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UN Secretariat Item Scan - Barcode - Record Title Pa9e 41 Dafe 08/06/2006 Time 11:11:51 AM

S-0864-0006-07-00001

Expanded Number S-0864-0006-07-00001

™e Items-in-Public relations files - luncheons, dinners and receptions - Volumes XVIII, XIX, XX

Date Created 03/09/1970

Record Type Archival Item

Container s-0864-0006: Public Relations Files of the Secretary-General: U Thant

Print Name of Person Submit Image Signature of Person Submit

SG- reception for participants in the Editors1 Round/table, Wednesday, 21 October 1970, ffi to ffi p.m., jHBrfajmmffitoairn Library Penthouse 7 8 Participants in the Editors' Roundtable: iX"Mr. A.K. Sen (India) iX Mr. Abdul Hamid (Indonesia) iX Mr. Hassangholi Javanshir (Iran) X Mr. Roedad Khan (Pakistan) iX Mr. Simoun Almario (Philippines) iX Mr. Chaiyong Chavalit (Thailand) iX Mr. Abderrahmane Cherriet (Algeria) iX M. Andre Kashala (Dem. Rep. of the Congo) iX Mr. Wegusse Hapte-¥old (Ethiopia) iX'Mr. Malam Adamu Ciroma (Nigeria) iX Mr. Ben Mkapa (United Republic of Tanzania) ^ Mr. Abdul Hamid Younes (United Arab Republic)

b/Sir Robert Madgwick (Australia) (to "be accompanied by daughter, Miss Mary Madgwick) •^ Mr. Y. Maeda (Japan) (and secretary, Mr. Kyoichi Hashimoto) iX Mr. Ruy Mesquita (Brazil) (to be accompanied by wife) iX Mr. H.A. Hel^therington (United Kingdom) ,/ Mr. Elton H. Rule (United States) iX Mr. K. Balaraman (India) Clifton Daniel (United States) George F. Davidson (Canada) ^Mr. Stanislav Mojkowski (Poland) (and assistant, Mr. Maksymilian Berezowski) ,/ Mr. Westor Ignat (Romania) *-/Mr. Thomas Winship (United States) ^Atr. N.G. Ishchenko (Ukrainian SSR)

v/Mr. Mohamed Belaid Boureghda (Algeria) L/Mr. Paul Miller (United States) v/Mr. Ryszaud Erelek (Poland)

Under-Secretaries-Qeneral and Assistant Secretaries-General: Chief S.O. Mebo Dr. Ralph J. Bunche M. Philippe de Seynes M. Issoufou Saidou Djermakoye . Mohamed Habib Gherab i/ Mr. Agha Abdul Hamid i/Mr. W. Martin Hill ^ Mr. Paul G. Hoffman (X Dr. Victor Hoo v/" Dr. Leonid Rikolaevich Kutakov ^ Mr. Henry R. Labouisse v/Mr. C.V. Harasimhan i/ Mr. Jiri Hosek ^ Mr. Jose Rolz-Bennett •^Mr. Andrew A.S. Stark - 3 - *-/Mr. Constantin A. Stavropoulos iX Mr. Bruce Turner i/ Mr. David B. Vaughan

Members and officers of the UKCA Executive Committee: Mr. William N. Oatis M. Louis Foy Mr. Ted Morello Mr. Zvonimir Kristl Mr. Frangois Giuliani Mrs. Kay Rainey Gray Mr. Edward Or. Baskakov Mr. John Cappelli / Mrs. Inge Galtung Mr. Rudolph P. Hafter ^ Mr. G. Michael LittleJohns /1 Mr. Francisco V. Portela X Mr. Robert ¥. Reford jX Mrs. Anne Weill-Tuckerman v Mr. Ivan Zverina ^Dr. Louis Halasz OPI: ^ Mr. Gohl Obhrai S M. Jean d'&rcy ^Mr. Vladimir Pavlichenko «XMr. William Powell cXMr. David Ritchie i/ Mr. Reinholdt Eriksen iX Mr. Michael Hayward vXMr. Cesar Ortiz >/Mr. Ramses Wassif iXMr. Maurice Liu tXMr. Stephen A. Przylucki ^Mr. Ivar Gudmundsson ^Mr. Reginald Bruce /• CESI; i/Mr. W. Gibson Parker '•'Mr. Snowden Harrick •/Mr. Charles Bourbonniere

Participants in the Editors* Roundtable (continued) ,/Mr. P. Givskov Christensen (Denmark) ^/Mr. Knud Cornelius (Denmark) .y Mr. Tommy Elsvor (Denmark) ^Me. Finn Friis (Denmark) yMr. H. Larsen Bjerre (Denmark) i/Mr. B^rge Therkildsen (Denmark) v"Mr. Svend Stubbe 0stergaard (Denmark) Others; -- Miss Joan Bush (WHO) -Mr. Jack Ling (UHICEF) . Sally Shelley (UMESCO) . Lars Lind (IBRD) CS/rrt

8r. David B. Vaugfen 19 October for

S, Slvaaaaikar Assistant to the Chef Cabinet

Mr* Saj?asiiatiaia haa iiastrusted me to inft^a the following fuaetiottfi "sfeilcb the to ho34 ia tfoe Bag HammaralijoM Beathouse: fos* Editors* oa 21 October froa 7 to 8 p.m. for of ACS on 28 October at I.

- Mr,- ZCEG URG720 , 420544" ER R0B465 UHC144 61L!€3 USJJY CO ITRM 063

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FILE NO. ACTION 0 THAMT'SECRETARY SEVERAL TO OF THE UNITED «AT10»AS URA8ATIOWS KEWYORK

BECAUSE OF BHEXPECtEO LAST MOMEMT EMPEACHEPIEMT XT WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE FOR *€ TO BE PRESENT'TO THE EDITORS ROUMDTABLE m THE OCCASION OF THE TWENTYFIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE UNITED $ATXOUS STOP PLEASE ACCEPT !*K)ST SINCERE EXPRESSIONS OF MY DEEP

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URC144 PACES

RE6RET STOP WITH KINDEST REGARDS ETTORE BERI3ABEI DIRECTOR SEVERAL RAI RADIOTELEVISIOBE'lTALIABA 15

Note to; Mr. 0,T* Chef d« flnaa A, Iforla Chief of Fretoeol

to your note of Ik October concerning distinguishea journalists attending the Editors1 Round Table* ¥$ have a&e&dy issued passes whieh will allow tU^e @^itl€sm®ft to attend all at the during the W&ficA l^tto - gifrtfe of Qctoljer. to year request ws have also incliaded them in the list of guests invited to the reception at 12:50 !>•»- and to the evening conaert.

cci Mr. Mi*, Obhrai Mr. I^emieux Sr. Sinaa Karl* Chief of l»rotoc«Jl

C, V* Chef de Cabinet

The Secretsry-Seaeral Jias fiecified that the oarealistiff attending tfe

- Mr* Ifer, Obhrai Mr. Lemieux 17 Se$>ember 1970

Attached is the preliminary (and incomplete) guest list for the Editors1 Roundtable reception to be given on 21 October, from 6 to 7 p.m., for your approval. Mr. Obhrai's office will send us additional names vhen acceptances are received. 15 September 1970 •

EDITORS1 ROUNDTABLE ACCEPTMGES AS AT 14 SEPTEMBER 1970

ASIA

India Mr. A. K. Sen, Director-General of All India Radio Indonesia Mr. Abdul Hamid, Director-General, Radio Republik Indonesia (RRI) Iran Mr. Hassangholi Javanshir, Director-General, Para News Agency Pakistan Mr. Roedad/ Managing Director, Pakistan Television Corporation limited ^ Philippines Mr. Simoun Almario, General Manager, Philippine Broadcasting Service Thailand Mr. Chaiyong Chavalit, Director, PIM THAI

AFRICA

Algeria Mr, Abderrahmane Cherriet, Director-General, Algerian Radio and TV Organization (RTA) Uongo (Democratic Republic of) Mr. Andre Kashala, Editor-in-Chief, LE PROGRES Ethiopia Mr. Negusse Hapte-Wold, General Manager, Ethiopian Broadcasting Service Nigeria Mr, Malam Adamu Ciroma, General Manager, New Nigerian Newspapers Limited Tanzania (United Republic of) Mr. Ben Mkapa, Editor-in-Chief, THE NATIONALIST United Arab Republic Mr. Abdul Hamid Younes, Chairman, UAR Television Organization

LATIN AMERICA Argentina Mr. Roberto Caminos, Deputy Director, CLARIN Chile Mr. Emilio Phillipi, Editor of newsweek magazine ERCILLA Mexico Mr. Julio Scherer-Garcla, Chief Editor, EXCEESIOR Trinidad and Tobago Mr. Len Chongsing, Managing Editor, TRINIDAD GUARDIAN EUROPE

Belgium Mr. Luc Vandeweghe, Editor-in-Chief, DE STANDARD Czechoslovakia Mr. Jiri Hajek, Editor-in-Chief, TVORBA Denmark Mr. Arne Ejbye-Ernst, Managing Director, POLITIKEN Finland Mr. S. Raatikainen, Director-General, OY Yleisradio AB (To be accompanied by wife) France Mr. Jean Schwoebel, Diplomatic Editor, LE MONDE Ireland Mr. R.J.D. Gageby, Chief Editor, IRISH TIMES Italy Mr. Ettore Bernabei, Director-General, Radiotelevisione Italiana(RAl) Malta Judge A. J. Montanaro-Gauci, Chairman, Malta Broadcasting Authority Netherlands Mr. H.J.A. Hofland, Chief Editor, ALGEMEEN HANDELSBIAD and NIEUWE ROTTERDAMSS COURANT Norway Dr. Hans Jacob Ustvedt, Director-General, Norsk RISKRING-KASTING (Radio TV) Spain Mr. Manuel S. Morales Rico, Secretario Nacional, Prensa y Radio del Movimiento USSR Mr. Mikhail V. Zimianin, Editor-in-Chief, PRATOA Mr. Leonid M. Zamiatin, General Director, TASS

United Kingdom Mr. Ronald Waldman, Managing Director, VISNEWS Limited Yugoslavia Hr. Ivko Pustisek, Secy-Gen., Yugoslav Radio and Television NORTH AMERICA

U.S.A. Mr. Erwin D. Canham, Editor-in-Chief, The Christian Science Monitor Mr. John ¥. Macy, Jr., President, Corporation for Public Broadcasting OTHER AREAS Australia Sir Robert Madgwick, Chairman, Australian Broadcasting Commission (To be accompanied by daughter, Miss Mary Madgwick) 'apan Mr. Y. Maeda, President, Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK) 2J September 1970

Mrs. Newell, Here are two more names to be added to those who will receive invitations from the SG for the Editors' Roundtable reception on the 21st of °ctober.

U.S.A. - Mr. ELton H. Rule, President, American Broadcasting Company

Mr, William N. Qatis, President, United Nations Correspondents Association,

Thanks.

Marion Van Wickler Miss Newell, Here are the two additional names I mentioned to ypu over the phone this afternoon:

Mr. Ruy Mesquita, Director of JOKNAL DA TARDE and also Co-Director of 0 ESTADO DE SAO PAULO - Brazil

Mr. H.A. Heatherington, Editor, THE GUARDIAN, - United Kingdom

Marion Van Vickler "'

Mrs. Newell, Here is one more name to add to the list for the Seeretary=General's reception on 21 October:

Mr. K. Balaraman Associate Editor The Hindu Madras, India

Thanx

Marion Van Vickler UNITED NATIONS W£'$ NATIONS UNIES ^s^iy NEW YORK

CABLE ADDRESS ADRESSE TEL EG RA PH I QU E: UNATIONS NEWYORK

EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY-G ENERAL

CABINET DU SECRETAIRE GENERAL

PU lltf/2 (2) 1970 25 September 1970

Dear Mr. Balaraman, I was glad to hear from ,Gohl Qbhrai that you plan to be in Hew York during October to observe the Twenty-fifth Anniversary Session of the United Nations General Assembly. As it so happens, the UN Office of Public Information is organizing an Editors' Roundtable between 19 and 24 October to which we have invited some of the leading journalists and broadcasters from all over the world, including Mr. A.K. Sen, Director-General of All India Radio. As you will be in New York at that time, I would be very pleased if, as a past President of UNCA, you would also join us on the occasion as a participant.

Yours sincerely,

U Thant

Mr. K. Balaraman Associate Editor Ihe Hindu • . Kasturi Buildings, Mount Road Madras=2, India ROUTING SUP FICHE DE TRANSMISSION

FOR ACTION XPOUR SUITE A DONNER FOR APPROVAL I/ POUR APPROBATION FOR SIGNATURE POUR SIGNATURE PREPARE DRAFT PROJET A REDIGER FOR COMMENTS POUR OBSERVATIONS MAY WE CONFER? POURRIONS-NOUS EN PARLERf YOUR ATTENTION VOTRE ATTENTION AS DISCUSSED COMME CONVENU AS REQUESTED SUITE A VOTRE DEMANDS NOTE AND FILE NOTER ET CLASSER NOTE AND RETURN NOTER ET RETOURNER FOR INFORMATION POUR INFORMATION f*-

V

Date: FROM;

CR GUEST LIST FOR SECRETARY-GENERAL'S RECEPTION FOR THE EDITORS' ROUNDTABLE - 21 OCTOBER 1970

All participants in the Roundtable (some UO firm acceptances received so far; another 5 to 10 expected).

All Under-Secretaries-General and Assistant Secretaries-General (including Mr. Paul Hoffman and Chief Adebo).

3. Members UN Correspondents Association Executive Committee. *w k. Following from OPI: Gohl Obhrai Michael Hayward Jean d'Arcy Cesar Ortiz Vladimir Pavlichenko Ramses Nassif William Powell Maurice Liu David Ritchie Przylucki Reinholdt Eriksen Ivar Gudmundsson Reginald Bruce

Following from CESI: W. Gibson Parker Snowden Herrick Charles Bourbonniere

2k September 1970 Mrs. Kate Nevell -

Kate, Here is one more name for the SG's reception:

Mr. Clifton Daniel, Associate Editor, The Kev York Times.

Thanx

Marion SG'S Deception:

Mr- ent on Miss Kate Newell,

Kate —

A few more names to be added to the SG's reception and

invitations issued, pis.

Mr. Rodriguez Munoz (Assistant to Mr. Robert Caminos, Argentina)

Mr. Kyoichi Hashimoto )Secretary to Mr. Maeda, Japan)

Mr. Nestor Ignat, Chairman of Romanian Newsmen's Union and Deputy Managing Editor of LUPTA DE CLASA, Romania

Also, we have just learned that Mrs. Gageby and Mrs. Mesquita will be accompanying their husbands, so I just added Mrs. to the invitations already made. Miss K. Newell

Kate, I don't believe there will be many more after these:

Mr. Maksymilian Berezowski (Assistant to Mr. Mojkovski, Chief Ed. of TRYBUNA LUDU)

Mr. Thomas Winship Editor Boston Globe Boston, Mass.

Mr. N.G. Ishchenko, Chief Editor SILSKI VISTI Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic

Participants Danish Press Visit to the U.S., October 1970

Mr. P. Givskov Christensen Holding Polkeblad, Kolding

^ Mr. Knud Cornelius Frederilcsborg Amts Avis, T'illGr0d dr. Tommy Elsvor Fyens Stiftstidende, Oder.se fr. Finn Friis Copenhagen Mr. H. Larsen-Bjerre A-Pressens Korrespondance Bureau, Copenhagen i'lr. B0rge Therliiidsezi Jydske Tidende, Xolding vlr. Svend StubTbe 0stergaard Ministry of Foreign Affaire, Copenhagen

/ 7 00 a*

CD U and Mrs. Thant luncheon, Sunday, 18 October 1970, 1.00 p.m., Riverdale

PERMANENT MISSION OF BURMA: * 1/"H.E. Brigadier Sein Win i/H.E. U Soe Tin, Mrs. Soe Tin and family .E. U San Maung .E. Thakin Chan Tun and Mrs. Chan Tun t. Col. Tin Aye l/Major Maung Maung . Col. Tha Tun Thaung Lwin, Mrs. Thaung Lwin and family l/Daw Than Han Pe Myint and Mrs. Ba Yin t/U Tun Naing I/' U Khin Tun

UNITED NAT I ONSt U and Mrs. Shwe Mr a and family (CH 225^) U and Mrs. Richard Paw II (2952) and family and Mrs. Kyaw U (55^) Than Aye (DC S?g6, Eji . and Mrs. Gerald M. Desmond (|SS?) L.<{. - 3. / oS~ - and Mrs. Roy Doliner (A-J555) U and Mrs. Tin Aung (275) . and Mrs. Alain Morvan (A-350l) ,/Mr. and Mrs. Balwant Singh (2325) Aung San Su Kyi (2121 > Biili 30>i6)

OTHERS; - and Mrs. Y.S. Yee and Mrs. David Tin Hla, 231 E. 76th Street, New York and Mrs. Kyi Maung, 24l E. 76th Street, New York 10021

The Secretary-General and Mrs. Thant Dr. and Mrs. Tyn Myint U 01

04 ooi •Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 13 October 1970

Dr. Issraelyan Mr. Stark Mr. Sobolev

Mr. Nosek i x H.E. Mr. Roshchin

H.E. Mrs. Bultrikova x Dr. Kutakov

M. de Seynes X 2: H.E. Mr. Shevel

H.E. Mr. Malik ± The Secretary-General

Dr. Bunche :; c H.E. Mr. Gturinovich

H.E. Mr. Dobrynin :c Mr. Farasimhan

Sr. Rolz-Bennett H.E. Mr. Zakharov

Mr. Korle Mr. Lessiovski Mr. Tarassov and Liaison 12 October 1970

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General . on Tuesday, 13 October 1970

IX

Dr. Issraelyan Mr. Stark Mr. Sobolev XXX

Mr. Nosek : H.E. Mr.

