Word Search Puzzles

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Word Search Puzzles WORD SEARCH PUZZLES FIRST LADIES’ NAMES Martha Washington Helen Herron Taft Abigail Adams Ellen Axson Wilson Martha Jefferson Randolph (Thomas Jefferson Margaret Woodrow Wilson daughter) Edith Wilson Dolley Madison Florence Harding Elizabeth Monroe Grace Coolidge Louisa Adams Lou Henry Hoover Emily Donelson (Andrew Jackson niece) Eleanor Roosevelt Sarah Yorke Jackson (Andrew Jackson daughter- Bess Truman in-law) Mamie Eisenhower Sarah Angelica Singleton (Martin Van Buren Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Daughter-in-law) Lady Bird Johnson Anna Harrison/William Henry Harrison Pat Nixon Jane Irwin Harrison/William Henry Harrison Betty Ford Letitia Christian Tyler/John Tyler Rosalynn Carter Priscilla Cooper Tyler/ (John Tyler Daughter Nancy Reagan in law) Barbara Bush Julia Gardiner Tyler/John Tyler Hillary Clinton Sarah Childress Polk/James Polk Laura Bush Margaret Taylor/Zachary Taylor Michelle Obama Abigail Filmore/Millard Fillmore Melania Trump Jane Pierce/Franklin Pierce Harriet Lane/James Buchanan Mary Todd Lincoln Eliza McCardle Johnson/Andrew Johnson Julia Grant/Ulysses S. Grant Lucy Webb Hayes/Rutherford B. Hayes Lucretia Garfield Mary Arthur McElroy/Chester A. Arthur Sister Rose Cleveland/Grover Cleveland Sister Frances Cleveland Caroline Harrison/Benjamin Harrison Mary Harrison McKee/Benjamin Harrison (daughter) Frances Cleveland/ Ida Saxton McKinley/William McKinley Edith Roosevelt First Ladies’ First Names, 1789-1897 A E J D A D E H D D L W C A F X F R Z T M I L O G N M T W U Q F L R E R X D X N M P C I Q U I E X M V L A Q H Y C J Q M A A K I Z N L B X K I N M A R T H A A F L O R W T A Y A C C C D L I K P J X B Q X P F G H E O Z S E B O K C Z Q Y P I L L W Y L A N L I S U A Y A D W D L B G X Z S L L I R R L Q M A R Y N Y S S K A B B P E X J P E E H S M A E Y N M J I I W W C L U C R E T I A T E I R R A H E L V X O T U I I M U Z X P A F W O Z E N F V K I U G Z M O B O X J H B L S S N A P J R R G G O L U W O U Y M U Y O F E J Q N V Q B J Z I P D L V E Q M C J X F W Q S C M G V F U K I C N L B I L F Q Q S M G C X F B T Q A H Y P L H A R A S D V X G S O H O V P L C K L O J M T S D T G G O V O A F B N U K S Y D T G W L M Q D O R N G J J S L G Y D F R Z Z S B J N J O Y D T V U R G M P D L J F A W D R I F P F ABIGAIL ANNA DOLLEY ELIZA ELIZABETH EMILY FRANCES HARRIET JANE JULIA LETICIA LOUISA LUCRETIA LUCY MARGARET MARTHA MARY PRISCILLA ROSE SARAH First Ladies’ First Names, 1913-2020 E G G Y A E X T S T M Y Z M U P N R R R R B G S T I P A T E D V I A O A U E E W C H M L G S T P L C S L A B O H R A L W U D U A E E A L L Q E T M S I Q O D I A U N L I R L E I I E L B L N O E Q D Y H L R E S F H A O A L T E C E N E A U X K J R O L Q L X C A H N G R T B X A E E Y C N A N J Q R A P K D Q P M B E D I T H V A S P W C E P E R Y Y T A L B M M V N T W T O L N M L A D Y B I R D V T L H B X A R A B R A B T F Y F I A X M O Q E O W D T V D BARBARA BESS BETTY EDITH ELEANOR ELLEN FLORENCE GRACE HILLARY JACQUELINE LADYBIRD LAURA LOU MAMIE MARGARET MELANIA MICHELLE NANCY PAT ROSALYNN What Rhymes With Valentine? S T D C U S Q H F S T E D E N I W T E Q E A U Q Q T I I S P U N A N S B J C N D V N Y R B N S G G I E I N I I H A O I I R A I I P H W S N N A L D L X L G S F F W H C L L E U C I E C C E S K Z P S P O Q M R I S J N T E A X E L E N Q H J K F B X N E M U N T S G N R I H C T C B T O D E N