 et Manifestations

1301 Avenue of the Americas Economiques a l'Etranger,

New York, New York 10019

Paris

(Promotion of trade and commerce)

(T) Larson & Taylor - 1885

Centre Nacional Be La1625 Eye Street, N.W. Recherche Scientifique,Washington, D. C. 20006

ParisElectricite Be France

Service National, Paris

(Patents applications and legal services)

- 87 -

FRANCE (Continued)

(T) John Savage - 2024(dba Crest Productions)

550 5th AvenueNew York, New York 10036

French Government TouristOffice, New York

(Motion picture production)

„(T) Bell & Stanton, Inc. - 2054

909 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

French Government TouristOffice, New York

(Public relations; tourist promotion)

John Wilkinson, Prince H.R.H. the Princede Badenburg - 2099 Philippe d'Araucanie,

4617 Laurel Street ParisBellaire, Texas 77401

(Representative)

GERMANY

German National Tourist

German National TouristOffice - 615

Association, Frankfurt500 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10036

(Official information and travel office)

Stephen Goerl Associates, German Tourist InformationInc. - 644

Office, New York48 East 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

Gerhard G. Gerechter - 645

Social Democratic Party of35-06 21st Street

Germany, BonnLong Island City, New York 11106

(Subscription agent)

Roy Blumenthal InternationalAssociates, Inc. - 709

1 East 57th StreetNew York, New York 100221

Federal Republic of Germany,Bonn

Press and Information Officeof the City-State ofBerlin

(Public relations and publicity)

- 88 -

GERMANY (Continued)

(T) Boykin & De Francis - 812

Embassy of the Federal2600 Virginia Avenue, N.W. Republic of GermanyWashington, D. C. 20037

(Legal services)

(T) Larry A. Sestito - 935

Otto Mahncke, Hamburg263 West 1st AvenueRoselle, New Jersey 07203

(Political representative)

German Federal Railroad - 945

Deutsche Bundesbahn (German11 West 42nd Street

Federal Railroad),New York, New York 10036

Frankfurt/Main

(Information; publicity)

(T) Julius Klein Public

Foerderkreis FuerRelations, Inc. - 975

Deutsch-AmerikanischeOne East Wacker Drive

ZusammenarbeitChicago, Illinois 60601

Mannesmann InternationalCorp., Ltd, on behalf ofMannesmann A.G.Duesseldorf, Germany

(Public relations)

Galland, Kharasch, Calkins

Lufthansa German Airlines,& Lippman - 1051

Cologne1824 R Street, N.W. Condor Flugdienst G.m.b.H.Washington, D. C. 20009

(Legal services)

United States Navigation

Federal Government of WestCo., Inc. - 1088

Germany, Bonn `I I

17 Battery PlaceNew York, New York 10004

(Transportation services)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111

German Information Center880 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

- 89 -•GERMANY (Continued)

Leva, Hawes, Symington, Martin& Oppenheimer - 1300

815 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

Firma Otto Wolff, Cologne

(Legal services)

(T) Friedmann Radio Broadcasting and

Consulate of the FederalAdvertising Company - 1301

Republic of Germany,1105 Friendship Street

PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia 11, Pennsylvania

(Preparation and broadcast of Germanlanguage radio programs)

W. Frary Von Blomberg - 1319

Landsmannschaft Ostpreussen,111 Exeter Road

HamburgHampton, New Hampshire 03842

(Public relations)

Jules Cortell - 1368

Werbe & Verkehrsamt der Stadt136 East 57th Street

Duesseldorf, DuesseldorfNew York, New York 10022

Verkehrsamt der StadtDuisberg, Duisberg

(Tourist promotion)

Sterling Movies U.S.A., German Information Center,Inc. - 1597

New York375 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

The Albert Woodley Co., German Federal Railroad,Inc. - 1679

New York800 Second AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

Samuel Edlow - 1683

Nukem, Nuklear-Chemie undColumbus International Airport

Metallurgie GmbH.Suite 214, Box 19827

Transnuklear GmbH,Airport StationColumbus, Ohio 43219

(General representative, nuclear materials)

- 90 -

GERMANY (Continued)

(T) Marathon InternationalProductions, Inc. - 1695

10 East 49th StreetNew York, New York 10017

German Information Center

(Motion picture production)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Zentrale Bildstelle, Berlin25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

Modern Talking Picture Service, German Federal Republic, BonnInc. - 1803

1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

German American Chamber of

Deutscher Industrie-undCommerce, Inc. - 1812

Handelstag, Bonn666 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10019

(Trade promotion)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814 German Tourist Office, New600 Madison Avenue YorkNew York, New York 10022 German Federal Railroad

German Information Centerof the German ConsulateGeneral

German Tourist Office,California

(Film distribution)

(T) Burgess, Dinklage & Sprung - 1829

Hibernia - Chemie Gesellschaft605 Third Avenue mit Beschrankter Haftung,New York, New York 10016

Germany

(Legal services)

- 91 -

GERMANY (Continued)

German American Chamber ofCommerce of Chicago - 1878

77 East Monroe StreetChicago, Illinois 60603

Deutscher Industrie-undHandelstag, Bonn

German International TradeFairs in Hannover, Cologne

(Official trade promotion office)

(T) East European Trade Enterprise, Interwerbung, Berlin, GermanInc. 7. 1965

Democratic Republic221 West 41st StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Public relations, publicity)

(T) Rosalind B. Stevens - 2088

ADB Ausstellungs-Dienst15 Park Avenue Berlin, Germany

New York, New York 10016

(Public relations marketing)

GHANA

Delson & Gordon - 502230 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Permanent Mission of Ghanato the United Nations

Embassy of Ghana

(Legal services)

Davis, Polk & Wardwell - 785

Government of Ghana, AccraI Chase Manhattan PlazaNew York, New York 10005

(Legal services)

Ghana Information Services - 1463

Overseas Information, Ministry565 Fifth Avenue of Foreign Aggairs, Govern-New York, New York 10017 ment of Ghana

(Official information office)

GREAT BRITAIN

British Information Services - 481

Foreign Office, London845 Third Avenue H.M. Stationery Office,New York, New York 10022

London

(Official information office)

- 92 -

GREAT BRITAIN (Continued)

United States Office of theBritish BroadcastingCorp. - 505

630 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

British BroadcastingCorporation, London

(Official broadcasting service)

(T) Covington & Burling - 523

The British Cycle & Motor701 Union Trust Building

Cycle IndustriesWashington, D. C. 20005

Association

(Legal services)

British Travel

British Travel Association,Association - 579

London680 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10019

(Travel promotion)

Bennett Associates, Inc. - 1140

Union Castle Steamship Line605 Third Avenue of LondonNew York, New York 10016

(Public relations; publicity)

African Research and Development

Africa Confidential, LondonCompany, Inc. - 1414

75 East 55th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Subscription agency)

(T) Pritchard Wood, Incorporated - 1546 National Wool Textile Export750 Third Avenue Corporation, EnglandNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising and sales promotion)

Samuel Edlow - 1683

United Kingdom AtomicColumbus International Airport

Energy AuthorityBox 19827, Airport StationColumbus, Ohio 43219

(Consultant on traffic management ofnuclear materials)

- 93 -

GREAT BRITAIN (Continued)

Ogilvy & Mather, Inc. - 18262 East 48th StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

British Travel & HolidaysAssociation, London

(T) Larson & Taylor - 18851625 Eye Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

Director of Research andDevelopment, Ministry ofDefense, London

Ministry of Technology,London

National Coal Board, LondonNational Research Development

Corp., LondonUnited Kingdom Atomic EnergyAuthority, London

(Patents applications and legal services)

Bennett, Newbery & Cowan - 2017

National Wool Textile Export355 Lexington Avenue Corporation, YorkshireNew York, New York 10017

(Merchandising, publicity and public relations)

Schoenfeld Film Distributing _Central Office of Information,Corporation - 2056 London

220 West 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Film distributor)

British-American Chamber ofCommerce (The) - 2062

655 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10021

British National ExportCouncil, London

Confederation of BritishIndustry, London

The Scottish Council,Development and Industry,Edinburg

The Development Corporationfor Wales, Cardiff

(Trade promotion)

Courtney & McCamant - 21161725 K Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Business consultants)

Arthur Todd - 2117159 West 53rd StreetNew York, New York 10019

(Sales promotion)

National Wool TextileExport Corporation

National Wool TextileExport Corporation

- 94 -

GREECE

(T) Davis, Polk, Wardwell,Sunderland & Kiendl - 785

I Chase Manhattan PlazaNew York, New York 10005

Kingdom of Greece, Ministryof Finance, Athens

(Legal services)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111

Bank of Greece, Athens880 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Financial advisor)

(T) Ruder & Finn, Inc. - 1481

National Tourist Organization130 East 59th Street of Greece

New York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

(T) Pritchard Wood, National Tourist OrganizationIncorporated - 1546

of Greece, Athens750 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising and tourist promotion)

(T) Prather, Levenberg &

Government of Greece, AthensSeeger - 1815

1707 L Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Greek National Tourist

National Tourist OrganizationOrganization - 1895

of Greece, Athens601 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Official tourist office)

(T) Thomas J. Deegan Company, Government of Greece, AthensInc. - 2029

Time and Life Building1271 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10020

(Public relations)

- 95 -

GREECE (Continued)

(T) Burson-Marsteller Associates- 2070

1632 K Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

National Tourist Organizationof Greece, Athens

(Public relations)

Harry P. Anestos - 2081

Government of Greece, Athens7315 Wisconsin AvenueBethesda, Maryland 20014

(Public relations; legal services)

Harshe-Rotman and Druck, Inc. Greek National Tourist(New York) - 2091

Organization, New York300 East 44th StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Tourist promotion)

GUADELOUPE & MARTINIQUE

Surrey, Karasik,Greene - 1178

Gould & Associated Sugar Producersof Guadeloupe &

1156 15th Street,Washington, D. C.

N.W.20003

Martinique

(Legislative representative)

Albert M. Prosterman &

Associated Sugar ProducersAssociates, Inc. - 1566 of Guadeloupe &

818 18th Street, N.W. MartiniqueWashington, D. C. 20006

(Economic consultants)

GUATEMALA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406

Government of Guatemala,120 Wall Street

Guatemala CityNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

357-453 0-69-7

- 96 -

GUATEMALA (Continued)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111

Government of Guatemala,880 Third Avenue

Guatemala CityNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

The Central American Sugar

Asociaeion de AzucarerosCouncil - 1585

de Guatemala, Guatemala103 East 66th Street

CityNew York, New York

(Legislative representative;promotion of sugar interests)

GUINEA

Covington & Burling - 523

Republic of Guinea, Conakry701 Union Trust BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legal services)

Halco (Mining) Inc. - 1728

Compania des Bauxites de19200 South Western Avenue GuineeTorrance, California 90509

Republic of Guinea

(Engineering and economic advice;financial assistance)

Compagnie des Bauxites

Republic of Guineade Guinee - 1784

19200 South Western AvenueTorrance, California 90509

(Develop bauxite deposits)

GUYANA

(T) Guyana Public Relations andInformation Office - 1568

355 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Government of Guyana,Georgetown

(Government information office)

- 97 -

GUYANA (Continued)

Penaco InformationService - 1693

c/o Dr. Aaron T. Peters, Jr.565 Greene AvenueBrooklyn, New York 11216

People's National Congress,Georgetown

(News and publications distribution)

Oscar S. James - 2080

People's National Congress,70 Shaw Avenue Georgetown

Newark, New Jersey 07112

(Political activities)

Bronhill Associates, Inc. - 2085

People's National Congress,757 Third Avenue Georgetown

New York, New York 10019

(Public relations)

HAITI

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development;publicity and public relations)

I. Irving Davidson - 886

Dr. Francois Duvalier,1612 K Street, N.W. President, Republic ofWashington, D. C. 20006

Haiti

(Business and investment promotion)

Haiti Government Tourist

Republic of HaitiBureau, New York - 1901

30 Rockefeller PlazaNew York, New York 10020

(Official tourist office)

(T) Harold Gardner Associates, National Office of TourismInc. - 1917 and Propaganda, Republic

939 Arthur Godfrey Road of Haiti

Miami Beach, Florida

(Advertising and public relations)

Government of Haiti,Port-au-Prince

- 98 -

HAITI (Continued)

Newman/Schulte, Inc. - 1928

Republic of Haiti, National5810 Biscayne Boulevard

Office of Tourism andMiami, Florida 33137

Propaganda, Port-au-Prince

(Tourist promotion; publicity)

R.A. Rincones - 1968551 N.E. 173rd StreetNorth Miami Beach, Florida 33162

Republique d'Haiti, Corpsd'Aviation, Forces Armeesd'Haiti, CompagnieHaitienne de TransportAeriens,Port-au-Prince

(Purchasing agent)

(T) Haiti Government Tourist

Government of Haiti,Bureau, Chicago - 1972

Port-au-Prince600 South Michigan BuildingChicago, Illinois 60605

(Official tourist office)

Philip F. King - 2002

Arthur Bonhomme,2312 South Nash Street

AmbassadorArlington, Virginia 22202

(Political adviser)

Grant Advertising, Inc. - 2055

National Office of Tourism10 South Riverside Plaza of the Republic of HaitiChicago, Illinois 60606

(Advertising)

Fatoullah & Lazar, Inc. - 2075

L'Office du Timbre,116 Nassau Street

Government of HaitiNew York, New York 10038

(Philatelic agency)

International Board of

Haiti Tourist Office,Industrial Advisors - 2092

Port-au-Prince988 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Tourist promotion)

- 99 -

HONDURAS

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406

Government of Honduras,120 Wall Street

TegucigalpaNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

The Central American SugarCouncil - 1585

108 East 66th StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Legislative representative;promotion of sugar interests)

HONG KONG

Covington & Burling - 523

Hong Kong General Chamber701 Union Trust Building of CommerceWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legal services)

Modern Talking Picture Hong Kong Tourist

Service, Inc. - 1803

As1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

Kyatang Woo - 1843

Hong Kong Trade Development548 Fifth Avenue

CouncilNew York, New York 10036

(Commercial and industrial representative)

Bostelman Associates, Inc. - 2060

Hong Kong Trade Development654 Madison Avenue Council

New York, New York 10021

(Public relations)

Hong Kong Tourist

Government of Hong KongAssociation - 2110

291 Geary StreetSan Francisco, California 94102

(Tourist promotion)

Compania AzucareraHondurena, S.A., SanPedro Sula

- 100 -

HUNGARY

Artkino Pictures, Inc. - 103

Hungarofilm, Budapest723 Seventh AvenueNew York, New York 10019

(Foreign film distributors)

United States Relief Parcel

National Savings Bank,Service, Inc. - 652

Budapest245 East 80th StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Parcel forwarding service)

(T) Collegial Society of Hungarian

Elemer MeszolyVeterans in the U.S.A. - 920

1339 West Howard StreetChicago, Illinois 60626

(Veterans organization)

Bartlett & Partners, Inc. - 1145

ARTEX Hungarian Foreign16 West 32nd Street

Trading Co., BudapestNew York, New York 10001

(Sales representative)

Bela Harsany Bacskai - 1471

"Nemzetor" (HungarianP.O. Box 304

bi-weekly newspaper),Phoenixville, Pennsylvania Munchen, West Germany

(Subscription and distribution agent)

FAM Book and Translation Kultura, BudapestService - 1511

69 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

(Publications purchasing agent)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Danubia, Budapest19 West 44th StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

- 101 -

HUNGARY (Continued)

George Uhe Co., Inc. - 1745

Monimpex Hungarian Foreign76 Ninth Avenue Trading Company

New York, New York 10011

(Sales agent)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Interfoto, Budapest25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

(T) M.J. Jacobs, Inc. - 1856

Presto Foreign Trade270 Madison Avenue Publicity Co., Ltd,,

New York, New York 10016

Budapest

(Advertising agency)

Pal Ipper - 1871

Hungarian Radio & T.V.U.N. Secretariat BuildingRoom 848New York, New York 10017

(Correspondent)

Csaba Kis - 1906

Hungarian News Agency,622 Fairview Avenue Budapest

Takoma Park, Maryland 20012

Magyarorszag, Budapest

(Correspondent)

(T) Istvan Arkus - 1937

"Nepszabadsag", Budapest4500 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

(Correspondent)

Sobel Overseas Corp. - 2034

National Savings Bank210 East 86th Street of Hungary

New York, New York 10028

(Gift parcel service)

- 102 -

ICELAND

Milbank, Tweed, Hadley &McCloy - 1839

I Chase Manhattan PlazaNew York, New York 10005

Government of Iceland,Reykjavik

(Legal services)

INDIA

Fred Rosen Associates, Inc. - 1488717 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Indian Investment Centre,New York

(Public relations)

Pritchard Wood Associates Indian Government TouristInc. - 1546

Office, New York485 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising and tourist promotion)

Dawson, Quinn, Riddell, Taylor Indian Sugar Mills& Davis - 1547

Association, Calcutta723 Washington BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legislative representative;obtaining sugar quota)

Haseltine, Lake and Co. - 1580

Council of Scientific and19 West 44th Street

Industrial Research,New York, New York 10036

India

(Patent applications services)

EG&A International, Inc. - 1584

Government of India485 Madison Avenue Tourist OfficeNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

Sterling Movies U.S.A., Government of IndiaInc. - 1597 Tourist Office

375 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

- 103 -

INDIA (Continued)

Checchi and Company - 1713

Embassy of India815 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Economic consultant)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Government of India Tourist600 Madison Avenue Office, San Francisco

New York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

Tea Council of the U.S.A., Government of India, NewInc. - 1853

Delhi10 East 56th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Sales promotion)

(T) Janki N. Ganju - 1927

Embassy of India1250 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Public relations)