H.E. Mrs. Bultrikova : Dr. Kutakov

M. de Seynes : H.E. Mr. Shevel

H.E. Mr. Malik t The Secretary-General

Dr. Bunche H.E. Mr. Gurinovich

I.E. Mr. Dobrynin c Mr. Narasimhan

Sr. Rolz-Bennett c H.E. Mr.

Mr. Korle Mr. Lessiovski Mr. Tarassov SG luncheon for USSR delegation to the 25th session of the General Assembly, Tuesday, 15 October 1970, 1.1$ p.m., 58th floor

H.E. Mr. Y.A. Malik, Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs, Permanent Rep. .E. Mr. A.F. Dobrynin, .Ambassador to the USA .E. Mrs. B.B. Bultrikova, Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Kazakh SSR K.E. Mr. A.A. Roshchin, Representative to the Disarmament Committee ,/K.E. Mr. A.V. Zakharov, Deputy Permanent Representative jf Dr. V.L. Issraelyan, Deputy Permanent Representative ^X^ Mr. V.P. Sobolev, Deputy Permanent Representative l/ Mr. H.K. Tarassov, Deputy Permanent Representative k/H.E. Mr. G.G. Shevel, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Ukrainian SSR /H.E. Mr. A.E. Gurinovich, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Byelorussian SSR v

The Secretary-General t/Cr. Bunche tX*Mr. Kutakov ^X^' Narasimhan l/'Mr. Rolz-Benne tt . Hosek Mr. Lessiovski de Seynes . Stark . Korle

20

cc: Mr. Korle Don SG luncheon for USSR delegation to General Assembly, Tuesday, " 1970, 1.15 p.m., 58th floor

USSR delegation: \S H.E. Mr. Yakob A. Malik, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs i/ H.E. Mr. Anatoly F. Dobrynin., Ambassador to the United States ^ H.E. Mrs. B.B. Bultrikova, Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Kazakh SSR \/ H.E. Mr. Alexei V. Zakharov, Deputy Permanent Representative i/ Dr. Victor L. Issraelyan, Depty Permanent Representative ^ Mr. N.K. Tarassov, Deputy Permanent Representative Ukrainian SSR delegation; c/H.E. Mr. Georgy G. Shevel, Minister for~ Foreign Affairs i/ H.E. Mr. Mikhail D. Polyanichko, Pe^oanent Representative Byelorussian SSR delegation: t/ H.E. Mr. Anatoly D. Gurinovich, /Minister for Foreign Affairs i/ Mr. Vitaly S. Smirnov, Permanent Representative

The Secretary -General Dr. Bunche Mr. Kutakov Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Nosek \/ / Mr. Lessiovskz \s^ Mr. Pavliche'nko Mrs. Hata/ia Tyulina (Director of the Library) .Mr. Korle *s* no H.E. -Ma?-. -Jarring (previous engagement) / no Mi-ele-SeyHee (previous engagement) W*^* no ••- Stark (away) \s^ no Mp-»-Pe*3?Hfea4efe (hosting a luncheon)

19 cc: Mr. Korle Don PROPOSED LIST OF GUESTS TO A LUNCHEON TO BE GIVEN BY THE UN SECRETARY-GENERAL U THANT ON TUESDAY 29 SEPTEMBER, 1970

The USSR Delegation

'. H.E. Mr. Yakob A. Malik Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary, Permanent Representative at the United Nations, member of Delegation.

. H.E. Mr. AnatolyF. Dobrynin - Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary of the USSR to the United States, member of Delegation.

H.E. Mrs. B.B.Bultrikova - Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers and Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Kazakh SSR, member of Delegation.

H".EV"Mf. ALexei A.Roshchin - Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary, Representative to the Disarmament Committee, Alternate member of Delegation.

5 . H.E. Mr. Alexei V.Zakharov - Ambassador Extraordinary and Pleni- potentiary, Deputy Permanent Repre- sentative to the United Nations, Alternate member of Delegation.

6. Dr.Victor L.Issraelyan Envoy Extraordinary and Plenipotentia- ry, Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Alternate member of Delegation.

The Ukrainian SSR Delegation

. H.E. Mr. GeorgyG. Shevel Minister for Foreign Affairs, Chairman of Delegation, Ambassador Extraordi- nary and Plenipotentiary. 2. H.E. Mr. Mikhail D. Polyanichko- Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Permanent Repre- sentative to the United Nations, member of Delegation.

The Byelorussian SSR Delegation

. H.E. Mr.Anatoly E. Gurinovich Minister for Foreign Affairs, Chairman of Delegation, Ambassa- dor Extraordinary and Plenipoten- tiary .

2. Mr. Vitaly S. Smirnov Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Permanent Re- presentative to the United Nations, member of Delegation. Aje^, *r***J ^ b'S<^- £y fr*^=f

UHIOH OF SOVIET SOCIALIST ROUBUCB

Representatives: •B.S. Mr. A.A. OBOMIKO Bloiat«r for Foreien Afftlr* of the •S.K. Mr. T.A. MALIK Xtepatgr Miniater for Foreign Aabaaag.dor Extraordinary «a4 Plenlpotentlctry Foreaaent Acgpreeeatatlve to tte Itoited Itetlons / H.B. Mr. A.P.

to the United States of H.B. Mr. P.A. ABRASSIMOV Aatbtasador KxtraordiBuy cai flenlpotentlujr to tb» Oensan De&ocr&tle fi.S. Mrs. B.B. BOLTBIKOVA Deputy (%»limaa of tit» Cornell of Mlnletmm KaselLb Soviet Socialist ftepi&lie Mtolster for Forol^n Affftira of tin Kasakh SSR Alternate Representatives:

.E. Mr. A.A. ROSCHBI r SstrB&rdliuuy ^frt Plcnlpotsntlary Advisor to the Klolstcr for Foreign Affairs Bepreaentatlve to ths Comtdttse on Dlearoaisent

. Mr. M.D. TAK07LEV Esctraordlosuy and Bxtov ef tin KOBOW State Imtltute'of

B. Mr. A.Y. 2AEHAKOV A^bssscdor ExtrmordlBary sM Plenipotentiary Bepr«scntatlv« to tfaa Qhltsd Batlons •Mr. f .P. SOBOLSV Kmcgr S&tmordlrakry sad Minister Plenipotentiary Deputy Perasueat fojixesentatlve to tba United Batlons Alternate fiepvesentatlvesi (Cont'd)

. V.L. XSSKAKIXAa Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary Deputy Pezv&nent Representative to the Doited Rations

Entrap 3xtraoir41mkry cafl Minister Plenipotoatiwy tteputgr Pejtaaaient Repreaentatlre t» ttoft United

«f tbe Mr. P.F. SHAKHOV y *ad Minister PlenipeteatiMry of Foreign Affairs Adviser*} Kr. V.G. KAKAROV to the Foreign Minister

Kr. 7.A. KOPTSL1S2V Assistant to the Foreign Minister B.S. Mr. Y.P. SOSLOV ABfbacsador Bxtraordiasjy and Plenipotentiary Head *f tto Department Niaistxy of Foreign Affairs •Mr. X.I. BABABAHOV Senior Couaaellor, Beraanen «Kr. 1.6. HMLESSA . Sealor Coansellor, Peivanedt Mission »' *Mr. B.S. CWIBHIKOV Senior OeuHsaHer, FfnsmrTit Kissiea ^fSr« Z.T. FffiPORCHHiHKO Senior Counsellor, Fezoanent Mlssiao Secretary-General of ttoo Delegation tfr. B.Y. SK40LEKKO Senior Adviser, Ministry rf fbrei«n AfB»lr»

Kr. 8.1. TARAS30V «U1 act as Alternate BappesentatiTe after tba departure of esne of the other Alternate Representatives. A*ri««r»s (Cont'd)

Ur». L.A. GVISHIAHI CeuoMller, Hlnietzy *f ftoeicn Afffcln •Mr. O.A. GHIGORIKV Counsellor,

Hr«* X.A. A8fi«ciftt«, Meseoir State Xafttitat* ef iBtercfttleoal Rolcticms »«T. H.I. SVDOCESV C

«Kr. T.M. KAZAKO?

Kr. O.F. BUJRK1W CoiKsellor, ^inlctxy

Kr.V.F. KASATKBf C«qta»ell«rv Mintstiy «f F«orei0i Afffeln Mr. D.B Kiaiatiy of F»*«10> Aftfeii* v 0.A. % Bexnaaant itlmi« •Hr. A.P. KOVAUS7 Mlsalea «Kr. B.F. KBASULIH

G.F. LIS307 CeanwUor, Pe . V JC. Cocasellor, Fex Mr, S,D. FSRUII

My. V.M. Adriscrs: (Ccnt'd) Hr. V.Y. SKOSTQV Ceu&ssllor, Ministry «f Foreign Affairs •Mr. V.L. QLEAHSRW First Secretory, Fetaanent Kiation •Kr. G.3. 3TA3SKVSKT Tint 3ecreta»7, Fexsatoeat Sxperta: Mr. V.T. 13YOAKOV Cwm»ell»rv Ministry of . M.M. AMTIfOV lint Seeretuy, FerMwent Hlasion A.V. OCWK Pint 3ecret«r^, Penuaant Ki«»ien •Mr. V.D. ZAKHAROV First S«eretaxyv P»XB*nent Misaicn

Mr. G.I. 20LOTOV First 8«ereta37t Minifltry «f Foreign Affairs K.K. LQGIHOV First Secretary, Peivsiumt Mission

Mr. Y.E. FOTE3 First Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affsira •ttr. T.A. CHUCEUKIH First 3«eret«ry» PermuaeDt Kission *Kr. A.A. BOJLDOVSKT Secofid Secretary, Penwnent Mission Kr. A.V. QBOD8KI Second Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affsirs

S«eeo4 Seeretsr/^ Pevsmneftt Hissioa

Ur. 3.3. ELZS1S7 Second Sccretsry, Ministry *f Foreign Affsirs •Mr. K»X. KAtACBSf SeeceA Secretary, renanent Miscim

*Kr. I.E. Seccnd Secretary, Peraaaent Kiaslea

*Mr. R.H, KOTOJ4IB S«cret«a(y, fteantaiwat Mr. V.S. Second Secretsay, Mlnletxy «f F«r»lgo

fi«e«aA Secretary, fterameat « F«X* S*eoa& Secretary, FexKanent Hi»«i«a Mr. V.I. Second Seeratwry, Ministry *f Toreien Affair*

«Hr. T.H. Secretary* . V.A. AMISSIHOV IMrd Secretasy, FeaMneat V,?. ZOLCTABST Third Secretary, Feraooeat Mis«i»n «Er. I.d

•Mr. T.O, fETHOV Third Secretary, Pfenwotnt Kiasicn l. KEFARW fbird Secretary, Mnistry «f far

fbird Secretary, Pexnftaeat Mission *•* * ;*.

Export** (Cwt'd) «HT. V.I, AKTOSOV Attache, Peraonsnt Hls»l •Mr. Y.M. AKT2MSSKO Att«ch«t

Attache, *Kr. V.F. GLADKY

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5.3AXAPOB A.B. H HOJIHO^O^HHM HOCOJI, 3aM6C THT6JIB nOCTOHHHOrO npeSCTaBHTGJIH CCCP npn OOH, saMecTHiejiB qjieHa CCCP na XXy ceccHH PA OOH.

6. MCPABJIflH B.JI. H nOJIHOMOtlHblfi nOCTOHHHOrO CCCP npn OOH, saMecTHTea-u ^^u.^. CCCP Ha XXy ceccHH TA OOH.

I.BIEBMb P.P. MHHHCTP HHOcTpaHHHX 2TCCP, aejieranEiH, n nocoji. 2. HOJIHHMKO M.2. 0 nOJEHOMO^HblM nOCOJI, fipeaciaBHTejiB yCCP npw OOH, 3TCGP na XXy ceccra PA OOH. 2.

ECGP

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2. CfflPHOB B.C. - nocTOHHHHa BCCP npH OOH, H HOJIHOMO^HBIH nocjiaHHHK, BCCP Ha XX5T ceccM OOH.

Luncheon given "by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 6 October 1970

The Hon. Aloysius Mazewski Mr. Vaughan The Hon. Richard Gimer —X- 3&. ,—x

The Hon. Helen Edmonds 3 ± H.E. Mr. Finger

H.E. Mr. Olds x Mr. Warasimhan

Dr. Bunche The Hon. Jacob Javits

H.E. Mr. Yost The Secretary-General

Mr. Hoffman The Hon. Claibome Pell

Mr. Phillips Mr. Morse

Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Stark

-x- Mr. Korle Mr. Cohen ege] styl 6 October 1970

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 6 October. 1970

The Hon. Aloysius Mazewski The Hon. Richard Giraer XX

The Hon. Helen Edmonds fc -Jriiu Hun. GlaTburUti Tell

Mr. Narasimhan

Dr. Bunche

H.E. Mr. Yost The Secretary-General

Mr. Hoffman k

TP Mv.

Mr. Korle Mr. Cohen

IV SG luncheon for USA delegation to General Assembly , Tuesday, 6 October 1970**., 1.15 p.m., 38th floor _ Representative: ^ (U--v.r-. {-. - T -6, -/ • , U 3-3./ ixorne- Pell- - United- States- Senate .E. Mr. Glenn A. Olds, Representative on the Economic and Social Council

Alternate Representatives:

1XH.E. Mr. Seymour Maxwell Finger, Senior Adviser to the Permanent Representative ^- SEhe Hon. Helen G. Edmonds, Durham, North Carolina Hon. Richard H. Gimer, Springfield, Virginia Hon. Aloysius A. Mazewski, Chicago, Illinois

no Special gtae-s-t-s-'-Mr-e-.- Shis-ley- 3?emple-K.aek->-G€fflimi-66i€«a-©n-HHHia*i-Ra.gfete- (not in NY)

The Secretary-General •. Bunche •. Marasimhan -. Rolz-Bennett no Mr.-Kutateev (attending Abba Eban luncheon) k^-Mr. Vaughan

veif ^rs » * iK> wMj?-»-He£ffflaa no Mr-,-Labeuijsse- (attending Abba Eban luncheon) no (,^-H .E •.- Mr.- Jarring i/ Mr. Korle •. Morse Myer Cohen v/Mr. Stark

cc: Mr. Korle George

** originally scheduled for 17 September 1970 UNITED STATES DELEGATION TO THE TWENTY-FIFTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY New York, September 15, 1970

UNITED STATES DELEGATION

Repre sentatives: *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6461 Charles ¥. Yost, (Chairman) I/ Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Permanent Representative to the United Nations. *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6485 Christopher H. Phillips, Ambassador, Deputy Permanent Representative on the Security Council. *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6*61 Jacob K. Javits, United States Senate. *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6466 Claiborne Pell, United States Senate. *The Honorable Tel.: 573-644-7 Glenn A. Olds, Ambassador, United States Representative on the United Nations Economic and Social Council. Alternate Representatives: *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6451 Seymour Maxwell Finger, Ambassador, United States Mission to the United Nations.

I/ The Secretary of State, the Honorable William P. Rogers, -will serve as Chairman of the Delegation, ex offiejo, during his presence at the Session.

* Spouse present - 2 -

Alternate Representatives; (continued) The Honorable Tel.: 573-6351 Helen G. Edmonds, Durham, North Carolina. The Honorable Tel.: 573-657^ Richard H. Gimer, Springfield, Virginia. The Honorable Tel.: 573-6351 Aloysius A. Mazewski, Chicago, Illinois. Special Advisers: Director, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6Vfl Gerard Smith. The Assistant Secretary of State for Hear Eastern and South Asian Affairs: *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6516 Joseph J. Sisco. The Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs: *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6487 Samuel De Palma. Counselor, Department of State; *The Honorable Tel. : 573-6516 Richard F. Pedersen. Legal Adviser, Department of State: *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6415 John R. Stevenson.

