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Word: gsa (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...been questionable until that time whether the Federal statutes applied to the project because a private organization, the Kennedy Corporation, is building the Library. Because the facility will be turned over to the General Services Administration, (GSA) upon completion, however, the statutes were applied. The GSA provides maintenance for government properties...

Author: By Wendy B. Jackson, | Title: Environmental Study to Delay Construction of JFK Library | 9/28/1973 | See Source »

Actual research for the impact statement will not begin until late November or December, after a consulting firm has been contracted by the GSA. Before a contractor can be chosen, a "scope of work"--or request for proposal--statement must be drawn up to submit to potential firms...

Author: By Wendy B. Jackson, | Title: Environmental Study to Delay Construction of JFK Library | 9/28/1973 | See Source »

...draft of this statement, submitted to the City of Cambridge recently by Robert T. Griffen, special assistant to the administrator of GSA and an acquaintance of the late President Kennedy, is presently under review by the City government and members of the community...

Author: By Wendy B. Jackson, | Title: Environmental Study to Delay Construction of JFK Library | 9/28/1973 | See Source »

...clearly understood part of the negotiating process. One such contractor with impeccably bipartisan connections is, of course, Rodgers, whose firms began doing business with the Federal Government under Lyndon Johnson and prospered even more under Nixon. Since 1967, Rodgers' companies have received a total of $19.6 million from the GSA, and last year they collected $5.7 million; some of his leases run until 1991. Rodgers has told TIME, however, that none of his dealings has been influenced by his fund-raising efforts for the Nixon Administration...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Out of the Past: The Agnew Case | 8/20/1973 | See Source »

...known as the Western White House and $550,000 for communications equipment. There were many other expenses listed, some of them only tenuously connected with "security." Among these items were $998.50 to remove a wrought-iron handrail deemed hazardous and $1,950 to prune trees and eliminate what the GSA called a "safety hazard caused by dead branches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOUSING: Now It's $10 Million | 8/20/1973 | See Source »

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