INDONESIA

Delson & Gordon - 502

Embassy of the Republic of230 Park Avenue

IndonesiaNew York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

I. Irving Davidson - 886

Office of Military Attache,1612 K Street, N.W. Indonesian National ArmyWashington, D. C. 20006

Republic of Indonesia

(Public relations and procurement agent)

Sontheimer and Company, Indonesian NationalInc. - 1648

Tourist Organization4 West 58th StreetNew York, New York 10019

(public relations; tourist promotion)

- 104 -

INDONESIA (Continued)

"Antara", The NationalNewsagency Institute - 1674

United Nations, Room 451New York, New York 10017

The National NewsagencyInstitute "Antara",Djakarta

(Official news agency)

(T) Aranow, Brodsky, Bohlinger, Central Indonesian TradingEinhorn & Dann - 1731

Co., Inc.122 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

Central Economic Development

Republic of Indonesia,Organization, Inc. - 2026

Djakarta15409 Warwick BoulevardNewport News, Virginia 23602

(Investment promotion)

(T) N. Tina Schweitzer - 2053c/o Embassy of Indonesia2020 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Embassy of Indonesia

(Magazine editor)

Bell & Stanton, Inc. - 2054

Permina and Indonesian909 Third Avenue

National TouristNew York, New York 10017

Organization

(Public relations)

Ruby C. Sakai - 2101

Embassy of IndonesiaEmbassy of Indonesia2020 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Assistant editor)

INTERNATIONAL

European Travel Commission - 574

European Travel Commission,33 East 50th Street

DublinNew York, New York 10022

(Travel promotion)

- 105 -

INTERNATIONAL (Continued)

Scandinavian TravelCommission (Members:Denmark, Finland, Norwayand Sweden)

(Public relations counsel)

European Community, Information

The Commission of theOffice - 933

European Communities,808 Farragut Building Brussels

Washington, D. C. 20006

(Information service)

Hermine Herta Meyer - 970

European Free Trade2900 Cathedral Avenue, N.W. AssociationWashington, D. C. 20008

(Legal services)

William Herzl Freed - 73530 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

Caribbean Travel Association - 99120 East 46th StreetNew York, New York 10017

Government of AnguillaGovernment of ArubaGovernment of BonaireGovernment of BritishVirgin Islands

Government of CuracaoGovernment of DominicaGovernment of GrenadaGovernment of GuadeloupeGovernment of HaitiGovernment of MartiniqueGovernment of NevisGovernment of SabaGovernment of St, BartsGovernment of St, EustatiusGovernment of St. KittsGovernment of St. LuciaGovernment of St. MaartenGovernment of St. MartinGovernment of St. VincentGovernment of SurinamGovernment of AntiguaGovernment of BarbadosGovernment of the Cayman

IslandGovernment of Montserrat

(Tourist promotion)

- 106 -

INTERNATIONAL (Continued)

Reynaldo Gubbins - 12731120 Vermont Avenue, NOW.Washington, D. C. 20005

Gubbins & Co., Lima, Peru,and other Latin Americanfirms and persons seekingdamages for "blacklisting" under Tradingwith the Enemy Act.

(Promotion of legislation)

Donald N. Martin - 1381(dba Donald N. Martin & Co.)

630 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

European Travel Commission,New York

(Travel promotion)

(T) Joseph S. Gould Associates - 1408

Eurailpass, New York441 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

(T) African Research & Development

"Africa Confidential"Co., Inc - 1414

London75 East 55th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Subscription agent)

Curt Heidenreich - 1420

Commission of the European900 17th Street, N.W. Communities, BrusselsWashington, D. C. 20006

(Official representative)

European Free TradeAssociation, WashingtonInformation Office - 1434

711 14th Street , •N W '

Washington, D. C. 20005

The Secretariat, EuropeanFree Trade Association,Geneva, Switzerland

(Information service)

(T) Murden & Company, Inc. - 151039 East 51st StreetNew York, New York 10022

Committee of EuropeanShipowners, Bremen,Germany

Ad Hoc Committee of ForeignPassenger Lines, New York

(Public relations)

- 107 -

INTERNATIONAL (Continued)

Samuel E. Stavisky &Associates, Inc. - 1531

1250 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Pan American Coffee Bureau

(Public relations)

Leonard Gage James - 1554

Committee of European310 Sansome Street

Shipowners, LondonSan Francisco, California 94104

(Legal services)

Albert M. Prosterman &

Inter-African CoffeeAssociates, Inc. - 1566

Organization, Paris818 18th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Economic consultant)

411) Clinton E. Frank - New York,Inc. - 1601

666 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Caribbean TouristAssociation

(Advertising; public relations;tourist promotion)

World Muslim Congress - 1603

World Muslim Congress,441 Lexington Avenue

PakistanNew York, New York 10017

(Political movement)

William E. G. Taylor - 1609

Scandinavian Airlines1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. System, StockholmWashington, D. C. 20036

(Public relations; tourism)

Ronald A. Capone - 1620

Committee of EuropeanKirlin, Campbell & Keating Shipowners, London

900 17th Street, N.W. CENSA/CES - Joint ContainerWashington, D. C. 20006

Committee, London

(Legal adviser)

- 108 -

INTERNATIONAL (Continued)

Jules Lippet Advertising,Inc. - 1696

130 West 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10036

Scandinavian Railways

(Advertising agent)

Van Brunt & Company, European Travel CommissionAdvertising-Marketing, Inc. - 1704

711 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

McCann-Erickson, Inc. - 1746

World Coffee Promotion485 Lexington Avenue

Committee of the Inter-New York, New York 10017 national Coffee

Organization, London

(Advertising agency)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Scandinavian Travel38 West 32nd Street

CommissionNew York, New York 10001

European Travel CommissionAlpine Tourist Commission

(Film distribution)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Olympic Airways, New York600 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

Mutch Haberman Joyce, Inc. - 1842

Eurailpass548 Fifth Avenue Conference of EuropeanNew York, New York 10036

Railroad Representatives

(Advertising agency)

Vincent Gerrard Barnett - 1992

Committee of European1725 Eye Street, N.W. Shipowners, LondonWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legislative counsel)

- 109 -

INTERNATIONAL (Continued)

New York Committee ofInternational Committee ofPassenger Lines - 2036

25 BroadwayNew York, New York 10004

(Travel

Canadian PacificClipper LineCunard LineFrench LineGreek Line Inc.Holland-America LineHome LinesIncres LineItalian LineNational Hellenic America

Line C/O Chandris LineNorth German LloydNorwegian America LineP & 0 Lines Inc.Swedish American Line

promotion)

Alpine Tourist Commission - 2052P. O. Box 91New York, New York 10010

National Tourist Offices o. :Austria, ViennaFrance, ParisGermany, FrankfurtItaly, RomeMonaco, MontecarloSwitzerland, ZurichYugoslavia, Belgrade

(Tourist promotion; film distribution)

Schoenfeld Film Distributing Central Office ofCorp. - 2056

Information, London220 West 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

Walter R. Choroszej - 2063

Amicale du Labor Service1343 H Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20005

(Legal services)

Donald Dent Webster - 2077

Committee of European1100 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Shipowners, LondonWashington, D. C. 20036

(Writer for C.E.S. Newsletter)

- 110 -

INTERNATIONAL (Continued)

Irwin Shishko - 2105(dba International ConsultantsAssociated)

Alewives RoadNorwalk, Connecticut 06850

Cooperating Coffee Agenciesof Mexico, El Salvador,Guatemala, Costa Rica,Nicaragua, & Honduras

(Consultant on Coffee matters)

Clinton E. Frank, Inc. - 2109

Caribbean Travel Association120 South Riverside PlazaChicago, Illinois 60606

(Advertising)

IRAN

Covington & Burling - 523701 Union Trust BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

Embassy of Iran

(Legal services)

Development and Resources Khuzestan Water and PowerCorporation - 969

Authority, TehranOne Whitehall StreetNew York, New York 10004

(Resources consultant)

Downs & Roosevelt, Inc. - 1726

Ministry of Information1629 K Street, N.W. and Tourism, GovernmentWashington, D. C. 20006

of Iran, Teheran

(Public relations)

The Khaibar Khan - 1860

K.K. United Patriots for27 West 72nd Street

Justice, SwitzerlandNew York, New York 10024

(Political activities)

IRAQ

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of Iraq,405 Lexington Avenue BaghdadNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

IRELAND

Irish Tourist Board - 536

Bord Failte Eireann590 Fifth Avenue

(National TouristNew York, New York 10036

Publicity Organizationof Ireland), Dublin

(Tourist promotion)

Joseph S. Gould Associates - 1408

Irish Tourist Board,441 Lexington Avenue

New YorkNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

Geyer, Oswald Inc. - 1468

Irish International555 Madison Avenue

Airlines, DublinNew York, New York 10022

Shannon Free Airport,Ireland

(Advertising agency)

Patton, Blow, Verrill, Brand

Government of Ireland,& Boggs - 1636

Dublin1200 17th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Buchen Advertising, Inc. - 1689

Irish Industrial Development10 South Riverside Plaza Authority, DublinChicago, Illinois 60606

(Advertising agency)

Irish Industrial Development

Industrial DevelopmentAuthority - 1770

Authority of Ireland,420 Lexington Avenue

DublinNew York, New York 10017

(Information office)

Tribune Films , Inc. - 1810

Irish Tourist Office38 West 32nd StreetNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

357-453 0-69-8

- 112 -

IRELAND (Continued)

de Garmo, McCaffery Inc. - 1821

Bord Failte Eireann605 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10016

(Advertising agency)

ISRAEL

The Jewish Agency for Israel,American Section - 208

515 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

The Executive of theJewish Agency forIsrael, Jerusalem

(Publicity - fund raising)

Robert R. Nathan Associates, Government of IsraelInc. - 352

Supply Mission,1218 16 Street, N.W. Embassy of IsraelWashington, D. C. 20036

(Economic consultants)

Ginsburg and Feldman - 540

Government of Israel1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. (Embassy of Israel,Washington, D. C. 20006 Treasury Department,

New York)

(Legal services)

Israel Information Services - 543

Government of Israel,11 East 70th Street

Ministry of ForeignNew York, New York 10021

Affairs, Jerusalem

(Official information office)

Maurice M. Boukstein - 544

Jewish Agency-American37 Wall Street

Section, Inc., New YorkNew York, New York 10005

(Legal services)

Israel Government Tourist

Israel Ministry of Tourism,Office - 620

Jerusalem574 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10036

(Travel promotion)

- 113 -

ISRAEL (Continued)

Doyle Dane Bernbach, Inc. - 1066

El Al Israel Airlines,20 West 43rd Street

Ltd., New YorkNew York, New York 10036

(Advertising agency)

Ruder & Finn, Inc. - 1481

Government of Israel,130 East 59th Street

Investment Authority,New York, New York 10022

New York

(Public relations)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Government of Israel,19 West 44th Street

State of IsraelNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

Modern Talking Picture

Israel GovernmentService, Inc. - 1803

Tourist Office1212 Avenue of the Americas Consulate of IsraelNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810

Israel Government Tourist38 West 32nd Street

OfficeNew York, New York 10001

El Al Israel Airlines

(Film distribution)

Cannon Advertising Associates, El Al Israel Airlines,Inc. - 1945

Israel9 East 53rd Street

Consul General of IsraelNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

(T) Fred Bertram - 1950

Israel Government CoinsP.O. Box 81

and Medals Corporation,Cliffside Park, New Jersey 07010

Ltd., Jerusalem

(Publisher and Editor of bi-monthlypublication; numismatic consultant)

- 114 -

ISRAEL (Continued)

Israel Communications, Inc. - 2097477 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Israel Government Coinsand Metals

Israel GovernmentInvestment Authority

(Public relations)

ITALY

Italian Government TravelOffice - 568

626 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

Ente Nazionale ItalianoPer Il Turismo,Rome

(Official tourist office)

Cox, Langford & Brown - 746

Embassy of Italy1521 New Hampshire Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

(T) Larry A. Sestito - 935263 West 1st AvenueRoselle, New Jersey 07203

Movimiento SocialeItalian°, Rome

Pino Romualdi, RomeEnte Nazionale DiAssistenza, Rome

(Political representative)

Stitt, Hemmendinger & Kennedy - 1001

Unione Industriale Pratese,1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. PratoWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Surrey, Karasik, Gould &

Construzioni Aeronaut icheGreen - 1178

Giovoni Agusta S.p.A.1156 15th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20005

(Legislative representative;legal services)

- 115 -

ITALY (Continued)

Gardner Advertising, Inc, - 1385

Alitalia Airlines, New York915 Olive Street

Venice Provincial OfficeSt. Louis, Missouri 63101

for Tourism

(Advertising agency)

Communications Affiliates, Ente Nazionale italianoInc. - 1449 Per Ii Turismo (ENIT),

605 Third Avenue RomeNew York, New York 10016

(Public relations; publicity)

Fred Rosen Associates, National Institute forInc. - 1488

Foreign Trade, Republic717 Fifth Avenue of ItalyNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations counsel)

Frank M. Tamagna - 1691

Commercial Office of the7101 Connecticut Avenue Italian EmbassyChevy Chase, Maryland 20015

(Financial adviser)

Needham, Harper & Steers, Italian LineInc. - 1748

401 North Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60611

(Advertising agency)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814600 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Italian State TouristOffice, New York

Alitalia Airlines,Rome and New York

Italian State TouristOffice, San Francisco

Italian Line, New York

(Film distribution)

- 116 -

ITALY (Continued)

Vanni Buscemi Montana - 1846

ENIT (Italian State290 Ninth Avenue

Tourist Office),New York, New York 10001

New York

(Public relations; publicity;tourist promotion)

Italian Government Travel Office,San Francisco - 1884

St. Francis HotelPost StreetSan Francisco, California 94119

Ente Nazionale ItalianoPer Ii Tourism°, Rome

(Official tourist office)

Italian Government Travel E.N.I.T., Ente NazionaleOffice - 1892 Italiano Per Ii Turismo,

203 North Michigan Avenue RomeChicago, Illinois 60601

(Official tourist office)

Schoenfeld Film Distributing Italian Government TravelCorp. - 2056

Office220 West 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

Daniels & Houlihan - 2072

Unione Industriale1819 H Street, N.W. Pratese, PratoWashington, D. C. 20008

(Legal services)

Victor de Guinzbourg - 2107

Office of the Permanent323 East 47th Street

Observer of the HolyNew York, New York 10017

See to the United Nations

(Political advisor)

IVORY COAST

Anatole Visson - 860

Government of the Republic5335 32nd Street, N.W. of the Ivory CoastWashington, D. C. 20015

(Public relations consultant)

- 117 -

IVORY COAST (Continued)

Development and ResourcesCorporation - 969

One Whitehall StreetNew York, New York 10004

Republic of the IvoryCoast, Abidjan

(Resources consultant)

Harry Torczyner - 1640

Republic of the Ivory521 Fifth Avenue Coast, Embassy

New York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

JAMAICA

The Jamaica ProgressiveLeague, Inc. - 296

P. O. Box 247New York, New York 10027

The People's NationalParty, Kingston

(Fund raising)

Samuel Moment - 1052

Government of Jamaica,2916 S.E. Woodstock Boulevard

KingstonPortland, Oregon 97202

(Economic consultant)

Doyle Dane Bernbach, Inc. - 1066

Jamaica Tourist Board,20 West 43rd Street

New YorkNew York, New York 10036

(Advertising agency)

Jamaica Industrial DevelopmentCorporation - 1444

200 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Promotion of industrial developmentand investment)

Jamaica Tourist Board - 1445

Jamaica Tourist Board,200 Park Avenue Kingston

New York, New York 10017

Jamaica IndustrialDevelopment Corporation,Kingston

(Official tourist office)

- 118 -

JAMAICA (Continued)

Sterling Movies U.S.A., Inc. - 1597

Jamaica Tourist Board375 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

John A. Tetley Company, Jamaica Tourist Board,Inc. - 1630

Kingston3075 Wilshire BoulevardLos Angeles, California 90005

(Travel promotion)

Sontheimer and Company, Jamaica IndustrialInc. - 1648

Development Corp.,4 West 58th Street

KingstonNew York, New York

(Public relations; tourist promotion)

Prather, Levenberg &

Air Caribbean TransportSeeger - 1815

Ltd., Kingston1707 L Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Bell & Stanton, Inc. - 2054

Jamaica Tourist Board909 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

Peyton Ford - 2098

Government of Jamaica1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Jamaica Tourist Board - 2118

Jamaica Tourist Board,37 S. Wabash Avenue KingstonChicago, Illinois 60603

(Tourist promotion)

- 119 -

JAPAN

Japan National TouristOrganization - 769

45 Rockefeller PlazaNew York, New York 10020

Japan National TouristOrganization, Tokyo

(Official tourist office)

Charles von Loewenfeldt,Inc. - 810

1333 Gough StreetSan Francisco, California 94109

Japan Air Lines Co,, Ltd.,San Francisco

United States-Japan TradeCouncil, Washington, D.C.

