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S-0864-0003-05-00001

Expanded Number S-0864-0003-05-00001

Title items-in-Public relations files - luncheons, dinners and receptions - Volumes VI, VII, VIII

Date Created 01/02/1965

Record Type Archival Item

Container s-0864-0003: Public Relations Files of the Secretary-General: U Thant

Print Name of Person Submit Image Signature of Person Submit H H

OJ, CO H O K Luncheon given by the Secretary-General 1 February 1965

Mr. Dobell x

Mr. Stavropoulos Dr. Bunche

H.3. M. Seydoux H.E. Mr. Enckell

H.E. Mr. Quaison-Sackey Madame Faure

Mrs. Kennedy 3£ The Secretary-General

H.E. M. Faure Madame Seydoux

H.E. Mr. Stevenson Mr. Dean

M. de Seynes x Mr. Owen

Mr. Rolz-Bennett

I XERO I XERO I XERO COPY : COPY COPY P'->'^ F-:^ SG luncheon for H.E. Mr. Edgar Jean Faure - Monday, 1 February 1965, 1.15 p.m., $8th floor Jufc/ff

H.E. Mr. Edgar Jean Faure and Madame Faure H.E. M. Roger Seydoux and Madame Seydoux H.E. Mr. Ralph Enckell H.E. Mr. Alex Quaison-Sackey H.E. Mr. Adlai E. Stevenson Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy Mr. Arthur Dean Mr. Peter C. Dobell

The Secretary-General Dr. Ralph J. Bunche Mr. Philippe de Seynes Mr. David Owen

Mr. Jose Rolz-Bennett Mr. C. A. Stavropoulos

16 48 WALL. STREET NEW YORK 5

January 29, 1965

His Excellency U Thant, Secretary-General of the , United Nations Plaza, Hew York, N.Y.

dear Mr. Secretary-General: This will acknowledge your note of January 26, 1965 in which you advise me of the seven prominent persons from different parts of the world who you have invited to deliver lectures on the general theme of international co-operation during the early months of 1965. Mrs. Dean and I will be very happy to attend the lecture given by Monsieur Edgar Faure, the former Prime Minister of .

I will also be happy to attend the small luncheon you are giving at 1:15 p.m. on February Is'fc at your Headquarters and will look forward to seeing you at that time.

Sincerely yours,

Arthur H. Dean €01mtibra

NEW YORK 27, N. Y. PRESIDENT'S ROOM January 27, 1965

Dear Mr. Secretary-General: Many thanks indeed for your gracious letter of January twenty-second inviting Mrs. Kirk and me to attend the lecture to be delivered by Monsieur Edgar Faure on February d! irst " in the General Assembly hall. We are happy to be able to accept. I am appreciative also of your thoughtfulness in inviting me to attend the small luncheon on that same day which, as you know from a telephone message left with your secretary, I must regret because our University trustees will meet at luncheon and through the afternoon on February first. However, Mr. Curtis Roosevelt of your staff has been kind enough to suggest that I might come instead to a similar small luncheon which you will give on February eighth in honor of H. E. Mr. Allah Bukhsh Karim Bukhsh Brohi. I am delighted to be able to accept the invitation for that date, and look forward to being with you then. Sincerely,

' Grayson Kirk

The Honorable U Thant Secretary-General The United Nations New York, New York 10017 s wilt Ins

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SG reception for the Press - Friday, 29 January 1965, / - /^JO p.m. Delegates Dining Room

5S Radio Country Press Replit Repl:ies Correspondents Yes No Correspondents Yes Wo

Argentina Estol, Horacio Marquez, Guillermo M. Australia Adams, Maurice Barnett, Peter Armati, Leo Grant, Bruce A.

Austria von Hofmannsthal, Emilio Belgium de Pauw, Nestor P. Schroeder, Peter British Guiana Cummings, Felix Bulgaria Naidenov, Georgi Cambodia Tran, Van Ky Canada Gumming, Carman Armstrong, Craig Einfrank, Aaron Cloutier, Jean

Nossal, Frederick, C. Reilly, Peter China Lin, Chen Chi Cuba Portela, Francisco Villacorta, Alfonso C ze cho slovaki aFolta, Petr Denmark Halberg, Hansen P. Winther , Chri sti an Jensen, Allen Ben, Philip Sallebert, Jacques Dorian, Max Foy, Louis A. Ghnassia, Maurice Tuckerman, Anne Weill Wolff, Georges R.

Federal Rep. Leichter, Otto of Germany Pachter, Henry Pol, Heinz German . Democratic Olivier, Kurt Republic Ghana Enninful, George Greece Condomitros, Solon Pe Claris, Panayotis Venizelos, George C. Hungary Kis, Csaba Ipper, Pal - 2 -

Press Replies Ra3Lo Replies Country Correspondents Yes No Cor re spondent s Yes No Reddi, P. R. India Banerji, Jogindra K. Bhattacharjea, Ajit K. Krishnayya, Pasupuleti G. Raghavan, Charcavarti Indonesia Berry, Winston Soemarsano Pangabean, Bonar Israel Hassin, Eliahou Ritov, Yaakov Lurie, Jesse Shneiderman, Samuel Wiesel, Lazare Baal - Te shuva , Jac ob Italy Cappelli, John Orlando, Ruggero X Lucentini, Mauro 1 Stille, Ugo Boffa, Guiseppe Japan Fujinei, Kazuo Kimura^ Eiji Kawamur a, Kat sumi chi K-Qarfeer'-Hideo ^1 "^ Ri"n"1" s ^^ B Fh i Maeda, Jiro

Oda, Shigeharu Onodera, Sho Ota, Yasumasa

Sugino, Naomi ehi Lebanon Makdisi, Madim Mizrahi, David Netherlands Vas Bias, Arnold Person, Bernard Norway Galtung, Ingegerd > Heimar, Bjorn Hvistendahl, Else Johansen, D. Pakistan Panama Rosenthal, Rita Philippines Wang, Kwei S. Poland Gornicki, Wieslaw Janiszewski, Bartosz Puerto Rico Gonzalez-Gonzales, J. A. South Africa Fick, Albert Spain Bueno, Guy Sweden Ahman, Sven Thoren, Arne "RraT*irT'i"r>rtTTi TtartWi.Q *s Leistikow, Gunnar Lindahl, Mac 0. Lindmarker, Ingmer Press Replies Radio ffiepl:ies Country- Correspondents Yes No Corre spondent s Yes Wo

Switzerland Beer, Max Steinitz, Hans Wronkow, George Cherif, Anouar Malley, Simon Turkey Demokan, Feridun USSR Freeman, Harry Dubovik, Vladlen Kondrashov, Stanislav Druzhinin, Alexander Kuznetsov, Georgi Lossev, Serguei Vassilliev, Gennadi » Velinchansky, Leonid Ponomareu, Leonid United Arab Keshishian, Levon Republic United Kingdom Ball, Ian Wigan, Anthony Bennett, Roy Blyth, Ronald Britter, Eric Bulbeck, John Egginton, Joyce Fischer-Williams, Barbara I.. Hayes, Michael Kilian, Richard Littlejohns, Michael Midgley, John » Pick, Hella Ratzin, Gerald Yaffe, Richard United States Beichman, Arnold Combs, George Hamilton Ben Israel, Shelomo Endrst, Jaroslav Besser, Milton Frederick, Pauline Bracken, M.D. Hottelet, Richard C. Brewer, Sam Pope V MacVane, John Carson, Saul Pugell, Gerda Clapso, Gerard Rose, Oscar Dennen, Leon Siegel, Seymour Duribar, Ernest . X Mai Goode El Korashi, Issa Walton, Richard Fell, Carl Pilkington, Betty Fisher, Franklin Schoenfeld, Moses Fleming, Louis Fletcher, Arthur Foell, Earl Fraser, Charles G. Freudenheim, Milton Frye, William Fulton, William Rossi, Mario Lucas, Ellen Country Press Replies Radio Replies Corre spondent s Yes Wo Corre spondent s Yes Ho Boyd, Jim United States Gabriel, Alexander (cont'd) Geary, Philip W. Gesmar, Renee Goldberg, Abraham I- Grant, Donald Gray, Kay Rainey Gruin, Frederick Hagan, Mary Halasz, Louis Hamilton, Thomas J. Harrelson, Max Harvey, C. D, Horne, Richard L. Horowitz, David Howard, Charles P., Sr. Huss, Pierre Jhabvala, Darius Kaye, Joseph McLaughlin, Kathleen Mezerick, Avrahm More, Alberto Morello, Theodore Munn, Bruce TLff TV_ '

>Ja,UJ.t3, "J.-LJLJ.-C; Papanek, Jan Parry, John Rammel, Otto Rivlin, Morris Selz, Lucile Stevens, Georgina Teatsorth, Ralph Teltsch, Kathleen S. Velasco, Antonio Wallenberg, Peter J. Watts, Daniel H. Wiener, Max Ward, Paul Republic of Viet-Nam Dinh, Tran Van

Yugoslavia Otovic, Andjetko,S. Tome, Egon Radojckic, Miroslav Kymcl, Karel Stajduhar, Rudolph .-Vrhovic, Josip F. Nieuwenhos, Willebrort Mbutu, Titus Orkut, Guntekin Korea, Rep. of Kong, Chang Ho UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES -^"^- INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM

TO: Ramses Nassif Date: 12 January 1965

FILE NO.: . THROUGH:

FROM: Audrey S. Langsten

SUBJECT:

Ass®plated Press; Walter DurkLn, Picture Editsr Jacsb H arris, Photographer J®hn Lindsay, Photograplier

United Press; Larry de Santis, Picture Editor Joel Landau, Photographer Edward Jerry, Phetegrapher

France-Proase; Sam Schulman, Picture Sditer & Photographer

New Y©rk TOLmea; Jshn Dugan, Picture Editor Patrick Burns, Ph©t©grapher Sam Falk, Phetegrapher

Hew Y©rk Herald Trituue: Ben Price, Picture Bdit@r Ira Rosenberg, Photographer Hi Hi am Saur®, Photographer Hew York Daily Newat Arthur Siebelist, Picture Editor Free—Lance Photographers: Leo Hosenthai, Fix Geerge R©wen Yutaka Uagata, United Hati©na Photographer Secretariat: C. V. Warasimhan Jose Rolz-Bennett Ralph J- Bunche C. A. Stavropoulos v&r. B. R. Turner V. P. Suslov Philippe de Seyries yEr. Hernane Tavares de Sa 4Mr. Reinholdt Eriksen —Mr. Tibor Mende George J. Janecek Konstantin Smirnov -Mr. Herman Ho ^Mr. W. Gibson Parker -Mr. Osgood Caruthers -Jfe". Cesar Ortiz-Tinoco J. Rajasooria G. Rizzo Tin Aung V. J. G. Stavridi Maurice Liu David Exley Jean d'Arcy D. Ritchie M. Hayward . A. Langston Paul Stephen JlMr. J. "AMr. David Va-ughan JJr. Vincent Donahue iJ4r. Rudolph Skeete -Mr. Kenneth Kelly —Mrs. Josephine Blacklock -Mrs. Ghislaine Mailloux »jyiiss Lalla Rookh Shelley —Mr. Victor McBarnette Ramses Wassif Earl Cahiil Jiri Nosek •^General I. Rikhye -A William C. Powell < \AJ- i-"t>"L»* 3 December 1964

ARGEBTIM CHIHA

Estol, Horacio Lin, Chen Chi Marque z, Gfuillermo M.

AUSTRALIA

Adams, Maurice

Armati, Leo

Grant, Bruce A. CUBA

Eae, Ian Portela, Francisco

AUSTRIA Villacorta, Alfonso von Hofmannsthal, Emilio

BELGIUM

De Pauw, Westor P. CZECHOSLOVAKIA

DEEMiRK

BRITISH GUIANA Halberg, Hansen P.

Cummings, Felix Jensen, Allen

BULGARIA FRAHCE Faidenov, Georgi Ben, Philip

Cambodia Dorian, Max

Tran, Van ky Foy, Louis A.

CAMDA Ghnassia, Maurice

Gumming, Carman Tuckerman, Anne Weill

Binfrank, Aaron Wolff, Georges R.

Gayti, Mark FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY

Uossal, Frederick C Leichter, Otto

Pachter, Henry

Pol, Heinz -2-

GERMA1 DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC ISRAEL

Olivier, Kurt Hassin, Eliahou GHAEA Lurie, Jesse

Enninful, George Shneiderman, Samuel

GEEECE Wiesel, Lazare

Condomitros, Solon ITALY

Cappelli, John Peolaris, Panayotis

Venizelos, George C.

Lucentini, Mauro

Stille, Ugo

HUNGARY JAPAU

KLS, Csata Kato, Isugio

IHDIA ELmura, Eiji Banerji, Jogindra K. Koike, Hideo

Bhattacharjea, Ajit K. Miirakami, Masatoshi

Krishnayya, Pasupuleti G. Oda, Shigeharu

Onodera, Sho

Raghavan, Charcavarti Ota, Yasumasa

Reddi, P.R. Sato, Koji

Sugino, JIaomichi

IHDOUESIA REPUBLIC OF KOREA

Berry, Winston

Soemarsano LEBANON Makdisi, Nadira

MzraM, David SOUTH AFRICA

Fick, Albert

HEEBEKLAHDS SPAM

Vas Dias, -Arnold

KORWAY Bueno, Guy

Galtung, Ingegerd

Heimar, Bjorn SWEDEN

Evistendahl, Else Ahman, Sven

Johansen, D. Bergstrom, Thomas

Leistikow, Gunnar

PAKISTAN Lindahl, Mac 0.

Eusain, Ejaz Lindmarker, Ingmiler

PAEAMA SWITZERLAED

Rosenthal, Rita Beer, Max

Steinita, Hans

Wronkow, George

PELLIPPIEES TUNISIA

Wang, Ewei S« ESherif, Anouar POLAHD / Malley, Simon Gornicki, Wieslaw TURKEY

Demokan, Feridun

USSR

Freeman, Harry PUERTO RICO

Gonaalea-Gonzales, J.A. Kondrashov, Stanislav

Kuznetsov, Georgi

Lossev, Serguei USSR (COKTIEUED) UNITED STATES (COETIMJED)

Beichman, Arnold

Vassilliev, Gennadi joBes&aegTCjrTTMllf tf j^O&kiy

Tfelinchansky, Leonid \ Ben Israel, Shelomo

UNITED ARAB REPUBLIC Besser, BUlton

Keshishian, Levon Bracken, M.D.

UNITED KINGDOM Brewer, 'Sam Pope

Carson, Saul

Ball, Ian Clapso, Gerard

—ktwMi-M. fcwaissfti.,^,^ Dennen, Leon

Bennett, Roy Dunbar, Ernest

Blyth, Ronald El Korashi, Issa

Britter, Eric Fell, Carl

Bulbeck, John Fisher, Franklin Egginton, Joyce Fleming, Louis

.-F-ischer-Williams," H. Fletcher, Arthur

Hayes, Michael Foell, Earl

Kalian, Richard Fraser, Charles G.

Littlejohns, Michael Freudenheim, Mlton Frye, ¥illiam Midgley, John Bulton, William

Pick, Hella Gabriel, Alexander Ratain, Gerald Geary, Philip ¥. a Taffe, Richard Gesm^r, Renee

UNITED STATES Goldberg? Abraham I.

^flJHpTij ffllMAftgk

Grant, Donald UNITED STATES (COITIMJED) UKITED STATES (COmiMDED) Gray, Kay Rainey

Gruin, Frederick Eammelj Otto Eagan, Mary Halasz, Louis Rivlin, Morris

Hamilton, Thomas J. Selz, Lucile

Barrelsony Max Stevens, Eeorgina

Teatsorth, Ralph

Harveyf C.D. Teltseh, Kathleen S.

^jB]gBS^iaJy(i.^}jiiei^a^fe1,

Velasco, Antonio

Home, Richard L. Wallenberg, Peter J.

Horowitz, David Watts, Daniel H. Howard, Charles P., Sr.

Huss, Pierre Ifiener, Max

Jhabvala, Darius HEPUBLIC OF 'VIET-MM

Kaye, Joseph Dinh, Tran Van

TOGOSLATOA

McLaughlin, Kathleen Otovic, Andjetko S.