V Q A B I I H Q Z O T I R H H I V S I Q G T P H U K N I S N O C Z I K M Y M H B S U C R R V U E N R L T N S Z S Z H T N R H I N E X E V B E C E S T W O L H O T Z F D Y L X U W H Z C W X M S P Z C R F K A K V F X G B J Z M D D F O T Y R R K L D R L H C E N I L R I A J T N C P R B E X E C L E M E N T I N E N I N E E Y K N N P D U X G C H G U Z M N U C D Y Q K I E I G P Z B R I A G K N S Y K O Q D L H A K D V M S K P W P Z K F O P M H Y L Q S D Q Y B J Q H J W X G L Y A E B F I C T I Q K G V G G T I C E U A Y H AIRLINE BUSLINE BYLINE CLEMENTINE CLOTHESLINE CONSTANTINE DANDELION DINE FINE FISHLINE MINE NINE RECLINE RHINE SHINE SIGN SPINE THINE TURPENTINE TWINE LARGE CITIES IN ILLINOIS E Z C E U E P D B J O L I E T X U V V A S V F I G S R F L W A U K E G A N U R R O I A U C O V I O H Q L I B Z M H B P O O G F N F E U N O E L L I V R E P A N R N X A K S L R V M G N I G L E G L U T U H V C C H T V O I U R L K U X A D P S A W O G V I M O G N B S U B G T U Y P K B R L S E S H Q N G F S O B I V I H B O J J M W P B E C U T F L P N M A C I S K U N M J Q R U I D O I A E Z I U N C C I J I H Y R I I U G N V Y A R O O A B Z E X I U V M I N N G L I F O H R N M H P G G W W Z M Y K B G M D E U M R G M A C S L J F N N S R K M F P E A C D I U C D S E Z S D T O K Y E R I L L L A A G O Z H N G S O O Q B W K K H E Q U I P K B R N V O U K B S Z O X Y H T L D D M I G C D I Z R A B L T W V R V L T D C A Z S U P E A K Q P V U G Q E T U A K F H J U T N W T S R U H M L E O W P O T R C H O A P U AURORA BLOOMINGTON BOLINGBROOK CHAMPAIGN CHICAGO CICERO ELGIN ELMHURST EVANSTON GLENVIEW JOLIET NAPERVILLE NORMAL PALATINE PEORIA ROCKFORD SCHAUMBURG SKOKIE SPRINGFIELD WAUKEGAN .
Recommended publications
  • Truman, Congress and the Struggle for War and Peace In
    TRUMAN, CONGRESS AND THE STRUGGLE FOR WAR AND PEACE IN KOREA A Dissertation by LARRY WAYNE BLOMSTEDT Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY May 2008 Major Subject: History TRUMAN, CONGRESS AND THE STRUGGLE FOR WAR AND PEACE IN KOREA A Dissertation by LARRY WAYNE BLOMSTEDT Submitted to the Office of Graduate Studies of Texas A&M University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Approved by: Chair of Committee, Terry H. Anderson Committee Members, Jon R. Bond H. W. Brands John H. Lenihan David Vaught Head of Department, Walter L. Buenger May 2008 Major Subject: History iii ABSTRACT Truman, Congress and the Struggle for War and Peace in Korea. (May 2008) Larry Wayne Blomstedt, B.S., Texas State University; M.S., Texas A&M University-Kingsville Chair of Advisory Committee: Dr. Terry H. Anderson This dissertation analyzes the roles of the Harry Truman administration and Congress in directing American policy regarding the Korean conflict. Using evidence from primary sources such as Truman’s presidential papers, communications of White House staffers, and correspondence from State Department operatives and key congressional figures, this study suggests that the legislative branch had an important role in Korean policy. Congress sometimes affected the war by what it did and, at other times, by what it did not do. Several themes are addressed in this project. One is how Truman and the congressional Democrats failed each other during the war. The president did not dedicate adequate attention to congressional relations early in his term, and was slow to react to charges of corruption within his administration, weakening his party politically.