Consulate General of Japan,San Francisco

Japan Trade Center,San Francisco

(Public relations; publicity)

Japan Broadcasting

Nippon Hoso Kyokai, TokyoCorporation - 820

420 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Official Broadcasting Office)

United States-Japan Trade

Japan Trade PromotionCouncil - 929

Office, New York1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Public relations; influence legislation)

H. William Tanaka - 9481819 H Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

Embassy of JapanUnited States-Japan Trade

CouncilJapan Trade Center, New YorkJapan Light Machinery

Information Center, NewYork

Electronic IndustriesAssociation of Japan,Tokyo

(Special counsel)

- 120 -

JAPAN (Continued)

Stitt, Hemmendinger &Kennedy - 1001

1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Japan General MerchandiseExporter's Association,Tokyo

Japan Woolen & LinenTextile Exporter'sAssociation, Osaka

The Japan Rubber FootwearManufacturer's Association,Tokyo

Japan Iron & SteelExporter's Association;Japan Galvanized IronSheet Exporter'sAssociation; JapanSteel Wire & WireProducts Exporter'sAssociation, Tokyo

Embassy of JapanUnited States-Japan Trade

CouncilJapan Stainless SteelExporter's Association,Tokyo

Japan Trade Center, New York

(Legislative representative; economic andlegal advice; research)

John B. Wentworth - 1005

Embassy of JapanEmbassy of Japan2520 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

(Editing and liaison services)

Galland, Kharasch, Calkins

Japan Air Lines Company,& Lippman - 1051

Ltd., Tokyo1824 R Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20009

(Legal services)

Japan Trade Promotion

Embassy of JapanOffice - 1113

39 BroadwayNew York, New York 10006

(Official trade promotion office)

- 121 -

JAPAN (Continued)

Clifford J. Hynning - 11921555 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. G. 20036

Embassy of Japan

(Legal and financial services)

Industrecon Associates, Japan Trade Center,Inc. - 1458

New York866 United Nations PlazaNew York, New York 10017

(Market research)

Ruder & Finn, Inc, - 1481130 East 59th StreetNew York, New York 10022

Japan External TradeOrganization (JETRO),New York

United States-Japan TradeCouncil, Washington, D.C.

(Public relations)

John C. Ross - 1484

Permanent RepresentativeCold Spring Harbor of Japan to the UnitedLong Island, New York 11724

Nations, Ambassador

(Adviser)

Japan Trade Center, Japan External TradeNew York - 1643

Organization, Tokyo393 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10016

(Trade promotion)

William R. Joyce, Jr. - 1647

Government of Japan1815 H Street, N.W. (Finance Ministry)Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Sontheimer and Company, Japan National TouristInc. - 1648

Organization4 West 58th StreetNem York, New York

(Public relations; tourist promotion)

- 122 -

JAPAN (Continued)

Van Brunt, & CompanyAdvertising-Marketing,Inc. - 1704

711 Third AvenueNew York, Nen York 1.0017

Japan External TradeOrganization

(Advertising agency)

(T) Norman Taylor Gregg - 1705

Embassy of JapanEmbassy of Japan2520 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

(Informational and cultural adviser)

Japan Trade Center, Japan External TradeNew Orleans - 1768

Organization (JETRO)330 International Trade MartNew Orleans, Louisiana 70130

(Official marketing researchand publicity office)

Modern Talking Picture

Consulate General ofService, Inc. - 1803

Japan1212 Avenue of the Americas Japan External TradeNew York, New York 10036

Organization (JETRO)

(Film distribution)

Japan Trade Center, Japan External TradeSan Francisco - 1813

Organization (JETRO)1737 Post StreetSan Francisco, California 94115

(Trade research)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Japan Trade Center,600 Madison Avenue

New YorkNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

Jiro Murase - 1818

Consulate General of JapanBaker & McKenzie Japanese National Railways

350 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Legal services)

- 123 -

JAPAN (Continued)

Japan Trade Center,Los Angeles - 1833

727 West Seventh StreetLos Angeles, California 90017

Japan External TradeOrganization (JETRO)

(Trade promotion)

Milbank, Tweed, Hadley& McCloy - 1839

1 Chase Manhattan PlazaNew York, New York 10005

Government of Japan, TokyoJapan Development Bank,

TokyoNippon Telegraph & Telephone

Public Corporation, TokyoBank of JapanMetropolis of Tokyo, Tokyo

(Legal services)

Japan Trade Center, Japan External TradeChicago - 1850

Organization (JETRO)232 North Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60601

(Official trade office)

Valentine B. Deale - 1918

Japanese National Railways,1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Tokyo and New YorkWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

United World Films, Inc. - 1952

Japan National Tourist221 Park Avenue South

Organization, New YorkNew York, New York 10003

(Film promotion)

International Public RelationsCompany, Ltd., New York (dbaJapan Steel InformationCenter) - 1967

230 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Kozai Club, Tokyo

(Public relations and publicity)

- 124 -

JAPAN (Continued)

Philip Van Slyck,Inc. - 1991320 East 54th StreetNew York, New York 10022

O

Consulate General of Japan,New York

(Political, economic, andcultural consultant)

Mary A. Heffner - 1993

Embassy of Japanc/o Embassy of Japan2514 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

(Assistant information & cultural officer)

John V. Neeson - 2015(dba Neeson InternationalCorporation)

5 Third StreetSan Francisco, California 94103

Japan Trade Center (JETRO),San Francisco

(Public relations; market research)

Donald D. Steele - 2030(dba International PublicRelations Co., Ltd.,San Francisco

703 Market StreetSan Francisco, California 94103

Japan Trade Center,San Francisco

International Public RelationsCo., Ltd., Tokyo

Tokyo Shibura Electric Co.,Ltd., Tokyo

(Public relations; advertising)

Robert Bruce Johnson - 2046

Consul General of Japan333 North MichiganChicago, Illinois 60601

(Public relations counsel)

The Public Relations Board, Japan Trade Center,Inc. - 2065

Chicago75 East Wacker DriveChicago, Illinois 60601

(Public relations)

- 125 -

JAPAN (Continued)

Daniels & Houlihan - 20721819 H Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

Embassy of JapanJapan Trade Center, New YorkJapan Lumber ImportersAssociation, Tokyo

Japan Chemical FibresAssociation, Tokyo

Japan Woolen & LinenTextiles ExportersAssociation, Tokyo

(Legal services)

Donald Lerch, Jr. & Co., Japan Chemical FibresInc. - 2089

Association, Tokyo1522 K Street, N.W. Japan Lumber ImportersWashington, D. C. 20005

Association, Tokyo

(Public relations)

JORDAN

Arab Information Center - 876

The Government of Jordan,405 Lexington Avenue AmmanNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

John Cushman Fistere - 1384

Jordan Tourism Authority,Halaby Building Hashemite Kingdom ofAhmad Shawki Street

Jordan, AmmanBeirut, Lebanon

(Tourist promotion)

(T) Fund For The Relief ofJordan - 2045

P. O. Box 14088Benjamin Franklin StationWashington, D. C. 20044

The Hashemite Kingdom ofJordan, Amman

(Fund raising)

KENYA

(T) Pritchard Wood,Incorporated - 1546

750 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Government of Kenya,Ministry of NaturalResources, Wildlife andTourism, Nairobi

(Advertising and tourist promotion)

- 126 -

KENYA (Continued)

(T) Rabinowitz & Boudin - 173430 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

Embassy of the Governmentof Kenya

Permanent Mission of Kenyato the U.N.

(Legal services)

Tea Council of the

Government of KenyaU.S.A., Inc. - 1853

10 East 56th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Sales promotion)

KOREA

Robert R. Nathan Associates,Inc. - 352

1218 16th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Government of the Republicof Korea

(Economic adviser)

Ginsburg and Feldman - 540

Embassy of Korea1700 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Korea Trade Promotion Korean Trade PromotionCenter - 1619

Corporation, Seoul350 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10001

(Trade promotion)

(T) Korea Tourist Association - 1656

Korea Tourist Association,11 West 42nd Street

SeoulNew York, New York 10036

(Tourist promotion)

(T) International Public RelationsCo., Ltd., New York (dbaJapan Steel InformationCenter) - 1967

230 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

Korea Trade PromotionCorporation

- 127 -

KOREA (Continued)

(T) Associated Public RelationsCounselors, Inc. - 2090

1028 Connecticut Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Republic of Korea, Seoul

(Public relations)

KUWAIT

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of the State of405 Lexington Avenue KuwaitNew York, New York 10017

(Information office)

LATVIA

Robert H. Law, III - 1672

Latvian Legation450 North BroadwayWhite Plains, New York

Legal services)

LEBANON

Arab Information Center - 876

The Government of Lebanon,405 Lexington Avenue BeirutNew York, New York 10017

(Information office)

The Palestine Arab

The Arab Higher CommitteeDelegation - 1459

for Palestine441 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Political activities)

Downs & Roosevelt, Inc. - 1726

Ministries of Information1629 K Street, N.W. and Tourism, GovernmentWashington, D. C. 20006 of Lebanon

(Public relations)

357-453 0-69-9

- 128 -

LIBERIA

Delson & Gordon - 502

Permanent Mission of230 Park Avenue Liberia to the United

New York, New York 10017

Nations

(Legal services)

(T) Charles Kramer - 831

Republic of Liberia,100 West 42nd Street

MonroviaNew York, New York 10036

(Purchasing agent)

Albert J. Rudick - 911

Republic of Liberia,103 Park Avenue Monrovia

New York, New York 10017

(Deputy Commissioner of Maritime Affairs)

Fred T. Lininger - 1125

Republic of Liberia,103 Park Avenue MonroviaNew York, New York 10017

(Deputy Commissioner of Maritime Affairs)

Harold Cooper - 1155

Embassy of Liberia4242 East-West HighwayChevy Chase, Maryland 20015

(Public relations counselor)

Financial Consultants, Inc. - 1544

Republic of Liberia2247 47th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20007

(Financial and industrial consultants)

LIBYA

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of the Kingdom405 Lexington Avenue of Libya, TripoliNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

- 129 -

LIBYA

(T) James F. Fox, Inc. - 2038

Government of Libya500 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10036

(Public relations)

MALAGASY REPUBLIC

Albert M. Prosterman &Associates, Inc. - 1566

818 18th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

Syndicat des Distellateurset Producteurs deSucre de Madagascar,Paris, France

(Economic consultant)

MALAWI

(T) Patton, Blow, Verrill, Brand& Boggs - 1636

1200 17th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Malawi Mission to theUnited Nations

(Legal services)

MAURITIUS

(T) Burt Kerr Todd - 1988

Mauritius Sugar Syndicate,Foxley Farm Port Louis

Ligonier, Pennsylvania 15658

(Sugar consultant

MEXICO

(T) Comite Regional Sinarquistaen Los Angeles - 139

727 South Camulos StreetLos Angeles, California 90023

(Promotion of Sinarquism; distributespublication "Orden")

Pan-American Coffee Government of Mexico,

Bureau - 406

Mexico, D.F.120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development, publicityand public relations)

Union Nacional Sinarquista,Mexico

- 130 -

MEXICO (Continued)

Mexican Government RailwaySystem - 413

500 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10036

National Railways ofMexico, Mexico, D.F.

Mexican Tourist Association,Mexico, D.F.

(Travel and trade promotion)

Murden & Company, Inc. - 1510

Consejo Mexicano de39 East 51st Street

Relaciones Publicas,New York, New York 10022

A.C., Mexico City

(Public relations counsel)

(T) Washburn, Stringer Associates, Consejo Mexicano de lasInc. - 1576

Relaciones Publicas,4622 Broad Branch Road, N.W. A.C., MexicoWashington, D. C. 20008

(Public relations)

Benjamin Hill Jenkins, Jr. - 1629

Consejo Nacional de8 Lee Street

Turismo, MexicoNewnan, Georgia 30263

(Tourist promotion)

Mexican National Tourist

Consejo Nacional deCouncil - 1754

Turismo, Mexico2 East 55th StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Official tourist office)

The Lewis Company, Ltd. - 1763

Mexican National Tourist8741 Sunset Boulevard

CouncilLos Angeles, California 90069

Aeronaves de Mexico

(Public relations)

Mexican Government TourismDepartment, Houston - 1847

146 Mellie Esperson Building809 Walker AvenueHouston, Texas 77002

Mexican Government TourismDepartment, Mexico

(Official tourist office)

- 131 -

MEXICO (Continued)

Mexican Government TourismDepartment, Chicago - 1852

210 North Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60601

Department of Tourism ofthe Government of Mexico

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourism Mexican Government TouristDelegation, Dallas - 1857

Department, Mexico1905 Commerce StreetDallas, Texas 75201

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourism Department° de TurismoDepartment, San Diego - 1866

del Gobierno de Mexico707 Broadway, Suite 935San Diego, California 92101

(Tourism; public relations)

Mexican Government Tourism Mexican Government TourismDepartment, Los Angeles - 1869

Department, Mexico3106 Wilshire BoulevardLos Angeles, California 90005

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourism Mexican Government TouristDepartment, Tucson - 1870

Department, Mexico80 North Stone AvenueTucson, Arizona 85701

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourist

Departmento de Turismo,Department, San Francisco - 1872

Mexico219 Sutter StreetSan Francisco, California 94108

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourism Departmento de Turismo,Department, New York - 1879

Mexico630 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

(Official tourist office)

- 132 -

MEXICO (Continued)

Mexican Government TourismDelegation, New Orleans - 1881

203 St. Charles StreetNew Orleans, Louisiana 70130

•Mexican Government Tourism

Department, Mexico

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourism Mexican Government TourismDepartment, San Antonio - 1882

Department, Mexico402 North St. Mary's StreetSan Antonio, Texas 78205

(Official tourist office)

Mexican Government Tourism Departmento De TurismoDepartment, Miami - 1894

De Mexico125 S.E. Third AvenueMiami, Florida 33130

(Official tourist office)

Cannon Advertising Associates, Aeronaves de Mexico, MexicoInc. - 1945

9 East 53rd StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

Jesus Miravete Madrazo - 2108

Agrupacion Nacional732 Bittersweet Place DemocrataChicago, Illinois 60613

(Political activities)

MOROCCO

Arab Information Center - 876 Government of Morocco,405 Lexington Avenue RabatNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

Vavin, Inc. - 1112 Ministry of Information236 East 46th Street and Tourism of the SharifianNew York, New York 10017 Empire of Morocco, Rabat

(Film production)

- 133 -

MOROCCO (Continued)

Moroccan National TouristOffice - 1793

341 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Moroccan National TouristOffice, Rabat

(Tourist promotion)

MOZAMBIQUE

Joseph C. Massinga - 1710230 East 176th StreetBronx, New York 10457

(Distribution of publication"Mozambique Revolution")

Frente Be Libertacao BeMocambique - 2067

c/o Sharfudin M. KhanP. O. Box 1592New York, New York 10017

Frente Be Libertacao BeMocambique, Dar Es Salaam

(Political activities)

NETHERLANDS

Netherlands InformationService - 447

711 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Netherlands Government,Ministry of ForeignAffairs, The Hague

(Official information office)

The Netherlands Chamber of

Netherlands Government,Commerce in the U.S., Inc. - 456

Department of Economic10 Rockefeller Plaza Affairs

New York, New York 10020

(Trade promotion)

Netherlands National Tourist

Algemene NederlandseOffice - 619

Vereniging Voor605 Fifth Avenue Vreemdelingen Verkeer,

New York, New York 10017

The Hague

Frente de Libertacao deMozambique (FRELIMO)

(Travel promotion)

- 134 -

NETHERLANDS (Continued)

The Netherlands Chamber ofCommerce in the United States(for the Pacific Coast States),Inc, - 639

World Trade Center, Room 233San Francisco, California 94111

Netherlands Ministry ofEconomic Affairs,The Hague

(Trade promotion)

Francis Lestrade Brown - 974

K.L.M. Royal Dutch1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Airlines, The HagueWashington, D. C. 20036

(General representative)

Johan Goedkoop - 1507

Port and Municipality of17 Battery Place

AmsterdamNew York, New York 10004

(Industrial, port and trade representative)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Reactor Centrum Nederland,19 West 44th Street

The HagueNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

EG&A International Inc. - 1584

Netherlands National485 Madison Avenue Tourist OfficeNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

The Lampert Agency - 1739

Netherlands National770 Lexington Avenue Tourist OfficeNew York, New York 10021

(Advertising agency)

Tribune Films, Inc. - 1810 K.L.M. Royal Dutch38 West 32nd Street AirlinesNew York, New York 10001

(Film distribution)

- 135 -

NETHERLANDS (Continued)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

The Netherlands Information600 Madison Avenue Service, San Francisco

New York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

Netherlands InformationService - 2048

912 International Building601 California StreetSan Francisco, California 94108

Netherlands Government,Ministry of ForeignAffairs, The Hague

(Official information office)

Netherlands Information Netherlands Government,

Service - 2049

Ministry of ForeignNetherlands Museum Affairs, The Hague

Holland, Michigan 49423

(Official information office)

Schoenfeld Film Distributing Netherlands Government,

Corp. - 2056

Information Service,220 West 42nd Street

The HagueNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

NETHERLANDS ANTILLES

Sontheimer and Company, Inc, - 1648 The Netherlands Antilles,4 West 58th Street CuracaoNew York, New York 10019

(Public relations)

Justin I. Kingson - 2074

Island Government of the1050 Park Avenue Island Territory of the

New York, New York 10028

Windward Islands, Philipsburg,St. Maarten

(Air Transport consultant)

- 136 -

NEW ZEALAND

New Zealand Government TouristOffice in the United Statesand Canada - 672

153 Kearny StreetSan Francisco, California 94108

Government of New Zealand,Tourist and PublicityDepartment, Wellington

(Official tourist office)

Ruder & Finn, Inc. - 1481

New Zealand Meat Producers130 East 59th Street

BoardNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

George Bronz - 1740

New Zealand Meat Producers888 17th Street, N.W. Board, WellingtonWashington, D. C. 20006

New Zealand Dairy Board

(Legal services)

NICARAGUA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406

Government of Nicaragua,120 Wall Street

ManaguaNew York, New York 10005

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

Frank M. Barry - 9922480 16th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20009

Government of Nicaragua,Managua

(Consultant on security matters)

The Central American Sugar Nicaragua Sugar Estates,Council - 1585 Managua

108 East 66th StreetNew York, New York 10021

(Promotion of sugar interests)

(T) National Development Institute Instituto de Foment()of Nicaragua - 1947 Nacional (INFONAC),

270 Park Avenue ManaguaNew York, New York 10017

(Economic and industrial promotion)

- 137 -

NICARAGUA (Continued)