Mezerick, Avrahm Radojckic, Miroslav

M/ore, Alberto Stajduhar, Eudolph

Morello, Theodore Yrhovic, Josip F. Munn, Bruce

Murray, David

Oatis, William

Papanek, Jan

Parry, John 3 December 1964

AUSTRALIA

Barnett, Peter

BELGIUM

Schroeder, Peter

CANADA KSTHEELA13DS

Armstrong, Craig Person, Bernard

Cloutier, Jean

Mutrie, Fergus

POLA5ID

Janissewski, Bartosz DEMARK

Winther, Christian

FRANCE

Sallebert, Jacques

HUNGARY SWEBEHST

Ipper, Pal Thoren, Arne

ISRAEL

Eitov, Yaakov

ITALY USSR Orlando, Ruggero

JAPM

Fujinei, Kazuo Dubovik, "Vladlen

Kawamura, Katsumichi

Blaeda, Jiro TOUTED ZDTGDOM

Wigan, Anthony

TOUTED STATES

Combs, George Hamilton

Endrst, Jaroslav

Frederick, Pauline

Hottelet, Hicliard C.

MacVane, John

Pugell, Gferda

Rose, Oscar

Siegel, Seymour

Tome, Egon / -{ ••-<$$

TOj SG

Secretariat guests for your press receptions

Mr. C.V. larasimhan Mr. Jose Rolz-Bennett Dr. Ralph J. Bunche Mr. C.A. Stavropoulos Mr. B.E. Turner Mr. Vladimir P. Suslov Mr. Philippe de Seynes Dr. Hernane Tavares de Sa Mr. Eeinholdt Eriksen Mr. Tibor Mende Mr. George J. Janecek Mr. Konstantin Smirnov Mr. Norman Ho .Mr. W. Gibson Parker Mr. Osgood Caruthers Mr. Cesar Ortiz-Tinoco Mr. J. Eajasooria Mr. G. Rizzo U Tin Aung Mr. V.J.G. Stavridi Mr. Maurice Liu Mr. David ExLey Mr. Jean d'Arcy Mr. D. Eitchie Mr. M. Hayward Mrs. A. Langston Mr. Paul Jankowski Stephen Przylucki

Ili" v+—flt* Vincen~ ' *•* * ( Jft^ DonahueV ' I Q^/ U*T/ ' -^~r |__ijX^ Mr. Rudolph Skeete Mr. Kenneth Kelly y g J •sa^gagBBBBTMJL.llliaiMUJJUiMB^iiiriMffliii&iiiiiiiiiiiiiilii'i'^^ ~*— ' /I ^£~ ft ' / Mrs. Josephine Blacklock V H/4i,l.-\,^. ^ ^^^^t^^~^^^ ^&JjES^€t^x Mrs. Ghislaine Mailloux ( , , M Miss Lalla Rookh Shelley \ Mr. Victor McBamette }

«/ ; o V 29 January 1965 SG re Reception _for the Press tonight Total :

pauline SG reception for the Press - Friday, 29 January 1965, f£t - ;?:36 0 p.m. Delegates Dining Room

2S Radio Les Country Press Replit Repl: Correspondents Yes No Corr e spondent s Yes No

Argentina Estol, Horacio Marquez, Guillermo M. - Australia Adams, Maurice Barnett, Peter Armati, Leo Grant, Bruce A. Ian •'Moffitt Austria von Hofmannsthal, Emilio Belgium de Pauw, Nestor P. Schroeder, Peter British Guiana Cummings, Felix Bulgaria Naidenov, Georgi Cambodia Tran, Van Ky Canada Gumming, Carman Armstrong, Craig Einfrank, Aaron Cloutier, Jean u sjy 11, I'ldj. is. Nossal, Frederick, C. Reilly, Peter China Lin, Chen Chi Cuba Portela, Francisco Villacorta, Alfonso Czechoslovakia Folta, Petr Denmark Halberg, Hansen P. Winther, Christian Jensen, Allen . France Ben, Philip Sallebert, Jacques Dorian, Max Foy, Louis A. Ghnassia, Maurice \ Tuckerman, Anne Weill Wolff, Georges R. Federal Rep. Leichter, Otto of Germany . Pachter, Henry I Pol, Heinz German . Democratic Olivier, Kurt Republic Ghana Enninful, George Greece Condomitros, Solon Pe Claris, Panayotis Venizelos, George C. Hungary Kis, Csaba Ipper, Pal

,'XEROI- a COPY I A *• - 2 -

Press Replies RaSLo Replies Country Correspondents Yes Wo Corre spondent s Yes No Reddi, P. R. India Banerji, Jogindra K. Bhattacharjea, Ajit K. Krishnayya, Pasupuleti G. Raghavan, Charcavarti Indonesia Berry, Winston Soemarsano Pangabean, Bonar Israel Has sin, Eliahou Ritov, Yaakov Lurie, Jesse Shneiderman, Samuel Wiesel, Lazare Baal-Te shuva, Jacob Italy Cappelli, John Orlando, Rugger o X Lucentini, Mauro Stille, Ugo Boffa. Guiseppe Japan T i n "t~i/^i T m i tvT r\ Fujinei, Kazuo Kimura, Eiji Kawamura, Katsumichi VnSIrn tTn*^^.n Kltffl.nl iTfl^flPllI Mae da, Jiro MT» v* *-]!»- i-iwi-n ^Af^ f f'fcffi alvi TTi '^n rC Oda, Shigeharu Onodera, Sho i Ota, Yasumasa Rnt.n JCcuu Yn qn n WrfnlriTm Sugino, Naomi chi Lebanon Makdisi, Wadim Mizrahi, David Netherlands Vas Dias, Arnold Person, Bernard Norway Galtung, Ingegerd Heimar, Bjorn Evistendahl, Else Johansen, D. Pakistan fT.._ • ..EMorr.Biirl'-i H K Panama Rosenfchal, Rita Philippines Wang, Kwei S. r Poland :...Gorj:iicki_.LJW ieslaw , ___\ Janiszewski, Bartosz Puerto Rico Gonzalez -Gonzales, J. A. South Africa Fick, Albert Spain Bueno, Guy Sweden Ahman, Sven Thoren, Arne "RrtTTf n*4"T»*^*vi n"*V^/*x>vi f\ e* Leistikow, Gunnar Lindahl, Mac 0. Lindmarker, Ingmer

ICOPY Press Rep3ies Radio Kepi:ies Country Correspondents Yes No Corre spondent s Yes Wo

Switzerland Beer, Max Steinitz, Hans Wronkow, George Tunisia Cherif, Anouar Malley, Simon Turkey Demokan, Feridun USSR Freeman, Harry Dubovik, Vladlen Kondrashov, Stanislav Druzhinin, Alexander Kuznetsov, Georgi Lossev, Serguei Vassilliev, Gennadi Velinchansky, Leonid Ponomareu, Leonid United Arab Keshishian, Levon Republic United Kingdom Ball, Ian Wigan, Anthony Bennett, Roy Blyth, Ronald Britter, Eric Bulbeck, John Egginton, Joyce Fischer -Williams, Barbara I Hayes, Michael Kilian, Richard Little Johns, Michael Midgley, John Pick, Hella Ratzin, Gerald Yaffe, Richard United States Beichman, Arnold Combs, George Hamilton Ben Israel, Shelomo Endrst, Jaroslav Besser, Milton Frederick, Pauline Bracken, M.D. Hottelet, Richard C. Brewer, Sam Pope •< MacVane, John Carson, Saul Pugell, Gerda Clap so, Gerard Rose, Oscar Dennen, Leon Siegel, Seymour Dunbar, Ernest , yi 1 Mai Goode El Korashi, Issa Walton, Richard Fell, Carl Pilkington, Betty Fisher, Franklin Schoenfeld, Moses Fleming, Louis Fletcher, Arthur Foe 11, Earl Fraser, Charles'G. Freudenheim, Milton Frye, William Fulton, William Rossi, Mario XEROt riCOPY { w Country Press RejxLies Radio Replies Correspondents Yes Wo Correspondents Yes No Boyd, Jim United States Gabriel, Alexander (cont'd) Geary, Philip W. Gesmar, Renee Goldberg, Abraham I. Grant, Donald Gray, Kay Rainey Gruin, Frederick Hagan, Mary Halasz, Louis "V Hamilton, Thomas J. X Harrelson, . Max Harvey, C. D. Horne, Richard L. Horowitz, David . Howard, Charles P., Sr. Huss, Pierre Jhabvala, Darius Kaye, Joseph Mclaughlin, Kathleen > Mezerick, Avrahm * More, Alberto Morello, Theodore Munn, Bruce Murray, David Oatis, William Papanek, Jan Parry, John Rammel, Otto Rivlin, Morris Selz, Lucile Stevens, Georgina Teatsorth, Ralph Teltsch, Kathleen S. Velasco, Antonio Wallenberg, Peter J. Watts, Daniel H. . Wiener, Max Ward, Paul • ' . Republic of - Viet-Nam Dinh, Iran Van •/ Yugoslavia • Otovic, Andjetko,S. Tome, Egon Radojckic, Miroslav Kymcl, Karel Stajduhar, Rudolph Vrhovic, Josip F. Wieuwenhos, Willebrort Mbutu, Titus -• Orkut, Guntekin Korea, Rep. of Kong, Chang Ho

'HERO! f m COPY UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES —?• ^ INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM

TO: Ramses Nassif nata. 12 January 1965

THROUGH:

FROM: Audrey S. Langston ^

SUBJECT:

Associated Press; Walter Durkin, Picture Editor Jacob H arris, Photographer John Lindsay, Photographer

TTnited Press; Larry de Santis, Picture Editor Joel Landau, Photographer Edward Jerry, Photographer

France-Presset Sam Schulman, Picture Editor & Photographer

Hew York Times; Jehn Dugan, Picture Editor Patrick Burns, Photographer Sam Palk, Photographer

Hew York Herald Tribune,; . Ben Price, Picture Editor Ira Rosenberg, Photographer William Sauro, Photographer

Hew York Daily Hews; Arthur Siebelist, Picture Editor

Free-Lance Photographers; Leo Hosenthal, Pix George Rowen

Yutaka Hagata, United Nations Photographer

fXERO<} ' fxERO' /3COPYnov f •! ICOPY! Secretariat: C. V. Karasimhan. Jose Rolz-Bennett yfor. Ralph J- Bunche V^tr. C. A. Stavropoulos vfc. B. R. Turner v#lr. V. P. Suslov 'I/Mr. Philippe de Seyries yBr. Hernane Tavares de Sa 4Mr. Reinholdt Eriksen —Mr. Tiber Mende -^^Mr. George J. Janecek -AMr. Konstantin Smirnov -Mr. Norman Ho ^Jir. W. Gibson Parker -Mr. Osgood Caruthers -Mr. Cesar Ortiz-Tinoco J&-. J. Rajasooria Jir. G. Rizzo -«• Tin Aung AMr. V. J. G. Stavridi Maurice Liu David Exley Jean d'Arcy D. Ritchie M. Hayward . A. Langston Paul Stephen J. David Vaughan Vincent Donahue i_Mr. Rudolph Skeete -Mr. Kenneth Kelly —Mrs. Josephine Blacklock Ghislaine Mailloux Lalla Rookh Shelley —Mr. Victor McBarnette •^T3r. Ramses Wassif NMr. Earl Cahstil •* n3,5 ^Mr. Jiri Nosek ^General I. Rikhye $. -4William C. Povell

,XERO1 coprf W H- ro VQ

00 §CQ Mr*

Mr* * Mr.

,I^J&-. * H»B. Mr.

H.S. Monsieur Sons * * fhe jBec;retary»Qeneral

I.S, Mr. BarriugtOB * * H.E. Mr.

Mr* KiarasiBihan * Mr. Bunch®

Kr. Vuttfel SG luncheon - to bid farewell to H.E. Mr. Voeunsai Sonn, PR of Cambodia to the UN - Friday, 29 January 1965, 1.15_p.m., 58th

KH.E. Mr. VOeunsai Sonn yfl.E. Mr. James Harrington HET.E. Mr. Bohdan Lewandowski vIl.E. Mr. Paul Tremblay^*/, yH.E. Mr. Sori Coulibaly o-BatSr-likr, Rogooe Oeydoux • - Kioutch Vutthi . Mr. B. N. Chakravarty

Secretary-General C. V. Narasimhan Dr. Ralph J. Bunches?"Ml . V. P. Suslov &,lh . Jose Rolz-Bennett

cc: Don Protocol roi

t VJaJ Mr.

* 3§e. Harrar

E.E. Mr- Maaadou * H.S. Mr.

«j» Mr• *

* H.S. Mr* Mop

* iar* Buache

Mr. "Ward

#*# SG luncheon for H. E. Mr. Gabriel Marie d'Arboussier, Thursday, 28 January 19^5^ 1-15 p.m., 38th floor $ f t 6&'

v&.E. Mr. G. M. d'Arboussier . Mr. Ralph Enckell . Mr. Alex Quaison-Sackey * Champion Ward (Deputy Vice President^Int '1 Affairs, Ford Foundation) . J. George Harrar (President, RockefellerFoundation) IH.E. Mr. Ihomas Diop (Amb. of Senegal to Ghana - Member of Delegation to GA, y^B.E. Mr. Michel Gallin-Douathe (PR of Central African Republic)

The Secretary-General C. V. Barasimhan . Ralph J. Bunche , n ^Mr.'K. J, Amachree Vfir. V. P. Suslov . Philippe de Seynes Curtis Roosevelt The Rockefeller FoxincLation 111 WEST 50th STREET, NEW YORK 20

OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT CABLE: ROCKFOUND, NEW YORK TELEPHONE: co LUM B u s 5-810 o

January 25, 1965

Dear U Thant: I appreciate your letter of January 22, and I am looking forward to being with you at lunch on Thursday, January 23. It will be a pleasure to join you and your other guests on that occasion. I would like also to hear the lecture by Mr. Gabriel M. d'Arboussier, the Ambassador of Senegal to France, on January 29, but unfortunately I am scheduled to be in Washington that night and the following day. Therefore, it will be impossible for me to accept your thoughtful in- vitation. With best personal regards, Sincerely yours, JJM ijo"^ J. G. Harifer

The Honorable TJ Thant The Secretary-General United Nations New York, N.Y. JGHtls THE FORD FOUNDATION

477 MADISON AVENUE

N EW YORK 22, N. Y.

F. C. WARD DEPUTY VICE PRESIDENT INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS January 22, 1965

His Excellency U Thant Secretary General of the United Hations United Hations, New York

Dear Mr. Secretary General: This is in reply to your kind invitation of 21 January to attend a luncheon on January 28 and a lecture lay M. d'Arboussier on the 29th. I look forward with pleasure to both of these events.

With kindest regards,

S inc er ely '"your s ";

Champion Ward Me ft if Ifct s§r m 5T* 8- tt> ro

0- n> , Ifoask Br* Alvarez Tabi©

H.S, Hr, Jteianaa * * H.®. Mr

*

H.E« Mr. Jsaual * H.I. Mr. Mollfcita

Mr, de Sir Alexander Meulemeester JfeeFarquhsr Plan No, 2

Luncheon given by the Secretary-Gegieral 26 January 1965

Mr. Nosek Dr. Alvarez Tablo x x

H.E. Mr. Mouanza x H.E. Mr. Tanimcune

Mr. Harasimhan x x The Secretary~General

H.E.. Mr. Jamal x H.E. Mr. Mulikita

x x Mr. de Meulemeester Sir Alexiader MacFarquhar Plan No, 1

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General 26 January 1965

The Secretary-General X

H.B. M. Tanimoune x x H.E. Mr, Mullkita

H.E. Dr.'Alvarez Tabio x x Sir Alexander MacFarquhar

Mr. Nosek x Mr. de Meulemeester

H*E. Mr. Mouanaa x H.E. Mr. Jamal

Mr. Narasimhan SG- luncheon - Tuesday, 26 January 19^5 j> 1*15 38th floor

K-E.E. Dr. Fernando Alvarez Tabio, PR of Cuba •*f.E. Mr. F. M. Mulikita, PR of ZamMa 3&!,< HiJB* Mr. Aclikar Mai-of, Charge d^affaii-co Guinca- l^H.E. Mr. Jamal Mohamed Ahmed, PR of Sudan£&/) . Mr. Ary Taninoune, PR of BTiger &5)/ lAjifr) H.E. Mr. Jonas Mouanza, PR of Congo (Brazzaville) T y •*> The Secretary-General i •. Pierre de Meulemesster^/* C. V. Harasimhan z-frgf Sir Alexander MacFarquhar Jiri Nosek

o

cc: Don Protocol

ifertttla Ifct^j. Gen. B&raenfco # *

. favmres * Mr* Sarasiiohan *

* Kr. Gals Haze,

* 1.1. Mr.

