Word: shultz
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Flying home from Reykjavik at the start of last week, Ronald Reagan appeared to be winging from one debacle to another. The dejection in the President's carriage as he walked out of Hofdi house, the disappointment etched into every line of Secretary of State George Shultz's face as he briefed the press, had flashed an unmistakable message to TV watchers around the world: the summit meeting with Mikhail Gorbachev had ended in failure. Worse, headlines were already spreading the impression that Reagan had thrown away the promise of a nuclear-free world by clinging to his vision...
...took his case on the campaign trail. But his aides handled most of the spin control, trooping before every microphone, TV camera, journalistic conclave or group of citizens they could find or summon to uncover a pony of hope under what at first looked like the manure of Reykjavik. Shultz, who rarely sees the press, in two days invited himself to sessions with editors of the Washington Post, New York Times, Wall Street Journal and all three TV networks, then returned from a quick trip to El Salvador for a Friday speech to the National Press Club. Regan logged...
...million came on the heels of a string of successful divestment actions including the shantytown, numerous demonstrations, the election of a prodivestment candidate to the board of overseers and finally, the events sponsored by the 350th coalition which culminated in preventing a black-tie dinner being held for George Shultz...
...administration is preparing new arms control proposals, based on the summit meeting, to present to the Soviets in negotiations in Geneva. Also, Secretary of State George P. Shultz is due to meet with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard A. Shevardnadze in Vienna...
...have beaten Reagan to his own policy. They already require their employees to take drug tests, and now Reagan wants the federal government--the nation's largest employer--to get into the act. Attorney General Edwin Meese III sees nothing wrong with such testing. And Secretary of State George Shultz, who last year said he would resign if forced to take a lie-detector test, also had no qualms about taking a drug test...