Alianza PatrioticaNicaraguense - 1955

61 Fair AvenueSan Francisco, California 94110

Dr. Fernando Aguero Rocha,Managua

(Political activities)

(T) Francisco Aguirre - 1997

Dr. Fernando Aguero Rocha,4951 Rockwood Parkway, N.W. ManaguaWashington, D. C. 20016

(Political activities)

Compton Advertising, Inc. - 2095

Secretaria de Integracion625 Madison Avenue Turistica CentroamericanaNew York, New York 10022

(SITCA), Managua

(Advertising)

NIGER

Anatole Visson - 8605335 32nd Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20015

Government of the Republicof Niger

(Public relations adviser)

NIGERIA

Dumbarton Associates, Inc. - 1938

Federal Government of120 East 56th Street

NigeriaNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

Burson-Marsteller Associates - 2096

The Federal Republic of1632 K Street, N.W. Nigeria, LagosWashington, D. C. 20006

(Public relations)

Robert S. Goldstein - 2103

Nigeria13940 Sherman WayVan Nuys, California 91405

(Public relations)

- 138 -

NIGERIA (Continued)

Hubert F. Julian - 2104

Nigerian Republic1630 Sedgwick AvenueBronx, New York 10453

(Military sales agent)

NORWAY

Norwegian Information Norwegian GovernmentService - 436

Foreign Office,290 Madison Avenue Norwegian EmbassyNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

Norwegian National Travel

Norway Travel Association,Office - 526

Oslo505 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Official travel office)

Scandinavian Railways - 736630 Fifth Avenue, Suite 1608New York, New York 10020

- Norwegian State Railways,Oslo

(Ticket and information office)

(T) Patton, Blow, Verrill, Brand

Norwegian Mission to the& Boggs - 1636

United Nations1200 17th Street, N.W. Government of NorwayWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Modern Talking PictureService, Inc. - 1803

1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

Norwegian EmbassyInformation Service

(Film distribution)

- 139 -

OMAN

Wendell Phillips - 814

Said bin Taimur, SultanInternational Market Place of OmanHalau BuildingHonolulu, Hawaii 96815

(General representative andeconomic adviser)

PAKISTAN

(T) Covington & Burling - 523

Government of Pakistani 701 Union Trust Building

Washington, D. C. 20005

(Legal services)

Mohammad Yusuf Buch - 1010

Azad Kashmir Government,8 East 65th Street

Muzaffarabad, KashmirNew York, New York 10021

(via Pakistan)

(Information officer)

Arnold C. Brackman - 1406

Government of Pakistan,Merwin Brook Road

EmbassyBrookfield Center, Connecticut 06805

(Public relations adviser)

(T) Patton, Blow, Verrill, Brand

Government of Pakistan& Boggs - 1636

1200 17th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

(T) Jerome Lipper - 1994

Republic of Pakistan,30 Rockefeller Plaza Consulate, New YorkNew York, New York 10020

(Legal services)

(T) Bernard A. Rittersporn, Jr. - 2000

Pakistan Mission to the447 East 14th Street

United NationsNew York, New York 10009

(Public relations)

- 140 -

PANAMA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

Government of Panama,Panama City

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

Quinn & Quinn - 1425

Azucarera Nacional, S.A.723 Washington Building and Compania AzucareraWashington, D. C. 20005

La Estrella, S.A., Panama

(Legal services; legislative representative)

Warren Well Public Colon Free Zone, RepublicRelations - 1530 of Panama

405 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations; publicity)

Richard G. Danner - 1645

Panama Insurance Company,200 World Center Building Republic of PanamaWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Panama Government Tourist

Instituto Panameno deBureau - 1767

Turismo630 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

(Official tourist office)

Thomas J. Deegan Company,Inc. - 2029

Time and Life Building1271 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10020

South American ConsolidatedEnterprises, S.A.,Panama City

(Public relations)

Bruno Dittmann - 2035

South American Consolidated480 Park Avenue Enterprises, S.A.New York, New York 10022

Panama City

(Consultant)

- 141 -

PANAMA (Continued)

Clifton Counselors, Inc. - 2071

South American Consolidated602 Ring Building Enterprises, S.A.

Washington, D. C. 20036

Panama City

(Public relations)

Francisco Aguirre - 2106

Dr. Arnulfo Arias M.,4951 Rockwood Parkway, N.W. Presidente-Electo ofWashington, D. C. 20016

Panama

(Personal Advisor)

PARAGUAY

Washington ServiceAssociates - 724

35 Wisconsin Circle, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20015

Corporacion de ObrasSanitarias de Asuncion

(Trade representative

PERU

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406120 Wall StreetNew York, New York 10005

The Government of Peru,Lima

(Research, resource development,publicity and public relations)

Prather, Levenberg &Seeger - 1815

1707 L Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Comite de Productores deAzucar, Lima andConfederation of Workersof Peru, Lima

Sociedad Nacional dePesqueria, Lima

(Legislative representative)

PHILIPPINE REPUBLIC

John A. 'O'Donnell - 1194

Philippine Sugar1001 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Association, ManilaWashington, D. C. 20036

National Federation ofSugarcane Planters

(Legislative representative;legal services)

- 142 -

PHILIPPINE REPUBLIC (Continued)

Philippine Tourist and TravelAssociation - 1195

210 Post StreetSan Francisco, California 94108

Government of the Republicof the Philippines,Manila

(Official travel and information agency)

George Peabody & Associates, Philippine Association,Inc. - 1682

Inc., Manila501 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Public relatious; investment andbusiness promotion)

Braden Toureast, Inc. - 2091

Philippine Tourist & Travel210 Post Street

AssociationSan Francisco, California 94108

(Travel promotion)

POLAND

Gdynia America Line, Inc. - 81115 BroadwayNew York, New York 10038

Gdynia America ShippingLines, Ltd,, Gdynia,with Polish OceanLines, Gdynia

(General agency)

Polish Press Agency - 372928 National Press BuildingWashington, D. C. 20004

Polish Press Agency(PAPPRESS), Warsaw

(Official news agency)

Central Parcel Service, Inc. - 483

Orbis, Polish Travel220 South State Street

Office, WarsawChicago, Illinois 60604

(Parcel forwarding service;travel service)

Pekao Trading Corporation - 817

Bank Polska Kasa Opieki,225 Park Avenue South

S.A., WarsawNew York, New York 10003

(Gift parcel service)

- 143 -

POLAND (Continued)

Select Magazines, Inc. - 1083229 Park Avenue, SouthNew York, New York 10003

The Enterprise forDistribution of ForeignPublications of thePolish People's Republic(P.E.I. RUCH), Warsaw

(Magazine distributor)

Wladislaw Kolakowski - 1335

RUCH - Export and Import(dba Poland Philatelic Agency)

Enterprise, WarsawP. O. Box 394Great Neck, New York 11022

(Philatelic agency)

(T) Zygmunt Broniarek - 1506 Trybuna Luda (Newspaper),4201 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. WarsawWashington, D. C. 20016

(Correspondent)

FAM Book and Translation RUCH - Export-Import

Service - 1511

Enterprise, Warsaw69 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

(Publications purchasing agent)

David Cobb - 1512

Embassy of the Polish1819 H Street, N.W. People's RepublicWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legal services)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Polservice, Warsaw19 West 44th StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

George Uhe Company, Inc. - 1745

Ciech, Warsaw76 Ninth AvenueNew York, New York 10011

(Sales agent)

357-453 0-69-10

- 144 -

POLAND (Continued)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Centralna Agenja25 West 43rd Street

Fotograficzna, WarsawNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

Polish Press Agency, NewYork Office - 1951

United Nations SecretariatBuilding, Room 354

New York, New York 10017

Polish Press Agency,Warsaw

(News agency)

Polish Travel Office ORBIS - 2086500 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10036

Government of the PolishPeople's Republic(ORBIS) & GeneralCommittee for Sport &Tourism

(Travel & information office)

PORTUGAL

Casa de Portugal - 172

Government of Portugal570 5th Avenue Embassy of PortugalNew York, New York 10036

(Official information office)

Heyward Associates, Inc. - 1639

Secretariado Nacional da245 East 63rd Street

Informacao, CulturaNew York, New York 10021

Popular e Turismo,Lisbon

(Public relations; tourist promotion)

Bernardo Teixeira - 1662

Embassy of Portugal1500 34th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20007

(Press officer)

Downs & Roosevelt, Inc. - 1726

Overseas Companies of1629 K Street, N.W. PortugalWashington, D. C. 20006

(Public relations

- 145 -

RAS AL-KHAIMA

J. Collier Adams - 2057

Government of1213 Avenue J

Ras Al-KhaimaLubbock, Texas 79401

(Economic consultant)

RHODESIA

Sterling Movies U.S.A., Inc. - 1597

Rhodesian National375 Park Avenue Tourist BoardNew York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

(T) Purcell & Nelson - 1702

Sugar Sales (Pvt.) Ltd.,888 17th Street, N.W. RhodesiaWashington, D. C. 20006

(Legislative representative;legal services)

Kotsho Lloyd Dube - 1953

Zimbabwe African Peoples467 Central Park West

Union (SouthernNew York, New York 10025

Rhodesia), Zambia

(Political activities)

Rhodesian Information Office - 1958

Department of External2852 McGill Terrace, N.W. Services, MinistryWashington, D. C. 20008 of Information,

Government of Rhodesia

(Information office)

(T) Central African Airways - 2039

Rhodesia National Tourist535 Fifth Avenue Board, SalisburyNew York, New York 10017

(Travel promotion)

Air Rhodesia - 2073

Rhodesia National Tourist535 Fifth Avenue BoardNew York, New York 10017

(Tourist promotion)

- 146 -

ROMANIA

Cosmos Parcels ExpressCorporation - 1246

45 West 45th StreetNew York, New York 10036

Cartimex, Bucharest

(Gift parcel service)

FAM Book and Translation

Cartimex, BucharestService - 1511

69 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

(Publications purchasing agent)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Biroul de Brevete si19 West 44th Street

Inventii PentruNew York, New York 10036

Strainatate Camera deComert, Bucharest

(Patent applications services)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Agerpress, Bucharest25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

M.J. Jacobs, Inc. - 1856

Publicom-Rumanian270 Madison Avenue Advertising Agency,New York, New York 10016

Bucharest

(Advertising agency)

Romanian National Tourist

The National TouristOffice - 2093

Office of the S.R. of500 Fifth Avenue RomaniaNew York, New York 10036

(Tourist promotion)

SAUDI ARABIA

Hill and Knowlton, Inc. - 786

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,150 East 42nd Street

JeddahNew York, New York 10017

(Public relations

- 147 -

SAUDI ARABIA (Continued)

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of Saudi Arabia,405 Lexington Avenue RiyadhNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

Shaw, Pittman, Potts, Embassy of Saudi ArabiaTrowbridge & Madden - 1226

910 17th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legal counsel)

SIERRA LEONE

Harry Torczyner - 1640

Government of Sierra Leone,521 Fifth Avenue Consulate

New York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

SINGAPORE

Singapore Investment PromotionCenter - 2003

745 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Economic DevelopmentBoard

(Investment promotion)

SOMALIA

John H. E. Fried - 2013

Permanent Mission of55 East 86th Street

Somalia to the UnitedNew York, New York 10028

Nations, New York

(Legal adviser)

SOUTH AFRICA

Information Service ofSouth Africa - 424

655 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10021

Republic of South Africa,Department of Information

(Official information office)

- 148 -

SOUTH AFRICA (Continued)

South African TouristCorporation - 603

610 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

South African TouristCorporation, Pretoria

(Official tourist office)

Casey, Lane & Mittendorf - 1553

South African Sugar26 Broadway Association, DurbanNew York, New York 10004

(Legislative representative)

Sterling Movies U.S.A., Inc. - 1597

Information Service of375 Park Avenue South AfricaNew York, New York 10022

South African TouristCorporation

(Film distribution)

Harry W. Graff, Inc. - 1999

South African Tourist380 Madison Avenue Corporation, New YorkNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising; tourist promotion)

African National Congress(South Africa) Committee - 2023

c/o Mr. Benedict V. Mtshali158 East 23rd Street, Apt. 3FNew York, New York 10010

African National Congress(South Africa),Provisional Headquarters,Tanzania

(Political activities)

Justice M. Chambers - 2043

Swaziland Sugar2300 Calvert Street, N.W. Association, MbabaneWashington, D. C. 20008

(Legislative representative - sugar)

Schoenfeld Film DistributingCorp. - 2056(dba Lester A. Schoenfeld Films)

220 West 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10036

South African TouristCorporation

(Film distribution)

- 149 -

SOUTH AFRICA (Continued)

South Africa Foundation - 2111

South Africa Foundation,245 East 63rd Street

JohannesburgNew York, New York 10021

(Public relations)

SOUTH WEST AFRICA

Gottfried Hage Geingob - 1949 South West Africa Peoples657 West 161st Street Organization of SouthNew York, New York 10032 West Africa, Tanzania &

National Headquarters,Windhoek, South WestAfrica

(Political representative)

Nathanael Veiue Mbaeva - 1975

South West Africa691 Nostrand Avenue National United FrontBrooklyn, New York 11216

(Political activities)

Festus U. Muundjua - 2040

South West Africa64 South Oxford Street

National UnionBrooklyn, New York

(Political activities)

SPAIN

Kelly, Nason, Inc. - 71

Spanish National Tourist300 East 42nd Street

Office, MadridNew York, New York 10017

Iberia Airlines, Madrid

(Advertising; tourist promotion)

(T) Junta de Cultura Ligue des Mutiles et

Espanola - 273

Invalides de la GuerreP. O. Box 5037

d'Espagne en Exil,Tampa, Florida 33605

France

(Fund raising)

- 150 -

SPAIN (Continued)

Spanish National TouristOffice - 538

589 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Spanish National TouristDepartment, Madrid

(Travel promotion)

Culbertson, Pendleton &

Embassy of SpainPendleton - 1743

1155 15th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C, 20005

(Legal services)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Spanish National Tourist600 Madison Avenue Office, San Francisco

New York, New York 10022

(Film distribution)

Spanish National Tourist

Ministry of InformationOffice, Chicago - 1830

and Tourism, Madrid180 North Michigan AvenueChicago, Illinois 60601

(Official information and tourist office)

Spanish National Tourist

Ministry of InformationOffice, San Francisco - 1914

and Tourism, Madrid453 Post StreetSan Francisco, California 94102

(Official tourist office)

Cipriano Larranaga - 2033

Basque Government in201 West 21st Street

Exile, Paris, FranceNew York, New York 10011

(Public relations)

John Wilkinson, Prince

H.I. & R.H. the Princede Badenburg - 2099

William III de4617 Laurel Street

Grau-Moctezuma y Rife,Bellaire, Thxas 77401

Barcelona

(Representative)

- 151 -

SUDAN

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of the Sudan,405 Lexington Avenue

KhartoumNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

SURINAM

Surinam Tourist Bureau - 1257

Surinam Tourist10 Rockefeller Plaza Development Board,

New York, New York 10020

Paramaribo

(Official travel and trade development office)

Harry W. Graff International

Surinam Tourist Bureau,Corporation - 1998

New York380 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising; tourist promotion)

SWEDEN

The Swedish Chamber of Commerceof the United States ofAmerica - 13

161 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

Government of Sweden,Stockholm

(Trade promotion)

Swedish National Travel

Swedish Tourist TrafficOffice - 68

Association, Stockholm505 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Travel promotion)

Swedish Information Service - 70

Swedish Foreign Ministry,161 East 42nd Street

StockholmNew York, New York 10017

(Official news and information service)

Scandinavian Railways - 736

Swedish State Railways,630 Fifth Avenue Stockholm

New York, New York 10020

(Ticket and information office)

- 152 -

SWEDEN (Continued)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111

Embassy of Sweden880 3rd AvenueNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

Swedish Broadcasting Sveriges Radio Aktiebolag,

Corporation - 1676

Stockholm1290 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10019

(Broadcasting services)

Samuel Edlow - 1683Columbus International AirportSuite 214, Box 19827Airport StationColumbus, Ohio 43219

Aktiebolaget Atomenergi,Stockholm

Allmanna Svenska ElektriskaAktiebolaget (ASEA)

(General representative, nuclear materials)

(T) Aranow, Brodsky, Bohlinger, Kingdom of SwedenEinhorn & Dann - 1731

122 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Legal services)

Modern Talking PictureService, Inc. - 1803

1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

Scandinavian RailwaysCompanies, Stockholm

Swedish Institue forCultural Relations,Stockholm

(Film distribution)

(T) Films of the Nations

Swedish National TravelDistributors, Inc. - 2028

Office, New York5113 16th AvenueBrooklyn, New York 11204

(Film distribution)

Jerome Schpiro - 2100 Swedish National Travel(dba Business Education Films) Office

5113 16th AvenueBrooklyn, New York 11204

(Film distribution)

- 153 -

SWITZERLAND

Swiss National TouristOffice - 55

608 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

Swiss National TouristOffice & Swiss FederalRailways

(Official tourist office)

Swiss National Tourist

Government of Switzerland,Office - 458

Department of Posts and661 Market Street

Railroads, ZurichSan Francisco, California 94105

(Official tourist office)

Hermine Herta Meyer - 970

Embassy of Switzerland2900 Cathedral Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20008

(Legal services)

Stitt, Hemmendinger and

Vorort des schweizerischenKennedy - 1001

Handels-und Industrie-1000 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Vereins, ZurichWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legislative representative)

Galland, Kharasch, Calkins Swissair, Swiss Air

& Lippman - 1051

Transport Co., Zurich1824 R Street, N.W. Balair, Ltd., A.G.,Washington, P. C. 20009

Switzerland

(Legal services)

Maurice Feldman - 1094

Official Tourist Office745 Fifth Avenue of the City of LucerneNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