UB,. Mr. feqfc^Xl *

S<&. le. Alv&ree * H.S. SF.

* ibp. Bunchfe

* Me* Sols-Bennett

* Me* lagere Sifehye Luncheon given by the Secretary-General 25 January 1965

Mr. Urrutia Maj.Gen. Sarmento x x

Dr. Tavares de S£ x Mr. Narasimhan

Mr. Heurtematte x |fr. Galo Plaza

K.E* Sr. Sette Camara x x H.E. Sr. Lleras Camargo

H.E. Mr. Enekall X X The Seeretarv*General

H.E. Dr. Alvarez x H.E.•%•. Zea Vidaurre

Mr. McCloy x Dr. Bunche

Dr. Prebisch x Mr. Rolz-Bennett

Mr. Engers Gen. Rikhye Luncheon given by the Secretary-General 25 January 1965

Dr. Tavares de S£ Mr. Franklin x x

Dr. Prebisch x X Dr. Bonche

Mr. McCloy x H.E. Mr. Ueras Cemargo

H.E. Mr. Bnckell x The Secretary-General

H.E. Dr. Alvarez x x H..B. Dr. Zea Vidaurre

Mr. Heurtematte x x Mr. Narasimhan

x Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Engers SG luncheon for H.E. Mr. Alberto Lleras Camargo, Monday, 25 January 19°5j 1-15 p.m., 38th floor

c-ffi.E. Mr. Alberto Lleras Camargo •H.E. Dr. German Zea **&. E. Dr Antonio Alvarez Vidaurre <-Mr. John J. Me Cloy 'jH.E. Mr. Alex Quaison-Sackey ^.E. Mr. Ralph Enckell The Secretary-General l^St. H. Tavares de Sa Mr. Jose Rolz -Bennett '•'Sir. J. F. Engers "Mr. C. V. Warasimhan Dr. Ralph J. Bunche Raul PreMsch Roberto Heurtematte regrets - Mr- George S. Franklin, Executive Director, Council on sick Foreign Relations Mr. Francisco Urrutia Major General S. Sarmento Major General I. J. Rikhye H.E. Mr. Jose Sette Camara Mr. Galo Plaza

\- cc: Don Protocol . •*• CTO/nt

3.6

suggestion of the 0oa2sltte& for the International €o~0p®ratioa I&az's I fear© inmtied seatsi pa?osaiBeat persons from diffeBSKfc p^rts of fcht woafld, each to deliver a lecture on tlie gemeraa. thasi® of iatesaational co-operations during tbe @a^2y Hoatbs of 19651, 33i« first speaker will be focmer B*esddfifl.-fc AJ3s$rto Slei^as CamaipgQ of Cblcasfeiaj ¥ho will an address on Moadsjr 35 Jansasy at 7 p.aa. la the hall, ?fe -srouia 'fee ^©fetSy h

tfith

U

1 Cfcase Ifeihattan

ec - Jife1. Engers Mr. ro H o\ VJ1

00 Mr* &araeimhan 15r. Buache

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Mr*

«l M •***.* *** -*St jt tJ T •Ju* «%£** #c^Jj@OGjtfit *t«J

* * Mr* Sagaov Sr." Bola-Beimett

. 11! I! SG luncheon - Thursday, 21 January 19&5, 1-15 P-m. 58th floor e! h

"H.E. Mr. Salvador P. Lopez "H.E. Mr. Policarpo Callejas •TI^E. Mr. Jphn W.S. Malecela •

Hie Secretary-General ''Mr. Pierre de Meulemesster ,"

cc: Don Protocol PDM/pr

Secretary-General^ Luncheon - Thursday, 21 January 1965 at 1.15 p.m. - ?8th Floor

Secretary-General X

H.E. Mr. Lopez X X H.E. Mr. Callejas

Dr. Bunche X X Mr. Rolz-Bennett

Mr. de Meulemeester X X Mr. Suslov

H.E. Dr. Pardo X HIE.'for./Malecela Mr. NSrasiinhan

Secretary-General's Reception for'General S. Sarmento, Commander designate, UMEF. on/2]PJanuary 6-7 pm. 38th Floor ?s %a^-.

.E. M. Jose Sette Camara BRAZIL/^- .E. M. Paul Tremblay CANADA ^H.E. Mr. Hans R. Tabor DENMARK v[H.E. Mr. B.N. Chakravarty INDIA -TRt? - -9$oo ikH.E. Mr. Sivert A. Nielsen NORWAY +-fa> ~ ez£ ^H.E. Mr. Sverker-C. Astrom SWEDEN ft- & - /c 3 6 \R.E. Mr. Danilo Lekic YUGOSLAVIA

^General of the Army Oswaldo de Araujo Motta

. C.V. Narasimhan C. Stavropoulos . Ralph J. Bunche B.R. Turner . J. Rolz-Betinett William McCaw i^ajor-General I.J. Rikhye John Birckhead * -s «. ? y . Marshall E. Williams Alexander MacFarquhar . C. Sivasankar H. Tavares de Sa . Grace Lodge *TMr. David B. Vaughan . Brian Urquhart Carey Seward -I *• f / Squadron-Leader D. Harrison George Lansky 4 o c~a I. Michelmore (UHRWA)^1 Mr. D. Sullivan (UNEF) if in town-

Col. V. S, de Guinzbourg '%% ^ ? ; . George J. Janecek ^ftr. Gibson Parker . 0. Car/uthers . Ramses Nassif

7** CURRICULUM VITAS - SUMMARY MaAor-General gyaeno S»mtejato

fto Scynthia CarneLro Sar»ento, Graduated from Raalengo (Brazilian Military Acadezny) in 1923. *" Prok there on clinked all steps in' the Military career, being promoted j t . to Brigadier-General on 25 November I960 and on 24 July 1964 to Major-General,

* • "* H General Sarmento has all regular courses in the Brazilian 'including the Coaaaand and General slaff Course and the Brazilian War College. i| . .- 1 ^ x ' ' . * In th« United States he "attended 'courses in the Infantry School, Fort % * JBenning* " , Georgi! a and Fort Jacksont , South Carolina'. ' f " H>J ^ As" a Ma^or, General Sarroento, coBaBanded an Infantry battalion of the Brazilian Ejtjseditionary Force in Italy during World War II. He won several citations for bravery and gallantry and was awarded the 1st Class Combat Cross (Brasil), the Bronze Star (USA) and the Cross of War Merit (Italy).

As a tt. Col,, he was Governor'of the State of Amazonas (Bb-asil). As ; Chief of Staff Armoured Division and Chef du Cabinet of the * flr«U - United States Military Commission. A a Brigadier-General, ha *_ ,v * I 8 - . was coaasander of the 2nd Mixed Brigade in the western Frontier and Chef du Cabinet of the Minister of War* .After his resent promotion he had been appointed GGC 4th Infantry Division*

General Sanasnto also holds the following decorations: Knight of the Order of Military Merit (Brazil) Knight of the Order of National Merit (Parsgu&M) War Medal (Brazil) N- f Campaign Medal (Brazil) Order of Merit Taoandare' (Navy - Brazil)

SG reception - to meet members of the Executive Committee, United Nations Correspondents Association (1965) - Friday, 15 January 65 38th floor S- 6/»•>"•

C.V. Narasimiian Jose Rolz-Bennett Italph J. Bunche Vladimir P. Suslov Hernane Tavares de Sa ¥. GLlDson Parker Jean D'Arcy George J. Janeoek ReirJioldt Eriksen Osgood Caruthers Eamses Massif

\O-*Q. ^" •Urc lunart

Lessiov

Hernando Samper David Eitchie CR.lR46i (4-59) ROUTING SLIP

Comments for the record should not be written on this slip. REFERRAL SHEET PT.108 should be used instead. TO:

>#x APPROVAL YOUR INFORMATION MAY WE CONFER? AS REQUESTED

YOUR SIGNATURE FOR ACTION NOTE AND FILE REPLY FOR MY SIGNATURE

NOTE AND RETURN PREPARE DRAFT YOUR COMMENTS ATTACH RELATED PAPERS

.*a -J

DATE: FRO! 6 January 1565

TO: SG

A note to remind you of the traditional small gathering for the new Executive Committee for UHCA. It would last for about an hour and might serve as a first step in renewing your direct contact with the press.

This would involve inviting all members of the Executive Committee (15) j 9 past presidents of UKCA; and some 10 Secretariat members.

Ramses Kassif UNITED NATIONS CORRESPONDENTS ASSOCIATION

UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK The Election Committee of the United Nations Correspondents Association hereby certified the results of the Membership Election of Officers held on December 8, 9 and 10, 1964. Elected: President Rudolf Stajduhar (Tanjug News Agency) First Vice President Milton B. Freudenheim (Chicago Daily News) Second Vice President G. Michael LittleJohns (Reuters) Third Vice President George C. Enninful (Ghana News Agency) Secretary Chakravarti Raghavan (Press Trust of India) Treasurer Kay Rainey Gray (Greenwich Time) Executive Committee Jean Cloutier (Radio Canada) Earl W. Foell (The Christian Science Monitor) Wieslaw Gomicki (Polish Press Agency) Serguei A. Lossev (TASS)

PAST F5ESIDEETS OF UECA William N. Oatis (The Associated Press) Max Beer Yasumasa Ota (Kyodo News Service) Francis ¥. Carpenter Pauline Frederick Kathleen Teltsch (The New York Times) -Thomas J. Hamilton Max Harrelson Anne Weill-Tuckerman (Agence France-Presse) l\Tohn MacVane Bruce W. Munn Anthony H. Wigan (British Broadcasting Co.) Georges R. Wolff i- Pierre Huss &r (T> O ES

a>fd ct - Protocol and Liaison

Luncheon in honour of H.E. Mr. Eisaku Sato Prime Minister of Japan 14 January 1965

Mr. Chiba Mr. Narasimhan Mr. Ushiba

Mr. Miki Mr. Hoffman

H.E. Mr. Harrington H.E. the Lord Caradon

Mr . Shimanouchi H.E. Mr. Quaison-Sackey

H.E. the Prime Minister 2. 3 The Secretary-General

H.E. Mr. Liu H.E. Dr. Fedorenko

H.E. Mr. Stevenson H.E. M. Seydoux

H.S. Mr. Matsui Dr. Bunche

Mr. de Meulemeester Mr. Kase Mr. Fukushima LUNCHEON

given in honour of

His Excellency MR. EISAKU SATO Prime Minister of Japan

by the

SECRETARY-GENERAL

on Thursday, 14 January 1965

at the

UNITED NATIONS HEADQUARTERS MENU

< c ? c- -A/ <~£...iL y La Galantine de Volatile a la Gelee au Madere

Le Grenadin de Veau Braise aux Endives

Les Salsifis au Beurre

Les Pommes Amandine

Le Cceur de Petite Laitue a I'Estragon

L'Orange Glacee Mafalda

Les Petits Fours Protocol and Liaise® 12 January 1965

GUESTS ATTENDING TH3 LUNCHEON IN HONOUR OF H.B. MR.filSAJO I SATO, PRIMS SINISTER OF JAPAN ON 14 JANUARY 1965

The Secretary-General

H.E* Mr. Eisaku Sato Prime Minister of Japan

Mr. Takeo Mild Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party Mr. NobuhikQ Ushiba Deputy Vics-Miniafcer, Ministry of Foreign Affairs H.E. Mr, Aldra Matsui Pemeaasni Reprsssntafcive to the United Nations H.JB. Mr. Koh Ghiba Deputy Fesmansnt iiepresentatixr© to the United Nations MSP. Toshikaau Kas©

S-b*0 Shintaro Ftikushisa Representative to the 19th Session of the General Assembly Mr. Toshiro Shimanouchi Consul Gessral^ Los Angeles (Interpreter)

President of the General Assembler H»E« Mr. Liu President of tho Security Council

Hspresentati^e of France on the Security

H.B. Br, N,,T0 Fedorenko Representative of the USSR on the Security Cosmei"*. H,E« the Et.Hon. the Lord Caradon Reprsssntative of the United Kixjgdom on the Security Council HeE, Mr. Adlai E, Stevenson Representative of the United States on the Security Council

H»E» Mr0 Jaass Harrington Chairaan of th© Afro-Asian Group for January (Burma) I * Dr» Ralph J8 Bunche Unier-Seereiary for Special Political Affairs

Mr. Paul GO Hoffsan Managing Directors, United Nations Special Fund Mr. C.V* Karaaiiahan Un-ier-Seeffetargr for General Asseiably Affairs and Ch@f ds Cabinet of the i'Sr. Pierre de Chief of Protocol Protocol and Liaison 12 January 1965

PROGRAMME FOR THE VISIT OF H0S» MR. EISAKU SATO PRIME MINISTER OF JAPAM TO HEADQUARTERS OK 14 JANUAfll 19&5

H.E0 S4r« SlsaL

The- Prims Minister vdll be accompanied by H«ii0 Mpu Akira Permanent itsprssent-ative to the United Nations s Mr. Takso Miki,, Secretary -General of the Liberal Democratic Party,,, f!r. Nobuhiko U&'iiba, Deputy ?ice-Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. TosM.ro Shimanouchi., Consul General in Los Angeles0 TiV3 Chief of Protocol will escort, the official pariy by spsrifl elf-: vat or to the 3Sth floor e The Sacrotar-y-Gssisral vdll receive the Prime Minister are* the ssstrabers of bis paj'ty at the elevators on tha ^Sth floor ruicl escor-t them into the conference roos.

12U50 pcia, Th-3 photographorsy previaisly asseable-d In tho confer-'nee rooar,.. vrf.ll be allovssd to take the official photograph of t':a Prims Minister and the Secretary-General, 12«53 p.uic, The Secrctasy-General vdll invite the PrijEe Minister and the meinbesrs of his party into his office for a private cosiversation.

1U10 pum0 The guests invited to the luncheon in honour o''. the Prime Minister vdll arrive in the Secretary-General » s conferaice room on the 38th floor. 1*15 p.nu The Prime Minister, escorted by the Secretary-Generals will meat tho guests invited to the luncheona

Io30 p»m0 Luncheon vdll be served.

2«30 pura0 The Prims Minister mil tak© leave of th'i guests in the conference room on the 38th floor « Tha Secretary-General will escort the ?riiss Minister to the el3T3.iors on tJie 38th floors whero th#; Prime Minister snd the msabsrs of his party will take lea-tf© of the Sacretaxy-Gsasrsil. 2o35 Pom. The Prime Minister and his party,, escorted by the Chief of Protocols, mil go by special elevator down to the second floor ?.nd into the South louRge to meet the Secretariat staff membsra of Japanese nationality » 2o40 p»Kic The Chief of Protocol will escort the Prime Minister and the sasmbsrs of his party back to the elevators on the second floor pad down to the Secretariat entrance, from where the party will le»ve Headquarters. U KITED KATIO'NS ?rer.s Services Office of Public Information United Eations, H.Y. (FOR USE OF INPOEMA.TIOK MEDIA — KOT AK OFFICIAL RECORD)

Note Ho. 301*3 13 January

KOTE TO CORRESPONDENTS

The Prime Minister of Japan, Eisaiiu Sato, will visit United Nations Headquarters tomorrow, Thursday, 14 January, when he will meet with the Secretary-General, U Xhant. The Prime Minister and Ms party will arrive at the United fiations Secretariat at 12:45 p.m., when he will be met by the Chief of Protocol, Pierre de Meulem-3.ester. He will be officially received inside the building on the 38th floor by tjae Secretary-General, who vill then escort him to his office for a private conversation. Accompanying the 'Prime Minister will be: Akira Matsui, Permanent Representative to the United Nations; Takeo Mild., Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party; Kobuhiko Ushiba, Deputy Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs; and Toshiro Shimanouchi, Consul General in Los Angeles. The Prime Minister of Japan will be guest of honour at a luncheon given by the Secretary-General at 1:30 p.m., and will later meet Secretariat staff members of Japanese nationality in the South Lounge. Fo3.1owing this meeting, the Prime Minister and his party will leave United Nations Headquarters at 2:40 p.m.

* t

Note on the visit of Prime Minister Eisaku Sato of Japan to Headquarters. 14 January 1965.

