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155 result(s) for "Barnes, Robert G"
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Possible Soviet Move into Afghanistan Differently Excised Copy Appended
Lists participants in meeting about possible Soviet incursion into Afghanistan.
Memoranda, Notes, Reports, and Analyses from Various Agencies and Individuals regarding the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities Report
Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that the Intelligence community concentrate on Intelligence collection concerning foreign Soviet Bloc [Technological development; Military policy]; U.S. Central Intelligence Agency denies allegations by Joseph McCarthy that $200 thousand were lost in Germany (Federal Republic) in 1948-1949; McGeorge Bundy declares that John K. Fairbank did not participate in Harvard University Defense contracts to prepare a study of Soviet citizens lifestyles for the U.S. Air Force. Air University; [U.S. Congress members; Business owners; Government officials] objections to the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendations; U.S. Central Intelligence Agency reports that there were no Information security breaches regarding the case of Howard Louis Jamison who died while on a research assignment at the U.S. Library of Congress; Allen W. Dulles requests that Joseph McCarthy provide Evidence of Communists Infiltration in the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency as he alleged to the U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations. Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations; John L. McClellan informs Allen W. Dulles that the files he requested regarding Communists Infiltration of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency are in the possession of Joseph McCarthy rather than in the files of the U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations. Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations; Herbert C. Hoover directs that J. Edgar Hoover continue the Governmental investigations of the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. Department of Defense change Organization and functions of [U.S. Air Force Security Service; U.S. Army Security Agency; U.S. National Security Agency. Central Security Service. Naval Security Group] to improve prestige and Management policy; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends creating a board to review [Communications intelligence; Electronic intelligence] activities which call for more [Intelligence officers; Electronic equipment; Intelligence facilities] than can be supplied from existing Budgets; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends creating a special commission composed of [Military personnel; Civilian personnel] Technical personnel to produce recommendations on the most effective utilization of U.S. [Communications; Electronic equipment; Technology] resources in case of [Warfare; State of emergency]; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends intensifying the [Training; Language training] programs for Intelligence officers involved in Covert operations; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. National Security Council publish an interpretation of National Security Council Directive 5412/1 of 12 March 1955 which directs the U.S. Director of Central Intelligence to inform [Government officials; U.S. Congress; Military officers] of Intelligence operations which could affect them; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities memos and notes from U.S. [Government agencies; Government officials] asked to comment on the recommendations; [U.S. Central Intelligence Agency; U.S. Department of Defense] agree with the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendation that the U.S. Director of Central Intelligence. Intelligence Advisory Committee Libraries adopt a single index system; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that the U.S. Director of Central Intelligence. Intelligence Advisory Committee develop new [Sources and methods; Electronic equipment] for [Intelligence collection; Intelligence analysis] and insure that Intelligence exchanges occur within the Intelligence community; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. Communications Intelligence Board establish Communications intelligence Collection requirements which take the capabilities of other Intelligence sources into account; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. National Security Agency receive a mandate and unlimited Funding to develop high level Communications intelligence Intelligence facilities; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. National Security Agency tighten Information security procedures for Cryptography; U.S. Communications Intelligence Board opposes the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendation that U.S. National Security Agency establish a single board to control [Communications intelligence; Electronic intelligence; Communications security] activities; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that National Security Council Intelligence Directive 10 of 18 January 1949 be revised to assign responsibility for Intelligence collection of Scientific and technical intelligence to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that the Intelligence collection potential of the Defense Attach System be exploited; U.S. Department of Defense disagrees with the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendations that the U.S. Army. Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence be elevated to the level of deputy chief of staff; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that the U.S. Army increase use of Colleges and universities and outside Training to redress the shortage of Military personnel with fluency in foreign Languages; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that the U.S. Navy improve its [Counterintelligence; Counterintelligence collection] programs; U.S. Department of Defense disagrees with the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendation that a board should be created to supervise Declassification of information; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that use of Aerial reconnaissance for Intelligence collection be increased; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. Atomic Energy Commission responsibility for Intelligence collection and the composition of the U.S. Joint Atomic Energy Intelligence Committee be defined in a National Security Council Intelligence Directive; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that the U.S. Navy add Counterintelligence Intelligence officers to provide adequate Security for [Military personnel; Military facilities]; Documentation from U.S. Government agencies responding to the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities report is compiled; U.S. General Accounting Office press release announces the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendations to create a U.S. Congress committee and a committee of private American citizens for Intelligence oversight of U.S. Foreign intelligence activities; U.S. Central Intelligence Agency disagrees with Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendation that Covert operations be organized separately from Cold War Intelligence operations; U.S. Central Intelligence Agency concurs with the Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities that an office of Basic intelligence should be created; U.S. Central Intelligence Agency disagrees with Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommendations regarding its Organizational structures and the responsibilities of the U.S. Director of Central Intelligence; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends the creation of the U.S. Director of Central Intelligence. Intelligence Advisory Committee. Committee on Scientific Intelligence; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends that U.S. Central Intelligence Agency implement new Security systems to reevaluate Intelligence officers every five years; Hoover Commission Task Force on Intelligence Activities recommends increases in U.S. Central Intelligence Agency [Wages; Personnel benefits]; Allen W. Dulles reports that no U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Classified information is processed at the U.S. Government Printing Office main facility; Harvard University study of Soviet Union policy conducted for the U.S. Air Force. Air University concludes that Georgi M. Malenkov resignation will not result in significant change
St. Louis Post-Dispatch Tony Messenger column
[...]the news conference at which Stillman stood alongside St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay and a man who hopes to replace him, Board of Aldermen President Lewis Reed, came the day after Gov.-elect Eric Greitens repeated his stance that public funding for sports stadiums amounts to \"welfare for millionaires.