    [Show full text]
  • Historical Notes Distaff Side
    HISTORICAL NOTES on. the DISTAFF SIDE MARION WALLACE RENINGER HARRIET LANE The most famous of Lancaster County women was Harriet Lane, niece of President James Buchanan, who was born in Mercersburg, Penn- sylvania. She was the daughter of Jane Buchanan, James' favorite sister, and Elliot T. Lane, descendant of an old Virginia family. Jane's father, the elder James Buchanan, was a merchant, who had acquired wealth in trading at the Mercersburg stop on the great highway from east to west. Elliot Lane was also a merchant and his father-in-law transferred much of his trade 'to this son-in-law, Jane's husband. However, Mr. Lane died when Harriet was seven and two years later her mother died, leaving another girl and two boys as orphans. Her uncle and guardian, James Buchanan, invited her to come to live with him at his house in Lancaster. He also gave a home to another sister's orphan son, James Buchanan Henry, and to Harriet's younger brother, Elliot Eskbridge Lane. In reading letters written from Washington to Harriet in Lancaster the then Senator Buchanan shows his deep attention to Harriet's welfare and education. She attended a small private school for three years, prob- ably Miss Young's. Later she was sent to a boarding school in Lancaster kept by the Misses Crawford. Here she complained in letters to her uncle of "the strict rules, early hours, brown sugar in the tea and restrictions in dress." Here she was not very happy, as she was a mischievous and high spirited girl, who loved to play practical jokes and made many friends, but resented the school's strict disciplines.
    [Show full text]
  • Defining the Role of First Lady
    - Defining the Role of First Lady An Honors College Thesis (Honors 499) By Denise Jutte - Thesis Advisor Larry Markle Ball State University Muncie, IN Graduation Date: May 3, 2008 ;' l/,~· ,~, • .L-',:: J,I Table of Contents Abstract 2 Acknowledgements 3 Introduction: Defining the Role of First Lady 4 First Ladies Ranking 11 Individual Analysis of First Ladies 12 Chronological Order Observations on Leadership and Comparisons to Previous Presidential Rankings 177 Conclusion: The Role ofthe Future First Spouse 180 Works Cited 182 Appendix A: Ranking of Presidents 183 Appendix B: Presidential Analysis 184 Appendix C: Other Polls and Rankings of the First Ladies 232 1 Abstract In the Fall Semester of 2006, I took an honors colloquium taught by Larry Markle on the presidents of the United States. Throughout the semester we studied all of the past presidents and compiled a ranked list of these men based on our personal opinion of their greatness. My thesis is a similar study of their wives. The knowledge I have gained through researching presidential spouses has been very complementary to the information I learned previously in Mr. Markle's class and has expanded my understanding of one ofthe most important political positions in the United States. The opportunity to see what parallels developed between my ran kings of the preSidents and the women that stood behind them has led me to a deeper understanding ofthe traits and characteristics that are embodied by those viewed as great leaders. 2 Acknowledgements I would like to thank my dad for helping me to participate in and understand the importance of history and education at a young age.
    [Show full text]
  • D3b1bdf3996e66f42682fee8
    winterfall 2012 2012 HOPKINS medicine Comfort Zones Living better in the shadow of serious illness Sometimes, the most intriguing career path is off the beaten one. You may have read in this magazine that Johns Hopkins Medicine is becoming ever more global. Over the last decade, we’ve been engaged in dynamic collaborations with government, health care and educational institutions overseas designed to de- velop innovative platforms for improving health care delivery around the world. To achieve this ambitious mission, we rely on physicians and other health care profes- To apply or to sionals who work onsite in leadership roles at these locations. This is an opportunity learn more, visit to push the boundaries of medicine in a broad-reaching, sustainable way—while hopkinsmedicine.org/ expanding your clinical exposure to complex cases and developing new research and careers and refer to the education projects in close collaboration with Johns Hopkins faculty and interna- requisition number tional colleagues. Questions? Current opportunities on the Johns Hopkins Medicine International [email protected] expatriate team: n Chief Executive Officer (Panama): 38143 n Chief Medical Officer (United Arab Emirates): 38147 n Medicine Practice Leader/CMO (Kuwait): 38541 n Paramedical Practice Leader (Kuwait): 38802 n Physician (Kuwait): 38652 n Project Manager/COO (Kuwait): 38501 n Public Health Professional—MD or MD/PhD (Kuwait): 38591 n Radiology Practice Leader (Kuwait): 38775 n Senior Project Manager/CEO (Kuwait): 38500 EOE/AA, M/F/D/V – The Johns Hopkins Hospital and Health System is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer committed to recruiting, supporting, and fostering a diverse community of outstanding faculty, staff, and students.
