Word: tho
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...renewed flurry of antiwar activity is the result of the failure of U.S. negotiator Henry A. Kissinger '50 and North Vietnamese negotiator Le Due Tho to reach an agreement in their Paris talks...
...Herschel C.Baker.Petkevitch, and Valenzuela Make those New Years parties gala. Kudo to papa, applause for all the sports stars. And may Starrs sparkle brightly in Bill Liller's sky Shedding light on the lectures of AI Alcalay Gloria! Emerson, it's calm dreams you want So. Le Due Tho and kissinger, speed your entente. Ring registers loudly for Dave and for Hazen, Rememberwarm summers, remember Tom Crooks. (To Ted Alevizos return all your books.) Happy birthday dear friend Arnold Q Arboretum. Good luck to the school-super. Alflorence Cheatham Doeting and Dolphin, let all Grignards rest Spare your students from...
HENRY KISSINGER was back in Paris to meet Hanoi's Le Due Tho for another in the seemingly interminable series of secret talks aimed at ending the war in Viet Nam. Lacking any formal announcements of either final agreement or impasse, newsmen concentrated on the omens-and they were ambiguous. As Kissinger emerged from one session, a nearly all-black cat jumped atop his Cadillac limousine. At another meeting in the private home of an American jeweler in fashionable Neuilly-sur-Seine, Kissinger pointed at the ceiling and said with a puckish smile: "When the light bulb starts blinking...
...that, there was no doubt that the going was difficult, as Tho and Kissinger met six times during the week. Some talkathons lasted five hours. The cable traffic from Kissinger to the White House was unusually heavy, suggesting that the tentative language of sections of a final agreement was being transmitted for presidential approval. It was evident throughout the week that Nixon was remaining in close touch with each negotiating development...
Knotty. The single most troublesome difficulty still was what would be required in the way of Communist troop withdrawals from South Viet Nam. The Kissinger-Tho agreement, revealed shortly before the U.S. elections, did not require Hanoi to remove any of its troops. Yet there apparently was a tacit understanding that some would go, although it would not be detailed in writing. This would preserve the Hanoi fiction that there are no North Vietnamese troops there. Thieu insists that all such troops must be removed and that this be guaranteed in print. Kissinger in Paris this week undoubtedly will...