* Spouse present - 3 -

Special Advisers; (continued) United States Ambassador to the Republic of Burundi; *The Honorable Tel.: 573-6^81 Thomas P. Melady. Assistant Director, Arms Control and Disarmament Agency: *The Honorable Tel.: 573-61+71 James F. Leonard. United States Representative on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights; *The Honorable Tel. : 573-6W& Rita E. Hauser. United States Representative on the United Nations Commission for Social Development; «Tba Honorable Tel.: 573-6438 Jean Picker. Advisers; *Gerald M. Adams, Colonel, U.S.A.F., Tel.: 573-6588 Military Adviser, United States Mission to the United Nations. Daniel N. Arzac, Jr., Tel.: 573-6483 Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, Department of State. Robert L. Barry, Tel.: 573-6483 Bureau of European Affairs, Department of State.

*Albert F. Bender, jr. Tel.: 573-644-5 Counsellor for Legal and International Organization Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Ronald J. Bettauer, Tel.: 573-6443 Office of the Assistant Legal Adviser for United Nations Affairs, Department of State.

* Spouse present Advisers; (continued) Slator C. Blackiston, Jr., Tel.: 573-6476 Bureua of Hear Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Department of State.

*Rudulph H. Carter Tel.: 573-6*1-56 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. John M. Gates, Jr., Tel.: 573-6413 United States Mission, Geneva. Susie Anne Chan, Tel.: 573-6501 San Francisco, California. ^Arthur R. Day, Tel: 573-6411 United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. Ben P. Dixon, Tel.: 573-6478 Bureau of East Asian Affairs, Department of State. Robert H. Dockery, Tel.: 573-6466 Staff Consultant, Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Senate. *Benjamin T. Douglas, Captain, U.S.N., Tel.: 573-6585 Military Adviser, United States Mission to the United nations. *Paxton T. Dunn, Tel.: 573-6438 Adviser, Economic and Social Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Earvey J. Feldman, Tel.: 573-6456 Office of United Nations Political Affairs, Department of State. *Daniel W. Figgins, Tel,: 573-6427 Adviser, International Organization Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Walker Givan, Tel.: 573-6471 United States Mission, Geneva. *Ernest C. Grigg, III, Tel.: 573-6478 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations.

* Spouse present - 5 - Advisers; (continued) #James Clarence Brwin, Tel.: 573-6407 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *¥allace Irwin, Jr., Tel.: 573-6259 Special Assistant to the Permanent Representative, United States Mission to the United Nations. Robert Wilson Kitchen, Jr., Tel.: 573-6438 Special Adviser on Economic Development Programs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *John w. Koehring, Tel.: 573-6436 Adviser, Economic and Social Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *Sol Kuttner, Tel.: 573-6421 Adviser, International Organization Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Edward W. Lawrence, Tel.: 573-64-27 Office of International Administration, Department of State. Stuart H. Mclntyre, Tel.: 573-6458 Office of United Nations Political Affairs, Department of State. Katherine B. McSweeney, Tel.: 573-6456 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *Edward T. Mytko, Tel.: 573-6591 Assistant Press Officer, United States Mission to the United Nations. Alan F. Neidle, Tel.: 573-6411 United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. *Mlchael H. Berlin, Tel.: 573-6411 Counselor for Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission, to the United Nations.

*" Spouse present - 6 - Advisers; (continued) *Donald R. Newman, Tel.: 573-6591 Deputy Director, Public Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *Robert B. Oakley, Tel.: 573-61)76 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United nations. *Arthur A. Olson, Colonel, U.S.A., Tel.: 573-6578 Military Adviser, United States Mission to the United Nations. W. Clinton Powell, Tel.: 573-6^78 Bureau of African Affairs Department of State. Herbert K. Reis, Tel.: 573-6415 Assistant Legal Adviser for United Nations Affairs, Department of State. *John P. Reddington, Tel.: 573-6^27 Adviser, International Organization Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Jacques J. Reinstein, Tel.: 573-6*1-36 Bureau of International Organization Affairs, Department of State. Woodward Romine, Tel.: 573-6^13 Management Staff, Department of State. *Robert B.-Rosenstock, Tel.: 573-6kL5 Adviser, Legal Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Elliott C. Rothenberg, Tel.: 573-6^3 Adviser, Economic and Social Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations.

* Spouse present - 7 - Advisers; (continued) ^Frederick H. Sacksteder, Jr., Tel.: 573-6481 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United nations. *Vice Admiral Arnold F. Schade, U.S.N., Tel.: 573-658? Military Adviser, United States Mission to the United Nations. *Theodore P. Schottke, Jr., Tel.: 573-6471 Senior Adviser, Administrative Affairs, United States Mission to the United nations. *A. Reynolds Smith, Tel.: 573-6454 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United nations.

Robert I. Starr, Tel.: 573-6407 Office of Legal Adviser, Department of State.

*Arthur M. Stillman, Tel.r 573-6443 Adviser, Economic and Social Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *John Stuart, jr., Tel.: 573-6591 Senior Adviser, Public Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. *Peter S. Thacher, Tel.: 573-6458 Counselor for Science, Technology and Environmental Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations.

^Frederick D. Vreeland, Tel.: 573-6454 Adviser, Political and Security Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations. Xenia Vunovic, Tel.: 573-6421 Adviser, International Organization Affairs, United States Mission to the United Nations.

David M. Wilson Tel.: 573-6591 Assistant Press Officer, United States Information Agency.

* Spouse present 10° 2 October 1970

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Monday, 5 October 1970

Mr. Narasimhan Sr. Rolz-Bennett Dr. Kutakov X X X

H.E. Mr. Mojsov H.E. U Soe Tin

H.E. Mr. Rydbeck H.E. M. Kosciusko-Morizet

H.E. M. Araujo Castro H.E. Mr. Malik

H.E. Mr. Haymerle The Secretary-General

H.E. Sir Colin Grove : H.E. Mr. Yost

I.E. M. Ake H.E. Mr. Shahi

H.E. Mr. Sen Dr. Bunche

Mr. Korle Dr. Herndl SG- luncheon to Md farewell to H.E. Mr. Heinrich Haymerle on Monday, 5 October 1970 , 1-15 p.m., 58th floor _ | ^.< t/H.E. Mr. Heinrich Haymerle - Austria (/ . Mr. Charles W. Yost - United States H.E. Mr. Yakov Aleksandrovich Malik - USSR . M. Jacques Kosciusko-Morizet - France v^-H.E. Sir Colin Crowe - United Kingdom U"H.E. Mr. Olof Rydbeck - Sweden . Mr. Lazar Mojsov - Yugoslavia . Mr. Agha Shahi - Pakistan ^•H.E. M. Simeon Ake - Ivory Coast no v«XH-.E--MT-Edoua:ird-Stiea?3fa --- Lefeaaeja (death of Pres. Nasser) . Mr. Samar Sen - India . U Soe Tin - Burma . M. Joao Augusto de Araujo Castro - Brazil

The Secretary-General ~-Cr. Bunche i/Mr. Kutakov Warasimhan Rolz-Bsnnett . Herndl (PSCA) Korle

19

cc: Mr. Korle • Don E1 P I t-t X tt)

Hs? ft r Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Wednesday, 30 September 1970

U Khin Tun

U Ba Yin U Thaung Lwin

Lt. Col. Tha Tun ,c Lt. Col. Tin Aye

Mrs. Tyn Myint U H.E. U Soe Tin

H.E. Brigadier Sein Win The Secretary-General

H.E. Thakin Chan Tun H.E. U San Maung

or Maung Maung U Shwe Mra

Daw Than Han Major Pe Myint SG luncheon on Wednesday. 30 September 1970 , 1.15 P.m., 38th floor BURM/L Mission -s '«' '— '. - - i , i... •'•..- ^~ Representatives ' ' * ,/H.E. Brigadier Sein ¥in Minister for Public Works and Housing Chairman of the Delegation ^ H.E. U Soe Tin Permanent Representative Vice-Chairman of the Delegation -/H.E. U San Maung Ambassador to the United States ^ H.E. Thakin Chan Tun Ambassador to Canada

Lt. Col. Tin Aye Burma Socialist Programme Party

Alternate Representatives Maung Maung Burma Socialist Programme Party Lt. Col. Tha Tun Officer on Special Duty Ministry of Foreign Affairs U Thaung Lwin Deputy Permanent Representative Than Han First Secretary Ministry of Foreign Affairs no So orotaiy Major Pe Myint Ministry of Public Works and Housing no

Ba Yin Second Secretary, Permanent Mission

A.. — 2 — no

Tun Second Secre 'ermanent Mission Khin Tun Third Secretary, Permanent Mission

The Secretary-General Mrs. Tyn Myint U U Shwe Mra

16

cc: Don ,0-! H P i X 4 : g| &

ff

TO l Protocol and 25 September 1970

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Monday, 28 September 1970

M. Paolini M. Servant M. Muller

M. Blanc M. Deleau

M. de la Gorce M. Djermakoye

M. de Seynes x H.E. M. Kosciusko-Morizet

H.E. M. de Lipkowski X The Secretary-General

Dr. Bunche : H.E. Mr. Jarring

Dr. Kutakov Sr. Rolz-Bennett

M. Viaud M. Bouquin

Mr. Korle M. Legras SG luncheon for French delegation to General Assembly, Monday, 28 September 1970, 1-15 p.m., 38th floor

Repre sentat!ve s: H.E. M. Jean de Lipkowski, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs H.E. M. Jacques Kosciusko-Morizet, Permanent Representative

Alternate Representatives: M. Francois de la Gorce

Special Represent atives: M. Maurice Viaud M. Olivier Deleau M. Marcel Bouquin M. Paul Blanc M. Jean-Dominique Paolini M. Henri Servant M. Guy Legras

The Secretary-General Mr. Kutakov M. de Seynes no Mr-.--&bai?k (away in Geneva) H.E. Mr. Jarring M. Muller Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Korle Dr. Bunche M. Djermakoye

19 cc: Mr. Korle Don ROUTING SLIP FICHE DE TRANSMISSION r-Ki hieft- FOR ACTION POUR SUITE A DONNER FOR APPROVAL POUR APPROBATION FOR SIGNATURE POUR SIGNATURE PREPARE DRAFT PROJET A REDIGER FOR COMMENTS POUR OBSERVATIONS MAY WE CONFER? POURRIONS-NOUS EN PARLER? YOUR ATTENTION VOTRE ATTENTION AS DISCUSSED X COMME CONVENU AS REQUESTED SUITE A VOTRE DEMANDE NOTE AND FILE NOTER ET CLASSER NOTE AND RETURN NOTER ET RETOURNER FOR INFORMATION POUR INFORMATION

Date: FROM: DE: r>

CR. 13 (11-64) Liste de la delegation franqaise a proposer £ M. THANT pour le de*j-efttter of "Pert par le Secretaire General le lundi 28 septembre.

1 - S.E. M. Jean de Lipkowski

2 - S.E. M. Jacques Kosciusko-Morizet

3 — Monsieur Franqois de la Gorce

4 - Monsieur Maurice Viaud

5 — Monsieu r Olivier Deleau

6 — Monsieur Marcel Bouquin

7 - Monsieur Paul Blanc

8 — Monsieur Jean—Dominique Paolini

9 — Monsieur Henri Servant

10 - Monsieur Guy Legras Suggested List of Members of the French Delegation for the luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Monday, 28 September:

1. S.E. M. Jean de Lipkowski Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs / 2. S.E. M. Jacques Kosciusko-Morizet Permanet Representative 3. Monsieur Francois de la Gorce Minister Plenipotentiary, Deputy Permanent Representative k. Monsieur Maurice Viaud Minister Plenipotentiary, Economic Adviser 5. Monsieur Olivier Deleau Counsellor, Secretary-General of the French Delegation 6. Monsieur Marcel Bouquin Counsellor of Embassy, Alternate Permanent Representative T. Monsieur Paul Blanc Counsellor of Embassy l//8. Monsieur Jean-Dominique Paolini Counsellor of Embassy 9- Monsieur Henri Servant Counsellor of Embassy 10. Monsieur Guy Legras Secretary of Embassy, Member of the Office of the Secretary of State

y^s^-c^

>LA~-*c

CJL^ -9-fc Cx. ^~^u-^ h~ LISTE DES MEMBRES DE LA DELEGATION FRANCHISE A LA XXVerne SESSION DE L'ASSEMBLEE GEWERALE DES NATIONS UNIES

REPRESENT ANTS : MM. Maurice SCHUMANN, Ministre des Affaires Etrangeres, President de la delegation,

Jean de LIPKOWSKI, Secretaire d'Etat aux Affaires Etrangeres.

Jean de BROGLIE, Depute, President de la Commission das Affaires Etrangeres de I'Assemblee : Nationale.

Andre MONTEIL, Senateur, President de la Commission senstoriale des Affaires Etrangeres, de Is Defense et des Forces armees.

* Jacques KOSCIUSKO-MORIZET, Ambassadeur, Representant permanent de la France aupres des Nations Unies.

REPRESENTANTS SUPFLEANTS : MM. Yvon BOURGES, Secretaire d'Etat aux Affaires Etrangeres. G-eorges GORSE, Depute. Michel HABIB-DELONCLE, Depute. Stephane RESSEL, Ministre plenipotentiaire, charge des Affaires des Nations Unies et Organise, tions Internationales au Ministere des Affaires Etrangeres. y, * Franqois de la GORGE, Representant adjoint au Conseil de Securite.

•CONSEILLERS SPECIAUX (celebration du XXVerne anniversaire) MM. Rene PLEVEN, Ministre de la justice, Garde des Sceaux. Andre BEAUGUITTE, Depute. * Louis JACQUINOT, Depute. 2. Jean Paul PALEWSKI, Depute. Alain PEYREFITTE, Depute. Herve ALPHAND, Arabsssedeur de Prance. Henri BONNET, Ambassadeur de Prance. Rene CASSIN, Vice-President honoraire du Conseil d'Etat.

Andre GANEM, Guillaume GEORGES-PICOT, Ancien Secretaire General adjoint des Nations Unies. Henri LAUGIER, Ancien Secretaire General adjoint des Nations Unies.

SECRETAIRE GENERAL X M- Olivier DELEAU, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres

CONSEILLERS : MM. Aymar Achille POULD, Depute. * Pierre Bernard COUSTE, Depute. Xavier DENIAU, Depute. Bernard DESTREMAU, Depute. Christian de la MALENE, Depute. Rene RIBIERE, Depute. Pierre de CHEVIGNY, Senateur. Jacques de BEATTMARCHAIS, Ministre plenipotentiaire. Paul LEMERLE, Directeur du Cabinet du Ministre< * Maurice VIAUD, Ministre plenipotentiaire.

* Emile de CURTON, Ministre plenipotentiaire, Guy de LACHARRIERE, Ministre plenipotentiaire. Andre MATTEI, Ministre plenipotentiaire. Robert de SOUZA, Ministre plenipotentiaire. Jean BELIARD, Ministre plenipotentiaire. Dieudonne MANDELKERN, Maitre des requites au Conseil d'Etal;. * Marcel BOUQUIN, Premier Conseiller. * Michel DUMOM1, Conseiller de Presse. * Alain CHAILLOUS, Chef du Service de Presse et d'Informa. tion. * Henri CHOLLET, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. Raymond BRESSIER, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. * Andre MISTRAL, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. * Roger ESTABLIE, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. * Michel le DIRAISON, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. ^ * Paul BLANC, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. ^ * Jean Dominique PAOLINI, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. V. * Henri SERVANT, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. V Robert GENET, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. Melie Annick MARTIN SANE, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. MM. * Alain DESCHAMPS, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. * Alain de SEDOUY, Conseiller des Affaires Etrangeres. Alain DEJAMMET, Secretaire des Affaires Etrangeres. * Francis LOTT, Secretaire des Affaires Etrangeres. Bernard PRAGUE, Attache commercial. Jean Paul SCHRICKE, Secretaire adjoint des Affaires Etrangeres. Melles Jacqueline BALENCIE, Secretaire adjoint des Affaires Etrangeres. Marguerite PENEL, Secretaire adjoint des Affaires Etrangeres. M. Edmond PAMBOUKJIAN, Secretaire adjoint des Affaires Etrangeres.

.../.. D M*ne Catherine BOIVINEAU, Secretaire adjoint des Affaires Etrangeres. yf. Henri CUNT, Secretaire adjoint des Affaires Etrangeres fj. Louis NICOLAS, Secretaire d'Ambassade

? M. Lucien DUBUS, Attache. Melie Gisele EMAILLE, Attache. H. Marcel ABATE, Attache. VI, Alain GOUHIER, Attache. Helle Nicole COURSGH, Attache. ro vn PHILIPPINE MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS

13 EAST 66TH STREET

NEW YORK, N. Y. IOO2I

10 — YUKON S-9IOO

7 October 1970

Your Excellency:

I should like to thank you again for having invited me to the excellent dinner which you gave in honor of

Mrs. Imelda Romualdez Marcos, First Lady of the

Philippines, on the 25th September, last.