Background, of Mr. Sato 1. Prime Minister Eisaku Sato was born in Yamaguchi Prefecture in the western part of Japan 63 years ago. He is the younger brother of Mr. Kishi, a former Prime Minister. After serving as Vice-Minister of Transportation, Mr. Sato became Chief Cabinet Secretary for Prime Minister Toshida in 194#. He has been elected to the House of Representatives seven times since 1949* He served as Post and Telecommunications Minister and Construction Minister in the Yoshida Cabinet, Finance Minister in the Kishi Cabinet and as Minister of International Trade and Industry and Minister of State in the Ikeda Cabinet, He also occupied several key posts in the ruling Liberal-Democratic Party. His Premiership 2. He is a comparative novice to premiership, having assumed the post on 9 November last year after defeating two rivals within the Liberal-Democratic Party. Since becoming the Prime Minister, he has emphasized that Japan should play a more active and enhanced role in international affairs in view of its great industrial power. He has especially stressed the importance of Japan's role in Asia. In his latest address to the Diet, he stated that the keynote of Japan's foreign policy was to maintain and promote its relations with the United States on the basis of the U.S.-Japanese Security Treaty. He added, however, that a true prosperity cannot be brought about without the solution of the North-South problem, namely, the question of economic development of under-developed countries. On the United Nations Mr. Sato said that it should play the "leading role in facilitating comprehensive and orderly solution of the major problems of the world" and that he intended to "make efforts so that Japan may make more positive contributions to the cause of preserving world peace in the arena of the United Nations". Japan's interest in the Indonesia-jy[alaysi,a question 3. Indonesia's withdrawal from the United Nations may be a subject of great interest to Mr. Sato. Soon after the announcement by President Sukarno on 1 January, there was an exchange of correspondence between President Sukarno and Mr, Sato, the latter urging him to reconsider the withdrawal. The Japanese -2-

Ambassador in Jakarta saw President Sukarno several times. A special emissary from Tokyo to Jakarta is now under consideration. By carefully refraining from taking sides in the Indonesia^Malaysia dispute, Japan has attempted to mediate in their conflict. Mr, Sato may well be interested in exchanging opinions with the Secretary-General on the modalities of mediating the dispute between Indonesia and Malaysia. Japan and Chinese representation 4. Japan has been very interested in the question of Chinese representation at the United Nations. So far, it has opposed the change of representation to the Government of the People's Republic of China. Since 1961, Japan has considered that this question is "important11 under Article 18 of the Charter and, therefore, is subject to a two-thirds majority rather than a simple majority. It is likely to continue this policy, although it is in favour of promoting vigorous trade and cultural exchange with mainland China on a non-governmental basis. Japan is deeply concerned over the impact of the Chinese nuclear explosion of 16 October 1964. Mr. Shiina, Japanese Foreign Minister, during the general debate in the General Assembly on 4 December 1964, criticized the Chinese test as "an open betrayal of the earnest hope and desire for peace" of many people in the world. He added that Japan is opposed to any nuclear weapons testing by any country. In the same speech, Mr. Shiina referred to the Secretary-General's suggestion of a dialogue among the five nuclear powers and said that this merits a very careful consideration, and that it might be expected to make a substantial contribu- tion to the progress of negotiations on disarmament. By recognizing the Nationalist Government on Taiwan and having considerable trade with it, Japan finds itself in a dilemma in dealing with the Chinese question. It is somewhat critical of the rigidity of American policy towards China as well as towards Vietnam, preferring an Asian approach to these questions, but seems unable to offer concrete alternatives. Japan and United Nations peace-keeping 5. Japan has expressed its support for the strengthening of the United Nations in its peace-keeping role. Pending the establishment of UN Forces based on Article 43 of the Charter, Japan feels that the United Nations should be equipped with a peace-keeping machinery able to deal effectively with all situations with which it is confronted. It has thus welcomed the -3-

moves made by Canada, the Wordic countries and the Netherlands to establish stand-by forces for the United Nations. It has consistently supported United Nations peace-keeping operations by making financial contributions. It finds itself, however, unable to make a commitment of contingents now, because of its post-war Constitution which prohibits the possession of war potential and also because of the generally pacifist and isolationist sentiment within the country. p- o tJ" CD VNI

OS'JO VJ1 CQ I VM f Mr.

* We

H.S« Mr* Quatson- * SG luncheon - Wednesday 13 January 1965

( Vwab. Quaison-Sackey ^ The Secretary-General J Mr. CV Narasimhan & Dr. R.J. Bunche jr Mr. J. Rolz-Bennett 6 Mr. C. Stavropoulos Mr. B. Turner

./

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* Mis Boffssaa SG luncheons for Executive Secretaries of the Economic Commissions - Tuesday, 12 January 19^5^ 1-15 P-m- 38th floor

Nyun - ECAFE . J. A. Mayobre - ECIA . V. Velebit - ECE . Robert Gardiner - EGA

. P. de Seynes . Victor Hoo ^ Mr. I. H. Abdel-i >) Mr. Paul G. Hoffman «4 Mr. David Owen

Protocol and Liaison 20 December 1965

Guests invited to the reception given in honour of the Mayor of the City of New York and Mrs. Robert Wagner on. .Thursday. 23 Dedember 1965

Jt, The Mayor and Mrs. Wagner f The Deputy Mayor and Mrs. Cavanagh (T II.'E'i—bhe-~£g_rmanent Representative__o£-bluu USS. Ayvt/ ^ *t- and-lii-j .Goldberg' " /*' /" Commissioner and Mrs. Richard Patterson /o Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Benjamin /'i- Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bowling /t- Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Cordier /& H.E. the Deputy Permanent Representative of the USA and Mrs. lost II- Mrs. Albert Lasker / ? Dr. and Mrs. Bunche *-( Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman i3Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan •2- f Mr. and Sirs. Rolz-Bennett ^ Mr. Narasimhan x ^ Miss Henderson %f Mr. de Meulemeester /UvO. YXtv^oA ^^ Mr. James Fordyce (Mrs. Lasker's nephew;

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X Protocol b Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Thursday, 23 DeceEfoer 1965 at 1:15 P»EU, 38th floor W If • * rO1 5TK

Mr H*B» Mp* Tarabanov

H*E» Mr* Pashwak H«E» Mp* Lopes

B«E» CMsf Adebo

H«E« Br« Paehachi The Secretary'»5enera3.

H*B. Jlr. EL-Farra H«S« Mr* Cuevas Canclno

j H«E« the Eb*Hon. Lord Caradon

Or* Bunehe H»E« !%•• Baroody

S? SG luncheon to bid farewell to H.E. Dr. Moan M. Pachachi, Iraq. Thursday, 25 December 19^5, 1*15 p.m., 58th floor v yes Mb. Paohachi v/ yes Lord Caradon - UK no Ambi— Nielsen——Norwa y (leaving for Norway on 22 Dec.) no AnbT-tewandewski — PelaH.3 \/ yes Amb. Baroody - Saudi Arabia v/ yes Amb. Tesfaye - Ethiopia -/ yes Amb. Pazhwak - Afghanistan ,/ yes Amb. Lopez - IMlippines ^/ yes Amb. Adebo - Nigeria ^/ yes Amb. Tarabanov - Bulgaria no Aritr r -Beleconde -* -Peru ^/ yes Amb. El-Kony - UAR t/ yes Mb. El-Farra - Jordan y yes Mb. Cuevas Cancino - Mexico

The Secretary-General \/ yes Dr. Bunche ^ yes Mr. Rolz-Bennett i/ yes Mr. Machree y/ yes Mr. Nosek /yes Mr. de Seynes / yes Mr. de Meulemeester

18

cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Don n ro if ru X U p> vn CD i ,'K-

MgdLaMs. x ' x 32r« i» Bsutista at

SSr* Jeaa

a: & Miss iianimh

. ItoMa *„

Mr. SG luncheon to bid farewell to Mr. Leo Malania, Wednesday, 22 December 1965^, 1.15 p.m.. 38th floor ... .. /

Mr. Leo Malania

The Secretary-General . Warasimhan Dr. Bunche Mr. Rolz-Bennett Stavropoulos

. Rene* Lavlgne

,/Mrs. Grace Lodge /Mrs. Isabel Bautista Miss Doreen Geary Hannah Platz . Jean Gazarian ,/Mrs. Estella Mira I/Mr. Robin Miller iXMiss Charlotte Carpenter /Mr. Donald Ihomas

16

cc: Don UNITED NATION'S $&E$ NATIONS UNIES

NEW YORK

EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY-GENERAL

CABINET DU SECRETAIRE GENERAL J

J^tlAV^i-j A-tfUcct* & ffl.

ICD (0

I H S

,01 luncheon given by the Secretary-General in honour of H.E. The Rt. Hon. Harold Wilson, M.P. Prime Minister of the United Kingdom on 16 December 1965

i! Sir Burke Trend Mr. Rola-Bennett Mr. Lloyd Hughes J

i. Sir Roger Jackling x x Mr. Narasimhan

Sir Alexander MacFarquhar x x H.E. Mr. Shaw

H.E. Dr. Fedorenko x H.E. M. Fanfani

H.E. The Rt.Hon. Harold WilsonX X The Secretary-General

i. M. Seydoux x H.E. Lord Caradon

Dr. Bunche x Mr. Amachree

Mr. Owen x H.E. Mr. Yost

X X X Mr. Mitchell Mr. de Meulemeester Mr. Wright Luncheon given by the Secretary-General in honour of H.E. The Rt. Hon. Harold Wilson, M.P. on 16 December 1965

The Secretary-General H.E. The Rt. Hon. Harold Wilson, M.P. H.E. Lord Caradon H.E. Sir Roger Jackling Sir Burke Trend, Secretary of the Cabinet Mr. D.J. Mitchell, Principal private secretary Mr. J.O. Wright, Private secretary (Foreign affairs) Mr. P. Lloyd Hughes, Press Secretary H.E. M. Amintore Fanfani H.E. M. Roger Seydoux H.E. Dr. W.T. Fedorenko H.E. Mr. G.W. Yost H.E. Mr. Patrick Shaw

Mr. Amachree Dr. Bunche Sir Alexander MacFarquhar Mr. Narasimhan Mr. Owen Mr. Rolz-Bennett

Mr. de Meulemeester Total 20 Sublets Visit of lU^ The Eft. Hon. Harold Wilson5 M.P». .JJ-6

• Several departments of tha Secretariat have inquired from this office fjiat. avrangemsnfcs visra bsisig HEde for the visit of the Prims Minister of the United Kingdom to Headquarters on Tliurscaay,,, 16 December 1965 = Since this visit has esveral pspacfcs and differs from other* visits we have had in the past^ it has not been possible to draw up the usual prograss However $ Tor joie1 infoncation I am lislvixig balo>y ths iimes and items of the prpgrarams iwhich I have been advised about „

10r45 a .So Arrival of feh^aPpim s MiRisfeer at the Delsgatss' Qiitrance. He ba a}st by the Chief of Protocols t'.feo vdll escort him by spseial from the Delegates3 entrance to GA-20Q« The POISES Miniate? id.ll call on the President of the Gsmeral Asseaibly in his officos behind the podium,,

11«00 s.,ma The P^ime Minister t-dll address the plenary i^@ting of the

Ho 30tt .a. - «> 12040 p.m.. The Prims Minister's activities are untoovm and the United Kingdom Mission has informed Protocol that the Prims Minister would rnske up his mind upon arriving in the building. 12o40 porno The Chief of Protocol will sasat the Prims Minister, the United Kingdom Permanent Representative? Sir Sarke Trend, Secretrrv of the Cabinet,, Mr0 D0J0 Mitchell^ Principal privr-te secretary, snd Mb?o JoOo Wright, private sses-etary ( for foreign affairs), in the South Lounge and escort thess by spseial elevator to tha 38th floor< _ .«^ The Seerstarj-Gsnsral vdll sr^et th© Prl'as Ministor at the elevators on the 3@fch floor, and escort him into his conference room, ^ier® the official photograph will b© taken.

p.m0 The Prints Minister ant! his parij idll have a priv?te conversation the Secretarj=General,

p«KS0 The Saeratary-Gsneral will eacort the Prims Minister into his conference room., whsre the guests in\d.ted to the luncheon will have assembled

1«30 p0mc Lunohson will be served. t - 2 r

Tii-? rrirsc Miuist1;^ •?:O.l ^-afe lo.vxs of ":hx gwas^s aitanding

Tils Ssorofep-i^'-Gen^rsl t-.dll ecocar* the Prims Minister to ths sloxratcifs oa the 3»5vh flooE»n whors be will take leave of ths

2ho Cltlef of Ppotoeol id.ll escort the Prims Minister bgr special ios1 down to the ground floor.

p0aio Tils PsdJES Minisfeor t-jill leave Ksadqi^rters by the Secretariat entrance «,

Ths United Kisigdewa has bssn asteKl t?heth@£> the Pricvs Mizslstef visa contemplaiii^g holding a prsss eossfersace T?hil@ at Hsadquartsrs« Ws bsen iffifonaed that he ^sould spaak to the press at ths airport upon arrival and that no ps.°ass eoisfersnss tss goiag to be held-at Headqusrtsrs0

President of tha Gensral Assembly All Under-Sacrefcaries Mr, Lsadetuc Mr. Cosgrotra OPI: I4r. Pencil «p. Klein Mr. Michols Dip. Ortia Mro Rizao Mr. Uu feo ¥an Name Mrs. UNITED KINGDOM MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS 845 THIRD AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y. (1633/154/65) 10 December, 1965.

I have now had confirmation from London of the arrangements for the visit of my Prime Minister, The Rt. Hon. Harold Wilson, P.C., O.B.E., M.P., to the United Nations on 16 December. I know that the Prime Minister is greatly looking forward to the lunch which you are so kindly giving for him, and to calling on you half an hour before the lunch, as you suggested. I enclose, for your information, a copy of the Prime Minister's programme. Mr. Youde has written separately to Mr. de Meulemeester, giving him additional details.

(Caradon)

His Excellency U Thant, Secretary-General, United Nations, New York. PROGRAMME OF VISIT OF THE RT. HON. HAROLD WILSON,

p.o.to.B.E., M.P. TO THE UNITED NATIONS

15 December 19.30 Arrive John F. Kennedy International Airport "by RAF Comet. Proceed direct f to hotel ( Waldorf-Astoria ). 16 December

Arrive at Delegate's Entrance, U.N. Building. 10.45 Call on President of the General Assembly, Mr. Amintore Fanfani, in the President's office at the General Assembly. 11.00 Address the General Assembly. 12.45 Call on the Secretary-General at the

Secretary-General's office0 Secretary-General's lunch for the Prime Minister,,

A- 5 (approx,) Leave the U.N. for John F0 Kennedy Airport, 15.30 Take off from John Fo Kennedy Airport for Washington* in

-ft X mm h> List Ceremony for Receiving Ford Foundation Cheque for UMS

The Ford Foundation - 477 Madison Avenue, New York 22, SF.Y. Board of [Trustees

J. McCloy, Chairman Dcwid, Vice CBatrman Ford II /Henry T. Heald, President V Julius A. Stratton M. Webster Program Staff l/Shepard Stone, Director, International Affairs y Joseph E. Slater, Associate Director, International Affairs J Stanley T. Gordon, Program Associate, " " Frank Bowles, Director, Education Edward J. Meade, Jr., Program Associate, Education Gores, Educational Facilities Laboratory /Cyril Sargeant, Consultant - City of New York / efU. Hon. Robert Wagner, ^yua^^v, ^J^ "0 /t//^^ V(A>K ,/ Mrs. Eleanor Clark French " ' / United States Mission \/ H.E. Mr. Arthur J. Goldberg ,/ V Others in U.S. Mission? (Albert F. Bender, Jr., Wilbur H. Ziehl?) United Nations OTIS Board of Trustees (see attached list) VDavid Vaughan V/S.-S1: Brodnaz i/Miss Anne Toncich Esmond Van Name A.