Curtis J. Hoxter, Inc. - 1111

Swiss Information & Press880 Third Avenue Service

New York, New York 10022

(Public relations

- 154 -

SWITZERLAND (Continued)

Joseph S. Gould Associates - 1408

Swiss National Tourist441 Lexington Avenue Office, New York

New York, New York 10017

(Public relations)

Arnold & Porter - 1750

Ambassador of the Swiss1229 19th Street, N.W. Confederation, EmbassyWashington, D. C. 20036

(Legal services)

Association Films, Inc. - 1814

Swissair, New York600 Madison Avenue Swiss National TouristNew York, New York 10022

Office, San Francisco

(Film distribution)

(T) The Tiderock Corporation - 2016

Investors Overseas Services444 Madison Avenue

(I.O.S. Ltd.), GenevaNew York, New York 10022

(Public relaiions)

Emilio Von Hofmannsthal - 2019

Foundation for the45 Sutton Place South

Protection of CorporateNew York, New York 10022

Standards, Glarus

(Consultant)

Wyse Advertising, Inc. - 2027

Swiss National Tourist777 Third Avenue Office, New YorkNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

Daniels & Houlihan - 2072

Vorort des schweizerischen1819 H Street, N.W. Handels-und Industrie-Washington, D. C. 20008

Vereins, Zurich

(Legal services)

(T) Donald Lerch, Jr. &

Swiss Union of IndustryCo., Inc. - 2089

& Commerce, Zurich1522 K Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20005

(Public relations)

- 155 -

SYRIA

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of the Syrian405 Lexington Avenue

Arab RepublicNew York, New York 10017

(Information services)

THAILAND+.1

(T) Sterling Movies U.S.A.,Inc. - 1597

375 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

Tourist Organization ofThailand

(Film distribution)

Tourist Organization of

Tourist Organization ofThailand, New York Office - 1897

Thailand, Bangkok20 East 82nd StreetNew York, New York 10028

(Official tourist office)

TIBET

The Office of Tibet - 1699

The Dalai Lama, India801 Second AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Representative; public relations)

TONGA

Stanley Z. Siegel - 20041006 Global Building1025 Vermont Avenue, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20005

Kingdom of Tonga,Nukualofa

(Legal services)

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO

Stephen Goerl Associates, Trinidad and TobagoInc. - 644

Tourist Office, Port48 East 43rd Street of Spain, TrinidadNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

- 156 -

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO (Continued)

Tinidad & Tobago IndustrialDevelopment Corporation - 1889

400 Madison AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Trinidad & TobagoIndustrial DevelopmentCorporation, Port ofSpain

(Official industrial development office)

TUNISIA

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of Tunisia,405 Lexington Avenue

TunisNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

TURKEY

Turkish Tourism andInformation Office - 498

500 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10036

Government of the Republicof Turkey, Ankara

(Official tourist office)

Harry W. Graff, Inc. - 1999

Turkish Tourism &380 Madison Avenue Information OfficeNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising)

Malcolm M. Kilduff - 2014

Turkish Embassy5600 Grove StreetChevy Chase, Maryland 20015

(Public relations)

UGANDA

(T) Patton, Blow, Verrill, Brand& Boggs - 1636

1200 17th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20036

Uganda Mission to theUnited Nations

Embassy of Uganda

(Legal services)

- 157 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS

Four Continent BookCorporation - 94

156 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10010

Mezhdunarodnaja Kniga,Moscow

(Publications purchasing andselling agent)

Artkino Pictures, Inc. - 103723 Seventh AvenueNew York, New York 10019

Sovexportfilm, Moscow

(Foreign film distributor)

New York Bureau of theTelegraph Agency of theUSSR (PASS) - 464

50 Rockefeller PlazaNew York, New York 10020

Telegraph Agency of theUSSR (PASS), Moscow

(Official news agency)

Central Parcel Service,Inc. - 483

220 South State StreetChicago, Illinois 60604

Intourist, MoscowVneshposyltorg, Moscow

(Parcel forwarding service; travel service)

Narodno Trudovoy Soyuz (N.T.S.),U.S.A. Branch - 565

110-18 Jamaica AvenueRichmond Hills, New York 11418

Narodno Trudovoy Soyuz(National Alliance ofRussian Solidarists),Underground (Headquarters:Frankfurt/Main, Germany)

Political activities)

- 158 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Continued)

Amtorg Trading Corporation - 596355 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Ministry of Foreign TradeMoscow

Bank of Foreign Trade,Moscow

Vsesojuznoe Objedinenie(V/0) Machinoimport

V/O TechnopromimportV/O StankoimportV/0 RaznoimportV/O RaznoexportV/0 ExportljonV/0 PromsyrioimportV/0 SojuzchimexportV/0 SojuzpromexportV/O SojuznefteexportV/O ExportkhlebV/0 TechnoexportV/0 ExportlesV/0 SojuzpushninaV/O Prod intorgV/0 Avtoexport, MoscowIntourist, MoscowBaltic State Steamship

Line, LeningradBlack Sea State Steamship

Line, OdessaFar Eastern State SteamshipLine, Vladivostok

Northern State SteamshipLine, Archangel

V/0 TechmashimportV/0 MachinoexportV/0 Medexport, MoscowV/O Tractorexport, MoscowV/0 Licensintorg, MoscowV/O Mashpriborintorg,Moscow

V/0 Sudo importV/O PrommashimportVsesojuznaja Kontora

(V/K) NovoexportV/K TechsnabexportV/0 Aviaexport, MoscowV/O Sojuzplodoimport,

Moscow

(Purchasing and selling agent;collects industrial information)

- 159 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Continued)

Lillian Henley - 597

Embassy of the USSR,1706 18th Street, N.W. Soviet Life MagazineWashington, D. C. 20009

(Copyreader

Imported Publications and

Mezh"dunarodnaja Kniga,Products - 676

Moscow1 Union SquareNew York, New York 10003

(Book, periodical and subscription agency)

Louis Lerman - 973

Soviet Life Magazine,P. O. Box 3928

Embassy of the USSRGrand Central StationNew York, New York 10017

(Style editor - Soviet Life Magazine)

Package Express and Travel

Vneshposyltorg, USSRAgency, Inc. - 1117

Podarogifts, Inc.1776 BroadwayNew York, New York 10019

(Gift parcel service)

Globe Parcel Service, Inc. - 1164

Vneshposyltorg, Moscow716 Walnut StreetPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania 19106

(Gift parcel service)

Intourist, New York

VA0 Intourist, MoscowOffice - 1240

45 East 49th StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Official travel office)

Cosmos Parcels Express Vneshposyltotg, Moscow

Corporation - 124645 West 45th StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Gift parcel service)

357-453 0-69-11

- 160 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Continued)

Koehl, Landis & Landan, Intourist, New YorkInc. - 1436

41 East 42nd StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

Crossworld Books and

Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga,

Periodicals, Inc. - 1457

Moscow333 South Wacker DriveChicago, Illinois 60606

(Importation and sale of publications;subscription agent)

Stanislav N. Kondrashov - 1499

Izvestia, Moscow11 Riverside DriveNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Haseltine, Lake & Company - 1580

Patent Bureau of the19 West 44th Street

USSR, Chamber ofNew York, New York 10036

Commerce

(Patent applications services)

(T) Georgi A. Kuznetsov - 1611

"TRUD" and "SOVIET CULTURE,"11 Riverside Drive Newspapers, USSRNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Liuba Solov - 176625 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga,Moscow

Fotokhronika Tass, USSRNovosti Press Agency,

USSRSoviet Life, Washington,

D.C.

(Literary and photo agency)

Eastern News Distributors, Mezhdunarodnaya Kniga,Inc. - 1796

Moscow115 West 15th StreetNew York, New York 10011

(Periodical distributor)

- 161 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Continued)

Fawcett-Haynes Printing Embassy of the USSRCorporation - 1835

1900 Chapman AvenueRockville, Maryland 20852

(Printing and distributing ofSoviet Life Magazine)

(T) Robertasse Jiougjda - 1905

Moscow News, Moscow150 West End AvenueNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Podarogifts, Inc. - 1919

Vneshposyltorg, Moscow220 Park Avenue SouthNew York, New York 10003

(Gift parcel service)

Heinfried von Nuremburg - 1946

Union of Soviet SocialistP. O. Box 122

Republics, EmbassyCollege Park, Maryland 20740

(Public relations representative)

Nikolai V. Kurdyumov - 1948

Pravda, Moscow11 Riverside DriveNew York, New York 10023

(Journalist)

Moscow Radio and Television,U.S. Bureau - 1973

c/o Leonid E. Lipovetsky1401 Blair Mill RoadSilver Spring, Maryland 20910

Moscow Radio and Tele-vision, Moscow

(Official news bureau)

Vasily_T. Gromeka - 1980

Ekonomicheskaya Gazeta,150 West End Avenue MoscowNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

- 162 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Continued)

Compass Publications, Inc. - 1981

Novosti Press Agency,327 East 18th Street

MoscowNew York, New York 10003

(Editor and publisher)

Yuri V. Barsukov - 1987 Izvestia, Moscow #1401 Blair Mill RoadSilver Spring, Maryland 20910

(Correspondent)

Guenrikh A. Borovik - 2010

Novosti Press Agency,11 Riverside Drive, MoscowNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Goratsi Guevorguian - 2022

"TRUD," Newspaper, Moscow11 Riverside DriveNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Arau Associates, Inc. - 2051

Soviet Life Magazine15 East 48th StreetNew York, New York 10017

(Sales promotion)

Harry Wolff - 2059

Information Department,508 West 26th Street

Soviet EmbassyNew York, New York 10001

(Promotion of Soviet Literature)

Helen E. C. Hart - 2076

Soviet Embassy1706 18th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20009

(Edits Soviet Life Magazine)

(T) Natalie Lamken - 2079

Soviet Embassy1706 18th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20009

(Copyreader for Soviet Life Magazine)

- 163 -

UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS (Continued)

Albertas Laourintchioukas - 2102

Moscow News150 West End AvenueNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Sherwood Ross - 2113

Government of the USSR,216 G Street, S.W. EmbassyWashington, B. C. 20024

(Promotion of Soviet Life Magazine)

Jury Shaposhnikov - 2114

Komsomolskaja Pravda150 West End AvenueNew York, New York 10023

(Correspondent)

Koppe International Ltd. - 2115

Vneshtorgreklama610 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10020

(Advertising agent)

UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC

Arab Information Center - 876

Government of the United405 Lexington Avenue Arab Republic, CairoNew York, New York 10017

(Official information office)

United Arab Republic Tourist

United Arab Republic& Information Center - 1322

Tourist Administration,630 Fifth Avenue Cairo, EgyptNew York, New York 10020

(Official tourist office)

The Palestine Liberation The Palestine LiberationOrganization - 1845

Organization, Cairo801 Second AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Political activities)

- 164 -

UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC (Continued)

(T) Atwater Bradley Company,Inc. - 1925

445 Park AvenueNew York, New York 10022

League of Arab States,Cairo

(Public relations)

United World Films, Inc. - 1952

United Arab Republic221 Park Avenue South

Tourist Office, New YorkNew York, New York 10003

(Film distribution)

URUGUAY

Michael Lever- 1592

Embassy of Uruguay6209 30th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20015

(Public relations)

VENEZUELA

Pan-American Coffee Bureau - 406

Government of Venezuela,120 Wall Street

CaracasNew York, New York 10015

(Research, resource development, publicityand public relations)

(T) Covington & Burling - 523

Government of Venezuela701 Union Trust BuildingWashington, D. C. 20005

(Legal services)

(T) Van Brunt & Company, Direccion de Turismo,Advertising-Marketing, Ministerio de Fomento,Inc. - 1704 Caracas

711 Third AvenueNew York, New York 10017

(Advertising agency)

- 165 -

VENEZUELA (Continued)

Venezuelan Government Tourist Ministry of Development,Bureau - 1776 Department of Tourism,

485 Madison Avenue Republic of VenezuelaNew York, New York 10022

(Tourist promotion)4

(T) Charles Patrick Clark - 1907 Distribuidora VenezolanaWorld Center Building de Azucares, Caracas918 16th Street, N.W.Washington, D. C. 20006

(Legislative representative; legal services)

Francisco J. Lara - 1920 Government of Venezuela,2437 California Street, N.W. EmbassyWashington, D. C. 20008

(Director of information service)

Atwater Bradley Company, Inc. - 1925 Government of Venezuela,535 Park Avenue CaracasNew York, New York 10021 Fondo Comun De Promocion

de Venezuela en elExterior, Caracas

(Public relations)

Cannon Advertising Associates, Viasa InternationalInc. - 1945

Airlines, Caracas9 East 53rd StreetNew York, New York 10022

(Advertising agency)

(T) Scott Runkle & Associates, Embassy of VenezuelaInc.--- 1983

P. 0. Box 19312Washington, D. C. 20013

(Public relations; publicity)

Charles V. Hurtado - 2005

Embassy of Venezuela311 Cambridge RoadAlexandria, Virginia 22314

(Writer; translator)

- 166 -

VIET NAM

Henry H. Noyes - 1350(dba China Books & Periodicals)

2929 24th StreetSan Francisco, California 94110

Deputy Director Nguyen SiTrue of Xunhasaba,Hanoi

(Importation & sale of publications)

(T) Patton, Blow, Verrill, Brand

Miss Amalie Cecillon,& Boggs - 1636

Saigon and1200 17th Street, N.W. Mr. Henri Cecillon,Washington, D. C. 20036

Paris, France

(Legal services)

David Rosen - 1824(dba China Publications)

95 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

Xunhasaba, Hanoi

(Periodical distributor)

YEMEN

Arab Information Center - 876405 Lexington AvenueNew York, New York 10017

Government of the YemenArab Republic, Sana

People's Republic ofSouthern Yemen

(Official information- office)

Bushrod B. Howard, Jr. - 16213218 Klingle Street, N.W.Washington, D: C. 20016

Mutawaklite Kingdom ofYemen

(Oil and shipping adviser)

YUGOSLAVIA

Tanjug - Yugoslav NewsAgency - 493

United Nations, Room 489New York, New York 10017

Tanjug, Belgrade

(Official news agency)

- 167 -

YUGOSLAVIA (Continued)

Yugoslav Information Center - 587816 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10021

Socialist Federal Republicof Yugoslavia, Belgrade

(Official information office)

Yugoslav State Tourist

Turisticki SavezOffice - 915

Jugoslavije, Belgrade509 Madison Avenue

Jadrolinija (YugoslavNew York, New York 10022

Shipping Co.), Rijeka

(Official tourist office)

Milan Sega - 1212

"Croatia-Hrvatska"1445 East 40th Street

(Croatian Newspaper),Cleveland, Ohio 44103

Buenos Aires, Argentina

(Distributor)

FAM Book and Translation

Yugoslovenska Knijiga,Service - 1511

Beograd69 Fifth AvenueNew York, New York 10003

(Publications purchasing agent)

Haseltine, Lake & Co. - 1580

Patentcentar Beograd,19 West 44th Street

BelgradeNew York, New York 10036

(Patent applications services)

Liuba Solov - 1766

Yugofoto, Belgrade25 West 43rd StreetNew York, New York 10036

(Literary and photo agency)

Modern Talking Picture

Yugoslav State TouristService, Inc. - 1803

As1212 Avenue of the AmericasNew York, New York 10036

(Film distribution)

- 168 -

YUGOSLAVIA (Continued)

Cannon Advertising Associates,Inc. - 1945

9 East 53rd StreetNew York, New York 10022

Yugoslav State TouristOffice and Airlines

(Advertising agency)

(T) Davor Culic - 1959

Tanjug News Agency,National Press Building BelgradeRoom 950

Washington, D. C. 20004

(Correspondent)

ZAMBIA

EG&A International, Inc. - 1584

Zambia National Tourist485 Madison Avenue Bureau, LusakaNew York, New York 10022

(Public relations)

- 169 -

APPENDIX III

Alphabetical list Of short-form registrants

in active status during the calendar year 1968

Aarons, Judith C.Abdallah, HassanAblamov, Ivan P.Abrahamian, OnikAbrams, George S.Abromowitz, Anagilda G.Abt, Henri A.Acevedo, JesusAcheson, Dean G.Ackerman, JeromeAdams, Frank C.Adendorff, Josias H.O.Adjaye, Nee Of 01iAdorn, Edward N.Adomonis, JohnAdorney, Charles S.Adusei-Poku, Samuel K.Adzima, Emil W.K.Aerts, ReneAgnelli, Bernard F.Agrell, GoranAguirre, OsvaldoAlderisio, WilliamAlexander, Ian C.Alexandrakis, AlexanderAlexandrov, Edouard K.Alexandrov, Vladimir K.Alexeev, Anatoly E.Alexeevich, Kharitonov A.Alfaro Sales, Jose R.Allen, Arthur C.E.Allen, Barry M.Allen, George V., Jr.Allen, John PolkAllen, .Rutillus H.Allen, wil.fiamAlonso, CarlosAlphand, Andre

Amador, NapoleonAmato, AlphonsoAmory, Derick H.Amram, Philip W.Anderla, Georges J.Anderson, Clay J.Anderson, David R.Anderson, James A.D.Anderson, John M.Anderson, Leo L.Anderson, Roger E.Anderton, David A.Anderwald, Frank P.Andrews, John P.Andris, Eugenia S.Anfrol, Michel K.Angermueller, Hans H.Angliss, Robert J.Anichkin, Oleg N.Antrobus, EdmundAoyama, HaruoApplebaum, Harvey M.Arau, Anthony J.Arbuckle, J. GordonArias Sanquintin, Joaquin M.Arlinghaus, Clemens G.Arnold, John B.Armitage, Flora A.Armstrong, Frank A.Armstrong, Michael A.Arnold, Juergen W.Arthur, Hartney J.Asculai, GershonAshbourne, Johanna E.Astarita, John F.Aszling, Richard A.Atkin, Maurice D.Auchincloss, Hugh D., Jr.