It was an honor and a great pleasure to have been

included in the select company of your guests that evening.

With highest esteem, I remain

Yours sincerely,

ARCISO G. RE1 Ambassador

His Excellency

U Thant

Secretary-General of the United Nations

New York MRS. E. HAMBRO 10 GRACIE SQUARE o NEW YORK, N. Y. 10028 TR 9-8670

( £UUt

o / Dinner given by the Secretary-General on Friday, 25 September 1970

Mrs. Toda

H.E. Mr. Reyes - Mrs. Korle

Mrs. Tyn Myint=U :; H.E. Mr. Jimenez

H.E. Brigadier Sein ¥in Mrs. Hambro

Mrs. Marcos The Secretary-General

H.E. Dr. Romulo Mrs. Jimenez

. Soe Tin H.E. U Soe Tin

Dr. Tyn Myint-U Mrs. Romulo, junior

Mr. Korle Dinner given by the Secretary-General on Friday, 25 September 1970* 7.30 p.m., 58th floor (informal)

Ferdinand E. Marcos Dr. Carlos P. Romulo . Mariles C. Romulo, junior (Dr. Romulo1s daughter-in-law) . Mr. Privado G. Jimenez and Mrs. Jimenez no ix"Go-ve-35tn«i;L-Ben-jaaioi-n--RorB:aarMe-a-(:bi'e'felie3?-ef'-MFS-.-Marees) noux-Ms-s-- tew^d**-3SLiaia—(laiy-iH-waitiHg -te-M^ST -MaFees) ,/'H.E. Mr. Harciso Reyes (Ambassador to London) Rosemarie Toda (wife of President of Philippine Airlines)

The Secretary-General Dr. and Mrs. Tyn Myint-U . Brigadier Sein Win >XH.E. U Soe Tin and Mrs. Soe Tin ^/ H- Jr.- Mr-. - Edvard- Hembre- an.4 Mr s. Hambr o VMr-.--artd-M-rs-.-Paui-H-e>f^nan (cocktails only)

: /Mr. and Mrs. Sinan Korle

16

cc: Mr. Korle Don CD TO ro 8* ro H % H $ & Foreign and Commonwealth Office London S.W.I

26 September, 1970

n o

It was Trery kind of you to invite me and members of my staff here to lunch with you last Tuesday. I enjoyed this very much, and our talk beforehand. I was delighted to see you looking so fit and well despite your many responsibilities in this difficult world.

(Alec Douglas-Home)

His Excellency U Thant. BY HAND

His Excellency U Thant,

United Nations,

New York. o o o o Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 22 September 1970

Mr. Ehodes Mr. Haydon Sir Vincent Evans

Mr. Jamie son •: H.E. Mr. Warner

Mr. Stark 2 M. de Seynes

Dr. Bunche 3 H.E. Sir Colin Crowe

H.E. The Rt. Hon. Sir Alec : She-Secretary-General Douglas -Home

H.E. Mr. Jarring : ; Mr. Hamilton

M^ Rolz -Bennett : : ::: Mr. Kutakov

Mr. Allen ' : Mr. Hill

•V- . Tf Mr. Korle Mr. Graham Protocol and Liaises* 21 September 1970

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 22 September 1970

Mr. Rhodes Sir Vincent Evans X X

Mr. K.D. Jamieson H.E. Mr. Warner

Mr. Stark M. de Seynes"

Dr. Bunche H.E. Sir Colin Crowe

H.E. The Rt. Hon. Sir Alec X The Secretary-General Douglas-Home

Ambassador Jarring Mr. Hamilton

Sr. Jj^ftz-Bennett Mr. Kutakov

Mr. Allen Mr. Hill

Mr. Korle Mr. Graham SG luncheon for UK delegation to the General Assembly, Tuesday, 22 September 1970; 1. 1$ p.m., 38th floor

' Repre sentative s ; f~ ?"V. '---- ;'"' f- •'• " '?'• r— - i/ X'H.E. The Rt.Hon. Sir Alec Douglas -Home, K.T., M.P., Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs no Seamen-wealth- A£fais»6 (not in . Sir Colin Crowe, K.C.M.G., Permanent Representative

no Sfee-Ma3?fw.iB-ef-Le%feiaH?-Pa3?liameH%a]?y-¥H.de3?-§eeFe%ai'y-ef -State, FapeigH-aHd-GemaeBweal-fek-Qffiee (not in NY)

Alternate Representatives no 5fee-teFd-StT-OBwaldT-M,e. (not in NY) / Mr. Michael Hamilton, M.P. v/ H.E. Mr. Frederick Archibald Warner, C.M.G., Deputy Permanent Representative ./Mr. M.E. Allen, C.M.G., C.V.O., Minister, Economic and Social Affairs, Permanent Mission ,/Mr. K.D. Jamieson, C.M.G., Minister, Permanent Mission

Special Advisers no Sir 5!homas=BF£mglDW7-K-:g=iM-.&.7=©^&;S=!^-itepa.t3r=UHder-SeGeetarjr-of- Foreign- and- Commonwealth- Office

Fez-sign- ead- CenimeHwealtk-

no H-rE-»-My»-I»FT-Pe3?-feeFT-6-wM^G'»T-0»l-rS-,r-BegH%y-LeaeLep7-BieaFiHaffleHt-Belegatie]aTSeHe¥a ^ Sir Vincent Evans, K.C.M.G., Legal Adviser, Foreign and Commonwealth Office ^y Mr. J.I.M. Rhodes, Minister, Treasury Adviser, Permanent Mission ^ Mr. John Graham, Private Secretary to the Secretary of State Mr. Robin Haydon, Press Adviser to the Secretary of State ^ Secretary-General '•/Mr. Stark Bunche i/Mr. Rolz-Bennett . Kutakov de Seynes . Hill iXMr. Korle VxAmb. Jarring no M3?T-Ka3?aBiafeaH-(away) no Mj?-»-Uj?^afeaj?t (away)

\ 19 cc: Mr. Korle Don Foreign and Commonwealth Office London S.W.I ,

14 September, 1970.

I have the honour to send you a list of the Representatives and Alternate Representatives .who will be representing Her Majesty's Government at the , XXVth Regular Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations* The names of the advisers to the United Kingdom Delegation will be communicated to you by the United Kingdom Permanent Representative to the United Nations.

(ALEC DOUGLAS-HOME)

His Excellency U Thant ; United Kingdom Delegation to the XXVth Session of

v The General Assembly , ; ''•'."'" t Representatives t '. ' ' ".

His Excellency The Rt. Hon. Edward Heath, M..B.-E., M.P., Prime Minister His Excellency The Rti Hon. Sir Alec Douglas-Home, K.T., M.P., Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs The Rt. Hon. Joseph Godber, M.P., Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs The Marquess of Lothian Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs His Excellency Sir Colin Crowe, K.C.M.G., Permanent Representative to the United Nations

Alternate Representatives

The Lord St. Oswald, M.C. Mr. Michael Hamilton, M.P. His Excellency Mr. Frederick A. Warner, C.M.G., Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations Mr, Mark Allen, C.M.G., C.V.O., Minister, Economic and Social Affairs, Permanent.Mission Mr. Kenneth D. Jamieson, C.M.G., Minister, Permanent Mission JM PROTOCOL C

UNITED KINGDOM MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS NEW YORK, N.Y.

Representatives

/ HoE0 The Rto Hon= Edward Heath, MoB_E0, MoPo, Prime Minister

#*H<,E» THE RTo Hon. Sir Alec Douglas-Home, K0T0, M,P0, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs The Rto Hon. Jose^eh/Godber , ^MoP . , Minister of St3^\ for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs

\/ *H«,Eo Sir Colin Crowe, KoC»M = G= , Permanent Representative to the Un|ted Nations

The Marquis of Zfothian, Parliamenta\g Under-Secretary of State, Foreign an« Commonwealth Office

Alternate Represeenta hives l?T *The Lord Sto"^wald, M0C. y/*Mr= Michael Hamilton, Mo P

Eo Mr= F0A0 Warner ,' C 0M»Go , Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nat.' on; MoEo Allen, CoMoG., CoVoOo, ' Minister, Economic and Social Affairs, Permanent Mission

K = Do Jamieson, C,,M0Gc, Minister,. Permanent Mission

Special Advisers

Thomas Brimeipwv

HcE0 Mr0 iJX-o/Porter, CoM = G,, O.BoE., Ambassador/^ Deputy Leader, Disarmament Delegation, Geneva v/Sir Vincent Evans, KoC»M=Go, Legal Adviser, Foreign and Commonwealth Office

/ Arrives 20th October # Arrives 19th September + Arrives about 16th November * Married and accompanied - ; ^T> 'v$> a Special Advisors (Continued)':.'-';'•-. V1 i &.,"'. Vf^w1-'•', •-ti- :—: . .. ' •,';'.<- •• :'• ,,,!'.'<• '»'•»'•'.„ ; "'>, -,••'• , .•' •-»',••• f I'', '-*;h ••>! - ''•'•' 'vy< *Mr. J,I.M.' Rhoden, '••',, , ^'v.,;,.^ V'-'-c ^:-' "Minister, Treasury Advisor,-; ..; I..,"'- '''•*•//;;••!• '"'• '''."•>'Permanent^ MiH !

fcV:V'r.--'-vv: />'"': '•••/ Counsellor, v ...... V'-VVrt/V^'-'^ •'''' Foreign'and Commonwealth Of f;].r,G '""''>'•'.

..•£)*'•%*•.••,'•''''•• i "Mr/ A. D. 'Parsons, C.M.G., .M.V.O.-,> M.C0J •^fciP^M-'1-- '-'••••" Counsellor, ' ' '!'' "' ' ^••:,^^>'-''^^fh\\ Permanent .Mission, ; ... •f''U'-''^.^''• '• V •*''";'' "'" ; ,;! '':' 5,j."->'<:''l?,^ ••»•'"••; *Mr."J.D.B.-Shaw,--M.V.O., •'•';!;'f iw^!- ;;.;V'v", >'."''''''.-.'Counsellor ^ -^•IB^^^^'••^•.:',-' "!:i';.•' ''.,'••''•,,,-.,-.-vr.. Permanen. t Missio•. n-^v , • .; ,:.'•.'"•..'.-*-••"•'.- ; 11'' '"• •• ./• ' """ '•"•:•• •",';. Advisers ., . , , Mr.. ;W.N. Hillier-Fry, ;...':. :i -'; .' Counsellor, ' ,•• - i ;;i Disarmament Deleqatioh, .Geneva1'' '" ' '• '

..'. *Mr., DcN. Lane, ;•' . i% '• First Secretary, ,,', Permanent Mission .''r' • .. • • i i*'' ' '. ' ' • ', • ' *Mr. D*F. Milton, '" -. First Secretary,, ''•.:,':, Permanent Mission . :.'.•' ••'.:" ' " >'' '''•''•'; •> • • 'Miss T.A. Solesby,/ .- First Secretary, Permanent Mission /..'•tMr.'.P.Ci1' Petr.ie,' .-"• ' •• First .Secretary^ ':••.••".'' '•]: ' <>'. Permanent Mission ,*•«!:. '.: ; •.. • ..... •..,,.:'. . .:v,:,/': Assistant Legal .'Adviser, n and ' Commonwealth" Of f ice'rv' ',, • .s.'.west-v ,,*•o , ',..,'v:^;?'^:./v.v-'' !-.;x-.-rii.--^^ 4 1 1 : st Secretary, "vv;wu^^,..;' ,' :,, .^: -ii. vW !'•{?/:- • !;H'^ ••}. •'•/•' '^l-?^.*/ • '',^:^;Vife t if .-b

- :-:^- '' Vj*. -rs,1 - •;•, ; , :f „, • .-.,,-,-„ -* •;'.'• r'.'f • a -jf^. > • r if Mr.:''A.H. First Sf.-crotary, w Wvt^-f K O (5" c H (L?vM UNITED KINGDOM MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS 845 Third Avenue, NEW YORK, N.Y. Telephone: PL 2-8400

Replies should be addressed P.O. BOX 3434 NEW YORK 17, N.Y.

(29/36/22) 3 August, 1970

I should now like to confirm that the United Kingdom Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, the Rt. Hon« Sir Alec Douglas-Home, K.T», M.P., would be very pleased to accept the Secretary-General's kind invitation to luncheon on Tuesday, 22 September at 1,15 p=m< on the 38th floor of the United Nations,

(Me Stallard-Penoyre)

Mr. Lucien Lo Lemieux, Room 3800C, U«,No Secretariat, New York, Perm. Rep. Mr Kutakov Mr Lemleux/ CVK/jw

3ft J«% I9TO

*ee«ip% of" grass? letter ©f 2? sat tliat y«e letve stisgaoiateS Mr J* S. Is* C* Bsstrife to fee Al*®rsate lafapieseatafel'v^s of

I, too, loc& forward to seelag you in ie, I i^JBftiB, with tfee aBsmrsuses of

St. Ion* Sir Alec of State for Poreigs M fairs /5> tfee UnfteS Klugaos Kt«9tos' to the TJnited Mtlons \" Foreign and Commonwealth Office London S.W.I

27 July, 1970

i—, ^ I have the honour to inform you that T

have appointed Mr. J.R. Freeland and Nr . P.C.

Petrie to be Alternate Representatives of

the United Kingdom on the Ser.urn.t371 Council.

r V (7VMX - (ALEC "DOUGLAS-HOME) His Excellency U Thant, , f) -fer I sr -31 I H

I (D SB 00 c+ a> en Prom: The Rt. Hon. Philip Noel-Baker

16, SOUTH EATON PLACE, LONDON S.W.I

28th September, 1970

My dear Secretary G-eneral, l ' It is already a week today since our memorable visit to United Nations headquarters in New Tork^with your delightful luncheon party and the impressive ceremony which you were kind enough to arrange to enable the recipients of the to present to you and to the President of the G-eneral Assembly their Declaration on peace and disarmament. I am siire that none of us who took part will ever forget your hospitality and what you were kind enough to say. We were not fortunate with publicity - the events in Amman took most of the big headlines - but I am sure that the record of the ceremony will go on producing its effect around the world for a long:time to come and we were all deeply indebted to you for arranging it. With kindest regards and gratitude again,

Tours sincerely,

The Secretary G-eneral, United Nations. r\ > y< M 1855 firet surface printed issue

Hie Secretary General, United Nations, New York City, N.Y., U.S.A. Luncheon given "by the Secretary-General on Monday, 21 September 19?0

Mr. Finn

Mr. Stavropoulo s Mrs. Pomerance

Mr. Nosek :: H.E. Mr. Yost

Dr. Pauling :: The Rt. Hon. Lester Pearson

H.E. Mr. Hambro The Secretary-General

M. Gassin The Rt. Hon. Philip Noel- Baker

,.E. Mr. Beaulne Dr. Bunche

Mr. Cousins Mr. Willner

-K- Mr. Epstein Protocol and 18 September 1970

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Monday, 21 September 1970

;c Mrs. Pomerance

Mr. Wosek K H.E. Mr. Yost

Dr. Pauling

H.E. Mr. Hambro The Secretary-General

Tlio HI.. Iluii. HULl Dull Tho n-fe.

. Mr. Beaulne Dr. Bunche

Mr. Cousins K Mr. Willner

Ji. Mr. Epstein SG luncheon for Nobel Laureates, Monday , 21 September 1970,12.45 p.m., 58th floor

Nobel Laureates: . Rene Gas sin , The Rt.Hon. Philip Noel-Baker i>^ ,'Ihe Rt.Hon. Lester B. Pearson &x t /Dr.

