Word: brzezinski
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...following day, daylight streamed through the glass panes of the Graduate School of Design's (GSD) Gund Hall to reveal Zbigniew Brzezinski, former President Carter's former assistant for national security affairs: G. William Miller, Carter's Secretary of the Treasury: Arthur Levitt Jr., chief executive officer of the American Stock Exchange; and Buchwald and Mondale again...
...disputes are referred to a senior interdepartmental group headed by Clark. The most important impact of arrangement is that it insulates Haig's department from the tendency of the National Security Council staff to become a kind of rival State Department, as it did under Kissinger and Zbigniew Brzezinski...
...such notables as war criminal Henry Kissinger. Harvard is also the home of Klitgaard, whose racist "admissions report" calls for Blacks to leave this enclave of wealthy white privilege. Here lies the reactionary hypocrisy of the Harvard administration: Marxists are "outside agitators" and "security risks" while real criminals like Brzezinski and Harold Brown--nuclear-armed cold-warriors who are genuine "security risks"--are welcome guests and paid to mouth their imperialist propaganda at Harvard. The Harvard administration may well despise the SYL for being communists, but the SYL will not tolerate harassment for the slanderous allegation that we are "criminals...
...National Security Adviser, Richard Allen, has promised that his office would return "the functions of formulating and implementing policy" to appropriate departments. That vow, if kept, would go a long way toward ending the who's-in-charge confusion that at tended U.S. policymaking during the Vance-Brzezinski and Rogers-Kissin ger years...
...Bundesbank, expressed concern over the disparate rates of inflation throughout Europe and the West, calling for "effective measures for coordinating economic policy." Guido Carli, former governor of the Bank of Italy, pleaded for new approaches to the problem of world raw materials shortages. The two principal American speakers, Zbigniew Brzezinski and John Connally, said little that was surprising, but still elicited warm applause. Brzezinski rehashed a speech that he had made two weeks earlier in Paris on the importance of confronting aggressive Soviet foreign policy around the world, while Connally lavishly praised his old friends...