- 170 - •Avramovic, MiodragAvril, Paul A.Axon, Gordon V.Aybar, Alberto P.Azaryan, Vladmiri G.Azouni, Omar S.A.Baar, StanleyBabaa, Kbalid I.Babiak, JoannaBabic, SretenBabinski, JanBadger, Dorothy S.Badue, Jose L. F.Baenen, Richard A.Baertschi, HansBaez, Julio E.Baez, Manuel P.Bagar, Robert A.Bailey, GeraldineBakalar, Elsa E.Baker, Leonard H.Baker, ReginaldBaker, Victor HerbertBakker, MarilynBalaban, DanBalaguer, JoaquinBaldwin, Kenneth N.Ballista Diaz, Fernando A.Ballot, Paul L.Bancroft, LeaneBandy, Eugene F., Jr.Banks, Arthur L.Bannister, RogerBaral, LillianBardac, JacquesBardy, ReneBarendrecht, BernardinaBaretz, Harley S.Barff, Stafford E. D.Barget, JacquelineBarish, Evelyn F.Barker, William A.Barker, AllonBarlow, Homer:J.11CBarlowe, RaleighBarnard, Jane W.

Barnard, PamelaBarnard, Robert C.Barnett, MichaelBarnett, StephenBaroni, BrunoBarnard-Jeserski, JetteBaroody, Joseph D.Barovick, RichardBarraza, EnriqueBarre, Robert L.Barrett, Edward W.Baru, MosheBary, Martin H.Basaluda Arigos, Carlos A.Basham, Richard D.Baskakov, Edward G.Bassett, Helen M.Batal, JamesBatalin, VladimirBates, HelgaBatista Falla, LaureanoBator, Peter A.Baumann, Hans J.Bayer, Jonathan L.Beckman Cranmer, Mary C.Beer, G. Ulrica B.Beebe, Walter H.Beham, YohananBein, Abraham C.Beit-Arie, DavidBelanger, Margaret G.Bell, Alan W.Bell, Daniel WafenaBell, Martha M.Bell, NancyBellenger, William A.Belleville, DenisBellinger, Virginia L.Bellis, Milton B.Belov, Anatoli P.Ben Ari, AvrahamBenetar, David L.Benford, Betty H.Bennett, Duncan Y.Bennett, Victor A.Ben-Yosef, Malka

- 171 -

Berch, Michael A.Berenter, Ingeborg R.Berg, Herman L.Berg, LouisBerger, GeorgeBergford, James W.Berggren, HaakanBerman, SelmaBergman, UriBerkeley, Alan J.Berlin, Lawrence H.Bernard, LucilleBernbach, WilliamBerne, MauriceBernstein, PhyllisBernstein, Richard M.Berrada, Eugenie G.Berrada itekhami, LarbiBerry, WinstonBerryman, Richard B.Berthe, RobertBeswick, FrankBeuta, Marcos U.Beveridge, Elisa S.Beyer, John C.Beyl, Efiin L.Beynon,-royce J.Bial, Louis C.Bieringer, Leroy J.Biklen, Paul F.Bikow, ArtamonBinder, Robert R.Bingham, John R.Bitan, Hava B.Black, James C.Black, Joan S.Blake, Richard J.Blake, William G.Blanco, Maria J.Bland, Carl C.Blandford, John B., Jr.Blattmatin, AlbertBleck, BasilBledsoe, Samuel B.Blish, James BenjaminBloch, Fred W.

Bloch, Henry J.Bloch, LeonBlock, L. RobertBlokhin, Alexei A.Bloom, Melvyn H.Blow, GeorgeBloxham, George P.Blumenthal, L. RoyBochow, John P.Bock, Chan C.Bocklage, George E.Bogaards, Harry W., Jr.Bogachev, Vladimir I.Boggs, Thomas H., Jr.Boldyreff, Constantin W.Bondfield, Margaret G.Bonham Carter, Helen V.Bord, Renee D.Borden, Ruth H.Born, Brooksley E.Born, Claus J.Borozdenkov, Vladimir I.Bostelman, William T.Bostwick, Phillip D.Boudin, Leonard B.Bouillier, Jeannine F.Boukalis, Mary A.Bourdrez, Joseph P.Bowen, Robert W.Boykin, Lykes M.Boyle, Edward C.B.Brache, RubenBrachvogel, TheodoraBrack, Magdalene A.Brack, MartinBraden, Edwin E.Bradley, Fontaine C.Bradley, John A.Bradley, Kathleen I.Bradner, William M., Jr.Brady, Jonathan B.Brady, Richard A.Bramble, Harlan P.Braman, LeonardBrains, Stanley H.Brand-Carter, Marielle

- 174 -

Colen, Donald J.Collyns, Charles N.Colson, Charles W.Colton, Wendell p.;, _Jr.Comacho, RudolfConant, F. ScottConnors, William O'NeilConroy, John A.Contreras, Jose L.Cook, Charles D.Cook, GeorgeCook, J. HowardCooper, HaroldCooper, Harry S.Cooper, Martha J.Copps, Joseph C.Corbett, Jack C.Cordon, Susie H.Core, David U.Corea, AntiiiiniTC.Cornet, Jacques H. L.Cornwell, Douglas A.Coryat, Cecil H.Cosman, J. W.Cotsis, Renate E.Cott, BettyCoudert, Alexis C.Courtice, Andrew P, K.Courtney, Paul L.__Coury, Bradley R.Cowl, MargaretCowley, Renton S. C.Cox, Elliott F. -Cox, Elsie W:Cox, Oscar S.Coyet, Claes A.Coyle, Donald E.Craig, Glenn H.Crane, PaulCranmer, Mary C.Cranston, Lawrence M.Crawford, John F.Creshkoff, JosephCreveling, GrayCrisman, Charles B.Crissan, Michael G.

Croffie, Edward J.Crosby, Henry A.Crosthwaite-Eyre, Oliver E.Crudgington, James W.Cruz, Jaime Q.Crystal, David S.Culbertson, William S.Curtis, TomiCurzan, Myron P.Cutler, LaurelCutler, Lloyd N.Czike, Ernestd'Albis, RolandDahlberg, Lars S. C.Dahlgren, Claes E.Dahlgren, Robert R.Daiboch, Alfred F.Dale, William L.Daley, JosephDalton, Peter J.Damon, Gordon G.Dane, MaxwellDaniels, Michael P.Danilov, Eugenee A.Danilov, Alexander J.Dansereau, Francois A.d'Aubuisson, Carlos C.Dauman, Alma R.Davey, John D.Davidson, De Witt S.Davious-Hassapoglou, AthinaDavis, Enoch D.Davis, Ernest M.Davis, FitzgeraldDavis, SamuelDawson, Donald S.Dazey, William B.de Alba, NievesDeane, Julian Lowriede Bary, Nadine J.de Bayle, MartaDe Carvalho, Manuel A.de Cortes, Walkyria del R. M.Deegan, Thomas J., Jr.Deegan, Thomas J., IIIDefferard, Ernest M.

- 175 -

De Francis, Frank J.de Garcis, Gloriade Garmo, JohnDeHaven, Charles R.Dejakaisaya, Nuantade Jong, Cornelis H.de Kerprigent, Gildas R.Del Coro, Ralph J.de Leon Garza, Samuel C.Delgado, Francisco E. L.Delgado Rodriguez, EmilioDellale, DinaDelobel, Jacques M.A.F.Be Lorme, CharlesDelson, RobertBe Maerel, PeterDeMare, Gregory NtDemidov, NatalieDemo, Vincent A.Demos, John A.DeNando, Joseph M.Denning, Arthur, Dr.Dennis, Frank L., Jr.Deno Estepan, A.E.Denton, John P.De Pena, Washington A.Derevenskov, Gennady G.de Rochemont, Richard G.d'Escayrac, Bernardde Schepper, Hendrik Y.Deshayes, Pierre R.Desmond, John D.de Spirlet, EricDessau, Axel C.J.De Tchihatchef, Margaretha J.Detchon, Elliott R., Jr.Deutsch, Jeromede Vallee, Henri H.de Vasconcellos, Joaquim G.de Villiers, L.E.S.deVilmorin, Henry L.Devine, Donald F.de Voogd, Stephina W.Dewhurst, DavidDewing, Vaughan C.R.Dey, John A.

Diamandis, Peter G.Diaz Alonso, Perfecto R.Diespecker, Richard A.Digby, NoelDima, DjawaDineen, Robert E.Dinklage, Ralph D.Dinzey, Juan V.Disraeli Anglin, Samuel L.Djuranovic, VojislavDjurica, BozidarDobbins, Emery E.Dobrogorski, Vladimir F.Dobrovir, William A.Doelger, Manolita T.Doherty, Edward J.Doherty, Frank J.Dogancay, Burhan C., Dr.Dokoutchaev, IgorDolan, Charles F.Domenech, Humberto M.Dominici, Francisco C.Donias, Claire H.Donley, James W.Donovan, James M., Jr.Dorje, TseringDormann, Henry 0.dos Santos Braga, AntonioDouglas, John W.Downs, Kenneth T.Downs, RosemaryDoyle, James E.D Peet, Charles, Jr.Drake, Luis 0.Drantch, SeymourDruck, Kalman B.Druzhinin, Alexander N.Dubois, IvoDubor, Claude F.Dubovik, Vladlen M.Du Breil, Alain C.V.Duerkop, JohnVuhar, KarlaDuke, ZurachDull, John R.Duncan, Rupert

357-453 0-69--12

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Dunlay, Philip J.Dunn, TimothyDunn, William J.Dunne, Maurice E.J.de Plessis, Johannes H.Duprat, CharlesDurant, Ellen G.Durbin, William A.Durland, William R.Durnin, Kevinde Tit, CarelDutt, AsokaDuVal, Clive L., IIDyk, Timothy B.Dym, HerbertDynan, Florence M.Dynner, Alan R.Dzienio, CzeslawEaton, -Joii5 M.Eastright, Robert E.Eaton, Fredrick M.Ebisutani, IsamuEchols, Henry V.Eckhardt, George H., Jr.Edger, RobertEstrom, Dean R.Edwards, Jean P.Edwards, Robert L.Egert, Leonard G.Egge, George V., Jr.Egli, GodyEguchi, HiromichiEhrenhaft, Peter D.Eisenman, DavidEisley, Richard S.Ekern, George P.Ekman, Elon V.Ellenis, Emanuel T.Elliott, Robert R.Elliott, RobertElliott, Sylvia L.Ellison, Newell W.Elofsson, Axel F.El-Okdah, MahmoudElsner, Neil G.Embretsen, Jon E.

Emeric, Joseph C.Engel, Rudolf J.English, Elizabeth A.Enya, YutakaEren, NuniEricsson, Gunnar L.V.Eriksen, Erik C.Escamilla Flores, HectorEshkol, NahumEspenbaum, RichardEspinal, GastonEspinola Fortunato, Ramon E.Estner, Josef K.Evans, Francine A.Evans, Lancelot 0.Evans, Reginald S.Evans, Richard L.Ewing, Ky Pepper, Jr.Eyal, MenachemFairbairn, Richard F.Fajardo, Manuel G.Falath, JosefFaling, Leendert J.Fanelli, John G.Farber, Herbert JayFarmer, Patricia J.Farnstrom, Bengt O.Fatoullah, KhanbabaFay, William C.Feigelson, MosesFeinstein, JosephFeldman, AlbertFeldt, MarnaFequiere, AndreFernandez Badue, Jose L.Fernandez, Eulalio M.Fernandez Nuevo, Antonio M.Ferris, Robert N.Fiebinger, Karl E.F.Field, FranklinField, JosephFieser, Max E.Filhaber, PhilipFine, FrancisFinehout, Robert M.Fink, Morton J.

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Finn, David E.Fischbeck, C. LloydFishman, Shirley G.Fitz, Peter R.Fitz Gerald, Dennis A.Fitzharris, Edward J.Flatabo, Olav A.Fleck, Gustav P.Fleites Diaz, ArmandoFleming, Robert I.Fletcher, Margaret L.Fletcher-Vane, MaryFlynn, Elspeth G.T.C.Flynn, Patricia M.Foley, Howard_Fones, John S.Fong, Philip H.Foot, Hugh M.Forbes, James C.Foreman, Richard R.Fornes, Frederic C., Jr.Forrestal, Michael V.Forrester, William D.411 Forsberg, Franklin S.Forsberg, TorstenFortune, George C.Foster, Robert D.Foster, Suzanne F.Fox, Donald T.Fox, Earl S.Fox, Gerald A.Fox, James F.Franco, Peter J.Franey, James M.Frank, Anna C.Frank, David D.Frank, Jacobus F.Frank, Louis J.Frank, William S.Frankel, Marvin D.Frankenheim, SamuelFrankfurt, NathanielFrankl, FricFranklin, John C.Franks, John L.Fraser, Alan

Fredrick, Alfred L.Fredericks, Charles, Jr.Frederiksen, Harald D.Freed, William H.Freedman, JeanFreedman, Nathan T.Freedman, Paul W.Freeman, HarryFreidberg, Stephen P.Fremuth, Gerald W.Frias de Rodriguez, Thelma A.G.Frias, RobertoFriberg, KarinFricke, Calla J.Friedman, AlvinFriedman, Jack J.Friedman, Martin L.Friedrichs, Niels G.Fris, Erik I.D.Fromm, EvelynFu, Chien ChungFugitt, Warren G.Fujise, Eijirokuldauer, IvanFuller, William.A., Jr.Furman, David M.Furman, Gerald S.Furman, John P.Furukaki, TaroGabrielovitz, AbrahamGalbinski, StansilawGale, Oliver M., Jr.Galindo, FredGalland, George F.Gallaway, George H.Galub, JackGamble, Eric M.Gambos, ClaireGannon, John J.Garcia, Enrique A.Garcia, GloridaGarcia-Herraiz Perez, EnriqueGarcia Valera, Enrique A.Gardiner, Arthur Z., Jr.Garfield, Sorrell L.Garnham, Peter J.

- 178 - •Garnick, Daniel H.Garrido, NicolasGarrity, Robert A.Garrote Peluzzo, LaureanoGarunkstis, BrunoGarzon, DionisioGaskill, William J.Gass, OscarGauerke, Gustav A.Gavigan, Harold F.Gaxiola Peralta, GustavoGee, Hop CanGeer, Edward S.Geer, FaithGeldenhuys, Ghemus J.J.Gell Schweverer, Virgilio A.Gemeil, Jose A.Gerber, Richard F.Gerfin, John L., Jr.Gericke, Marie L.Germain, Edmour A.R.Gero, George H.Gero, RoseGevers, Maxmilian E.Giberga, Manuel R.Gibson, AlethiaGibson, John D.Gilchrist, Charles W.Gilday, John F.Gille, Ake L.Gilman, Michael G.Ginsburg, DavidGittler, Lewis F.Glabinski, StansilawGlaser, Eda H.Glemser, BernardGlover, Charles C., IIIGodoy Solis, Joaquin R.Goedkoop, JohanGoekjian, Samuel V.Goerl, StephenGoff, Daniel N.Gogarty, Henry A.Golan, MenahemGolan, YoramGoldberg, Sybil R.

Goldfin, AllenGoldman, Saul M.Goldstein, RobertGolebiowski, JanuszGomes, Albert J.Gomperts, JackGomperts, Philip J.Gonzalez, Felix B.Goodman, Brian W.H.Goodman, MurrayGoranson, Gustaf E.Gordon, Elaine T.Gordon, ElsieGordon, Harold E.Gordon, RahelGordon, Stephen AlanGoren, ZeyyatGorr, Reeva G.Gornicki, WieslawGorskov, Oleg V.Gotman, KaterynaGoto, HeigoroGottlieb, Edward-Gouffe, Noel F.F.Gould, BettyGould, Joseph S.Gould, LeslieGould, Michael M.Gourgel, Fernando P. do A.Graham, D. GordonGraham, James J.Grandjean, Marcel J. P.Grant, Gordon B.Grant, James A.Grantham, Alexander W. H.Gray, Haskell E.Gray, Robert K.Green, Peter GordonGreenberg, LisaGreene, Francis T.Greene, Nona LouGreenidge, Helen D.Greenspon, Barry MichaelGreenwald, Curtis H.Greve, Johan A.Gribbon, Daniel M.

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Griffiths, Eldon W.Grigorovich-Barsky, ConstantineGroen, Maurice T.Gronkvist, Uno V.Grossman, Benjamin B.Grossman, HaroldGrossman, SanfordGryffenberg, Jurei V. Z.Gudino Astudillo, RogelioGuerin, Charles H.Guerrieri, RenatoGuinan, Lorne M.Gunn, Joseph R., IIIGurge, James V.Gurirab, Theo-BenGutierrez Menoyo, EloyGutride, Philp S.Guttentag, Joseph H.Haase-Dubosc, Arnold A.Haberman, Jules J.Hacohen, Nahum H.Hadley, George G.Hagemeister, Jane T.Hager, Eric H.Hagers, CornelisHagglund, Erik H. M.Hagin, Jean D.Haglund, Didrik W.Haight, CharLes S.Haine, MargaretHaire, John E.Haley, John C.Hall, Barbara K.Hall, Ronald J.Hall, RussHallgarten, Katherine D.Hallowell JacquelineHalvax, GuenterHamilton, Ian C.Hamano, HidioHamlin, IsadoreHammon, JamesHampe Velazquez, CarlosHamstra, BernardHamutenya, Hidipo L.Hang, Ting Yung

Hanin, Simon A.Hanlon, R. TimothyHannsson, Jenny M.Hanrahan, Mary E.Hansen, Olaf C.Hanson Villa, Margaret H.Hara, TsutomHarding, Robert T.Hardy, Benjamin S.Hareli, ShaulHarfield, HenryHarmshaw, Dorothy L.Harris, JessieHarris, NormanHarrison, Allen H., Jr.Harrod, HarryHartley, Joseph R.Harvey, Homer M.Harvey, Lawrence A.Harvey, Leo M.Hasan, SaadatHashimoto, MasuoHashimoto, TadamasaHaskell, Dorothy C.Hassell, Lloyd A.Hasselman, Willem P.Hasselriis, Caspar H. W.Hatch, Diana A. D.Hatcher, Rodney N.Hathorn, Herbert C.Hattori, MorihideHauman, KathrynHaupt, Frederick, IIIHausman, Robert M.Havlicek, Frank J.Hawes, Alexander B.Hawke, John D., Jr.Hayasaka, Johnny K.Hayashi, Thomas T.Haynes, Roland A.Hazlett, Richard C.Heaston, Frank E.Hecker, Hanns E.Heckmann, Howard L.Heckscher, EvaHeemstra, Frans J. J.