Others Furi'fcmi. fee4ea - Allen & Murden, Inc., 39 E. 51st St., H.Y. 22 Desmond Cole (see UMS Board list) UEITEB NATIONS INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL BOARD OP TRUSTEES 1965/66

es Julia Hend«rson8 Chairman Mr0 Irsbad H0 Baqai 2727 , erfeo 2941* Rooa 35408 eato 2520

Sir Ale?? nder HaeEarqubar^ Viee^Chairtaaa 0 Philippe de Seynes Room 36^9 »xto 2181 Room 2925,, eajto 161

•v/Mr6 B7'«J© R« Turner 0 Vice=Chainaan Murray Juhraan Rooai /T27, exto 2866 Room 820, exte 3883

V Mis Karen Peter sen 9 Treasurer Nofftom 3763, eztc 3851 Roora 3&&, erfeo 683 CJ-tJrVi&Js . Bwlley MadawalSj, Secretary ^/ Mr0 Raymond Rodriguez 2F53* axto 2858 Room 2343*, exto 2977 Vice-chairmen Walker Stuart 101 Central Park >/H' e Apishid Al-Rashid New York 239 N0 Y6 rSsacnt Representative of the State of H. 6-4396 (Business)P EN 2-9143 Kuwait t@ the United Nations 135 East 42nd Stog 27th floor V Mr0 Shukri Salaaeh Sew York, No Y, 10017 - MU 7=8284 Room 36339 extc 2831 Mr. H.Y. Sung F» HO Coraez- 7'ermanent Representative of Haw Room 1171, ext. 3440 to the United Nations Jireotor of School 733 Third Avenue9 22nd floor New Tork, Mo Y 1001? - TS 7=2233 0 United Nations International School \/H»E. Mr0 Bohd&n Lewandowaki 1311 KLrst Avenue Permanent Representative of the Polish New York 219 LU Y0 People's Republic to the United Nations YU 8=5110 9 East 66th Street Ne*JC0rk a, No Y. -EH 4.2506 Legal Counsel Gottlieb, & Hamilton to the 144 East 44 York

ruBUUUliva -v£ Jranee 'to the United Nations 4 East 79*h Street, Harrison 630 Sew York 21, EUY0 - RE 4-6031 CO \/Hon<, Mro Tor® Tsllretfe Consul General of Swedaa 61 Eo 64th Strsst York a, No Yo - IB 7-7300 .E. Chief S.O. Adebo, C.M.G. Permanent Eep. of Nigeria to the United Nations "Unless otherwise indicated^ eddraes is Uaitad 1 pfeons PLaaa 4-1234 t-.:':^ \

UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES

INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM MEMORANDUM INTERIEUR

TO: DATE: 8 December 1965 A: , Mr. C. V. Uarasimhan Chef de Cabinet;.

THROUGH: S/C DE:

T1. „ . „. . A^-A-, FROM: Julia Henderson, Ohairaafc"> (Bic1.a1}ed but not DE: Board of Trustees, UMS x

SUBJECT: OBJET: Ceremony for Receiving Ford Foundation Cheque for U1IS

1. As I mentioned to you on the telephone, Mr. Stone has informed me that they are ready to receive the Secretary-General's letter (this has now been delivered),and they will immediately send the reply which is already draftedt, In light of changes in top foundation personnel, they would like to finish this business as soon as possible and therefore are ready to deliver the cheque at an early date« • 2. When I asked Mr. Stone about Board members and officers of the Foundation who should be invited to attend the ceremony, he suggested the following list: Ford From the/Board; Mr. John J. MeCloy, Dr. Julius A. Stratton, Mr. Bethuel M. Webster (I wonder if we would not like to add Henry Ford II to this list in light of his personal pledge in addition to the Foundation pledge)

IJrom the Ford Messrs Henry T. Heald, Joseph E. Slater, Officers: Stanley T. Gordon, Frank Bowles, Cyril Sargeant, Edward J. Meade, Jr. and Dr. Harold Gores (latarally, we should include Mr. Shepard Stone.)

3. From the United Nations aide, I assume the Secretary-General will wish to invite the members of the Soard of the School, who are all named on the attached letterhead with the exception of Chief Adebo, who will be confirmed by the Board of Trustees within a few days. I assume you will also wish to invite the Director of the School, Mr. Desmond Cole. 4. It would also seea useful to invite the Mayor of the City and Mrs. Eleanor Clark French, who have played so large a part in arranging for the lease of the property at 25th St», and Ambassador Goldberg and one or two other members of the U.S. Mission, who have played an important part both in the Ford grant and in the arrangements for the new site might be invitedo 1__.J AdOO \OU3XJ

There may of course be other 'senior officials whom you will wish to include who are not now on the BoarcU Beyond doubt, Dr. Bunche has played an important role both in the Ford grant and in the action of the City0 5. Since the early investment of the $7'|" million is important to the School funds from many points of view, I suggest that the Secretary- General may wish to arrange a late afternoon reception at the earliest possible date* Mr, Stone suggests that if possible, you or I should call him with alternative dates that he could check with Mr<> Healdo From a practical point of view, I suppose this could not take place earlier than .-. Monday or Tuesday0 9 Dec

SG.

This is the list submitted by Julia Henderson. Do you wish it £f4aT5:30 to 6i3Q. 10 Dec. 1965 Mr. Narasimhan: The attached is the list for the Ford Foundation reception on Tuesday, 14 Dec., as sent by Miss Henderson.

em

^

» t W o 8"

OS

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on Tuesday, 14 December 1965

Mr. Lessiovski Dr. Bunche

~ '"X''

I Mr. Mesterenko Ix H i'E.; Dr.. Pachachi

Mr. Kiselev X! The Secretary-General

H.E. Mr. Lekic 4 x Mr. Tchernouchtchenko

Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Nosek SG luncheon for Foreign Minister Kiselev - Byelorussian SSR, Tuesday, 2h December 1965* 1.15 P.PU, 38th floor v H.E. Mr. K. V. Kiselev Mr* G.C. Tchernouchtchenko ,E. Mr. Danilo Lekic - Yugoslavia / H.E, Dr. Adnan Pachachi - Iraq. H»E,-iteefesee3?-MaH£3?ea-iaelie---;Pelea€l, left NY

Secretary-General

r« Bunche v/Mr. Rolz -Bennett tX Mr. Hesterenko 4/ Mr. Nosek /Mr. Lessiovski

10

cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Don I ttOf; B

CD 22 Beeembar

% dear .Ambassador, I thank yoa for your kind letter of today *s date which £ received along vith the beautiful gift from the I'resident of Pakistan* Heaee convey imp siassere aj>preeiation and gratitude to the President for his thoughtfulness and also u§r t)est wishes to Mis for a vary Sappy Be» fear* Tfoars

Skeelleney %ed Ja^ael Bepresentatlve of Pakistan Ibp the flfeited Hatiozis Pakistan louse 8 Ea^t 65th Street Jbw lorfc, Kew York

PAKISTAN MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS PAKISTAN HOUSE 8 EAST 65T_H STREET NEW YORK 2 I, N . Y.

22 December 1965.

My dear Secretary-General,

I am desired by the President of Pakistan, Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan, to send you a small gift as a token of his appreciation for the courtesies and hospitality that you kindly extended to him on the occasion of his visit to the United Nations on 13th December, 1965-. and to convey to you his best wishes for a very happy New Year. I avail myself of this opportunity to also extend my own personal good wishes to you for the coming year.

Yours sincerely,

(Syed Amjad Ali)

His Excellency U Thant, Secretary-General United Nations New York NY Luncheon given by the Secretary-General in honour of H.E. Mohammad Ayub Khan j President of Pakistan ; on 13 December 1965

Mr. Aziz Ahmed Mr. Nesterenko Mr. Gauhar x x

Mr. Amacbree x H.E. Mr, Ghulam Ahmed

; • • f. H.E. Syed Amjad All x x H.E* lord Caradon

H.E. Dr. Pedorenko x H.E. M. Fanfani

H.E'. Mohammad Ayub IQian X X The Secretary-General

H.E. M. Seydcraac x H.E. Mr. Zulfikar All Bhutto

E. Mr. Faruque x H.E. Mr. Goldberg

Mr. Hoffiaan x Dr. Bunche

xxx Mr. de Heulemaester Mr. Rolz-Bennett Brig. Rafi Khan Luncheon on 13 December 1965 in honour of H.E. the President of Pakistan

The Secretary-General H.E. Mohammad Ayub Khan, President of Pakistan H.E. Mr. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, minister for Foreign Affairs H.E. Mr. Ghulam Faruque, Minister of Commerce H.E. Syed Amjad Ali, Permanent Representative H.E. Mr. Ghulam. Ahmed, Ambassador to the USA Mr. Aziz Ahmed, Foreign Secretary- Mr. Altaf Gauhar, Secretary of Information Brigadier Mohammed Rafi Khan, Military Aide

H.E. M. Amintore Fanfani H.E. M. Roger Seydoux H.E. Dr. N.T. Fedorenko H.E. Lord Caradon H.E. Mr. Arthur Goldberg

Dr. Bunche Mr. Hoffman Mr. Amachree Mr. Nesterenko Mr. Holz-Bennett

Mr. de Meulemeester Total 20 Protocol and liaison 9 December 1965

PROSRMMB FOH THE mix OP H.& MOHAMAD Aiua KHAN, PRESIDENT CF THE REPUBUi; Uir rAKlSTAN, . TO TIM UNITED NATIONS OK MOHDAI, 13 DECEMBER 3.965

12055 P»5ft« H,,E0 Mohammad Ayub Khan, President of the Republic of Pakistan, : accompanied by H.Bo Mr<> Zulfikar All Bhutto,, Minister for Foreign ! Affairsj and H0E0 Sjad Aiajad Alij, Permanent Representative,; will . arrive at th© Seerstariat entraaca^ Viiisx's the President id.ll be greeted outside the building by Mr* Pierre de Meiilemeestepj Chief of Protecolj, and officially received inside the building by the Secretarjr-Generalo The . Secretary-General will escort the Presidential party to the 38th floor and into his offies0 loOO p0m0 The President and the Seeretary-Genssral vdll hold a private ; conversation <»

1015 D»m, Tha Secr©tary=G<3neral will escort the President into the Conference lioom y^ere the guests invited to ths luncheon premously.,- .

1«30 poitt0 laincheon idill be servecU

2^30 p0m0 The guests vjill take lea^e of the President aM the Secretary- General. The Secretary-General will escort the President into his office to enable the photographers to take the usual photograph,, 2o35 P«H»O Ths Sseretarj-General %dll take lea^e of the President at the elevators on the 38th floor a

Escorted by the Chief of Protocols the President will go by special elevator down to 1=B and along the concourse and the neck to Conference Hoom k9 where he will be received outside the Conference Room by the Chairman of the Afro=Asian Group*, ths Permanent Representative of Ethiopia 0

2o40 poia0 The President will meet the members of the Afro=Asian Group in Conference Room 4«

3oOO p0ra. The President will leavs Conference tioom 4 and go by special elevator to GA-200 ys£ ore aidrsssine the olsnas-r lEseting of th@ A V, I

I;!.-"- Pr-ysid^it vdll biv j'sc^ivod by i-hs President of •:h-- Gcanejral Assembly, in his office., 13 'p/-!.. Tiw pler-avy rssatii'^- o:r t-ha G-snsr&J. Assembly lp-'.ng bes called to order's tris j";.'esidoMt -.-jiH deliver his ;

i; p»iftu Upofl conclusion of t-he President s addrss3£ the President of ihs Gemral Assembly and the Secretary-General vdll escort the President f?oa the tjcdium to the offices in GA-200c President vdll fcalco leave of the Presideait of th® Genera! Asaerably outside tho elevator's behind GA=2000 Secret ary^Gsneral ^ri.ll escort- ths President, by spasial elevator from GA-200 fco ths ground floor 0 PresidGat will leave the United Nations Headquarters by the Delegates0 entrance,, UNITED NATIONS Press Services Office of Public Information United Nations, Bf.T. (FOR USE OF INFORMATION MEDIA — NOT AN OFFICIAL RECORD)

Note Bb. 3250 10 December 1965

NOTE TO CORRESPONDENTS

Mohammed Ayub Khan, President of the Republic .of Pakistan, will visit United Nations Headquarters on Monday, 13 December, to meet with the Secretary- General, U Thant, and address the General Assembly. President Ayub will be accompanied by Zulfikar All Bhutto, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Pakistan, and Syed Amjad Ali, Permanent Representative to the United Nations, The President and his party will arrive at the Secretariat entrance at 12:55 P-ra., where he will be greeted outside the building by Pierre de Meulezneester, Chief of Protocol, and inside the "building by the Secretary- General . The President and the Secretary-General will hold a private conversation in the latter's office on the thirty-eighth floor, from 1:00 to 1:15 P«m. The Pakistani President will then attend a luncheon given in his honour by the Secretary-General. At 2:^0 p.m., President Ayub will meet the members of the African-Asian Group in Conference Room U, where he will be greeted by the Chairman of the Group, Tesfaye Gebre-Egzy, Permanent Representative of Ethiopia. At 3:15 p.m. the President of Pakistan will address a plenary meeting of the General Assembly. He will leave United Nations Headquarters at 3:^-5 p.m.> through the Delegates' Entrance.

' 9 December 1965 RECEPTION v" MASTER GUEST LIST HUMAN RIGHTS DAY CELEBRATION 10 December 1965

Secretary General President of the General Assembly H.E. Mr. Salvadore Lopez H.E. Mr. .Guevas-Cancino and Mrs. Cuevas-Cancino Mr. and'Mrs. Robert S. Benjamin (UN Association of the USA) Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Krim (UN Association of the USA) Mr. Sidney Poitier (Narrator) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Merrill (Soloist) Mr, and Mrs. K. Weinhold (President, Columbia Artist) Manitas de Plata (Guitarist) Mr. Jose Reyes (Cantaor) Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Clergue (Manager) Mr. Thomas Thompson (Vice President, Columbia Artists) Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Dali Mr. M. Babatunde Olatunji (Director, Sahara Dancers) (Sahara Dancers) Mr. Ladji Camara Chief Bey Mr. Motola Marshall Allen Mr. Ralph Dorsey Mr. Laudrine Patrick Mr, Stacj!" Edwards Mr. Humphrey Obafemi Mr. Tobi Alakuku Davis Mr. Fred Taylor Miss Aquasiba Derby- Miss Ijalu McCullum Miss Wuraola Pryor Mr. Solo S. Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fonville (Manager) Mr. and Mrs. Amachree Mr. Philippe de Seynes Dr. Victor Hoo Mr. and Mrs. Nesterenko Mr. and Mrs. Nosek Dr. and Mrs. Protitch Mr. and Mrs. Rolz-Bennett

Mr. C.V. Narasimhan 2. Dr. and Mrs. Humphrey Mr. and Mrs.' Edward Laws on Mr. and Mrs. William Bruce Mr. and Mrs. Kamleshwar Das Mr, and Mrs. Ilhan Liitem Mr. and Mrs. Valentin Romanov Mr. and Mrs. Pedro Yap Mr. and Mrs. Obhrai Mr. and Mrs. Janecek Mr. and Mrs. ¥. Powell Mr. and Mrs. Eitchie Mr. and Mrs. Smirnov Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Mr. Sparks Mr. Grunzweig Mb. and Mrs. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Eriksen Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Liu H.E. Mr. LIU Chieh Miss Santha Weerekoon (Kandyan Dancers of Ceylon) Mr. and Mrs. Egerton Weerekoon Mr. F.C. Schang (Vice President, Columbia Artists) Miss Beverly Roberts (Director, Theatre Authority) Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sherbert HUMAN RIGHTS DAY CONCERT

FRIDAY, 10 DECEMBER,1965

8:30 PM

THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY HALL

-THE <\RTISTS-

SIDNEY POITIER

NARRATING THE PREAMBLE OF AT SIXTEEN,HE LANDED IN NEW YORK. AT 18,

THE UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS HE JOINED THE U.S.ARMY AND WAS TRAINED

IS THE 1964 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER FOR BEST AS A PHYSIOTHERAPIST IN A HOSPITAL.