    [Show full text]
  • Niall Palmer
    EnterText 1.1 NIALL PALMER “Muckfests and Revelries”: President Warren G. Harding in Fact and Fiction This article will assess the development of the posthumous reputation of President Warren Gamaliel Harding (1921-23) through an examination of key historical and literary texts in Harding historiography. The article will argue that the president’s image has been influenced by an unusual confluence of factors which have both warped history’s assessment of his administration and retarded efforts at revisionism. As a direct consequence, the stereotypical, deeply negative, portrait of Harding remains rooted in the nation’s consciousness and the “rehabilitation” afforded to many presidents by revisionist writers continues to be denied to the man still widely-regarded as the worst president of the twentieth century. “Historians,” Eugene Trani and David Wilson observed in 1977, “have not been gentle with Warren G. Harding.”1 In successive surveys of American political scientists, historians and journalists, undertaken to rank presidents by achievement, vision and leadership skills, the twenty-ninth president consistently comes last.2 The Chicago Sun- Times, publishing the findings of fifty-eight presidential historians and political scientists in November 1995, placed Warren Harding at the head of the list of “The Ten Worst” Niall Palmer: Muckfests and Revelries 155 EnterText 1.1 Presidents.3 A 1996 New York Times poll branded Harding an outright “failure,” alongside two presidents who presided over the pre-Civil War crisis, Franklin Pierce and James Buchanan. The academic merit and methodological underpinnings of such surveys are inevitably flawed. Nonetheless, in most cases, presidential status assessments are fluid, reflecting the fluctuations of contemporary opinion and occasional waves of academic revisionism.
    [Show full text]
  • Dead Last: the Public Memory of Warren G. Harding's Scandalous
    Payne.1-19 11/13/08 3:02 PM Page 1 Questions Asked Democracy has no monuments. It strikes no medals. It bears the head of no man on a coin. —John Quincy Adams To enter into any serious historical criticism of these stories [regarding George Washington’s childhood] would be to break a butterfly. 1 —Henry Cabot Lodge Harding and the Log Cabin Myth Warren G. Harding’s story is an American myth gone wrong. As our twenty-ninth president, Harding occupied the office that stands at the symbolic center of American national identity.1 Harding’s biography should have easily slipped into American history and mythology when he died in office, on August 2, 1923. Having been born to a humble midwestern farm family, what better ending could there be to his story than death in the service of his nation? What stronger image could stand as a lasting tribute than grieving citizens lining the railroad tracks, as they had for Lincoln, Garfield, and McKinley, to view Har- ding’s body? The public grief that accompanied the passing of Harding’s burial train would seem to have foreshadowed a positive place in the national memory. Warren and Florence Harding were laid to rest in a classically designed marble mau- soleum in their hometown of Marion, Ohio, a mausoleum that was the last great memorial in the older style popular before the rise of presidential libraries. However, the near perfection Payne.1-19 11/13/08 3:02 PM Page 2 Dead Last of his political biography and his contemporary popularity did not follow him into history.
    [Show full text]
  • 23 Caroline Lavinia Scott Harrison
    First Ladies of America Showing a dignified, even solemn Continuing to put her house countenance, the portraits of Caroline in order, she also cataloged “Carrie” Harrison belie her spirit and personality. the White House china, Warm, sentimental and artistic by nature, she designed a cabinet to hold the was fun loving, easily amused and quick to historical collection, and added to it by forgive. designing her own china for the White House. The daughter of parents who were both educators, she taught school in Kentucky for a year before Mrs. Harrison also changed the atmosphere inside the returning home at age 21 to marry Benjamin mansion. She put up the first White House Christmas Harrison, the grandson of President William Henry tree, and for the first time since 1845, a first lady’s Harrison. guests were invited to dance. As her husband’s law career advanced and he Mrs. Harrison’s interests were not all domestic. The became increasingly more focused on politics, Mrs. first President General of the Daughters of the American Harrison cared for their children, often alone, and Revolution, she kept the organization intact during its missed his presence in their family’s life. Tension founding, and she worked to advance the rights of developed in the marriage. American women. Ironically perhaps, it was Harrison’s extended When asked to support the construction of a absence during the Civil War that brought new wing at Johns Hopkins Hospital, she them back together. When Harrison Benjamin agreed — but not until hospital officials returned home safely after commanding agreed to admit women to their medical Union forces in some of the worst Harrison school.