PATERSON MAYOR WANTS SPIFFIER CITY HIRING TRASH CREW, PUBLIC RELATIONS MAN
[Martin G. Barnes] said he tried to hire local residents, adding that none would work for $36,000 a year. He said public relations firms offered bids ranging from $80,000 to $150,000 to work for the city. \"He {[Robert C. Grant]} is doing a favor for me,\" Barnes said with a chuckle. \"The thrust should be enforcing laws, not going around cleaning up after people who break the laws,\" he said. \"The laws will continue to be broken and the taxpayers will pay with this program.\" Barnes said the hiring of Grant will give the city a vehicle to market itself better. He said Grant will allow the city to speak with one voice, keep residents informed of the administration's new programs, and emphasize the city's positive aspects, such as the downtown shopping area or farmers market, that often are overlooked. \"With Grant, residents will get the right information, it will be consistent, and they'll know what is going on,\" Barnes said. \"One of the biggest problems we have had in Paterson is that we had no one position in the city and not one way of thinking. Now, we will make sure everyone is talking with one tongue.\"
SOURCE OF FAKED LETTER SOUGHT FAX TO TORRICELLI PROMPTED PROBE
The letter supposedly came from an anonymous National Security Agency employee and was sent to [Robert G. Torricelli] on March 28, days after the legislator had publicly charged that a Guatemalan military officer on the CIA payroll may have ordered the slayings of an American citizen in 1990 and the husband of a U.S. lawyer in 1992. Torricelli, who thought the letter was legitimate, immediately turned it over to the FBI and the White House. It also was released to the news media. Torricelli said Wednesday that his office informed the FBI of its conclusion about \"the individual who might be using fraudulent documents about recent Guatemala events and other matters\" two weeks ago. The congressman would not identify the person.
POLICE UNION HEAD BLASTS REVIEW PLAN
Councilman Thomas C. Rooney Jr. said the credibility gap between the police and the public was widening because of the perception that internal affairs investigations were biased in favor of the officers. He suggested airing police hearings on TV. \"Unless something is done to open the hearings, absolutely, you will end up with a civilian review board,\" he said. Mayor William J. Pascrell Jr. disagreed, saying open hearings would turn into a circus and \"we would never get justice.\" Pascrell also said he wanted to know which officers or city employees were verbally abusing citizens. \"None of us are second-class citizens,\" he said. Councilman Martin G. Barnes differed with [Robert Smith], calling some of his statements \"outright lies.\" \"When you want to know the truth, when you want to know the facts, we'll sit down at another meeting,\" Barnes told the audience. Smith said Barnes was entitled to his opinion, and the two shook hands after the meeting.
OPINION: Please Tell the Tourists: North Jersey Is Real N.J
Mar. 24--Gov. McGreevey thinks the shore is New Jersey's premier attraction, and sure enough, the salt and sand are featured on the cover of the state's new tourism magazine. North Jersey is barely mentioned, and North Jersey is the salt of the earth. A lot McGreevey knows. This is a strange governor. It was the sand at Cape May that did him in about a month after he took office in 2002. There was McGreevey and his wife going for an evening walk on the beach at Cape May when he fell off a sand mound, tumbled, and broke his left thighbone. And now he's trumpeting the Jersey Shore? That's like George W. Bush cheerleading for the pretzel industry; you recall of course that 19 days before the Great McGreevey Topple, the president fainted when a pretzel he was munching lodged in his throat. All North Jersey: It doesn't matter where you go in North Jersey because you can always bask in the rarified hot air of former Sen. Robert Torricelli anywhere. When he ran for a second term, Torricelli was confronted with a pit bull of an opponent named Douglas Forrester who would discuss nothing -- absolutely nothing, not one thing -- except the fact that Torricelli had been admonished by the Senate Ethics Committee for having taken cash and expensive jewelry and suits from a campaign contributor.