PERFORMANCE BY AN ACTOR.SIDNEY POITIER. NOTING A NEWSPAPER STORY THAT THE IT WAS FOR HIS STARRING ROLE IN "LILIES AMERICAN NEGRO THEATRE WAS SEEKING ACT- OF THE FIELD". HE HAS ALSO RECEIVED WIDE' ORS, HE APPLIED —BUT FAILED TWO AUDIT- ACCLAIM FOR HIS PORTRAYALS IN SUCH FILMS IONS. HOWEVER, HE STAYED IN THE THEATRE AS "THE DEFIANT ONES","THE BLACKBOARD AS BACKSTAGE WORKER AND SERVED AS JANI- JUNGLE*,"SOMETHING OF VALUE","PRESSURE TOR, IN EXCHANGE FOR ACTING LESSONS. AS POINT","THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD". HIS THEATRICAL EDUCATION PROGRESSED, HE

^ BORN IN MIAMI,FLORIDA,POI- ADVANCED TO BIT PARTS AND, ONE NIGHT, A

TIER WAS THE ONLY ONE OF SIX BROTHERS NEW YORK DIRECTOR NOTED THE YOUNG ACT-

AND TWO SISTERS TO BE BORN OUTSIDE THE OR'S TALENT. POITIER WON A PART ON THE CARIBBEAN AREA. YOUNG POITIER WAS REARED BROADWAY STAGE, ATTRACTED CRITICAL ATTEN- AT THE FAMILY HOME IN NASSAU.CIRCUMSTAN- TION, AND WENT ON TO PROMINENT ROLES IN CES PREVENTED HIM FROM STARTING SCHOOL "LYSI STRATA","FREIGHT" AND ANNA LUCASTA", UNTIL HE WAS. ELEVEN. TWO YEARS LATER,HIS HE MADE HIS FILM BOW IN 1949 FOLLOWED BY FATHER'S PRODUCE BUSINESS COLLAPSED AND A SERIES OF SUCCESSES. RETURNING TO THE SIDNEY HAD TO LEAVE SCHOOL AND GO TO BROADWAY STAGE,HE STARRED IN "A RAISIN

WORK. HE WAS DRUG STORE CLERK, PARK ING. LOT IN THE SUN", WHICH WON THE COVETED AWARD

ATTENDANT, DITCH DIGGER, CONSTRUCTION OF THE CRITICS CIRCLE. WOJ?KER,PIN soy,TRUCKER AND LONGSHOREMAN. POITIER STANDS SIX FEET^TWO, IS LARGELY SELF-TAUGHT, IS AN OMNIVEROUS CASKET WHICH ENSHRINFS THE SACRED TOOTH

READER AND IS KNOWN AS SOMETHING OF AN RELIC OF THE BUDDHA. ';, EXPERT ON AFRICAN CULTURE. HE LIKES TO KANDYAN DANCING IS ONE OF

GOLF AND FISH, COLLECTS PAINTINGS DONE THE MOST COMPLEX IN ITS TECHNIQUE. IT

BY HIS FRIENDS, ENJOYS PLAYING THE BON- REMAINS ONE OF THE PUREST FORMS OF CEY-

GO DRUMS,AND WHEN IN NEW YORK,CONDUCTS LONESE NATIONAL EXPRESS-ION. IT IS A PEO-

DRAMA CLASSES. HE CAN BE SEEN, CURRENT- PLE'S ART, AND NO PERAHERA,OR FESTIVAL,

LY IN A NEW FILM,WITH RICHARD WIDMARK, IS COMPLETE WITHOUT KANDYAN DANCERS AND

"THE BEDFORD INCIDENT". SEVERAL NEW, ACCOMPANYING DRUMMERS.

POITIER-STARRING PRODUCTIONS WILL BE SHANTHA WEEREKOON, LEADER

RELEASED SHORTLY. OF THE KANDYAN DANCERS, IS ONLY 19 YEARS

OF AGE, BUT SHE HAS ALREADY ESTABLISHED MRS.POITIER,JUANITA, IS A HER CREDENTIALS AS AN EXPONENT OF THE FORMER DANCER. THERE ARE THREE YOUNG. KANDYAN DANCE. SHE IS DEDICATED TO THE DAUGHTERS, BEVERLY,PAMELA AND SHERRY PRESERVATION OF THE TRADITIONAL ART OF 1 HER COUNTRY» KANDYAN DANCERS OF CEYLON £ i KANDYAN DANCING IS SHANTHA RECEIVED HER ACADEM-

ONE OF THE MOST ANCIENT OF DANCE FORMS IC EDUCATION AT ST.BRIDGET'S CONVENT.SHE

IN THE WORLD TODAY. ITS HISTORY GOES HAS BECOME NOT ONLY AN ACCOMPLISHED. DAN-

BACK BEFORE CHRISTIANITY AND BUDDHISM. CER BUT A PIANISTE,SINGER,DRESS. DESIGNER;

KANDY, THE LAST CIT- COOK AND HORTICULTURIST (SPECIALTY:

ADEL OF THE KINGS OF CEYLON, IS THE ORCHIDS AND ROSES).

SCENE OF ONE OF THE MOST SPECTACULAR A DANCER SINCE VERY EARLY

PAGEANTS OF ASIA —THE ESALA PERAHERA. CHILDHOOD, SHANTHA HAS LEARNED THE CON-

THE EVBIT IS HELD, IN THE LIGHT OF FLAMING SIDERABLE SUBTLETIES OF THE KANDYAN

TORCHES. THERE ARE SCORES OF BRILLIANTLY DANCE FROM LEADING MASTERS OF THE ART.

CAPARISONED: ELEPHANTS,. DRUMMERS AND, DAN- SHE HAS PERFORMED,TO CRITICAL ACCLAIM,

CERS ARE LED BY CHIEFTAINS, IN. BEJEWELLED THE LEADING ROLE IN CEYLONESE PRODUCT-

COSTUMES —AS THEY ESCORT THE MAGNIFI- IONa,SUCH AS "DITTA MANGALIKA" AND THE

CENT TUSKER CARRYING THE JEWEL-ENCRUSTED "SASADE BALLET". WHEN QUERIED ABOUT THE FUTURE TORY WHEN THIS PERFORMANCE BECAME THE

OF THE CLASSICAL STYLE,MISS. WEEREKOON FIRST OF TOSCANINI'S NOTABLE OPERA NET-

EXPRESSED CONCERN OVER MODERN INFLUENCES WORK BROADCASTS HE WAS WILLING TO RE-

THAT ARE BEING BROUGHT TO BEAR ON TRAD- LEASE ON RECORDINGS.,

ITIONAL ART ALMOST EVERYWHERE. SHE FEELS HANDSOME ENOUGH TO

STRONGLY THAT THERE IS AN OBLIGATION TO HAVE BECOME A TEEN-AGE IDOL,MERRILL IS

RECEIVE AND PASS ON TO OTHERS A RICH QUITE AS MUCH AT HOME WITH POPULAR MELO-

HERITAGE THAT HAS BEEN PRESERVED. FOR DIES AS HE IS WITH THE ARIAS HE SINGS AT

MANY CENTURIES. THUS,HER MISSION. IS NOT THE METROPOLITAN OPERA. HE WAS THE ONLY

ONLY TO DANCE BUT TO TEACH—WHICH SHE SINGER CHOSEN TO SING THE LORD'S PRAYER

>ES AT HER SHENEKA STUDIO IN COLOMBO. IN A MEMORIAL SERVICE FOR FRANKLIN D. HOWEVER,MISS WEEREKOON QUICKLY ADDS, THAT ROOSEVELT, AT A JOINT SESSION OF THE s THE CLASSICAL REPERTOIRE NEEDS PERIODI- U.S.CONGRESS. IN 1949, HE WAS CHOSEN

CAL RENEWAL —WITH ADDITIONS FROM THE TO SING AT THE INAUGURATION. OF PRESI-

PAST. THIS REQUIRES CONSTANT RESEARCH. DENT TRUMAN.

IF HE HAD NOT BECOME. AN

THIS WILL BE THE FIRST VISIT OPERA STAR,MERRILL MIGHT HAVE BECOME A

TO THE U.S. OF SHANTHA AND HER COMPANY. BASEBALL PLAYER. HE PLAYED SEMI-PROFES-

THE TRIP IS MADE POSSIBLE BY THE UNITED SIONAL BALL AND WAS SCOUTED BY THE 'AT IONS ASSOCIATION OF CEYLON. BROOKLYN DODGERS. BUT THEN HE MIGHT NOT

HAVE GIVEN. AT LEAST ONE MUSIC CRITIC

t THE OPPORTUNITY TO WRITE, "IT IS SIMPLY ROBERT MERRILL A GORGEOUS VOICE,FROM TOP TO BOTTOM,AND WHEN TOSCANINI; PICKED IT HAS NO EQUAL IN THE WORLD TODAY." ROBERT MERRILL TO SING THE ELDER GERMONT MERRILL WAS BORN IN BROOK- IN HIS BROADCAST OF LA TRAVIATA, HE HAD/ LYN. HIS MOTHER IMPLANTED IN HIM A LOVE NEVER MET HIM PERSONALLY. HE HAD HEARD OF MUSIC WHEN SHE TOOK HER 14 YEAR OLD MERRILL'S POWERFUL VOICE AND, RICH BEL SON TO SEE "IL TROVATORE" AT THE METRO- CANTO STYLE,VIA RECORDINGS AND RADIO. POLITAN OPERA. HE STARTED MUSIC LESSONS THE FAMED MAESTRO WAS NOT DISAPPOINTED-, AND HELPED PAY FOR THEM BY WORKING IN FOR MERRILL HELPED HIM MAKE MUSICAL HIS- HIS FATHER'S SHOE STORE, AND LATER, PITCHING SEMI-PRO' BASEBALL. AS A TEEN- MAN ITAS DE PLATA AGER,HE WORKED AT MOUNTAIN RESORTS AS A " "

SINGER AND 'STRAIGHT MAN1 FOR COMEDIANS |N RECENT YEARS, MANY

LIKE RED SKELTON AND JAN MURRAY. FAMOUS PEOPLE—AMONG THEM,PABLO PICASSO,

IN 1945,MERRILL WON THE JOHN STEINBECK,VINCENT SHEEHAN,MACK INLAY

METROPOLITAN AUDITIONS. OF THE AIR,AND KANTOR,THE LATE JEAN COCTEAU—HAVE VISI-

MAOE HIS DEBUT AT THE MET*.HE WAS AWARD- TED A SMALL VILLAGE IN THE SOUTH OF

ED A MAJOR RECORDING CONTRACT AND BECAME FRANCE TO HEAR A REWRKABLE MAN—A SPAN-

A REGULAR SOLOJST ON THE RCA-VICTOR PRO- |SU GYPSY WHO,WITHOUT FORMAL TRAINING,

GRAM ON THE NBC RADIO NETWORK. THE FOLLOW- HAS BEEN ACCLAIMED. BY AFICIANDOS: AS THE

ING YEAR,HE WAS SELECTED BY TOSCANINI TO GREATEST LIVING FLAMENCO GUITARIST. ' )

SING THE ROLE OF GERMONT IN THE NBC, SYM- UNTIL NOW,HE HAS NEVER LEFT THE COUNTRY

PHONY'S "LA TRAVIATA" AND THE MAESTRO'S OF HIS BIRTH. HE IS RICARDO BALLARDO BUT

LAST OPERATIC PERFORMANCE OF "THE MASKED KNOWN BY HIS GYPSY SOBRIQUET.MANITAS DE

BALL". , PLATA, ("SILVER HANDS1').HE PLAYa WHAT IS » SINCE THEN, MERRILL HAS R IS- PERHAPS THE MOST VALUED GUITAR EXTANT— % EN TO NEW HEIGHTS AT THE MET'.HIS ESCA- |J IS DECORATED WITH A PICASSO ORIGINAL.

MILLO IN "CARMEN1*,FIGARO IN "THE BARBER MANITAS DE PLATA COMES. HERE 01-

OF SEV1LLE",AND RODRIGO IN"DON CARLO" RECTLY FROM HIS HOME,A GYPSY ENCAMPMENT

ARE REGARDED AS AMONG THE FINEST IN OPER- WHICH HAS EXISTED FOR CENTUR IES,NEAR ( ,

A HISTORY.WITH RECORDINGS,FILMS,RAD 10 AND ARLES,FRANCE.HERETOFOR,HE HAS ALWAYS RE-

TELEVISION (AND A NEW, AUTOBIOGRAPHY, FUSED TO LEAVE THIS AREA. INSTEAD ,AUD IEN-.

"ONCE MORE FROM THE BEGINNING"),MERRILL'S CES HAVE GONE TO HIM.HIS PERFORMANCES AT

IS A BUSY LIFE. HIS WIFE,MAR ION,IS AN THE GYPSY FESTIVAL OF LES SAINTES MARIES

ACCOMPLISHED. PIANISTE.AND WILL PLAY THE DE LA, MER HAVE BECOME LEGENDARY.

ACCOMPANIMENT FOR MERRILL'S UN PERFORM- JHJE GROWING FAME OF WNITAS DE

ANCE. SON,DAVID,!0, AND DAUGHTER,LIZANNE, PLATA IN THE UNITED STATES PRECEDED HIS

9,BOTH SING IN THE CHILDREN'S CHORUS AT PERSONAL APPEARANCE.IT WAS ESTABLISHED

THE MET'. IN A 800K-OF-THE-MONTH ALBUM,FOR WHICH RECORDING THE CONNOISSEUR RECORD, SOCIETY ED BY AN AIR OF IMPROVISATION. THE GAYETY

SENT A CREW AND 3/4 OF A TON OF ELECTRON- OF THE ALEGRI'AS CLA'SICAS.THE BULERIAS OR.

IC EQUIPMENT TO ARLES. THE SEVILLANAS, CONTRASTS WITH THE BRAVURA FARRUCA,THE JOTA AND THE LANGUOROUS MALA- A JOINT CARNEGIE HALL-COLUMBIA GUENA. THE * EASTERN' CHARACTER OF SOME ARTISTS ENDEAVOR HAS BROUGHT THE FIERY FLAMENCO IS HEARD IN THE LONELY SOLEARES GYPSY TO THE UNITED STATES. HIGHLIGHTS GITANAS-. TO THESE AND OTHER TRADITIONAL OF HIS FOUR-WEEK VISIT ARE THREE CON- FLAMENCO, MANITAS DE PLATA ADDS NEW AND, CERTS IN CARNEGIE HALL AND HIS APPEAR- UNEXPECTED DIMENSIONS. ANCE IN THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY HALL.

MANITAS HAS. PLAYED THE GUITAR

SINCE CHILDHOOD—LEARNING EVERYTHING IT HAS TO TEACH.JOHN STEINBECK WRITES OF SAHARA DANCERS

MANITAS DE PLATA, "HE IS A GREAT AND SAV- NIGERIA-BORN,MICHAEL,BABA- AGE ARTIST,BOTH SUBTLE AND MASTERLY IN TUNDE OLATUNJI, LEADER OF THE SAHARA HIS CONTROL OF THIS VERY DIFFERENT AND DRUMMERS,MUSICIANS,SINGERS AND DANCERS,

DIFFICULT INSTRUMENT." VINCENT SHEEHAN IS CONSIDERED TO BE THE FOREMOST EXPON-

CALLS HIM " A DIAMOND AMONG LESSER JEW- ENT OF AUTHENTIC AFRICAN FOLKLORE IN THE

ELS — .THERE ARE TIMES WHEN IT SEEMS WORLD TODAY.

HARDLY CONCEIVABLE THAT ANY TEN FINGERS DANCE CUSTOMS IN AFRICA

(JOULD EVOKE SUCH AN ORCHESTRA OF PLUCKED VARY FROM SECTION TO SECTION —BUT THERE

STRINGS." MACKINLAY KANTOR COMPARES THE IS A COMMON PATTERN. THERE IS NO WRITTEN

EXCITEMENT AND SOULFULNESS OF HIS. MUSIC MUSIC. HOWEVER,OLATUNJI HAS DEVISED HIS

WITH "A CRY OF ANGELS." OWN SYSTEM OF NOTATION. "THE ART AND

JOSE REYES,COUSIN OF MANITAS FOUNDATION OF OUR MUSIC",SAYS OLATUNJI,

DE PLATA, IS SINGER TO THE GUITAR. HIS "IS RHYTHM. AFRICAN MUSIC SPRINGS FROM

SIMPATICO VOCAL ACCOMPANIMENT PRODUCES THE DEPTH OF FEELING. IT IS SPONTANEOUS,

AN UNFORGETTABLE BLEND OF VOICE AND IN- INSPIRED BY BIRTH,DEATH,PERSECUTION,RAIN,

STRUMENT. DROUGHT,EPIDEMIC,PROSPERITY AND OTHER

FLAMENCO MUSIC,WHILE OBSERV- STRIKING FACETS OF LIFE."

ING CERTAIN FORMS AND RHYTHMS, IS PERVAD- TRACES OF AFRICAN MUSIC AND CULTURAL PATTERNS APPEAR IN- MANY A MANY-SIDED MAN ,OLATUNJ |i COM-

PARTS OF THE WORLD. SLAVERY AND TRADING POSES CHOREOGRAPHIC MUSIC FOR FILMS,IS

WERE FACTORS RESPONSIBLE FOR ITS SPREAD A STUDENT OF ART, AN EXCELLENT COOK,AND

TO THE WEST INDIES,SPAIN,NORTH AND SOUTH RECENTLY WROTE A COMPLETE HISTORY OF

AMERICA,WHERE IT ACQUIRED. OTHER FLAVOURS DRUMS AND ORUMMING,"MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

THROUGH CONTACT WITH THESE CULTURES.LATIN- . OF AFR ICA ."