    [Show full text]
  • 22 and 24 Frances Folsom Cleveland
    First Ladies of America When Grover Cleveland married Actively involved in local Frances Folsom in 1886, he was 27 years charities for African-American her senior and old enough to be her father. children, Mrs. Cleveland was also a firm supporter of education A friend of her family and partner in her father’s for women. She served on the board law firm, Cleveland had known Frances since the of trustees for her alma mater, Wells day she was born. He was a presence in her life as College, and was instrumental in a campaign that led she grew up; upon her father’s death, when she was to the establishment of the New Jersey College for 11-years-old, Cleveland took over the administration Women. of her father’s estate and become her unofficial guardian. At the White House, she was a gracious hostess who planned regular receptions on Saturdays so that Affectionately known as “Frankie” during her working-class women could attend. Wherever she childhood, Mrs. Cleveland was born in Buffalo, N.Y., went, her youth, charm and charisma drew crowds of as the Civil War was drawing to a close. enthusiastic and devoted admirers. She received a well-rounded education, topping off So popular was Mrs. Cleveland, in fact, that the her grammar and high school years with unauthorized use of her image to sell products enrollment at Wells College, one of the first became the target of legislation aimed at liberal arts schools for women in the country. Grover preventing such unscrupulous business practices. The measure never passed, but While there, she studied astronomy, Cleveland it did foreshadow problems future first botany, and political science, and Administration, ladies would experience from an overly enjoyed activities including debate 1855-1889 & enthusiastic public.
    [Show full text]
  • Team Players: Triumph and Tribulation on the Campaign Trail
    residential campaigns that celebrate our freedom to choose a leader by election of the people are events P unique to our country. It is an expectant, exciting time – a promise kept by the Constitution for a better future. Rituals developed over time and became traditions of presidential hopefuls – the campaign slogans and songs, hundreds of speeches, thousands of handshakes, the countless miles of travel across the country to meet voters - all reported by the ever-present media. The candidate must do a balancing act as leader and entertainer to influence the American voters. Today the potential first spouse is expected to be involved in campaign issues, and her activities are as closely scrutinized as the candidate’s. However, these women haven’t always been an official part of the ritual contest. Campaigning for her husband’s run for the presidency is one of the biggest self-sacrifices a First Lady want-to-be can make. The commitment to the campaign and the road to election night are simultaneously exhilarating and exhausting. In the early social norms of this country, the political activities of a candidate’s wife were limited. Nineteenth-century wives could host public parties and accept social invitations. She might wave a handkerchief from a window during a “hurrah parade” or quietly listen to a campaign speech behind a closed door. She could delight the crowd by sending them a winsome smile from the front porch campaign of her own home. But she could not openly show knowledge of politics and she could not vote. As the wife of a newly-elected president, her media coverage consisted of the description of the lovely gown she wore to the Inaugural Ball.