President of the General Assembly: H.E. Mr. Edvard Hambro

Permanent Representatives: no no H-rfiT-Sir-eo±rn-erOTTer-KTeTMT9T - -OK .E. Mr. Yvon Beaulne - Canada .E. Mr. Charles W. Yost - USA no H^S^^^-^-rA-r

Others: . Josephine Pomerance, In care of UNA/USA, 835 United Nations Plaza, MY 10017 OX. 7-3252 yytr. Norman Cousins, Editor, SATURDAY REVIEW, 580 Madison Avenue, NY 10017 985-5555 ./Mr. Sidney Wiliner, In care of Hilton International, Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, 50th Street and Park Avenue, MU 8-2240 . David Finn, In care of Ruder and Finn Public Relations, 110 East 59th Street, 759-1800

Secretariat: !Ehe Secretary-General

i/ Dr. Bunche no . Stavropoulos . Epstein Mr. Nosek

16 cc: Mr. Korle Don UNITED NATIONS Press Services Office of Puolac Information United Nations, N,Y. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION MEDIA —. NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Press Release GA/U227 M/1873 21 September 1970

3Y PRESIDENT OF GENERAL ASSEMBLY 'AT PRESENTATION OF DECLARATION ONJBjACE AND DISARMAMENT

Following is the text of closing remarks by Edvard Hambro, President of the twenty-fifth session of the General Assembly, at ceremony held today at United Nations Headquarters for presentation of a Declaration on Peace and Disarmament, signed by five Nobel Peace Prize Laureates:

You will have noticed that there is one man on this rostrum who has not been called upon to speak, although he is a laureate of the Nobel Peace Prize. I am referring to Mr. . I would merely tell him that our thoughts also go out to him on this occasion. As President of the twenty-fifth session of the General Assembly, I want to thank the winners for their stirring document, which is of such great importance to all of us and will be given a wide distribution. It will help to make people think aboixt these important matters, I also thank them, as well as the Secretary-General, for their stirring speeches here today. I am sure that many of us who' are here today often pass by the monument in the street outside this building and see the words by the Prophet Isaiah: "And they shall beat their swords into ploughshares and their spears into pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more". That has been a dream and an aspiration for more than 2,000 years. It must not be a mere dream any longer; it must become a reality. For we realize that the mad race for anraments brings nothing but insecurity and fear and danger. We realize also that we have before us, in a peaceful world, enormous tasks: to help the poor developing nations, to help children and unfortunate people of all classes, all creeds and all races. We realize that year after

(more) - 2 - Press Release GA/14-227 M/1873 23. September 1970 year we find it difficult to get enough money for our most urgent tasks. We must use the $200 billion we are now using for armaments for constructive purposes in the future. Philip Noel-Baker talked about some prophecies having been made by the people who participated in the Disarmament Conference before the Second World War. I venture to say that if there are any historians left alive in the future to write the history of our days, they will be forced to describe our armaments race as the most peculiar, most compelling sign of collective insanity that the world has ever seen. I have taken the liberty of quoting a statement from the Prophet Isaiah, although you nay have heard it before. Now I should like to quote something else from the same Prophet. He said: "How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace." May I conclude this ceremony today by expressing the wish that the Nobel Laureates who have been here will in the future bring us more messages, and that their feet may get ever more beautiful.

* #*--* * UNITED NATIONS Press Services Office of Public la formation United Nations,, N.Y. (FOR USE OF ^FORMATION MEDIA — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Press Release M/1872 21 September 1970

REMAKES BY PErLg^NOEL-MKER AT PRESENTATION OF DECLARATION ON PEACE^ AM) DISARMAMENT

Following is the text of remarks by Philip Noel-Baker, recipient of 1959 Nobel Peace Prize, at ceremony for presentation of Declaration on Peace and Disarmament, held today at United Nations Headquarters:

We have come to present this Declaration to you from Canada, from California, from France, from Britain. Ralph Bunche, the first among us to receive the Peace Prize, is also here, and has endorsed the document which Lester Pearson has read out. Lord Boyd Orr would have come from , but for the fact that tomorrow he must celebrate his ninetieth birthday in the City of , with Prince Philip taking part. We are a united body, in demanding disarmament and peace. Forty years ago today, in September 1950 j I was a delegate to the Assembly of the League, That Assembly fixed the date for the long-delayed Conference on World Disarmament. Two years later, I saw the Conference come close to full success, when President Hoover proposed a plan for drastic disarmament by land and sea and air. Those who shared the American view, predicted, if the Conference failed: Back to power politics, to a ferocious arms race, wars in far-off places, the Covenant torn to ribbons, a Second World War more terrible than the first. There was world-wide support for Hoover's plan, but there was bitter opposition, too. Those who claimed to be the realists and the patriots called Hoover and those who backed him, romantics, Utopians, gazers at the stars. They urged the oldest, Roman Empire, fallacy in human history — "If you want peace, prepare for war". "More armaments will make you safe." The self-styled realists won; the Conference, by cowardice and hesitation, was allowed to fail.

(more) - 2 - Press Release M/1872 21 September 1970

Savage events soon proved which side was right — aggressive wars in Manchuria, the Chaco, Abyssinia, Spain. The League's collapse, Munich, the Second World Wu- -- the Second World War with 17 million soldiers killed in battle, six million Jews,, six million Poles. More than 50 million dead — the burning of Hamburg,, Dresden, Tokyo — JOO miles of street on fire in Hamburg, scores of thousands of little children running round like human torches in those hellish conflagrations till they died. It was Winston Churchill who called the Second War "the unnecessary war". It came precisely as the statesmen of 1930 fcad. predicted if their Conference failed* They were the realists. They were the patriots. Those who broke the Conference, who said "more armaments would make their nations safe" only led their nations to disasters never dreamed of in human history before. They were the Utopians., the illusionists, the gazers at the stars. How much more so those who put their faith today in nuclear bombs. The truth is that today it is the armaments themselves that create the dangers against which they are supposed to guard. There is only one realistic, practical policy for national defence, world disarmament under international control. It is for that great policy that we have come to plead.

y y y ~n~ ¥* w V UNITED -NATIONS Press Services Office of Public Information United Nations, N.Y. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION MEDIA — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Press Release 21 September 19JO

REMARIS B_Y^LINUS PAULING .ATPRESENTATION BYJNQBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES OF DECIAPJVTION ON PEACE AND DISARMAMENT

Folloving is the text of remarks "by Linus Pauling, holder of the 1962 Nobel Peace Prize, at the ceremony held at 2:30 p.m. today at United Nations Headquarters for presentation of a Declaration on Peace and Disarmament,* signed by five Nobel peace Prize Laureates:

The Nuclear Age began 25 years ago. It was soon recognized that if they did not restrain themselves, the great nuclear Powers could destroy each other completely, and that there was the possibility that in this process they would also destroy the rest of the world, bring an end to civilization, and perhaps exterminate the human race. The great Powers have succeeded in settling their major differences through negotiation and recourse to world law, although not without passing through some terrifying periods of crisis. In this respect, the world is well started toward the future of assured and continuing peace, based upon the principles of reason and justice. In two ways, however, we have failed. ¥ars continue to ravage some parts of the world. They bring horrible personal suffering to millions of people, through the killing and burning and maiming and starvation that result from the failure of the world's Governments and people to formulate and follow steadfastly a moral course. The great and technically advanced nations do not strive as vigorously and effectively as they should to prevent these wars and assist in the peaceful resolution of the disputes; instead,, they are involved in the wars, either directly or by selling or giving to the smaller countries the tanks, warplanes and other material of warfare that increase the horrors of war.

(more)

* For details, see Note No. 3622 issued on 18 September. - 2 - Press Release M/l8?l 21 September 19JO

There is a second failure, the failure to restrict the waste of the world's resources and the products of man*s labour. Technological developments now permit an unlimited expenditure on militarism, on meaningless and unnecessary changes and refinements of offensive and defensive systems, changes that do not and cannot alter the balance of terror, but instead increase the danger of cataclysm by rendering the balance less stable. Now each year 200,000 million dollars, nearly 10 per cent of the world's income, is wasted on militarism. Much of this money could be better used for the benefit of mankind. This sum, 200,000 million dollars, is equal to the total income of two thirds of the world's people, the miserably poor. Their physical health and their mental health are damaged by their —- there is increasing evidence that malnutrition can cause a decrease in, intelligence quotient by 5 or 10 or 15 points, or more. It is our duty r.ov to stop the waste of our wealth on war and militarism, and instead to use our resources to abolish the evil of poverty.

# #** * NATIONS U N I E S Service de la presse Service de 1'information United Nations, N.Y. (A L' INTENTION DES ORGANES D( INFORMATION - DOCUMENT NOBT OPFICIEL)

Communique de presse M/1870 21 septerubre 1970

ALLOCUTION DE RENE CASSIN A LA REMISE DE LA DECLARATION EN FAVEUR DE LA PAIX ET DU DESARMEMENT DE'S LAUREATS DU PRIX NOBEL DE LA PAIX

Ci-dessous, texte de 1'allocution de M. Rene Cassin, laureat du Prix Nobel de la Paix en 1968, a la ceremonie de remise de la declaration en faveur de la paix et du desartaement qui a eu lieu aujourd'hui au Siege des Nations Unies*:

Perraettez-moi de ta'associer expressement a la declaration dont 1'Honorable Lester B. Pearson vous a donne lecture au nom de tous les laureats vivant du Prix Nobel de la Paix. Nul doute que, si les differents Etats du monde, puissants ou modestes, entrent dans la voie du desarmement, une detente considerable en resulterait pour le bien de la paix. En outre, les ressources economisees de ce fait, pourraient, en partie, etre utilisses pour donner aux Nations Unies les moyens de faire face a leurs obligations croissantes pour le maintien de 1'ordre et de la securite mondiale. D'autres fonds iraient a la cooperation et, surtout a la lutte contre 1'anaphalbetisme et a 1'education. Car la declaration uni- verselle et les Pactes des droits de 1'homme, une- fois ratifies, ne seront observes effectivement que si la neutralite des etres humains et leurs conditions de vie, les preparent a cela. En attendant ces jours, 1'Institut international des droits de I'homme qui a pu §tre fonde gr§!ce au Prix Nobel de 1968 a commence un fructueux travail, de concert avec les Universites du monde entier. 'Je voudrais ajouter qu'un des clefs de la reussite de 1'arr^t de la course aux armements et, a fortiori, de leurs reductions progressives, se trouve dans la confiance des peuples inte"resses. Or, celle-ci sera plus facile a etablir si, des le debut, 1'execution des ententes conclues, est soumise ^> un controle (survey) impartial, serieux et non vexatoire. Les experiences

(a suivre)

*Pour details, voir Note No. 3622 du 18 septembre - 2 - Communique de presse M/1870 21 septembre 1970 anterieures et contemporaines le prouvent. Aucun progres durable ne se conqoit sans lrelaboration et le respect d'un droit et d'une justice Internationale adequate. La formule qui lie le desarmement au developpement de 1'artibrage et de la securite est toujours juste. Puisse cette periode du vingt-cinquieme anniversaire des Nations-Unies etre le point de depart d'une tentative nouvelle de 1'humanit^ pour reussir ce qu'elle n'a pas malheureusement pu atteindre aprss la fin de la premiere guerre mondiale.

# ##* * V

UNITED NATIONS Press Services Office of Public Information United Nations, N.Y. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION NED1A — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Press Release M/1869 21 September 1970

. TC JjESTER_ B_._ JPEARSOW AT. PRESENTATION DECLARATION ON PEACE ,_ DISARMAMENT

Following is the text of remarks by Lester B. Pearson, former Prime

Ilinister of Canada and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 195TS who pre- sented a Declaration on Peace and Disarmament f signed by five Nobel Peace Prize Laureates, to the United. Nations at a ceremony held today at United Nations Headquarters*:

This Declaration on Peace and Disarmament has been signed by five private citizens who have been greatly honoured by having been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. Tilth that honour goes a special responsibility to work in any way open to us, for the great cause, peace and disarmament, which the award symbolises. The Declaration is presented to you in that spirit; and in the hope that in some small way it may encourage the men and women of this Silver Jubilee Assembly of the United Nations as it seeks to take one more step on the long and obstacle-strewn path to peace. T-Ihen the Charter was signed at San Francisco 25 years ago, mankind affirmed its determination to realize the ideals of peace and security, freedom and progress for all the human family. Since then — and this is our failure and our shame — these ideals have been as much dishonoured in the breach as honoured in the observance. If you want evidence, look around our world. I know that through our United Nations we have done much to make a better world. But we have not succeeded in removing the scourge of war or the fear of war. If we fail here, our other achievements will turn to dust and ashes.

(more)

* For further details, see Note No. 3622 issued on 18 September and Press Release SG/SM/1336-M/1868 issued today. - 2 - Press Release M/1869 21 September 1970

Time is running out. This is all the more frightening because we refuse to recognize it. We take a false comfort, in the hope that because we have avoided the ultimate catastrophe for so many years we can live forever on the brink. Let no one blame our failures on the United Nations as something outside our own responsibility. T7e, the peoples and the Governments of the world, we are the United Nations, Iftien it fails, it is our failure. It is the sheerest hypocrisy for Governments to flee from their own responsibility by blaming the world Organization. lie have no illusions that our words in this Declaration are in themselves of any great significance. But we feel that they reflect, however inadequately, the hopes and the fears of millions and millions of the plain people who make up our crowded world community; and who will watch, I fear with more scepticism now than confidence, the work of this Assembly. In this work, we wish it god-speed and good fortune.

# *** * UNITED NATIONS Press Services Off:; co of Public J ^'ovmation United Nations, N.Y. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION MEDIA — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Press Release SG/SM/1336 M/1868 21 September 1970

REMARKS BY SECKETARYrGEimAI^ AT., CEREMONY FOR PRESENTATION OF DECLARATION BY NGBSL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES

Following is the text of remarks by the Secretary-General, U Thant, at the ceremony held at 2: JO p.m. today at United Nations Headquarters, at which Nobel Peace Prize Laureates presented a Declaration on Peace and Disarmament to the United Nations*:

It is a notable and certainly unique occasion that brings to United Nations Headquarters such an eminent group of citizens of international renown. •This is the first time in history that the Nobel Peace Prize Laureates have concerted their efforts in a public declaration on behalf of the cause for which they have been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, in recognition of their outstanding contribution to peace. It is most fitting that this Declaration should be made to mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of the United Nations and to help launch the Disarmament Decade and the Second Development Decade. The Declaration is a stirring statement of belief and an urgent plea for action to ensure human survival and human welfare which are the twin objectives of the United Nations. The perils which confront humanity, to which this Declaration calls attention, are grave and threatening. Only if the nations and the peoples of the world pay due heed to them and take the necessary measures called for in the Declaration is there any real hope for the future of humanity,

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* For further details on the ceremony, see Note No.3622 issued on 18 September. - 2 - Press Release SG/SM/1336 M/1868 21 September 1970

Distinguished Laureates, I appreciate very much the reasons which have motivated your Declaration and your kind presence here today. I am in full agreement with your purposes and objectives. Your Declaration deserves to be widely disseminated and discussed throughout the entire world in order to advance the cause of peace, justice and progress. I fervently hope that this will in fact be the case.

i # ### * UNITED NATIONS Press Services Office of Public Information United Nations, N.Y. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION MEDIA — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

CAUTION^ ADVANCE TEXT Note No. J623 Not for use before 21 September 1970 2:50 .p..m. Monday^ J21 September

NOTE TO CORRESPONDENTS

Following is the text of the "Declaration on peace and disarmament" which will be presented to the United Nations this afternoon on behalf of five Nobel Peace Prize Laureates.*

The year 1970 marks the 25th anniversary of the United Nations and the beginning of the Disarmament Decade proclaimed by the General Assembly. It should be a time of celebration and of hope for peace and disarmament. It is instead a time of disquiet and fear. It is only too easy to understand why a decline of general interest, sometimes a sense of cynicism, and even a feeling of despair, have begun to cloud the efforts of nations to bring meaning to disarmament. The world remains divided. Violence spreads. The middle east and south-east Asia are ravaged by war. New conflicts threaten. Distrust, tension and violence, not peace and disarmament, seem the realities of today. The total world expenditure for military purposes had already reached the figure of 120,000 million dollars in 1962, the year when the Eighteen- Nation Disarmament Committee began its work. By 1969 it had risen to 200,000 million dollars. The "mad momentum" of the nuclear arms race still continues. But whatever the immediate discouragement and frustration, it nonetheless remains as true today as it has always been that in the final analysis, reduction of armaments has to be a condition of world peace, and that the arms race is linked, whether as cause or effect does not matter, with unrest and suspicion between nations. The world has lulled itself into a state of mind which accepts armaments and the diversion of resources which they

^ (more) * For further information see Note Wo, 3622 of 18 September. - 2 - Note No. 362? 21 September 1970

imply. It has lulled itself into a belief that it can live with nuclear weapons, that these and other armaments bring security. All they bring in fact is the threat of disaster. The world could never survive a nuclear holocaust. There is no hope without the kind of mutual understanding which measures of disarmament, however small, will help to bring about. The 1960Ts witnessed the achievement of a number of treaties which show that progress towards disarmament can be made. The Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963, the Outer Space Treaty of 19&7, the Treaty establishing a Nuclear- free zone in Latin-America of 1967, the Non-Proliferation Treaty of 1968, are all witness to this fact. Each step which is taken provides a pointer to others which have still to be taken. Unfortunately, despite these successes, there is increasing diversion of enormous resources and energy, both human and physical, from peaceful economic and social pursuits to unproductive &n^ uneconomic military purposes The Secretary-General of the United Nations has warned: "The world now stands at a most critical crossroads. It can pursue the arms race at a terrible price to the security and progress of the peoples of the world, or it can move ahead towards the goal of general and complete disarmament, a goal that was set in 1959 by a unanimous decision of the General Assembly on the eve of the decade of the 1960s. If it should choose the latter road, the security, the economic well-being and the progress not only of the developing countries, but also of the developed countries and of the entire world, would be tremendously enhanced". If civilisation is not to suffer a set-back from which it might never recover, if man is to survive on our globe, it is imperative that the Disarmament Decade be made to live up to its name. The Strategic Arms Limitation Talks between the USA and the USSR which are now taking place are a sign that the two "super-powers" realise that the nuclear arms race gives them no security and that it must be curbed. All pray for their success; the consequences of failure can be fatal. They must halt and reverse the nuclear arms race. A mutual moratorium on the development and deployment of new offensive and defensive strategic nuclear weapons systems, such as the MIRVs and ABMs, is the most important first step.