AMERICAN MUSIC AND JAZ1 SHOW THE STRONS DESPITE THE DEMANDS OF HIS

INFLUENCES OF AFRICAN MUSIC. MANY STRENUOUS ACTIVITIES.OLATUNJI KNOWS

THE FRAME,WITH IN WHICH HOW TO RELAX.HE REQUIRES BUT FOUR HOURS

AFRICAN MUSIC IS CREATED, IS THE DRUM. OF SLEEP A DAY. MRS. OLA TUN J I ,THE FORMER

IT IS THE DETERMINER OF THE SHAPE AND AMY BUSH,HOLDS A MASTER'S DEGREE FROM $ SOUND OF ITS SONGS. BEFORE MODERN MEANS SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY. THEY HAVE TWO

OF COMMUNICATIONS, IT SERVED AS CARRIERS DAUGHTERS, SIX YEAR OLD FOLASHADE (IN

OF MESSAGES. BESIDES DRUMS, AFRICAN IN- YORUBA:»'ONE WHO WEARS HONOURS LIKE A

STRUMENTS ARE COUNTERPARTS OF THE EURO- CROWN"),FOUR YEAR OLD.. MODUPE (IN YORUEA:

PEAN HARP,FLUTE,TRUMPET,ACCORDIAN,XYLO- "I AM MOST GRATEFUL"),AND A SON,EIGHT

PHONE, ETC. YEAR OLD KWAME (IN EWE:"SATURDAY'S CHILD")

AS A CHILD IN LAGOS, OLATUNJI NAMED AFTER HIS GODFATHER,KWAME NKRUMAH,

WAS CONSTANTLY EXPOSED TO INDIGENOUS PRESIDENT OF GHANA.

MUSIC. HOWEVER,THROUGH BAPTIST HYMNS, "WE HOPE", SAYS OLATUNJI,"TO |

RECORDINGS AND RADIO, HE ALSO DEVELOPED FURTHER MUTUAL UNDERSTAND ING,RESPECT AND

AN APPRECIATION FOR WESTERN MUSIC. PROGRESSIVE RELATIONSIHI IP THROUGH THE ARTS.1*

AFTER PRIMARY AND SECONDARY

SCHOOL IN NIGERIA, WHERE HE WAS. ALSO AN

ATHLETE (880,1 MILE,3 MILE),OLATUNJI WON

HIS B.A.DEGREE IN A SCHOLARSHIP TO MORE-

HOUSE COLLEGE,ATLANTA..HE IS NOW A PH.D.

CANDIDATE ,AT N.Y.U.,IN PUBLIC ADMINI-

STRATION. HE SPEAKS FIVE LANGUAGES:

ENGLISH,YORUBA,IBO,HAUSA AND EGUM. Litho in U.N. 31100-December 1965-6M

gives fey the on 10 £eetftb«?

HE Qiui Qy>88f x x Ife^oj? Thauag tula

x x H»l. U fum Ifie

,. .11 faa. .Shaisa x * fhg. .

Eta fhia * • % U Sow Burgess SG luncheon, Friday, 10 Dscember 1965, 1.15 p.m., 38th floor

Mission of Burma: Representatives H.E. U Tun Sheia, Amb. to Japan, Vice-Ghaiiman of Delegation H.E. U Vum Ko Hau, Amb. to Indonesia H.E, U Zahre Lian, Arab, to Prance U Ba Thaung, Acting Permanent Representative Alternate Representatives Lt.Col. Tin Aung, Socialist Programme Party Major Thaung Iwin, Socialist Programme Party U Hla Thin, Office of Attorney-General U Saw Burgess, Chief of Division, Foreign Office H-3y«w-Miay-Bepttty-Chief-ef-Btvisiea^-Feireiga-Offiee Advisers

Daw Than Han, Second Secretary U Aye Iwin> Third Secretary U Ohn Gyaw, Second Secretary of Embassy, Washington

The Secretary-General

12

cc: Don /To M

Ul GVK/mpa

X ms.s cle«gply 'tou-cksfi '£$• your kind letter oi* esS^sa', I 'ea|<^;a£l your vXs.lt 5sid v«,vs spiteful for th to cj^s

1 ess alao- siost gsats^l to jay, fai? your LSssS. vsrd© of *mcl yo«r asssstaiacs of Iv of tte

CGI Permanent Mission of Mr* Lemieux liuncheon given by the Secretary-General in honour of the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Norway on 2 December 1965

H.E. Sir Roger Jackling H.E. Mr. Yost

Mr* Narasimhan x x 33r. Bunche

H.E. Dr. Fedorecko x x H.E. Mr. Mien

H.E. Mr. lyng x x Hie Secretary-General

H.E. M. Seydoxix x x H.E. Mr. Nielsen

Mr. Hoffman x Mr. Nesterenko

Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Aosteensen •kdOOt loaaxf- i''; f *

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General in honour of the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Norway on 2 December 1965

H.E. Sir Roger Jackling H.E. Mr. Yost

Mr. Narasimhan X Dr. Bunche

H.E. Dr, Fedorenko x x H.E. Mr. Aiken

H.E. Mr. Lyng The Secretary-General

H.E. M. Seydoux X H.E. Mr. Nielsen

Mr. Hoffman X x Mr. Nesterenko i

*. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Ansteensen

W*S*^^^ SG luncheon to meet the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Horway, H.E. Mr. John Lyng, Thursday, 2 December 19&5, 1.15 p.m., 38th floor

* yes 1/H.E. Mr. John Lyng ^ftl/if yes t/H.E. Mr. Si vert A. Nielsen yes ,/Mr. Einar Ansteensen, Director of Political Affairs, Ministry of For.Affairs,Norway yes yH.E. Mr. Frank Aiken no HTET-9?he-RfcrHeaT-I>ej?d-Gaj?aeLeH (attending Foreign Policy Asso. luncheon) no H»E-.-M3?-.-A3?tinM?-

Secretary-General yes /Mr. Narasimhan yes \/Dr. Bunche yes t/Mr. Rolz -Bennett yes /Mr. Paul Hoffman yes Mr. A.E. Nesterenko

cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Don ff

v> CD \^ December 20, 1965

Excellency,

I should like to take this opportunity to express to you my profound gratitude and appreciation for all your personal efforts in connection with the visit of the Federal Chancellor of Austria, Dr. Josef Klaus. The Federal Chancellor was deeply impressed by the hospitality you extended to him and for the kind words you found for Austria's role and activity in the United Nations, as well as for him personally. May I therefore, in my capacity of Permanent Representative of

H.E. U Thant Secretary-General of the ./. United Nations New York Austria, thank you and all the members of the United Nations Secretariat, who have helped to prepare and organize Dr. Klaus' visit to the United Nations. Accept, Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.

Dr. Kurt Waldheim* Ambassador CVM/mpd

touched fcgr jrasr feiM telegram seat oa the of your &erpar&s?e igroas IS&t Yorit* It was a for JESS to met ^«m aaa to have the to disouss •mri

of cc; Permanent Mission of Austria wise m PS FH FILE NO. tSEtfYQSK MY DEC. S 607PEST | ACTION i HISS E3CCEUA8CY II TW8T Y CTEMl OF T!?E TOTED ilTlonS

7IjJf\T-* i"R7 nffft F> ft 5P" 1TT«i*y"' i1"?,*?.? '^'HO T" f ^jfCU TT; f^TTi '™f? C "i"% VAT r-1; ^.Ji'j kj^ VJ R. a- u £ / i..,i.I, i; u ^ . £ w-'.i 'i -'.j- .". ~ ,\ \7i ^ ;, -ij.j. u r j, '.-'j j .', ,i A I/ it' '*^' 1 / A *!• •'• .- '/V >'l .'. i' < -i' ^ 6'-^ .li *>• f i ^ ' '•*'1 ',

'J'*'*;,*'/*!^1"* tj 'C ."1 "'Vrt^'/' ~ *'-°!:f V'-T"1 /^"'i":' -Mi* 7* TU^* 1 'i"-'T'"r*^ *~';'/*3 'J* ,"l Tfl r''-T*\ Wii* w-'.'v

ft.J - .il "U/ J.:.' ^Lrt*«f. rr ''.JO J. i-i ji i •! v '• * l!-' ' •* t ' i. ''' t./ '•"! Ii i 4 i. .',rtO n£» .~u ? +." -'k|. * l'"j *"f.|^'' *,.' .' si'' ,V ^- i, ii-^ .'_? : A- '-J-f'': & 'I ^,

t :M 1 1 i t i ri t.^C'f^T^f; 5 yr'V yv^Tr*T 1")t. j:'i ^''/*\ ?".t" n"TP T-'^r "^v tr7 ^7^ 7/-i "x*?.?^ ?^ **?^""^

v OH VAHIOUS DCCASirK; I ^\D T?;!^;n TIlL OPPOPTUiatY TO T)?Pn G5

in uici-rrr" nucn YOUF; F^oauticY-is FULFILLU'C T;r; ^OGT i; ft*1^ "f^"j"T>"**r"? v rj TT'irTfjTt "' *"'^ ^"^ HI" 't''iT^ -^T'T1 !"*• '7"A-\ v.";*^> ("••irr-"r"r'-\ ? '~\T;' "

UNITED mtionc. AT TIE EHD OF HY 7JC1T 1 tJOOU) LIKE TO

KEITimATE TII1C FETLinc AH!) ft SOTS YOUn EXCl'LLAiCY TlfeT

I GI-SRLL AUJAYS nFM:niFF! HIT!! GREAT PLEA SURE AMD GPATXTUD™

THE DAY 1 m.D BEh"] FPlVIL^CiTD TO SPEtB AT Tin- U^ITl'-D MATK

BH JOSEPH KUUS FEDKML CmnCELi^ OF AUSTRIA

I? tJUFiSO StfR HH ISS4EST LUNCHEON

given in honour of

His EXCELLENCY DK. JOSEF KLAUS CHANCELLOR OF AUSTRIA

by the SECRETARY-GENERAL on Wednesday, 1 December 1965

at the

UNITED NATIONS HEADQUARTERS MENU

Les Oeufs en Gelee Rosita

, V u\ Les Medallions de Veau Poeles Judic £> \ I Les Pommes Noisettes \ '.' f j_ f I Les Salsifis au Beurre ' .-,

La Salade de Cceurs de Palmier/ ./,,.., J

Le Vacherin Glace anx Praises

Les Friandises ! UdooE J AdOO, louaxs 1 OU3XJ

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General in honour of the Federal Chancellor of Austria on 1 December 1965

Dr. Klestle Dr. Hampe

„ ^

Dr. Willfort x Mr. Rolz-Bennett

Mr. Kesterenko x H.E. Mr. Waldheim

H.E. Mr. Goldberg

H.E, Dr. Klaus JZ X The Secretary-General

H.E. M. Seydoux x x H.E. Dr. Fedorenko

Mr. Hoffman x Mr. Harasimhan

H.E. Sir Roger X Dr. Karasek Jackling 4

;. X ; X Mr. de Meulemeester Dr. Backes Protocol and Liaison 2? Movcii^bSi- 1965

PSOG-HAlS-iiS KH THE 'JISI'-; 0? H«^, 0'^ JOSEF KLAUS, F^tFl^-L CK "^TJ/y* 0? /"„<:; TF'.IA3 TO THS UNITED NATION ON WKDl^DAY- 1 JSCJS-JSi'K 1?6?

12:15 p*ffl. HeE» Dp, Josef Klaus j Federal Chancellor of /Vustria. accompanied by H.S, Dr. Kuril VJaldh-,2ir<;. Pe/r-rftansnt Ropresenta^ivGj vrf.ll arrive at th.a S-s-sj-etar-ia^ snt.rancfes v;hsa*a he vjill ba fjraefcsd by I-t::\ Pierre de Msiilsnoester. Ghisf of Protoficl, anc! sscort-sd by !?p(5^Ir:.l plc-vator fco the 3dth floor. Thy Chancellor vrj.ll mee* the President of the General Assembly In fche latter' a

12:40 p»n>6 It^ooH.ed by the Chief of Protocol, -ihe Chancsllor yill meet •fcha Secretary-General In the la-ot-^v's out©^ Ci^ficso Photographs vdll be talon in the Sacra terj'-fe-iera.l11 s office^ The Chancellor ajid the Sseretaj-j-G-sRsral vdll have a prixre.ia

1:15 p«ra. Tn^ Sescrstary-Gsnaral v-d.Il escort -Ihe ChancQllor into his Confereneo Room whs?© fchs guests j.?ivi-tved to the luncheon will liave ppsviovsly aseeabled.,, 1:30 p.m. L\jncheon viill ba served, 2:45 P«a» "l^e guests will t-aka lea^s of the Secrets. jy-Gsneral and the

The Seere'iargr-GsnsraS. t-Jill oseori ths Chancellor to the on the 3Stb floor and take leave of his at this

3:00 pcR3» Tiie Chancellor will address the plonaiy mesti3g of the General A

4:00 p.nu The Chanegllor vdll hold a preas eor-fei-enos in Room 2260 4s30 p=.in. rilhe GhanceSJ-OZ1 will go by special •jleva.tor- fycsa the- s©coRd i'.loor to the ground rioor arid 1-ss.va Metidquai'osrs by the Sscr-etariat, enferancs Hh9?G9 on behalf of fc'is Secrstaiy~Ger*srals •fcbe Chief of Protocol will bid liim 0

MODERN HISTORY ^ ^^ i--..^* ^vvCvOW & #^/J *-~

Modern Austria was brought into being in 1918 at the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The country which had a population of over 50 million, was left with only the German-speaking provinces of the Empire. Of its c^j 7 million inhabitants more than 2 million were congregated in Vienna. It had a weak, unbalanced economy. In 1938 the country was annexed with Germany under Hitler After the Second World War a coalition government was formed consisting of the Peoplers Party (conservative) and the Socialist Party. Due to the injection of the Marshall Plan aid, amounting to $962,000,000, Austria recovered to such an extent that it was compared with the "miracle" of German recovery.

ECONOMY Two pillars of Austrian economy are the heavy industry sector, consisting of the steel and petroleum industries, and the light industry sector, consisting of pulp and textile industries. Austrian economy is characterized also by the existence of many small independent farmers (often in dairy industries) and in the manufacturing and handicraft art. Austria is a member of the EFTA,, About 60$ of her foreign trade is, however, with the European/Community countries. Thus, it has been negotiating for an associated membership in the EEC. But the two parties in the coalition are not entirely agreed on the question - the People's Party being more enthusiastic than the Socialists in the linkage with the EEC. It is also considered that too close links with EEC may jeopardize the neutral status of Austria especially vis-a-vis the Soviet Union, Furthermore, Austria has been actively promoting trade with the Eastern European countries with a view to serving as a "bridge" for the east-west trade in Europe,

POLITICAL SITUATION For the past twenty years, the Austrian Government has been based on a coalition between the People's Party and the Socialist Party, In the National Parliament the People's Party holds 81 seats, the Socialist Party 75* the Freedom Party (right wing party which includes neo-Nazi, Pan-Germanic elements) 8 seats, and the remaintUing seat held by an independent. The relative stability of the Austrian coalition has been considered a result of the economic structure of a country in which the middle class, consisting of independent farmers and small manufacturers dominate and in which theforeign policy is based on strict neutrality from military alliances. -2-

In the past, the Presidency has been held by a Socialist as a balance to a Chancellor held by a member of the People's Party, The coalition government has, however, been experiencing severe tension since October. Chancellor Dr. Joseph Klaus (People's Party) resigned on 22 October over the sharp differences which developed between the two major parties over the budget draft for next year. He is now holding office in a caretaker government until new elections are held early next year,

FOREIGN POLICY On 15 May 1965 Foreign Ministers of the four major powers, namely, US, UK^ France and ESSR^ met in Vienna to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the signing of the Austrian State Treaty, which resulted in the successful ending of the four- power occupation of Austria. The conclusion of the State Treaty ten years ago was considered by some partly a result of Chairman Khruschev's attempt to initiate a policy of relaxation of tension in order to serve as an example for subsequent German unification and neutrality, Austria is committed to permanent neutrality, non-participation in military alliance and non-establishment of foreign military bases. Its admission to the United Nations in 1955 was on the understanding that it would not be asked to participate in military and other enforcement action of the Organization. Austria has, however, supported the United Nations peace-keeping activities financially as well as by sending medical and policeunits. The Austrian Parliament recently passed a law which permits the Austrian Government to make available military contingents on the request of an international organi2ation or of the International Red Cross.