    [Show full text]
  • Read Ebook Articles on Taft Family, Including: William Howard Taft
    ALXJNRAF352S » PDF » Articles On Taft Family, including: William Howard Taft, Robert Taft, Helen Herron... Download eBook Online ARTICLES ON TAFT FAMILY, INCLUDING: WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, ROBERT TAFT, HELEN HERRON TAFT, BOB TAFT, ROBERT TAFT, JR., ALPHONSO TAFT, KINGSLEY A. TAFT, WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT III, WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT IV, C To get Articles On Taft Family, including: William Howard Taft, Robert Taft, Helen Herron Taft, Bob Taft, Robert Taft, Jr., Alphonso Taft, Kingsley A. Taft, William Howard Taft Iii, William Howard Taft Iv, C PDF, you should follow the button below and download the file or get access to other information which are highly relevant to ARTICLES ON TAFT FAMILY, INCLUDING: WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, ROBERT TAFT, HELEN HERRON TAFT, BOB TAFT, ROBERT TAFT, JR., ALPHONSO TAFT, KINGSLEY A. TAFT, WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT III, WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT IV, C book. Download PDF Articles On Taft Family, including: William Howard Taft, Robert Taft, Helen Herron Taft, Bob Taft, Robert Taft, Jr., Alphonso Taft, Kingsley A. Taft, William Howard Taft Iii, William Howard Taft Iv, C Authored by Books, Hephaestus Released at 2016 Filesize: 1.44 MB Reviews I actually started looking at this pdf. it was writtern extremely properly and valuable. I am very happy to inform you that this is basically the greatest book i have read through during my very own daily life and might be he finest pdf for actually. -- Jacey K rajcik DVM I actually started reading this article ebook. I actually have read and i also am certain that i will likely to go through once again again in the future.
    [Show full text]
  • Modern First Ladies: Their Documentary Legacy. INSTITUTION National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 412 562 CS 216 046 AUTHOR Smith, Nancy Kegan, Comp.; Ryan, Mary C., Comp. TITLE Modern First Ladies: Their Documentary Legacy. INSTITUTION National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, DC. ISBN ISBN-0-911333-73-8 PUB DATE 1989-00-00 NOTE 189p.; Foreword by Don W. Wilson (Archivist of the United States). Introduction and Afterword by Lewis L. Gould. Published for the National Archives Trust Fund Board. PUB TYPE Collected Works General (020) -- Historical Materials (060) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC08 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Archives; *Authors; *Females; Modern History; Presidents of the United States; Primary Sources; Resource Materials; Social History; *United States History IDENTIFIERS *First Ladies (United States); *Personal Writing; Public Records; Social Power; Twentieth Century; Womens History ABSTRACT This collection of essays about the Presidential wives of the 20th century through Nancy Reagan. An exploration of the records of first ladies will elicit diverse insights about the historical impact of these women in their times. Interpretive theories that explain modern first ladies are still tentative and exploratory. The contention in the essays, however, is that whatever direction historical writing on presidential wives may follow, there is little question that the future role of first ladies is more likely to expand than to recede to the days of relatively silent and passive helpmates. Following a foreword and an introduction, essays in the collection and their authors are, as follows: "Meeting a New Century: The Papers of Four Twentieth-Century First Ladies" (Mary M. Wolf skill); "Not One to Stay at Home: The Papers of Lou Henry Hoover" (Dale C.
    [Show full text]
  • White House Photographs May 8, 1976
    Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library White House Photographs May 8, 1976 This database was created by Library staff and indexes all photographs taken by the Ford White House photographersrelated to this subject. Use the search capabilities in your PDF reader to locate key words within this index. Please note that clicking on the link in the “Roll #” field will display a 200 dpi JPEG image of the contact sheet (1:1 images of the 35 mm negatives). Gerald Ford is always abbreviated “GRF” in the "Names" field. If the "Geographic" field is blank, the photo was taken within the White House complex. The date on the contact sheet image is the date the roll of film was processed, not the date the photographs were taken. All photographs taken by the White House photographers are in the public domain and reproductions (600 dpi scans or photographic prints) of individual images may be purchased and used without copyright restriction. Please include the roll and frame numbers when contacting the Library staff about a specific photo (e.g., A1422-10). To view photo listings for other dates, to learn more about this project or other Library holdings, or to contact an archivist, please visit the White House Photographic Collection page View President Ford's Daily Diary (activities log) for this day Roll # Frames Tone Subject - Proper Subject - Generic Names Geographic Location Photographer A9656 7A-11A BW SecState Trip to Africa-SecState Returns from 6- standing on tarmac, in front Kissinger, Nancy Kissinger, Others, Andrews Air Force Andrews Air Thomas Nation African Tour-Airport Arrival; Chief of plane; Catto and Kissinger Military Officers, Catto Base, MD Force Base Protocol Officer Henry Catto standiang together; aircraft in background A9657 26-36 BW SecState Trip to Africa-SecState Returns from 6- HAK kissing wife; Kissinger, Nancy Kissinger, Sen.
    [Show full text]