(more) - 3 •!• Note No, 3623 21 September 1970

Warfare may in the past have been &s$ooiated vith victory^ and occasionally vith peace. It is clear that it can no longer result in either. Let the Decade of Disarmament therefore bring with it an increasing realisation that whatever its costs, whatever presumed advantages have to be ceded, the political settlement of international differences will in the end always prove less costly and less dangerous than any attempted settlement brought about by the force of arms. With this realisation, may the nations of the world during the Disarmament Decade finally embark on the reduction and elimination of the dreaded means of their destruction. Nothing less will rescue mankind from international anarchy and war.

(Signed) Lord Boyd Orr Rene Gassin Lester B. Pearson Philip Noel-Baker Linus Pauling

Note; Ralph J. Bunche, Under-Secretary-General, United Nations, the only other living Laureate, feels that as a member of the Secretariat, he cannot be a signatory to the Declaration, but he fully agrees with the text and has endorsed it. # *#* •* UNITED NATIONS Press Services Office of Public Information United Nations, H.Y. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION MEDIA — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Note No. 3622 18 September 1970

NOTE TO CORRESPONDENTS

On Monday, 21 September, four of the six living Nobel Peace Prize Laureates will present a Declaration on Peace and Disarmament to the United Nations. The Declaration, signed by five Nobel Peace Prize laureates, represents the first joint initiative ever undertaken by Laureates since the Nobel Peace Prize was established in 1901. The Declaration's presentation coincides with the twenty- fifth anniversary of the United Nations and the launching of the Disarmament Decade. Lester B. Pearson, former Canadian Prime Minister and recipient of the Peace Prize in 1957? will present the Declaration in leather-bound copies to the President of the twenty-fifth General Assembly, Edvard Hambro, and to the Secretary-General, U Thant, at a ceremony at 2:30 p.m. in Conference Room 1. Mr. Hambro and U Thant will make brief statements. Nobel Laureates Rene" Cassin, French jurist, President of the European Court of Human Rights and recipient of the 1968 Peace Prize; Philip Noel-Baker, British labour Party statesman and 1959 Peace Laureate; and Linus Pauling, American chemist and bolder of the Nobel Prize for chemistry, 195*S and for Peace, 19^2, will also speak at the ceremony. Lord , Scottish physiologist, former Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and recipient of the 19^9 Peace Prize, will not be present as he is unable to come to New York. The sixth living Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, Ralph J. Bunche, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Special Political Affairs and 1950 recipient of the Peace Prize, is not a signatory to the Declaration only because of his position with the United Nations Secretariat. The Secretary-General will be host at a luncheon in honour of the Nobel laureates prior to the presentation. The text of the Declaration will be issued as a Note to Correspondents on Monday morning with an embargo for 2:30 p.m. that day. * «** * UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

T0: Mr, C.V. Narasimhan DATE: 10 September 1970 A: Chef de Cabinet REFERENCE:

THROUGH: S/C DE: PEBSONAL AW CONFIDENTIAL

FROM: William DE:

SUBJECT: OB JET:

Herewith is a preliminary draft programme for the Nobel Laureates. Ambassador Hambro suggested the presentation should be at 2.50 p.m. so that he can be in his seat in the General Assembly Hall by 5.00 p.m. Would it be possible for the Secretary- General's luncheon to be called for 12.^5 p.m? I would be grateful if you could let meTtnow as soon as possible whether the programme is acceptable as I would like to advise the Laureates and find out who will definitely be coming. V LO September 1970

DRAFT PROGRAMME IN CONNEXION WITH THE DECLARATION BY THE NOBEL LAUREATES

1. It is expected that four Nobel Laureates will be in New York in addition to Ralph Bunche. They are: Rend Cassin, Philip Noel-Baker, Lester B. Pearson and Linus Pauling. 2. Luncheon by the Secretary-General for the Nobel Laureates on Monday, 21 September 1970- Guests might include the 'President of the General Assembly, Mrs. Josephine Pomerance, Mr. Norman Cousins, Mr. Sidney Willner, Mr. David Finn, in addition to members of the Secretariat who are involved in the matter. Perhaps also the Permanent Representatives of Canada, France, the United Kingdom and the United States of which the Nobel Laureates are nationals. Perhaps also the Permanent Representative of the USSR (to round out the five permanent members of the Security Council.) 3« 2.JO-5.00 p.m. - Presentation of the Declaration to the Secretary- General and to the President of the General Assembly in one of the Conference Room (Room IV if possible) with members of Non-Governmental Organizations and Press invited. (Any others?) Five-minute speech by each of the four Laureates and by the Secretary-General and President of the Assembly. k. 6.30 p.m. - Reception at home of Mrs. Pomerance in honour of the Laureates. 5. Ruder and Finn (Public Relations firm) has donated their services to publicize the Declaration. They are hoping to get the Laureates on some TV shows, to get some press stories and magazine articles'about them and to send the Declaration out to local newspapers, libraries, high schools, colleges, clubs, etc. "" • 6. OPI and the NGO's might be asked to assist in all appropriate ways. If the Declaration is made an official document of the Assembly at the request * of some Delegation or Delegations, then the OPI and the UN Information Centres can help publicize it. In this connexion, Resolution 2602 E on the Disarmament Decade specifically requests "the Secretary-General and Governments to publi- cize the Disarmament Decade by all appropriate means at their disposal" and also requests the Secretary-General "to provide all appropriate facilities and assistance with a view to furthering the fullest implementation of the present resolution." ,r

7. Four thousand dollars is being contributed to cover expenses in connexion with this- project (Josephine Pomerance - $2500, Norman Cousins - $1000, Sidney Willner - $500) which is enough to cover the travel expenses of the Laureates and to produce attractive folders for the official presen- tation and 10,000 less expensive folders for publicity purposes. The money is being channelled through the Trust for Education on the United Nations (Mr. Winner's Trust). 3 Sept 70 e.V.Uarasimhan 5012 EOSG 10X01-501 CVH/at

FOE EESfflIM FROM MAMSIMfiAH. SECGM HAS BEEN CQMEEHED TO OFFEE BA!EB Cffi-53r-^gffiE^ TO BBESIDBH!g- OP SECCQ FOR CISEEKf MOUKI FOH SICCO HBJCKEQW, HE WOUK) 33S GIAD TO OKPSI KECEI'TIOliF TO KOBEIi IAUBEATBS THE SASE EVEHIMG. EEOA533S. ; .

ce - fetrs. Mlm

Chef fie Cabinet «r c.c. Mr Lemieux CW/jw

1970

Beas* Bill, I BKsJjaaotf ledge *eeeij»t of youy personal and «onfidential letter of 19 August* So far as the Secret ary-Oeneral is concerned, fee vcmld be quite fea^py if all the Hobel &a«a?eates, or as easy of them &s ooald come to Hew Yoffc foy th& occasion> comld be iareeent. I a® gl»d to know that y

C« V. Karasiwhan Chef Se Cabinet

Ra,tlo»e Office et aSfe.a Nat Itll 0

/ OFFICE DES NATIONS UNIES A GENEVE wSm UNITED NATIONS OFFICE AT.GENEVA

Tilegrammes: UNATIONS, GENEVE Palais das Nations l&lex : 22.212 ou 22.3« CH - 1211 fiENEVE 10 TelSphone : 346011 334000 332000 331000

REF.No: ^ ^gUSt 1970

\(a rappeler dans la reponse) Personal and Confidential

Dear C.V. Thank you for your letter of 14. August enclosing a copy of a letter •from Mike Pearson. Personally, I would have no objection if only one Nobel Laureate came to New York for the Presentation. However, Noel-Baker has been the main organizer of the project and the only Laureate to receive the prize because of his work in disarmament and it would, therefore, seem to be fitting that he should also be present. Actually, Noel-Baker had in mind that all the Nobel Laureates should come in person for the Presentation as this might attract more publicity and give greater "impact" to the Declaration. In addition, steps are underway., through the good offices of Norman Cousins, to have the same public relations firm, which worked on the Conference on Human Survival, to donate their services free to obtain maximum publicity for the Declaration, such as television and other media interviews with the Laureates.

Enclosed herewith is a letter which has just arrived from Noel-Baker setting out his latest ideas on the project. Thus with Ralph Bunche and Lord Boyd Orr out, the question seems to boil down to whether Rene Cassin would wish to come and, personally,, I think it would be a good thing to have somebody other than English-speaking Laureates.

Moreover, you will recall that Mrs. Josephine Pomerance (Chairman of the Disarmament Committee of UNA USA) promised to put up a minimum of $2,500 towards the expenses of the project with the possibility that it might be increased to f>5,000. I have just written to her asking for confirmation of her promised donation. Hence I hope that when you are in Ottawa for the World Federalist meeting around 23 August, you might be able to find out whether Mike Pearson would be able to come to New York for the Presentation on 21 or 22 September. Perhaps you would be good enough also to consider whether you could ascertain from him what his reactions are to Norman Cousins' suggestion that Pearson write to the Kettering Foundation for a grant?

Mr. C. V. Narasimhan Chef de Cabinet United Nations New York, N.Y. W

X!

, CO Prat«jc0."l and Liaises lU September 1970

Luncheon given "by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 15 September 1970

Mr. Ravne Mr. Helle x x

Mr. Stavropoulos 3 : Mr. Bakken

Mr. Hagen : Mr. Narasimhan'

I

Dr. Kutakov i H.E. Mr. Hambro

H.E. Mr. Svenn Stray } X The Secretary-General

Dr. Bunche H.E. Mr. Algard

Mr. Endresen Sr. Rolz-Bennett

Mrs. Aasen Mr. Fostervoll

Mr. Korle Mr. Lessiovski SG luncheon. Tuesday. 15 September ITO, 1.13 p.m., 38th floor

H.E. Mr. Svenn Stray, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Norway s H.E. Mr, Edvard Hambro, Permanent Representative of Norway tXH.E. Mr. Ole Algard, Ambassador of Norway to Peking, Vice- Chairman of the delegation V^Mr. Per Galby Ravne, Deputy Permanent Representative of Norway Egil Endresen, Member of Parliament . Arnt Hagen, Member of Parliament Ingvar Bakken, Member of Parliament , Liv Aasen, Member of Parliament ^ Mr. Alf Jacob Fostervoll, Member of Parliament k/Mr. Ingvar Helle, Member of Parliament no

The Secretary-General •/ Mr. Narasimhan »/ Mr. Stavropoulos ./ Mr. Lessiovski ^X Dr. Bunche ,/ Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Kutakov r. Korle

18

cc: Don Mr. Korle UNOFFICIAL TRANSLATION FROM FRENCH Norwegian delegation to the 25th session of the General Assembly:

REPRESENTATIVES Mr. Svenn Stray, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Chairmanj>f ^1&e^ delegation Mr. Edvard Hambro, Ambassador, Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Vice-Chairman of the delegation

,Ln 9 Mr. Ole Algard, Ambassador of Norway to Peking, 0 Vice-Chairman of the delegation ..,,.. # Mr. Egil Endresen, Member of Parliament .4 * ^ • Mr. Arnt Hagen, Member of Parliament

'•C ALTERNATES j, 0 Mr. Ingvar Bakken, Member of Parliament l >v€, • Mrs. Bergfrid Fjose, Member of Parliament

j « Mrs. Liv Aasen, Member of Parliament jL • Mr. Alf Jacob Fostervoll, Member of Parliament • Mr. Ingvar Helle, Member of Parliament

si ... . "**

N 0 U .S 0-L A V R 0 I D E H 0 S V E G E •f a i 's o n s s a v o i r :

Que Hous autorisons par la. presence les personnes ci-dessous laentionnees a representer le Gouvernement Royal de Norvoge a la vingt-cinquierae .session- de I'Assoniblee Generale de 1'Organisation des Nations Unies qui se reunira a New York le'15 septembre 1970: • ' '

Delegues: ' • Monsieur Svenn STHAY, Ministre des Affaires Etrangeres, 'Chef de la Delegation, •

Llonoieur ICdvard I-L-uvDjHO ? Anibassadour, Hepresentant permanent pras 1 'Organisation 'des Nations Unies, Chef Adjoint de la Delegation, ' . Llonsieur1 Ole AIGAliD, Ainbassadeur de Norvege a Peking, Chef Adjoint 'de la .Delegation, Honsieur Sgil SlTDPiESSlT , L'iernbre du Par lenient,' Monsieur Arnt Hi\.G-EK,- iiiembre du Par lenient.

Honsieur Ingvar BAKKSN, Llerabre du Parlement, Madame Bergfrid I? JOSS, ilembre du Parlement, .Madame Liv AAS3N, Hembre du Parlement, • Monsieur Alf Jacob POSTERVOIL, Ivlerabre du Parlement, .- • Monsieur Ingyar tiELLE, Hembre du Parlement.

f •

En _!' absence des deletes ou des suppliants, ITous

t t •' ' autorisons' les personnes suiv antes a les reraplacer:

Monsieur H&kon JOHKSElT, Merabre du Parlement ,' . Monsieur Gunnar GARBO, Merabre du 'Parlement , ' Monsieur S.rlarid STESKBERG , Membre ciu Parl'eraent ,

. .. ' . Monsieur Paul TKYEE3S I '

Monsieur Paul THYlffiSS , ilembre du Parleriient , . Llonsieur Gunnar SKAUG ,. Llembre du Parleuient, t. Llonsieur Kare ICHISITIAllSE!:! , .Liembre du Par lenient..

Monsieur Jens BVEKS3N , Direoteur General au Liinistere Royal des .Affaires Etrangeres, . ' Monsieur Sinar-i'redrik OIP3TAD, Directeur General Adjoint au ivi'inisture Royal, des _Affaires Stranger es, Llonsieur K jell CHHISTIAKSEIT , Oonseill'er d'Arabaasade , Monsieur Per RAVH3, Conseillor d'Ajribassade, Monsieur Arne AIil\iSS!2J:T , Chef do Divicion au iliniatere . Royal des Affaires Etrangeres, Llonsieur Oscar V.-EH1T0 , Chef do Division au Ministere Soyal des Affaires Etrangeres, . . . Llonsieur Jan AHYESEH ," Premier Secretaire d'Ambassade, Monsieur ITils DI3TZ , Premier Secretaire au Ministers Royal des Affaires Etrangeres, M , f£R T*^*li • Monsieur Bernt STAI:TG-HOIM , Premier Secretaire d'Ambassade, Llonsieur Sverrn H3?sriAJj , Premier Secretaire d'Arabassade, Monsieur Haakon HJSL'DB, Premier Secretaire d'Ambaesade, •Llonsieur Gunnar FLAKSTAD, Attache.

Llonsieur Torstein SAHD0, Hedacteur.

Honsieur Odd H0JDAHL, Chef Adjoint, Confederation Generale du Travail , • '* Llonsieur Erik HOZ?, Conseiller, Confederation Patronale de ITorvsge. ' • •

\ Pait au Palais Royal a .Oslo,., le 28 aout 1970. SG luncheon, Tuesday, 15 September 1970 j 1-15 p.m., ?8th floor i/C-*_^_,*Os A-s-,.

H.E. Mr. Svenn Stray, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Norway H.E. Mr. Edvard Hambro^ Permanent Representative of Norway

The Secretary-General V Mr. Karasimhan M? Mr. Stavropoulos t/xMr. Lessiovski \S Dr. Bunche . Rolz-Bennett . Kutakov UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: Mrs Estella Mira DATE; 21 August 1970 A: Secretary to the Secretary-General

REFERENCE: THROUGH: S/C DE:

FROM: C. V. Warasimhan DE: Chef de Cabinet

SUBJECT: Luncheon for the Foreign Minister and the Permanent bBJET: Representative of Norway, 15 September 1970

On "behalf of the Secretary-General, I have invited the Foreign Minister and the Permanent Representative of Norway to a luncheon by the Secretary-General on Tuesday 15 September at 1.15 p.m. on the 38th floor. You may also invite to this luncheon, in addition to myself, Mr Stavropoulos and Mr Lessiovski. As regards other guests, you may kindly take the instructions of the Secretary-General. c.c. Mr Lemieuxs/ CVE/jw

If August 1970

AM you inay laws?, th& Ssc3retfii»y*iGtea«j?rel hae a tradition of having ihs H*«5sideat*to*be of the 6eaeap$l Asa.ffl. on the 38th floor. Please give 331© a i*img ead let me knew that this is all right. With

Chef ae Cabinet

81s B«e€li«K6y' 'Ife* llvasrd lji»»y and Sspcesentatiife &£ Borway to the 18th a REPRESENTATIVE OF POLAND TO THE UNITED NATIONS 16 September 1970

Mr. Secretary-General^

I wish to tell you, on behalf of my wife and myself, how delighted we were to accept and be present as your guests at the naming ceremony of your grand daughter. We enjoyed immensely the reception as well as the delightful artistic pro- gramme, so interestingly presented. Most of all we were glad to offer our best wishes to your grand daughter and her parents, which I take the liberty of reiterating today.