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Hein, Denis R.Heires, John H.Heldring, Jerome L.Hemmendinger, NoelHennep, Henry E.Henriquez, JoseHernandez Perez, OrlandoHerrick, GeorgeHerrington, Margaret E.Hertell, Hirma H.Herzbrun, David J.Herzstein, Robert E.Hess, Richard C.Hetrick, Frederick G.Hewitt, Edwin J.Heynemann, Julius W.Heyward, Evelyn J.Hicks, RitaHigashi, KiyoshiHiggins, Robert J.Hikida, Joseph S.Hill, Dumond P.

Hiller, JacobHillerstrom, Tord H.Hilles, Charles D., Jr.Hinton, Wilfred J.Hinrichs, Harley H.Hiraide, SaburoHirano, ShunsukeHiraoka, SumieHirata, KozoHirnschrodt, HeinrichHirose, AkiraHirose, IehikoHirschfeld, Neil B.Hirse land, GerhardHirst, StephenHiss, DonaldHitchcock, Nelson A., Jr.Hobbs, Ranald D.Remmendinger, Noel Hoesch, Ann M.bets, Pieter J.Hofacker, Richard Q.,Hollander, Edward D.

Holloway, G. N.Holmes, John W. T.Homan, Margaret F.Hong, Louis T.Hooley, John A. P.Hooper, Henry J. C.Hooyberg, Jan F.Hooykass, Dirk N.Hopkins, Dorothy F.Hopkins, Theron C.Hornblower, MarshallHorne, Michael S.Horowitz, CarlHorvath, John P.Roving, Goran V.Horwitz, Aaron B.Hostetler, James S.Houlihan, David P.Hough, Richard M.Houlton, Frank W.Houlton, John O.Hovey, J. Allan, Jr.Howard, Kenneth MarvinHowell, John I.Howser, McKenzieHoxter, Curtis J.Hsiung, Pa-YinHubbard, Thomas B.Huber, Fred J.Huber, John R.Hudec, Robert E.Hudes, Albert B.Hughes, Anthony D.Hughes, Martin T. A.Huguet Del Valle, Rafael R.Humphrey, Champ C.Hungerford, Thomas A. G.Hunter, Harry F., Jr.Huntington, Freeman H.Huppi, Gordon P.Hurst, Virginia R.Hurwitz, SolomonHuss, Hermann D.Husseini, Ishaq A. S.Hutchins, HowardHutchinson, James R.

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Hutchison, Colonel J.R.H.Icolari, DanielIgnatiev, Gennady G.Ihara, KiyoshiIimura, EiichiIllenberger, TheodoraImhof, Eckard P.Imlach, RobertIngram, Richard C.Ino, KazuoInui, FumioInqerillo, JosephineIrwin, TheodoreIsaacs, Harriet R.Isaacs, Robert C.Isbell, David B.Isbrandtsen, Waldemar M.Ishikawa, SamuelIshikawa, ZenzaburoIsler, WillyIsrael, Rudolph C.Iwata, KazuoJacobs, Max J.Jacobsen, Edward R.Jacobson, CharlotteJacobson, Fred F. A.Jacobson, JeromeJacques, AndreJames, Oscar S.Jang, Young SumJansson, Karl S. S.Jedlicka, Judith A.Jeffers, William H.Jefferson, Thomas E.Jeffries, Peter J.Joel, ClarkJogise, KarlJohaneson, Nils R.Johanson, Brita J.Johnson, Audrey L.Johnson, Daisy B.Johnson, Elizabeth V.Johnson, 'James G., Jr.Johnson, Robert H.Johnson, Walter H., Jr.Johnston, Lily E.

Johnston, ThomasJohnston, Vincent L.Johong, JoonduJokileto, Maj-Britt L.Jokilehto, Berndt J.Jones, Alvin B.Jones, Brian D. J.Jones, HaysJones, John B., Jr.Jones, Richard P.Jones, Robert H., Jr.Jones, Robert W.Jones, Violet M. C.Jordan, Thomas W., Jr.Joseph, David A.Josephs, RayJoslyn, RogerJoyce, Robert N.Julian, HubertJuliana, James N.Julius, Arieh Y.Junker, Sigrid L.Jurehn, Hans E.Jurma, MallKachnykewych, TarasKahn, Helen L.Kahn, Malcolm B.Kaiden, NinaKaklugin, FeoktistKalser, KonstantinKameny, NathanKampelman, Max M.Kandus, MarjanKane, Margaret C.Kane, MichaelKane, Timothy F.Kaneko, KiyoshiKanzaki, HitoshiKaplan, AlbertKaplan, BarbaraKaplan, Bernard S.Kaplan, Sheldon Z.Karasik, MonroeKarev, NikolaiKarsavina, JeanKarydas, Nicholas

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Kass, Philip S.Kastrup, Hans S.Katchoura-Anfrol, MichelKater, Guilford C.Katsuno, RyoheiKaufman, ArthurKaura, NathanielKavanagh, James P.Kawai, HitoshiKawasaki, SumioKay, AllenKay, Beatrice K.Kay, DorothyKazarian, Micheline HKeating, Kevin DKekst, GershonKelleT., John G.Keller, John H.Kelley, Austin P.Kellogg, James C., IVKelly, John N. J.Kelly, Robert E.Kendall, Patricia A.Kennedy, John A., Jr.Kenney, James A., IIIKeown, Ian M.Kern, Robert R.Ketcham, William T., Jr.Khabele, Paseka E.Kharasch, Robert N.Kleiman, Friedrich 0.Kleiman, Wiadyslaw L.Killinger, Dieter A.Kim, Hee KonKim, Kwan-minKimura, ShigeoKincheloe, Fontaine, Jr.Kindred, Darwin R.King, Eugene G.King, Henry L.King, Wilfred T. C.King Yaw ChangeKinghorn, ArthurKirkbrid lee S.Kirshblum,Kisska, Stephen

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Krucoff, Ella L.Krugman, Herbert E.Krumbeing, MargaretKrupsak, Mary A.Kuczewski, ThaddeusKujtkowski, HarryKullberg, Gary W.Kuraishi, FumiakiKurmel, EdwardKuroda, AkioKurusu, YoshiroKwai-Cheong, ShumKwan, Peter T. S.Kwiatkowski, Jerzy J.Kyle, Charles D.Lada-Mocarski, ValerianLadd, OliviaLadwig, Harry F. K.La Fleur, Marcia AnneLa Fond, Richard D.Lahoszniak, WasylLalley, John B.Lalondriz, Luis E.Lambert, PhilippeLampe, Henry M.Lampert, HarryLanahan, Samuel J.Landau, John R.Landau, SamuelLandis, Abner A.Landis, Robert J.Landman, AmosLane, JohnLang, LillianLangeveia, M. A.Langhorne, John, Jr.Langley, Donald C.La Palme, Richard J.Lappin, James M.Larkin, James J.Larsen, Henning V.Larson, PaulLarsson, HansLaulicht, DavidLaursen, Lars P. J.Laverty, Helen

La Vole, Paul C.Lawrence, B. M.Lawrence, John M.Lawson, Kenneth J.Layline, John G.Lazar, NedjatLeahy, Kenneth E.Le Bris, Pierre M. A.Ledermann, ChristophLee, Chien-sanLee, Doo HwanLee, Hae YoungLee, Jack JongLee, Sang WonLee, Ta-lingLee, Wei-LuLeebaert, OnnoLeenders, Thea H.Leeuwenburgh, Helge W.Lefeld, WalterLegasse, Edouard R.Lehmann, Max P.Lennmalm, Carl 0.Lenz, Carl H.Leon, Manuel J.Leonard, Edwin D.Leonard, James R.Leonard, Roberta M.Lepp, Kenneth E.Lerch, Donald G., Jr.Lerman, Arnold M.Lerner, Sidney M.Leuenberger, EmilLeva, MarxLevenberg, GerryLeventhal, HaroldLeventis, Gregory P.Leverich, Beingham B.Levin, CarlLevin, Gerald M.Levine, GrettaLevine, HarryLevine, Patricia T.Levine, Samuel Z.Levine, Ted M.Levine, William A

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Levit, Dena R.Levy, David E.Levy, HenryLevy, Henry W.Levy, IdaLevy, JacobLevy, Marjorie R.Levy, Marvin J.Levy, MichaelLew, Goot CheeLew, Mon BenLewis, BudLewis, Joseph B.Lewis, Milton F.Lewis, Wilfred, Jr.Li, Chiang-KwangLibunao, Joseph A.Liberman, Frank P.Liebes, Peter P.Liebich, Joseph R.Lilienthal, David E.Lillycrop, Maurice C.Lin, Chen-chiLin, Robert C. H.Linares Tejeda, Carlos E.Lindell, Bror EmilLinden, Sidney K.Lindner, Bo G.Lindsay, David A.Lindsay, Merrill K.Lindsay, Richard C.Link, GeraldLipovetsky, LeonidLippit, JulesLippman, William J.Li, TalcLittlefield, Doris J.Littlefield, Edmund W.Liu, HouLiushar, Thupten T.Lloyd, BoardmanLloyd, Donald W.Lo, LorenzoLoach, JeanLocmaria, Yves du ParcLoeffler, Robert R.

Logan, Francis D.Loh, Gene I-chengLomakin, Genadi V.Long, Frank H.Longo, Alfonso C.Longo, GiorgioLopez Lecube, Miguel A. A.Lopez Martinez, JaimeLorberbaum, YehoshuaLorden, Richard K.Losev, Sergei A.Loughran, JohnLow, Leonard B.Lu, Ling-ShihLucas, James R.Lucas, Jennifer R.Lucas, VictoriaLucas-Tooth, Laetitia F.Lucci, GiuseppeLui, Barbara R.Lukats, Stephen G.Lukhang, Nawang C.Lupu, TraianLurie, ZviLuxford, Ansel F.Lvovich, Beloborodko V.Lynch, Julie G.Lynch, Kathleen A.Lynge, John E.Lynge, Shirely F.Lyskin, Oleg I.McAllister, GilbertMcAnnalley, Colin A.McArdle, Paul F.McAward, Patrick J.McCabe, Edward A.McCabe, Joseph G., IIIMcCaffery, WilliamMcCaffrey, Patrick J.McCall, Bruce P. G.McCarthy, John G.McClosky, Albert B.McCloy, John J.McCormick, William J., Jr.McCoy, Patrick D.McCulloch, Allan W.

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McDaniel, Richard B.McDermott, William M.McDonald, John M.McDonald, William J.McDonnell, Robert E.McDonough, HerbertMcEntee, Catherine H.McGivena, Leo E.McGovern, William L.McGrath, George E.McGratty, Charles D.McHugh, James N.McIntosh, Richard T., Jr.McKay, James C.McKenna, Dorothy M.McLachlan, Donald H.McLaughlin, Arthur V.McLymont, DorcasMcManus, FrancisMcMurray, Harry V.McNeill, Edward J.McOstrich, Norman H. M.Maas, Albert A. van L.Mabuchi, Kenneth K.MaQalphin R., HoracioMacCallum, William H.MacDermot, Christopher A.MacDona, Brian F.MacDonald, Charles M.MacDonald, JeanMacGinnis, Francis R.MacGregor, GregMacKay, Frederick C.MacKay, Margaret-AnneMackie, MaitlandMacKinlay, Edgar H.MacKinnon, Robert H.Mackriell, Keith C.MacMurray, John CurtisMacoun, Patricia A.Madden, Murdaugh S.Madell, RosaMadell, SamMadigan, Charles E.Madrazo, LuisMaffei, RudolphMaggi, Enrico

Mahoney, John R.Maisons, JacquesMakovsky, Kenneth D.Malaspina, AnitaMaldonado Solano, EladioMaley, Martha A.Malia, Gerald A.Malli, AntoniaMalmstrom, Lars G.Malone, John M.Malone, Joseph N.Manalac, Gabriel V., Jr.Manis, GeorgeManske, Fred W.Manyas, NezihMargalith, AahronMargesson, Francis V. H.Margolis, Martin L.Marino, James R.Markel, EdwardMarkman, Elsa L.Markoc, BorisMarkoff, AllanMarkoff, FannyMarks, Harvey J.Marks, Lee R.Marples, Alfred E.Marquez-Becerra, Oscar A.Marsden, ArthurMarsh, Jane C.Marshall, Anthony D.Marshall, Roger V.Martin, Beatrice S.Martin, RobertMartinez, GuillermoMartinez, JoseMartinez, SeverinoMartinez Gonzalez, SalvadorMartynov, Alexandr N.Maruo, TakeshiMaruta, AkiraMarx, Walter J.Masaoka, Etsu M.Masaoka, Mike M.Masek, KarelMason, John N.Mason, Thomas F.

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Mateo, RicardoMaternati, Joseph M.Mathews, CraigMatijasevic, ScepanMatsumoto, JunichiMatsumoto, KeiMattesich, Rudolf F.Mattesictr; Virginia C.Matz, StanleyMauer, Raymond J.Mawlawi, Farouk A.May, Rene A.Mayall, Robert L.Mayer, Frank A. R.Mayers, Daniel K.Mayne, Jessica L.Mazola, Peter J,, Jr.Mead, Thomas A.Meehan, James J.Meek, Coulter L.Meigs, R. JonathanMeinnier, Jacques J.Mejias Santana, JulioMelikyan, Artem 0.Mellon, ImogenMentor, Ann R.Mercer, Harry E.Meschi, AngelMesney, Peter M.Messler, Eric G.Mexax, Kasem B.Meyer, D. SwingMeyer, Harold D.Meyer, Lenore F.Meyers, Charles J.Miall, Rowland L.Miesegaes, WilliamMiller, Donald L.Miller, GavinMiller, Gilbert C.Miller, HarryMiller, HelgaMiller, John A.Miller, John-CharlesMiller, Maurice V.Mills, Eugene A.

Milo, Henry L.Milton, Joseph R. C.Mindes, MarvinMinkus, Mary S.Minikes, Jon C.Minor, John R.Miolan Reynoso, Angel E.Miser, Robert N.Mitchell, Edward T.Mitchell, FrankMitchell, Robert A.Mitchell, Robert D.Miyagishima, KatsuyaMiyamoto, HidetoshiMiyata, KyoshiroMiyoshi, MasayaMizanoglu, Orhan M.Mkrtchian, William V.Moller, Britt-MarieMoloney, Mary D.Monahan, Michael J.Moniz, Milton D. N. S.Monica, LawrenceMoukhouse, Patrick J.Monteith, RobertMontgomery, Ernest E.Monzain, AndreMooney, Franklin E. R.Moore, Frederick T.Moore, James H., IIIMoore, Leonard B.Moore-Park, Howard C. F. C.Moormans, William J.Morales, Marion M.Morde, Theodore A.Morena, John MichaelMoreno Brillas, GuillermoMorera PeIlon, Esteban A.Morey, VladimirMorgan, Gerald D.Morgan, William D.Moriguchi, RyouichiMorrah, Gertrude R.Morrell, SydneyMorris, Rhys H.Morris, Yaacov

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Neiman, Robert H.Nel, Petrus J.Nellis, Harry R.Nelson, C. RogerNelson, John H.Nelson, SaulNemir, Albert S.Nesnadny, ViktorNeto, RosarioNeuman, AlexanderNeumann, EmanuelNewbery, F. Stanley, Jr.Newman, Helen G. D.Newman, Stuart G.Newsom, Karla V.Neysmith, Horace G.Nichols, Arnold H.Nichols, Doris D.Nichols, Peter W.Nickles, Peter J., IINiewiaroski, Donald H.Nikels, Thomas R,Nikiforov, Youri A.Nikitin, Boris S.Nikolaev, Youri V.Nikolic, MilosNilert, Tore H.Ninomiya, Albert J.Nishikawa, YoshihisaNitka, HenrykNixon, Judith M.Noble, RonaldNodarse Fernandez, SamuelNoden, HarryNoerlem, lb AllanNogavica, MaehelenaNonas, ElliottNorberg, Gard E.Norbu, Thubten J.Nordholm, Birger J.Nordlinger, Henry H.Norell, Mark W.Noriega Legorreta, EduardoNormandeau, Andrew A.Norris, Jack A.Norton, Conrad

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Norton, rGerald P.Novack, MartinNoyes, ChristopherNozaki, SeigoNujoma, SamNussbaum, MichaelOard, William M.Oberdorfer, Louis F.O'Brian, John L.O'Brien, Eugene, Jr.O'Brien, Pauline B.Ochi, NorioO'Connor, David F.O'Connor, JeanOcquaye, Theophilus A.Oda, SueakiO'Doherty, James S.Oelsner, Edward C,, Jr.Oelsner, John W.Ofer, JacobOgilvy, David M.O'Hare, PatriciaOhgami, HitoshiOhlsson, Folke E. H.Oji, Aggrey K.Okada, SenjiIkawara, YoshihiroO'Keefe, JohnOkoro, Vincent 0.Oliver, JohnOliver, Robert R.Olsen, KnutO'Malley, RobertOmayad, HishamO'Neill, James P.Onions, Ronald E. B.Oppenheimer, Franz M.Oppenheimer, Jerry L.Oppenheimer, MonroeOram, Harold L.O'Reilly, LaselveO'Reilly, Thomas L.Orgill, James T.Orlin, DavidOrloff, RomanOrr, Michael F.