Eugeniuiaz Kula^a Ambassador

H.E. U Thant Seere tary-General of the United Nations UNITED NATIONS . . NATIONS UNIES

ISSOUFOU S. DJERMAKOYE

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Bloomfield Avenue, Hartford, Connecticut 06105 200 BLOOMFIELD AVENUE A. M. WOODRUFF WEST HAHTJTOHD, Coior. 06117 CHANCELI.OH TEL. (2O3) S36-5411

'*

^ ^-«H CABLE: "ROBCOLLEGE" ISTANBUL ' ' POST BOX 8, BEBEK TELEFON : 633554-636660- ISTANBUL, TURKEY ISTANBUL AMERIKAN KOLEJLER! THE AMERICAN COLLEGES IN ISTANBUL

ERKEK KISMI - BEBEK KIZ KISMI - ARNAVUTKOY ROBERT COLLEGE . AMERICAN COLLEGE FOR GIRLS

OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT .

September 2, 1970

The Honorable U Thant The Secretary general of the United/Nations." Villa. "Be.lla Vista", 3600'-Palisades Avenue 232nd Street L-.Riverdale, New York Dear,::U "Thant:' /",.-.. •• We have received the invitation to the naming ceremony of your grand-daughter A-thi Myint-U on Saturday, the twelfth of September. .We very much regret it will not be possible for us to be with you on-'this happy occasion as we will be here at, Robert College in Istanbul 5but Margaret joins with me in pur congratulations and very best wishes on this auspicious occasion;, .•'-...••:•. I note that your'office continues to send communications : to us addressed-to the Asia Society in New York City. Would you please inform/them of our address here at Robert College as given on this letter. I think the confusion arose owing to the fact that our daughter ••Barbara, Mrs. Jordan Getz, was at the Asia Society.," Barbai-a has had a- son and is no longer at the Society arid her address is 114 West 86th Street, N.Y. Her son. is now almost a year old. Barbara and our grand-son visited us here in Turkey, this summer, and Nancy, our daughter from Newburyport/ Mass, and our grand-daughter who is now two and a half years:.old-were also here. It.was a great delight to have the family with us. : We have,-completed1two years on this assignment at Robert College and are very-much enjoying our life on the Bosphorus. I regret that it has been so long since we last met and hope on the occasion of my next visit to New York I may have the pleasure of seeing you. Needless to say, we follow with great interest.the leadership you are giving to the United Nations and congratulate you on your continuing success. I know Margaret would- join with me in our best to you and your family. We will'be remembering you especially on September the twelfth., y '• •' " -•' • ". " •••••• ' .-' '"''/••. -Every good wish.: ."•••;

Sincerely yours,

JSE/mk '. . //ohn Scott Everton ^President ISTANBUL AMERIKAN KOLEJLER! THE AMERICAN; COLLEGES IN ISTANBUL MQDOR - PRESIDENT BEBEK POSTA KUTUSU8 ISTANBUL

OLOM1M1N XXX.YIU The Honorable U Thant TURKIYE CLIMHLJRlYETl 250 KUBU? The Secretary General of the United Nations Villa "Bella Vista" 3600 Palisades Avenue 232nd Street Riverdale, New York UQAKLA U.S.A. I BY AIR MAIL n f t/ <7

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J.«» H^" .Mms. Andrea Oiimon

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FRANKLIN D.ROOSEVELT

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Graduate School of Public Administration 4 WASHINGTON SQUARE NORTH, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10003

National Security Program

August 20, 1970

The Honorable Secretary-General and Mrs. Thant Villa Bella Vista 3600 Palisades Avenue at 232nd Street Riverdale, New York

Dear Secretary-General and Mrs. Thant:

Your invitation for a buffet luncheon on September 12 J for Dr. and Mrs. Trager has arrived in the office while they are out of the country. I know that they will regret not being able to accept your invitation, as they will not return to the United States until the following week.

Cordially, /a*.* Dorothea A. Schoeftfeldt Assistant to Dr. Trager UNITED NATIONS ||pf NATIONS UNIES -*y?*- NEW YORK

CABLE ADDRESS—ADRESSE TELEGRAPH IQUE: UNATIONS NEWYORK

REFERENCE:

18 August 1970 V

Dear U Thant, Thank you for the kind invitation from Mrs. Thant and yourself to be present at the naming ceremony of your grand- daughter on 12 September at "Bella Vista". As you know, I am leaving next week for a short New /\tuO /J Zealand visit from vhich I plan to return on 15 September, I hope that in these circumstances you vill accept my regrets and my best wishes for what I am sure will be a happy and enjoyable occasion. Sincerely,

B.R. Turner

U Thant Secretary-General United Nations, N.Y. TOTAL ACCEPTANCES: 225

TOTAL REGRETS: 62

DID WOT REPLY: 25

Total guests invited: 510 SG buffet luncheon on the occasion of the naming ceremony of their grand-daughter A-thi Myint-U, Saturday, 12 September 1970, 1.00 p.m., Riverdale / - ;;- (/ Accept Regret

n ! United Nations II ,/Mr. and Mrs. C.V. Warasimhain n !' ~

/Dr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Bunche__ie Jand Joan • $•

Mr. and Mrs. Jose' Rolz-Bennetifitt t :, •%,

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lessiovskrski i 1 £ t, Y/ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Muller $ . / Mr. and Mrs. Brian E. Urquharlart i; a. ^/ Mr. and Mrs. Sinan A. Korle5 f( ^

l//Colonel and Mrs. Harold A. Trimble } I/Mr. W. Rpickfirt \ 3- Mr. and Mrs. Jean d'Arcy _. ! z s i dhan L. Obhrai 1 Z ? Mr. W. Gibson Parkeerr i ' s ^ ! . A Mr. and Mrs. Willam Powell ! / | C M^c . ^w-*t^j / ! o i Mr. and Mrs. Rams s Nassif f 2 [ :-- . i I/ Mr. and Mrs. Maur ce Liu 1 ^ | V/ Mr. and Mrs. Stan ey D. Ho ! a 1 Mr. and Mrs. Balw .nt Singh ! 5. -____ „. T -— U and Mrs. Kyaw U / _L ^ U and Mrs. Tin Aun€g | ! ^ .. •^ U and Mrs. Richard. Paw.U I /• _, LA- .. t; U and Mrs. Shwe Mr•aa 1 ^ Pavlichenko T — I % C^^] i ,el H.K. Irwin ^ __ \ 3, (Q~S*-*-t } f. i - ft V Mr. .am N. Oatis^ President of UNCA i. & \ /Mr. • Ortiz-Tinoco ,_.._. ^ I a. - 2 -

Accept Regret

X*Mr, and Mrs. Frank Matza (electrician) \/ 227 Grant Avenue •RT-nnlrlyn, New York 11208 ,.,_. a ^

/ M qprt Mrs. Donald E. Thomas £ nt\f ' rf .^^..•—••111 w IL^HU.I

/Mr. and Mrs. George B. Pogue oC-^« /'Mr. and Mrs. Neil P. Breen i/ ••• — - - - — ~ ^ J Mr. and Mrs. Lucien L. Lemieux ___ si * ^/Miss Kate Starr Newell and guest

i/ Mr. and Mrs. Emilio Mira

Under-Secretarie s

Chief and Mrs. S.O. Adebo

t/ M. Philippe de Seynes / (a**-^) [ [/ Mr. and Mrs. I.S. Djermakoye ,,..„„. „, ,,,„„ „ „-, -t- 3L

/ Mr. and Mrs. Mohamed Habib Gherab ! I | A^L*, . ( Ct*«A*^ J

,/ Mr. and Mrs. Agha Abdul Hamid z ( f. E . /• \ V/ Mr. and Mrs. W. Martin Hill __ ._ __ _ j _____ / i fv^AAJ (Cb\AS^-*~> J ,.™,»,t> |,^.m,,-,..^,-..,. -,.,..,.^, „-../o^ ./ ,/Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Hoffman . „ ...„__„ ^ ., | Z" . | j ;/ Dr. Victor Hoo 1 / „. ^4 • / f ^/ M-r. and Mrs. L.N. Kutakov . ^OTtr.^,. ,. . r)J ,-,-„-- 1 .. " X 1 1 ? \/ Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Labouisse | -. ! ... '^ / " """" j 3 V/Mr. and Mrs. Jiri Nosek , _ ,J_ a 2 / 1 i I v/ Mr- apfl Mrs. A.A.S. Stark ^ 2, " 1 \/ / Mr and Mrs. Constantin A. Pt.a.vroponlop 11 ^ i " /~ \ ,/ Mr- Brnce R. Turner | j / / 1 | v/ Mr. and Mrs. David B. Vaughan _^_, „ _ .,..,, »«_,,„,>-X,,., ™ ^ ii s \// H.E. Mr. Gunnar Jarring ...... 1? /

[ c2 (^^^r) ^*^ Mr and Mrs, David Morse i.J., I, ^^ .^ / ¥ / Mr. Maurice Strong '•• L - 3 -

Accept Regret

Permanent Representatives H.E. Mr. Charles W. Yost and Mrs. Yost

H.E. Monsieur Jacques Kosciusko-Morizet and Madame Kosciusko-Morizet anddjughter_

.E. Mr. Y.A. Malik and Mrs. Malik

H.E. Sir Colin Crowe, K.C.M.G., and Lady Crowe

(y/H.E. Mr. Frederick Archibald Warner, C.M.G. _ /The Right Reverend Monsignor Alberto Giovannetti, J.C.E.., D.D.

The Very Reverend Monsignor Ettore Di Filippo \/ H.E. M. Nsanze Terence and Mme. Terence y H.E. Dr. Mehdi Vakil and Mrs. Vakil ___ /H.E. Dr. Hadji Roeslan Abdulgani

and Mrs. Abdulgani —— ——» inrmmiTTTiifTiTHir^-.«.—.—-~.~.-=>.»^jyy,,-j.. -vy-p-

City of New York The Honorable John V. Lindsay and Mrs. Lindsay City Hall New York ___„______

Personal friends '. and Mrs. Andrew W. Cordier Columbia University Morningside Heights, New York i/ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Delson 230 Park Avenue, New York 10017_ j/Mr. and Mrs. Max Delson 230 Park Avenue, New York 10017_ ./Dr. and Mrs. Frank N. Trager ^ Graduate School of Public Administration New York University Washington Square, New York 10003,, ) - 4 -

Accept

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Cousins Saturday Review 380 Madison Avenue, New York 10017

Mr. and Mrs. James A. Wechsler NEW YORK POST 75 West Street, New York 10006___„

/Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, 3rd V 30 Rockefeller Plaza Room 5600, New York 10020

Mr. and Mrs. David Rockefeller One Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York 10015 / Mrs. Richard Simon 4701 Grosvenor Avenue Riverdale, New York 10471

»/ Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zucker ' 4535 Livingston Avenue, Riverdale, New York 10471 t^ Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Gabor tXMiac Fdim GaTsor (^-^^ic^) 4645 Delafield Avenue, Riverdale, New York 10471

./ Dr. and Mrs. Donald Brandon 115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021

Dr. and Mrs. William von Stein 115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021 / ^/Mr. and Mrs. Philip von Stein (son of Dr. von Stein] In care of Dr. William von Stein 115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021 1.

Dr. and Mrs. Jackson A. Seward 115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021

/Dr. and Mrs. John H. Seward (son of Dr. Seward) ^ 185 East 85th Street, New York 10028 ______

Dr. Virginia Werden 59 East 54th Street, New York 10022

Dr. and Mrs. John M. Brush 4620 Grosvenor Avenue, Riverdale, New York 10471

Dr. Wan Ngo Lim / 445 East 68th Street, New York 10021 Accept Regret / Mr. and Mrs. Y. Dobshi Apt. 75Gc 144-66 Village Road / 1 L*+JL~JL(*" Jamaica. New York ~| Mr. and Mrs. Y.S. Yee t \ 231 East 76th Street, N^w Ynrk 10O21 / I Dr. and Mrs. Richard Dwane 5355 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale. New York 10471 .._. .... Z

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Doliner 400 East 56th Street Apt. QT_, T\fow York 100PP X

/ 1: Mr. and Mrs. Peter Chin and family 64-68 Wetherole Street Rego Park, Hew York 11374 ._„,,,„„„,-„,.,„,- £ f U and Mrs. Kyi Maung 241 East 76th Street, New York 10021 I

''Mr. and Mrs. Lional Landry and 3 children Asia Society »f 112 East 64th Street, New York 10021 „ / Mr. and Mrs. John Scott Everton fl.=-|_Q Rr.n-Sr.-Ly

-|-|0_Tp ,,j- (ClifK Q+v.^-.J- TW0,, Ycypl,-.. ,1 005^1 / j Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Benjamin and son and United Artists Corporation i/Mr.andMrs. M.Taylor 5 729 Seventh Avenue, Hew York _ _._. / r Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Krim .' United Artists Corporation 3 (a^^ 729 Seventh Avenue , Hew York . . _

Mr. and Mrs- Porter McKeever United Nations Association of the \ United States of America 833 United Nations Plaza, New York 10017 _-™^. _.„.,_. z f Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Kheel 407 West 246th Street, Riverdale, New York 10471 £

Dr. and Mrs. Jeremy Cowan (Daffney Whittman) In care of Mr. Lional Landry Asia Society 2, 112 East 64th Street 31 - 6 -

Accept Regret

. Francis B. Taylor and guest Department of Mathematics Manhattan College, New York 10471 Dr. aiRH'MJCJi, Lee Arnold Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics New York University, New York 10453 Dr. and Mrs. C.K. Chu Department of Mechanical Engineering Columbia University, New York 10027 / Dr. and Mrs. Arnold D. Kerr 240 East 82nd Street, New York __ Dr. and Mrs. John Jones The Riverdale Country School, New York 10471 „„-,,...„_ /Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan B. Bingham */ 500^(°lO0O Tnr^OTVZIndependenck vii^a VK-»£ea AvenueAirArviio , RiverdaleRn Trov»i^ i , New York 10471

IMr. and Mrs. Donald Gelman /!83-30 Victor Avenue E^nhurst, New York //jr?3 _ _ .__„ Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Jacobs /510 East 23rd Street, New York

/Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shuford 352 Sackett Street, Brooklyn, New York

Professor and Mrs. Nicholas Delillo 773 Pelham Road, New Rochelle, New York f Professor and Mrs. Thomas Smith 35 Ross Place, Tappan, New York 10983 „ Professor and Mrs. Charles Stolze /10^-66 108th Street Richmond Hill, New York „______Mr. and Mrs. William Mills Fordham Hills Apartments Derby House 2^00 Sedegwick Avenue Bronx, New York 10*4-68 _.

Mr. Arthur K. Delson (son of Max Delson) 2Ul Central Park West, New York - 7 -

Accept Regret

'Brother Gregory Nugent, F.S.C. President Manhattan College Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, New York 10471 / Brother Stephen Sullivan Academic Vice President Manhattan College Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, New York 10471 Brother Abdon Lewis Garavaglia Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences Manhattan College Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, New York 10471 Dr. and Mrs. Edward Reiss Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences New York University 251 Mercer Street Washington Square, New York . - Dr. and Mrs. Hla Pe 240 West 26lst Street, Riverdale, New York 10471 Mr. and Mrs. Laszlo Kozma 2675 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, New York 10463

Daw Than Aye 2 Beekman Place, New York 10022 _

/Professor Edward 0. Hynard and guest *S In care of Dr. Franbis B. Taylor Department of Mathematics Manhattan College, New York 10471 2 /Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Desmond (Miss Sheila Nath) v 137 East 38th Street, New York 10016 iwaBSRKnKBa^EjSP^^^^^s^^^'.'-^? Dr. Aung Thein 310 Riverside Drive, New York ./Dr. and Mrs. Chailes H. Bauer 1111 Park Avenue, New York _ Miss Aung San Su Kyi JIn care of Daw Than Aye 2 Beekman Place, New York 10022 - 8 -

Accept Regret

Mrs. Louis Werner 525 West 258th Street, Riverdale, New York 10465. / Mr. and Mrs. Alain Yves Morvan Room A-5501

866 United Nations Plaza .._ . . .. 1,,^,,- ,^n.v-,. ,«*.-' Dr. and Mrs. Lee Gillette plus 2 children 850 Park Avenue, New York Mrs. Gabrille Koppell and Mrs. William M. Felton Riverdale School for Young Children 5124 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, New York 10465,

Mr. and Mrs. Burton K. Gordon 419 West 119th Street, New York 10027. \S Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bein 165 LaSalle Street Colonial Heights Yonkers, New York 10710 I,/Mr. and Mrs. Carl L. Heimowitz 555 Mt. Bospect Avenue Newark, New Jersey U and Mrs. Sein Lin 14 Trout Brook Terrace West Hartford, Connecticut 06119 . arid Mrs. -'Robert McLean 202 Washington Street Marblehead, Massachusetts _ Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Zia 560 Riverside Drive New York

and Mrs. John L. Loeb City Commission to the United Nations 809 United Nations Plaza , Olivia Koppell In care of Mrs. Gabrille Koppell 5124 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, New York 10465 - 9 - Regret United Nations (continued)

•. and Mrs. David A. Hunter (BMS) 224 Ratbun £ Staten Island, New York 10512

L/ Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jaran (BMS) 249 Watch Hill Road RFD 10 -2 Peekskill, New York 10566

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Blaney (Head Gardener) 6 Alaska Avenue Brookwood Jackson, New Jersey 08527 Mr. and Mrs. Hendrick Roskam v/24 Homer Street Clifton, New Jersey OyOl4 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Palombo 229 Bronx River Road Yonkers, New York ,

and Mrs. S. Halbron 100 Central Park South New York s. David Tin Hla c/o Mr. and Mrs. Y.S. Yee 251 East 76th Street New York, New York 10021

Dr. and Mrs. A.M. Woodruff University of Hartford 200 Bloomfield Avenue West Hartford, Connecticut , /Mr. Ray F. Carmichael ^ Manhattan College Manhattan College Parkway Riverdale, New York 10471 / Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Garvey 1970 East Tremont Avenue Bronx, New York -10 -

Accept Regret \ Permanent Mission of Burma 1 H.E. U Soe Tin and Mrs. Soe Tin and family F 2. i Major and Mrs. Thaung Lwin and family 1 f i U and Mrs. Ba Yin . 1 Z i U Tun Waing 1 i i TT anrl Mys . Mira U-i n 1 i i / ((*;4*} U Khin Tun U and Mrs. Htay Lwin U and Mrs. Soe Myint - 11 -

Accept Regret

Members of the Security Council

^H,E. Mr. Liu Chieh ^H.E. Mr. Max. Jakobson and Mrs. Jakobson vXH. E. Major General Padma Bahadur Khatri and Mrs. Khatri Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa and Senora de Mr. Eugeniusz Mrs. Ku^aga v/H,E. Dr. Davidson S.H.¥. Nicol and Mrs. Nicol .__ >«/K,E. Seiior Don Jaime de Pinies and Senora de Pinies «««-»»=«, "Tv-s-^,. Cct*«s-~^.) wXH, E. Dr. George J. Tomeh and Madame Tomeh ,E. Mr. Vernon Johnson Mwaanga and Mrs. Mwaanga . SG and Mrs. Thant buffet luncheon on the occasion of the naming ceremony of grand-daughter Khinlei Myint-U, Sunday, 18 May 19^9^ 1.00 p.m., Villa Bella Vista, Rlverdale

Total number of guests invited: 279

Total acceptances: 221

•v> ' ' Total regrets: ' 38

Have not replied: 20 SO- buffet luncheon on the occasion of the naming ceremony of grand-daughter Khinlei Myint-U, Sunday, 18 May 19&9> 1.00 p.m., Villa Bella Vista, Riverdale

Regret

United Nations

r. and Mrs. C.V. Narasimhan

r. and Mrs. Ralph J. Bunche

Mr. and Mrs. Jose Rolz-Bennett

r. and Mrs. Victor Lessiovski _------^ . r^^ •. and Mrs. Brian E. Urquhart

• >r. and Mrs.i ,Sinan A. Korle .-. and Mrs. Esmond A. Van Name

Colonel and Nrs. Harold A. Trimble

1 and Mrs. 'ranois A. Moran i/ 172^;9 Stuart i Brooklyn 29x eV York

Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Reickert d'Arcy

• VT y' Mr. and Mrs. Goverdhan L. Obhrai

Mr. W. Gibson. Parker

> and Mrs. William Powell A " Mr ses Massif

and Mrs. Maurice Liu

and Mrs. Stanley D. Ho

and Mrs. Balwant Singhw

Kyaw U

n Aung \/ U and Mrs. Richard Paw U

Mra

and Mrs. V.P. Pavlichenko and Mrs* Michael H'K- Irwin Michaol tLittlejotino^ President - 2 -

Regret

'V--A M-V*^ rt v%/3 M>ic« TVM^an ^ Til Thntnpi ^ I//

/Mr. and Mrs. George B. Pogue ,.,.;....,,,^^._.,_ .„,..,. //: ,/Mr. and Mrs. Neil P. Breen „,_,_..„ ,, ./Mr. and Mrs. Lucien L. Lemieux y/ l/Miss Kate Starr Newell , ,.,.' ... . , /

iXkr. and Mrs. Emilio Mir a *// -. **t Under -Secretaries >*M-P, Ibrahim Ilp.lmi Abdel Rahman / •

•I/ Chief and Mrs. S.O. Adebo „_„„__

^/ M. Philippe de Seynes ; _„ V/Mr. and Mrs. I.S. Djermakoye __

i/ Mr. and Mrs. Mohamed Habib Gherab \/ f ^Z^lyUPtX-^/

v/Mr. and Mrs. Agha Abdul Hamid „_,___„.....„.„..„,,..,,] V/Mr. and Mrs. W. Martin Hill .__, \f Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. Hoffman ^

.^/Dr. Victor Hoo _ _. ^ L.1^. t \/Mr. and Mrs. L.N. Kutakov .____.„ _. ? ^\T I rwinifcwwwiBWwm-^uxMJ^^i^wi^^.M^c!^,^^.,,.^^.,,,,,,^^. .ji^i.^.,,^^_..._ - ...u,.,e .wij..,. .., ^.j. vA Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Labouisse

./Mr. and Mrs. Jiri Nosek n «- r i^* B JWrVT'T-ey tiW.. *"t«r, ju j-; i yX-Mr. and Mrc. David

Dor. Manuel Perez Guerrero-^ yltr-T__ y^Mr. and Mrs. A.A.S. Stark ( ''<\ Mr./Constant!i J^A^-"^ n A. Stavropoulos

Mr. . Bruce PR. Turner •/ \f Mr. and Mrs. David B. Vaughan _ I¥cbiDGh The Annex\of the Inter-American Development Bank 1701 PenneyIvania Avenue, Washington,D.C. - 5 -

Accept Regret

Permanent Mission of Burma

H.E. U and Mrs. Soe Tin C^xW .

i/ fr-aml Mi-b. Aung Tiu

"~ f ^ / / / l^and Mra. Hta:^ Lwin Cw^C M-«- i [/ j/ / - — — \/ t . Doe -* -*^o. '.=i //

; Embassy^ _o f the .Unio n p^Burma_^ , Washington;ton,j D.CP.O. ; i/ H.B. U 1 vV

Mrs* ____ J._!/.^^_ - ' ^,,....,.

and tjK-D\ Tin Tut i L£-£/-Sf 1

Permanent Representative^ s

f VI / I.E. Mr. Charles W. Yost and Mrs. YostJ , ,. J,l..«.,4»,,»i.oj..,,, ... y.:: , 1U,,,,UT,,

^/y/ ~Sf<<.^w-^s ^05c.;«sf

.E. The ..Rt. Huu. Luid OcU-aCL -ibaeh^Caradon P>-evr) v v/

. Mr. Y.A. Malik and Mrs. Malik Right Reverend Monsignor Alberto Giovannetti, J.C.D.^ P.P. . / ^o f b ^ v_ ' J 11 and ^jp

76 I

.

City of Hew York

y^The Honorable John V. Lindsay and Mrs. Lindsay

Personal friends

* Dr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Cordier J: 6 Merriuale_ RoaxL- Great Heck. New York Mr. and Mrs. Robert Delson 230 Park Avenue, New York 10017 sX'/'CMr. and Mrs. Max Dalson * v 230 Park Avenue, New York 10017 Dr. and Mrs. Frank N. Stager Graduate School.of Public Administration New York University Washington Square, New York 10003 V"^ xvMr. and Mrs. Norman Cousins Saturday Review 380 Madison Avenue, New York 10017

\/.>A . and Mrs. James A, Wechsler ' X NEW YORK POST 75 West Street, New York 10006

r. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, 3rd 30 Rockefeller Plaza Room 5600, New York 10020 ___ y -. X/^ Mr. and Mrs. David Rockefeller X, One Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York 10015 /* Mrs. Richard Simon 4701 Grosvenor Avenue, Riverdale, New York

.X^Mr. and Mrs. Herman Zucker ,; | \fi/ ' 1*535 Livingston Avenue, Riverdale, New!York 101*71 .XMr. and Mrs. Donald H. Gabor and y Miss Edna Gabor V 461*5 Delafield Avenue, Riverdale, New York 101*71 Accept Regret

Dr. and Mrs. Donald Brandon 115 East 61st Street, New York 10021. v//

Dr. and Mrs. William von Stein 115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021. Dr. and Mrs. Jackson A. Seward 115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021 Dr. Virginia Werden 59 East 54th Street, New York ._ . and Mrs. John M. Brush . 4620 Grosvenor Avenue, Riverdale, New York 10471

yXor. Wan Ngo1Lim . . ! 445 East 68th Street, New York 10021 |_ ! } '

J^ Mr. and Mrs . Y. Dobashi • • . . ij ' • i| . . . Apt. 75Gc 144-66 Village Road ' . i J J . Jamaica, Ne

./* Mr. and Mrs . Y.S. Yee / / 1 231 East 16th Street, New York 1 * \ r" f 1 ; : .X Dr. and Mrs . Richard Dwane , ' | 1 5355 Henry Sudson Parkway 1 ./ / • \ Riverdale, Wew York 10471 : V I

yX Mi^ Hazel\Jphfts . I ! t^tionSv.Plaza | y • i Room 9^, Ne>* Yo>k ioea7 % * !/• Mr . and Mrs. Roy Doliner 'I •- \ 400 East 56th Street 1 / / 1 • •' Ap^. 9T, NeW York 10022 j "I/ ' 1 «/ Mr. and Mrs . Peter Chin ^ 1 !

V Dr-/alcl Mreaf^lTun Thin . j |. ;, ' | I Internatiofilal Monatary Fund •,.'.'''•' f f Asian pejraa-tiken/ ' ' V,, .- I f // ISfth ahd/H S%e6ts\. N.W. i ',\ , 1 l/t/

K?

"ES'iaC'aS^r^tA.W»l:elW«?***.-*.^-:-J«rJ«!>^^.AJ'"l-!'1--—•«•' ' t ^': ' - 6 -

Accept Regret

y Mr. and Mrs. Lional Landry p/10 Woodchuck Lane Wilton, Connecticut 06897 «

. and Mrs. John Scott Everton °ld Post Road, Rye, New York 10580 . and Mrs. Kenneth Young Bonne tt Avenue, Larchmont, New York 105 38 _ • XMr. and Mrs. Robert S. Benjamin United Artists Corporation X 729 Seventh Avenue, New York ««,... Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Krim United Artists Corporation 729 Seventh Avenue, New York

Mr. and Mrs. Porter McKeever United Nations Association of the United States 'of America v// 833 United Nations Plaza, New York 10017^

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Kheel 407 West 246th Street, Riverdale, New York

* /y* Dr. Francis B. Taylor and guest •v/{ . /^s iJsp£Li*'tniGn"b of M3,"tnsni3.t/ic s^, * Manhattan College, New Yor i/* Dr. and Mrs. Lee Arnold *./ Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics <^. New York-University, New York 10^53

.J\ Dr. and Mrs. C.K. Chu **)*(J Department of Mechanical Engineering " ^ Columbia University, New York 10027 /\/" Dr» and Mrs. Arnold D. Kerr X 2^0 East 82nd Street, New York Dr. and Mrs. John Jones j ; ;The Riverdale Country School, New York; 10471 / "V ' V/ Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan B. Bingham \\ 5000 Independence Avenue, Riverdale, New York 10471 \/ Mr . v ,- JamaicaVNew York 11435

ST. - 7 -

Iccept Reeret

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gelman 85-50 Victor Avenue Elmhurst 75, New York

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Jacobs 510 East 25rd Street, New York,

. and Mrs. Harry Shuford 352 Sackett Street, Brooklyn, New York

SteetBrooklyn, NewNYork

N/I XProfessor and Mrs. Nicholas Delillo /\ 775 Pelham Road, New Rochelle, New York ... / *,/» f Professor and Mrs. Thomas Smith A v 55 Ross,Place, Tappan, New York 10985^ / vX/ Professor and Mrs. Charles Stolze S\v 104-66 108th Street, Richmond Hill 19, New York

Mr. and Mrs. William Mills Fordham Hills Apartments Derby House 2400 Sedegwick Avenue, Bronx, New York 10468

Brother Gregory Nugent, F.S.C. President / Manhattan College V Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, New York 10471;

l/C Brother Stephen Sullivan- Academic Vice President Manhattan College Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, New York

Brother Abdon Lewis Garavaglia 1 Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences ] / Manhattan College j V Manhattan College Parkway, Riverdale, New York 10471;;

F. C Vibe Prs^ident Eevelopment I Manha^tanNCollege *!' Manhattan College Pi .e, New York 10471J-

it? - 8 -

! Accept Regret

Dr. and Mrs. Edward Reiss Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences New York University 251 Mercer Street Washington Square, New York mnr.,^,.^,^.,^^^.m,^,,n

. 403)

Dr. and Mrs. Hla Pe 240 West 26lst Street, Riverdale, New York 10471

./•, Mr. and Mrs. Laszlo Kozma 2675 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, New York 1046?

, New York

X Daw Than Aye 2 Beekman Place, New York 10022

U and/*lr&T\San iWSeTway thesda, Maryland 20054

l/* Major-Gener Woodstock 320 East 2nd^Stree, New York 10017

i/A Mr. and Mns. E13ii Room iWU \ / , 1 RocKIf ellVr PMza, ITew York

Professor Edward ^wsr cP. 590^ Arlington Avenue

Now York 10>i7% 1 -*• '. *- - 9 -

Accept Regret

!/ Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Desmond (Miss Sheila Nath) 137 East 38th Street, New York v/ L/* Dr. Aung Thein 310 Riverside Drive, New York_

y Mr. >apd Mrls/. Brufpe Co^Le 21V liwoofci pe^u<

antclaar, VSew Jersey liifttillfruftltF. Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Bauer

1111 Park Avenue, New York __ r m fr*[» Mui)M*W(v;;>i^>t: J>S£?T-.-\. *#~-»iVf~l+v<*tiK*ln-.'

Mi&sl Bs^tv/ffohns 5^9 West~123rcLt^treet, New York 1002?.

\f Mi sjs /LLMl. i 22B WsIS 231 reat RcrverdaleV^ew York 1CA63

Miss Aung San Su Kyi In care of Daw Than Aye 2 Beekman Place, New York 10022

Kyaw if Burma to the United Nations etX, New York 10021 _„

Dr/'"5'oKn H. Seward (son of Dr. Jackson A. Seward) | / 185 East 85th Street, New York 10028 \ V/

Mr ./and Mrs. on In/care of ce Cole 1 1 23J1 iJ [' Uwper ew Jersey_ // £'. Mr. and Mrs. Alain Yves Morvan (Mi Mi Hla Maung) | d uf U Ilia McLUiJg ,_t ^A^-_A , , I 372 Contral -ParTTlfest ApL. $1), IfeW lu-rk 1UL^

1 ' -' . and Mrs. Philip von Stein tfson'of Dr. von Stein') , , ' In care of Dr. William von ^teih I v /

115 East 6lst Street, New York 10021 r ^ jj»farngw» a

Accept • Regret

// Mrs. Gabrille Koppell v/ Mr. and Mrs. William M. Felton -i and Mi* a-.— itywin- Bor-gCT Riverdale School for Young Children 3124 Henry Hudson Parkway Riverdale, New York 10465,.

U and s . THa Kyaw Wai 9211 s Ru 2005U Mr. and Mrs. Burton K. Gordon 419 West 119th Street, New York 1002?

V/y1 Mi ss7 Kjhin ,Win Voice .Burmese section) Washi 3 September 1970

TOTAL ACCEPTANCES TO DATE: 154

TOTAL REGRETS TO DATE: 32

MANHATTAN COLLEGE BRONXEW YORK 10471 MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT 212-548-1400

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AJ- MANHATTAN COLLEGE BRONX, NEW YORK 10471 MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT 212 - 548 - 1400 a .

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