O'Sullivan, Patrick P.Otue, NwonyeOverbeck, Robert S.Overgaard, Richard L.Pacheco, CayitaPacheco, Jose I. M.Pagnamenta, GiovanniPaine, Walter R.Pakhomov, Nikolai V.Palladino, Anthony A.Palmeter, N. DavidPanggabean, BonarPaniagua, LitaPanton, Eustace E.Papkin, Robert D.Park, HojoonParker, Glen L.Parker, James M.Parker, William M.Parry, Robert H.Patton, James R,, Jr.Patzak, HeinzPauker, Carol S.Paulson, Alfred G.Pavlov, Eugene S.Pawlick, John E.Peabody, GeorgePearson, Oscar E.Peart, Thomas F.Peck, JamesPeck, John H.Peebles, Jack C.Pei, Chi LiuPeled, BenjaminPellegrino, Thomas J.Pena, Persilio A.Pendleton, Edmund E., Jr.Pendleton, George C.Peng, Nai-ChingPepin Dominicis, Carlos de L. S.Pennington, Schuyler W.Peperzak, PaulPepper, SidneyPerez, BenitoPerez, Dr. LinoPerlik, William R.

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Perozo, Manuel de JesusPerry, Marilyn E.Perry, Matthew W., Jr.Peshkin, Anne S.Peter, Edouard S.Peter, Humphrey M.Peters, Aaron T., Jr,Peters, Sharon V.Petersen, ReinholdPeterson, Ervin L.Peterson, Howard C., Jr.Peterson, Rudolph A.Petrocelli, Robert H.Petrocik, JosephPetroussenko, Vitaly V.Pettingell, Barbara P.Pfeifer, FriedlPhilip, Nicholas W.Philips, August _Phillips, Sheila N.Phillips, William E.Pickering, John H.Picard, Richard A.Pigossi, Richard N.Pilosoph, ItzhakPina, AndresPincus, Louis A.Pitterson, FernandoPlatkin, Stanley W.Plotkin, Arieh L.Plummer, Ephraim A.Podoba, TheodorePonamarev, Youri K.Ponsart, GastonPope, Joseph R.Poppe, Fred C.Poroshin, Alexander G.Portela, Francisco V.Porteous, Donald C.Porter, Paul A.Portocarrero, Oscar V.Posey, Chester L.Posniak, Edward G.Post, Robert E.Powers, John M.Potts, Ramsay D., Jr.

Potts, Stephen D.Pow, Patricia Shiu-yingPozarniuk, Bohdan T.Pozzesi, PhyllisPrag, PerPrather, Alfred V. J.Prebish, Harry W.Press, LeonardPrestinary, RicardoPretorius, Stanley H.Pretorius, Willem J.Priesack, Laurence E.Prosterman, Albert M.Pucak, StjepanPudar, StojanPurcell, GansonPutterman, Felix M.Pyke, John S., Jr.Pyne, Sedley K.Quattlebaum, Poppy B.Quijano, Luz M.Quilliam, Cyril D.Quinn, Arthur L.Quinones Garza, JoelQuivey, William L.Raanan, UriRabinowitz, VictorRadberg, Lars T.Raden, SaulRafik, MohamedRagan, William F.Raiff, StanleyRajnic, JohnRamey, Frank B.Ramirez, Jose A.Ramkomut, AmaraRamo, Eva E.Ramo, Herman R. K.Ramos, DoloresRamos, Julio A.Ramsey, JamesRand, Larry A.Randall, Robert L.Rapieff, Richard K.Rapson, Donald J.Rasmussen, Harold W.

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Rathbun, Henry T.Rathkopf, Clifford A.Rau, RobertRaudsepp, HaraldRaushenbush, Josephine J.Read, Lawrence V.Reast, RonaldRedpath, Yvonne M.Reed, Dennis L.Reede, William_Reeves, Thoma_R., Jr.Reeves, William H.Reid, Edward S., IIIReid, Frederick L.Reid, Isis L.Reilly, Madeleine H.Reiner, GabrielReiner, SidneyReis, Robert H.Rengkoe, Marius L.Reu, Sophie C.Reuvers, Leendert M.Revis, Joseph S.Reynoso Rodriguez, RafaelRezelman, Dirk C.Rhinelander, John B.Rhoads, Andre F.Rhodes, Kenneth J.Rhoodie, Eschel M.Richards, Cranmer M.Richman, AlanRiddell, James W.Riegelman, HaroldRieser, Edith H.Rifkin, Lillian K.Rifkin, MauriceRike, George C.Rivera, Porfirio 0.Rivkin, Malcolm D.Roberto, HoldenRoberts, Alan G.Roberts, Alan K.Roberts, Alma F.Roberts, Richard S., Jr.Robertson, Alexander E.Robertson, James

Robertson, Katherine A.Robin, Stephen P.Robinette, Spurgeon L., IIIRobinson, Lewis D.Roboz, George T.Robson, Robert E.Rocca, Bernard T., Jr.Roditi, HaroldRodriguez Diaz, Guido E.Roe, MarjorieRoevekamp, Frederick W.Rogan, William P.Rogers, Gifford E.Rogers, Richard H.Rohatynskyj, PeterRojas, Domingo A.Rojas Rey, PompilioRojtman, HeleneRona, PeterRomantsov, Yuri V.Roosevelt, KermitRoot, Frederick W.Roper, Willet C., Jr.Rose, J. 0.Rose-Body, BeatriceRoseman, MillRosen, Barbara J.Rosen, DanRosen, FredRosen, Harold B.Rosenblatt, FredRosenbloom, JoelRosenbloom, Morris V.Rosenfeld, Hyman S.Rosenthal, AbrahamRoss, Alfred J., Jr.Ross, Carl D.Ross, Charlene A.Ross, James S.Ross, JackRoss, Martin C.Ross, Mary A.Ross, Thomas J.Rossotti, Barbara M.Roth, Frederick J.Roth, Gerda J. E.

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Perozo, Manuel de JesusPerry, Marilyn E.Perry, Matthew W., Jr.Peshkin, Anne S.Peter, Edouard S.Peter, Humphrey M.Peters, Aaron T., Jr,Peters, Sharon V.Petersen, ReinholdPeterson, Ervin L.Peterson, Howard C., Jr.Peterson, Rudolph A.Petrocelli, Robert H.Petrocik, JosephPetroussenko, Vitaly V.Pettingell, Barbara P.Pfeifer, FriedlPhilip, Nicholas W.Philips, August _Phillips, Sheila M.Phillips, William E.Pickering, John H.Picard, Richard A.Pigossi, Richard N.Pilosoph, ItzhakPina, ArldresPincus, Louis A.Pitterson, FernandoPlatkin, Stanley W.Plotkin, Arieh L.Plummer, Ephraim A.Podoba, TheodorePonamarev, Youri K.Ponsart, GastonPope, Joseph R.Poppe, Fred C.Poroshin, Alexander G.Portela, Francisco V.Porteous, Donald C.Porter, Paul A.Portocarrero, Oscar V.Posey, Chester L.Posniak, Edward G.Post, Robert E.Powers, John M.Potts, Ramsay D., Jr.

Potts, Stephen D.Pow, Patricia Shiu-yingPozarniuk, Bohdan T.Pozzesi, PhyllisPrag, PerPrather, Alfred V. J.Prebish, Harry W.Press, LeonardPrestinary, RicardoPretorius, Stanley H.Pretorius, Willem J.Priesack, Laurence E.Prosterman, Albert M.Pucak, StjepanPudar, StojanPurcell, GansonPutterman, Felix M.Pyke, John S., Jr.Pyne, Sedley K.Quattlebaum, Poppy B.Quijano, Luz M.Quilliam, Cyril D.Quinn, Arthur L.Quinones Garza, JoelQuivey, William L.Raanan, UriRabinowitz, VictorRadberg, Lars T.Raden, SaulRafik, MohamedRagan, William F.Raiff, StanleyRajnic, JohnRamey, Frank B.Ramirez, Jose A.Ramkomut, AmaraRamo, Eva E.Ramo, Herman R. K.Ramos, DoloresRamos, Julio A.Ramsey, JamesRand, Larry A.Randall, Robert L.Rapieff, Richard K.Rapson, Donald J.Rasmussen, Harold W.

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Rathbun, Henry T.Rathkopf, Clifford A.Rau, RobertRaudsepp, HaraldRaushenbush, Josephine J.Read, Lawrence V.Reast, RonaldRedpath, Yvonne M.Reed, Dennis L.Reede,Reeves, Thomas_R., Jr.Reeves, William H.Reid, Edward S., IIIReid, Frederick L.Reid, Isis L.Reilly, Madeleine H.Reiner, GabrielReiner, SidneyReis, Robert H.Rengkoe, Marius L.Reu, Sophie C.Reuvers, Leendert M.Revis, Joseph S.Reynoso Rodriguez, RafaelRezelman, Dirk C.Rhinelander, John B.Rhoads, Andre F.Rhodes, Kenneth J.Rhoodie, Eschel M.Richards, Cranmer M.Richman, AlanRiddell, James W.Riegelman, HaroldRieser, Edith H.Rifkin, Lillian K.Rifkin, MauriceRike, George C.Rivera, Porfirio 0.Rivkin, Malcolm D.Roberto, HoldenRoberts, AlanRoberts, Alan K.Roberts, Alma F.Roberts, Richard S,, Jr.Robertson, Alexander E.Robertson, James

Robertson, Katherine A.Robin, Stephen P.Robinette, Spurgeon L., IIIRobinson, Lewis D.Roboz, George T.Robson, Robert E.Rocca, Bernard T., Jr.Roditi, HaroldRodriguez Diaz, Guido E.Roe, MarjorieRoevekamp, Frederick W.Rogan, William P.Rogers, Gifford E.Rogers, Richard H.Rohatynskyj, PeterRojas, Domingo A.Rojas Rey, PompilioRojtman, HeleneRona, PeterRomantsov, Yuri V.Roosevelt, KermitRoot, Frederick W.Roper, Willet C., Jr.Rose, J. 0.Rose-Body, BeatriceRoseman, MillRosen, Barbara J.Rosen, DanRosen, FredRosen, Harold B.Rosenblatt, FredRosenbloom, JoelRosenbloom, Morris V.Rosenfeld, Hyman S.Rosenthal, Abraham I.Ross, Alfred J., Jr.Ross, Carl D.Ross, Charlene A.Ross, James S.Ross, JackRoss, Martin C.Ross, Mary A.Ross, Thomas J.Rossotti, Barbara M.Roth, Frederick J.Roth, Gerda J. E.

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Rothholz, Paula R.Rothholz, Peter L.Rothwell, Thomas A., Jr.Rotman, Morris.B.Rouse, MarionRovensky, Joseph C.Rowan, Russell C.Roy, Jean-MarcRozansky, BennieRubens, PaulRubenstone, ViolaRubin, Seymour J.Rubin, VivianRubinow, Ronald W.Ruby, Stanley L.Rucquoi, Leon G.Ruder, WilliamRuiz, Antonio A.Rule, Frank E.Runkle, Diane I. C.Runkle, Scott F.Ruschp, Josef S.Russakoff, Joseph M.

Aft Russell, DerekII, Russell, Edward

Russell, Richard A.Rustow, Aiello T.Ryabtchenko, Semen K.Ryan, PatriciaSabatino, Daniel C.Sachtleben, Arthur F.Sagatelyan, Mikhail R.Sailer, Henry P.Saillant, Luis T.Salgado, Herbert M.Salkin, Nancy M.Saks, Julien M.Samokish, JohnSamuel, Frank E., Jr.Samuels, JoelSandemar, GostaSanders, Gerard G.Sanders, Harold G.Sanders, William I.Sanderson, Ivan T.Sandoval Y Carrillo, Roberto

Sandquist, Robert L.Sapienza, John T.Sarett, Helen G.Sarmento, Armando M. d, M.Sauer, H. RobertSaul, SydneySaunders, FrankSaunders, Richard F.Saurel, Jean E.Sauvayre, GeorgesSavage, JohnScala, Pasquale M.Scanlan, Francis T.Schackne, John R.Schaefer, FannySchafer, John H., IIISchair, StanleySchechtman, Joseph B.Scheffey, FrankSchenker, AbrahamScher, Dagobert M.Schettino, PatriciaScheuermann, Arthel J.Scheuer, Noriko H.Scheuer, Stewart H.Schimpff, Marguerite P.Schmeltzer, John E., Jr.Schmidt, John T.Schmitt, Elwood J.Schneider, Johann B.Schoeman, Cathleen P.Schoenfeld, Gerald S.Schoenfeld, Lester A.Schofield, Robert W.Schooler, LeeSchorer, J. Willem M.Schpiro, JeromeSchraffenberger, David L. J.Schulberg, Jay W.Schulte, John K.Schultz, Franklin M.Schulz, SusanneSchumacher, RobertSchutzer, ArthurSchwartz, ClaraSchwartz, John G.

357-453 0-69-13•

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Schwarz, AliceScorse, Gerald E.Scott, Charles P.Scott, WilsonScotto, ArthurScupi, Amy RossSde-Or, GideonSealy, George P.See, Henry W.Seeger, Edwin H.Sega, MilanSegrave, Patrick B.Seigle, Clarence H.Seitinger, Heinz K.Selim, Hussein K.Senour, CharlesSerrato Oyervidez, Jose C.Serdaroglu, AkilSessions, Lillian S.Setai, Bethuel P.Severiens, Johannes C.Sewell-Baverstock, Edwina J.Seymour, Gerard B. A.Seymour, WaltonSfreddo, RomaShackleton, Edward A. A.Shadi, Mohammed F.Shadmi, DavidShallal, A. S.Shapiro, IsaacSharett, MosheSharpe, Thomas G., Jr.Shaw, BrackleyShea, Edward M.Shea, Michael J.Shearman, Robert J.Sheble, Walter F.Sheehan, HaroldSheffield, John J.Shenfield, Arthur A.Shephatiah, DovShere, Kenneth A.Sherelis, Robert F.Sherer, Frank A.Sherman, MartinSherrod, Henry F., Jr.

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Slater, CarlSlater, Elizabeth C.Slattery, John D.Slavnov, Anatoly I.Slocombe,Slover, Patricia M.Smith, C. DavisSmith, Edmund C.Smith, Gordon L.Smith, Hugh R. H.Smith, John G.Smith, Kevin H.Smith, MaureenSmith, RalstonSmith, Richard F.Smith, William D.Snow, MayerSnyder, Allan E.Snyder, David U.Snyder, John I.Soares, Nuno S.Sobel, Fra L.Softleigh, Neville E.Sofer, SaulSogo, ShinsakuSole, MladenSolano, JuanSolomon, Gerald A.Soloviev, Oleg P.Someya, KeijiSommer, Evelyn M.Sontheimer, MortonSoot Hong GeeSoutendijk, Louis R. W.Souville, EleanorSpencer, Frank A.Spencer, Harrison C.Spencer, William L.Spengler, HansSperanza, GianfrancoSpigle, SadieSpiridonov, Valentin M.Spofford, Charles M.Sprung, ArnoldSquires, Charles C.Srinava, Visit

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Wilkens, Lorraine M.Willems, Jan H. D.Williams, F. Bryan, Jr.Williams, GertrudeWilliams, Kenneth A.Williams, Lilla-D.Williams, Richa-rd P,, IIIWilliams, Thomas A.Williams Contreras, Norman R.Wilmer, Richard HookerWilmot, AnthonyWilmot, John C.Wilmotte, Joseph L.Wilson, Graham B.Wilson, Headley C.Wilson, Margaret R.Wilson, Mary F.Wilson, Michael G.Wilson, Warwick B.Wilson, William H.Winckelmann, AlbertoWinestine, HenryWinquist, Raymond V.

• Winsch, Martin J.Winslow, RalphWinter, StaceyWittman, George H.Wold, Anne R.Wolf, Franz B.Wolf, YolandaWolfe, Julia M.Wolff, MiltonWolfsberg, OskarWolfson, Deena R.Wollenberg, James R.Wollmar, Sixten F.W011ock, Roberta G.Wolowicz, AntoniaWong, Sen ChongWood, JaneWoodley, AlbertWoolfson, YitzhakWright, Barbara F.Wright, Edward E.Wright, Hamilton M., Jr.Wright, Hector C.Wright, Joyce A.

Wright, Noel N.Wright, Paul H. G.Wright, Richard W.Wright, Thomas H„ Jr.Wu, She KwanWu, York-LangWyant, Katherine I. C.Wyse, Marc A.Yadroshnikov, Leo K.Yafeh, AviadYakabe, MichioYamahata, KazuoYamamoto, GeorgeYamate, IsamuYamauchi, MasaoYamazaki, TakeshiYanez, Juan R.Yano, YoshioYates, Joseph B.Yelinek, FrankYellen, DwightYen, James T.Yie, YulYokota, HarumiYoon, Byung J.Yoshida, MasahikoYouker, Robert B.Young, George R.Young, HowardYoung, John S.Younger, Ronald M.Yukawa, SatoshiYukio, EgamiYuval, MosheZaiser, Carol J.Zamichow, BernardZanzotto, TommasoZarzuela, GuaroaZeiger, MartinZeitung, William I.Zeldis, ChayymZentay, John H.Zepkin, EugeneZhigulev, Alexandr I.Zimmerman, Gabriel A.Zinn, Matthew J.Zucker, Jack WolffZucker, MorrisZucker, Paul Benjamin

U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1969 0-357-453


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