SOUTH TIROL Its non-alignment policy has assured Austria relative tranquility in external affairs. Its only major foreign policy dispute has been with Italy over South Tyrol. The question of South Tyrol, detached from Austria in 191&, was brought before the United Nations in I960 and in 1961. The first resolution (Resolution 149?(XV)) requested Italy and Austria to enter into negotiations with a view to finding a solution to all differences relating to the implementation of the agreement of 1946* The second resolution (Resolution 1661 (XVI)), having noted with satisfaction that such negotiations had taken place, went on to call for further efforts by the two parties in accordance with the first resolution. As requested by these United Nations resolutions negotiations have been conducted but Austria feels that the question of the German-speaking minority in South Tyrol remains to be solved. In the course of the general debate this fall Mr.Kreisky, the Foreign Minister of Austria, expressed his serious concern over the "continued delay" in the matter, which he considered was contrary to the spirit of the resolutions. »

I& i tt:i

I! tt13 SG reception, Tuesday, 25 November 1965, 6.30 to 7>50 p.m., 58th floor

Ukranian SSR delegation: ReprT> e sentat0. J.iJ ve s */ H.E. Mr. P.T. Tronko, Deputy Chairman of Council of Ministers v/ Mr. S.37. Shevchenko, Permanent Representative !/ Mr. I.M. Pedanyuk, Chairman, State Committee on Press \/ Mr. M.D. Polyanichko, Member of Board and Head of Dept. of International Organizations, Ministry of Foreign Affairs i/ Mrs. R.A. Maksimenko, Chief, Kiev City Education Department

Alternate Representatives i/ Mr. A. A. Boiko, Member of Board and Head of Dept. of International Economic Organizations, Ministry of Foreign Affairs \/ Mr. Y.E. Yegorov, Member of Board and Head of Dept. of Press, Ministry of Foreign Affairs y Mr. U.K. Golovko, Professor, Kiev State University j/Mr. V.I. Sapozhnikov, Senior Scientific Worker, Section of Law, Academy of Sciences

Advisers t/ Mr. Y..N. Kochubei, First Secretary, Permanent Mission i/Mr. N.Y. Berkan, First Secretary, Permanent Mission

The Secretary-General i/Mr. Nesterenko x/ Mr. Lessiovski i/ Mr. Hosek \/ Mr. Narasimhan y/ Mr» Rolz-Bennett

Ukrainian staff - "UM Secretariat «/ Mr. I.I. Volenko Ext. 4015 Room 1446 i/Mr. I. Khmil 4155 1078 i/Mr. S.S. Ivanko 2145 1751D v/ Mr. Y.S. Zharkikh 2776 U-4-06 t/ Mr. A.P. Revenko 2804 3045 J Mr. G.P. Kuropiatnick 286l 2755 J Mr. I.F. Grischenko 2555 24lOB M 24 cc: Don 01 ro,

VJ1 ID)

O luncheon given by the Secretary-General on 23 November 1965

Mr. Van Wijk

Mr. Bender x :c Mr. Riad

Dr. Quljano x X Mr. Vaughan

Mr. Hosek x M. Ganem

Mr* Bannier :c ic ghe Secretary-General

Sir Alexander MacFarq.uhar x Mr* Karasimhan

Sr. Lopes Correa ;: x Mr. Gibson

Mr. McCaw x x Mr. Ulahchev

Mr. Serbanescu Mr. Singh Proiciol. and Liaison

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on 23 November 1965 Plan II

Mr. Boudjakdji Mr. Van Wijk

Mr. Bender at I x Mr. Riad i

Df. Quijano Mr. Vaughan

Mr. Mosek 3; x M. Ganem j

Mr. Bannier x The Secretary-General

Sir Alexander x Mr. Narasimhan MacFarquhar

Sr. Correa x Mr. Gibson

Mr. McCaw Mr. Ulanchev

Mr. Serbanescu Mr. Singh Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on 23 November 1965

Plan I

Mr. Boudjakdji Mr. Van Wijk

Mr. Riad x x Sr. Correa 1

Mr. McCaw X Mr. Nosek

Dr. Quijano x Mr. Bannier

Mr. Narasimhan X the Secretary-General

M. Ganem x Mr. Gibson

Sir Alexander x Mr. Vaughan MacFarquhar

Mr. Blanchev r Mr. Bender

X _ _X

v Mr. Serbanescu Mr. Singh SG Luncheon, Tuesday, 2? November 1965, 1.15 p«m., 38th floor

!/ • .'XX . ;'' i. A^VV---*'.

ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON ADMINISTRATIVE AMD o/0 );., , '.^ f, > * -/ / . ,. <} BUEGETAHI QUESTIONS *•>->.. -

Chairman: Mr. Jan P. Bannier (Netherlands)

Members:

'. Albert F. Bender, Jr. (United States of America) fi %J ^ Mr, . Rae>af Bea-4gafe4g4—(-AS^eria) - (has not so far attended current session) \S Sr. Paulo Lopes Correa (Brazil) t/ M» Andre Ganem (France) \ James Gibson (United Kingdom)

\ Dr. Raul A. J. Quijano (Argentina) 4/Mr. Mo named Riad (United Arab Republic) no sXMrr-Er-Glii-Safti* (Nigeria) i/Mr. Dragos Serbanescu (Romania) ,/Mr. S. K. Singh (India) */Mr. V, F. Ulanchev (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics)

The Secretary-General j/MS^TaSfiSr Mr. McCaw

v/ Mr. Narasimhan

8/Mr. Nosek ?/ Mr• Vaughan -XSir Alexander MacFarquhar v/Mr. Jan Van Wijk

«" |fl cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Don jU?VISORY G •'.'•, I , .

Mr. Jan P» Bannier (Netherlanda)

(M^ X JL l&f. Albert F. Beader* Jr. (United States of 1afi33I^3i (TDllM&t -" (has not so far attended current session) iAn. * / V 3r* Pattlo lapea Correa

V//A 5-" H, Attdrl daneis (France) ^/ ci Mp, Jaateii Gibson (United Kingdom) v/ "? Dr. Haul A. ^, Qidjano (Argentina) ^ ^^ Mohaiaedl Siad (United Arab Republic) !)>';£' /& $-** --"w / ?' ^ £ft \ <%f Mi% Dssagos Serbaneaou (Homania) ^-P ? AX^eL • , s» K. fidngh(India ) /^ ^ d^JU 'S&p. V, F. Ulanchev (Itoion of Soviet Socialist Republics)

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(0 Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on 22 November

B.E. Mr. Arkhurst The Secretary-General

E.E. Mr. Hilmy ELdi x. k H.E. Dr. El-Parra

H.E. Dr. Tomeh x

k H.E. Mr. Farah H.E. M. Schuurmans

x H.E. Mr. ALaini Mr. Amachree x*

fc |c Mr. Rolz-Bennett K H.E. IJr. Escobar Serrano x.

H.E. Mr. Abu Bakar Mr. Spineni

Mr. de Meulemeester H.E. Mr. Fakhreddine x

—XT- •M»^^—" y -•*"• jf-± • ntta^^L • r_>3 Mr. Marasimhan H.E. Mr. Parthasarathi Prot c; ol snd Hal;? on

Luncheon given by1 the Secretary-General on 22 November 1965

Plan I

Mr. Rolz-Bennett [Mr. Amachree]

H.E. Sr. Rodriguez x H.E. M. Tomeh

H.E. Mr. Fakherr-Ed-Dine x H.E. Mr.: Hiluy Didi

Mr. Ngvdri ' v 5c x H.E. Mr. Arkhurst I

Mr. Narasimhan The Secretary-General

H.E. Mr. Parthasarathi x x H.E. Mr. El-Farra

H.E. Mr.' x H.E. Mr. Farah

H.E. Mr. Alaini x H.E. Mr. Schuurmans

. '- ' &

Protciol ar.d' Liaisorj

Luncheon given by the Secretary-General on 22 November 1965

Plan II

'. Mr, Narasimhan Mr. Amachree

H.E. Sr.'Rodriguez x H.E. M. Tomeh

H.E. Mr, Fakher-Ed-Dine x Jc H.E. Mr. Hi Didi

Mr. Hgwiri H.E. Mr. Arkhurst

H.E, Dr. Escobar Serranofi fi The Secretary-General

H.E. Mr. Parthasarathi k H.E. Mr. El-Farra

.E. Mr. Abu Bakar ix H.E. Mr. Farah

H.E.; Mr. Alaini ' jx H.E. Mr. Schuurmans

-x- ; : Mr. de Meulemeester Mr. Rolz-Bennett

N.B. Have given, preference to Escobar Serrano because he is the only one to have participated in GA sessions as Minister for Foreign Affairs;. Alaini, although also having served as Foreign Minister, never participated as such in GA debates. tbe

1,1.

'3.1. Mr* Aim gives by tfce ©a 22 Maveafeer

H.E. Mr. Arl&urst x

S.E. Ifc* EiBinsr lidl x x E.I. !&.

«S. $tr» fomeh x x H.S. llr. Farah

H.E. M, Sehuunaans x S,E. Mr. Alalni

Kr.

H.E. Br. Sscobar Serrano S.B, Sr. Bodrfguez

Mr. de Heuiomeester

S-E. Mr*

Mr. E.g. J4r. Part&asarat&i 4-© Luncheon for new Permanent Representatives Monday, 22 November 1965, 1.15 pro

Amb. Parthasarathi - India Amb. Schuurmans - Belgium ——{ Amb. Farah - Somalia Minister Ngwiri - Malawi Amb. Fakher-Ed-Dine Mohamed - Sudan" Amb. Rodriguez - Dominican Republic Amb. Escobar Serrano - El Salvador, Amb. lil-Farra - Jordan Amb. Hilmy Didi - Maldives - Amb. Tomeh - Syria Amb. Abu Dakar - Singapore Amb. Arkhurst - Ghana

Secretary-General de Meulemeester £.\A

cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Don PERMANENT MISSION OF THE

BS6 UNITED NATIONS PLAZA HASHEMITE KINGDOM OF JORDAN NEW YORK, N. Y. 1DD17 TD THE UNITED NATIONS TELEPHONE: PL 2-O135-S

Ambassador Mohammad H. El-Farra AS'' 'A"" S "t Permanent Representative of Jordan, y-J to the United Nations, accepts with pleasure the kind invitation of the Secretary-General for Luncheon on Monday- November 22, 1965 at the United Nations Headquarters. Luncheon for new Permanent Representatives Monday, 22 November 1965, 1.15 pm f-wi^-.// -/

1. Amb. Parthasarathi - India 2. Amb. Schuurmans - Belgium 3. Amb. Farah - Somalia sir.—Minist-e**- Wgwiri-—Malawi 5. Amb. Fakher-Ed-Dine Monamed - Sudan

7. Amb. Escobar Serrano - El Salvador 8. Amb. El-Farra - Jordan 9. Amb. Hilmy Didi - Maldives -vu^ <\, j 10. Amb. Tomeh - Syria 11. Amb. Abu Bakar - Singapore 12. Amb. Arkhurst - Ghana

The Secretary-General Mr. de Meulemeester

6

yes Mr. Spinelli

17 cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Don f.JW

THE SECRETARY-GENERAU KENSINGTON PALACE // o r » i fs\/OLh^ Sr^AK J k

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22 Soveiober 1965

Thank you for your very kind letter of 20 Soveniber,, It was a pleaswe for me to be able to off sr hospitality to Her Royal Highness fhe Princess Margaret and The Sari of I am gla

U'Thant

His the St. Bos. Lord Caramon, G»C.M.G0, Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Peraansnt Representative of the United Kingdom to the 0nited Hatioas 845 third Avenue, 10th Floor U«w York 22, Kaw YorJc cc: Mr. de Meulemeester Mi$:s Kearne Mr. Lesieti- x I AdOO I OU3X.

UNITED KINGDOM MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS 845 THIRD AVENUE NEW YORK, N.Y.

20 November, 1965

I cannot tell you ho?/ grateful my Government and. my delegation are to you and all those in your staff who were concerned for the delightful hospitality which you extended yesterday to Her Royal Highness The Princess Margaret and The Earl of Snowdon. 'It was wonderfully kind of you, amongst all your preoccupations, to entertain Her Royal Highness and Lord Snowdon at such an enjoyable luncheon. And may I add that your decision to include amongst -your guests members of rny delegation arid their -wives was very specially appreciated. I thought that the room above • the library provided the perfect setting for such a happy occasion, and I am glad that you decided to have the luncheon there. In thanking you for the hospitality and courtesy and consideration which you extended to us all, I should like to pay

His Excellency U Thant, Secretary General of the United Nations, ••- New York. a particularly warm-tribute'to the . magnificent work done by * Meulemeester and'Miss Nearne and 1 who worked with them. I know very, «well that the visit entailed a great deal of careful and detailed work and I thought that the arrangements made by your protocol staff were throughout admirably planned and very skillfully executed. I send to all those who worked so hard to achieve these results : this message of deep gratitude. • Her Royal Highness and Lord Snowdon told me after their time at United Nations headquarters that they had been fascinated all they saw and almost overwhelmed by e kindness and warmth of the reception «tended to them - and-they told me that they would never forget the personal welcome with which you received them - a welcome which meant so much to them, since it came from a man for whom they have such a very high regard and admiration.

\i \ (Garadon) 903 PARK AVENUE • NEW YORK, N. Y. 10021 • TEL. 628-7610

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« \j__ (\ UjOboovjy UA ^ HEW YORK HERALD TBE3UME, Saturday, 20 November 1965

By Don Ross and Darius S. Jhabvala pf THs Herald Tribune Staff. Very little work' got done yesterday at the Empire State Building, the United Nations, the British Government Office and Girl Scout headquarters. Princess Margaret was there. On the second day of their visit to New- York, the Princess and her husband, Lord Snowdon,' attracted applauding crowds wherever they went, and. they covered a lot of territory. There were only two instances of unfriendliness in a day. that was otherwise all warmth. A crackpot telephoned a threat to police that a bomb would explode at the Empire State Building, and leaders of nine African .nations Herald Tribune photo by MORRIS WAB-M^N in the British Commonwealth stayed away Irom a rec'epV LORD &NOWDON showed her the sighls from the tion for the royal couple at the UN. v 86th floor-observatory of "the Empire State Building .f, . > The boycott was designed to show African displeasure %for allegedly soft British policy toward the white suprem- acist government of Rhodesia. I The Snowdons had a 25-minute unscheduled Tide around Central Park and through the Times. Square area in a sort ol limbo while 55 policemen searched the Empire State Building, the motorcade's first stop, to see II there were any bombs around. They found none and concluded that vhe woman, who did not mention Princess Margaret's name, was merely a hoaxer. The royal motorcade received a radio all-clear and the Snowdons quickly came out of limbo and descended1 from their Rolls-Royce at the world's, tallest building, • where about 1,500 persons applauded them at the 34th St: en- trance. There were several hundred, persons' in the lobby, also friendly. With their retinue of protocol and security officers, the Snowdons ascended to the 86th-floor observatory and gazed around. Visibility was cut by haze to about 20 miles. Lord Snowdon who, as Anthony Armstrong-Jones, photog- rapher, had sailed paper darts off the top of the building on his 1958 visit to New York, pointed out the'sights to his wife. He showed her the needle-topped Chrysler Building, the slab of the UN building and they gazed :into Queens. Lord Snowdon sailed no darts this time.

A VIEW TO REMEMBER The Princess, her mink coat wrapped around her against the chilly breeze, kept murmuring, "Beautiful, beautiful." A dozen or so tourists on the 86th floor seemed to be more enchanted with the near, view of the Princess than the far one of the metropolitan area. The Snowdons rode up to the 102d story for a quick Hcraht Tribune photo by MORRJS WARMAW look and then came down to earth for the ride to the UN. ave her a United •J&itions luncheon ... More than 100 diplomats and UN employees ap- u THANT plauded as the royal couple entered the building. The Se- curity Council, which had been discussing the Rhodesian Crisis, recessed a half-hour before the. Snowdons arrived. ] The British Commonwealth nations (hat boycotted the ijeception for the Snowdons given by Lord Caradon, chief 9f the United Kingdom delegation to the UN, were Zam- bia, Malawi, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania,. Ghana, Nigeria; - Gambia- and Sierra Leone. The African1 nations have called on Britain to take a tougher stand against the Rhodesian rebel government, which has denied civil rights to the black majority in .that country. Ghana's Foreign Minister. Alex Qualson-Sackey, who was president of the Assembly last year, was asked1 by a reporter why he stayed away from the reception. "Please go away," he said curtly. When the royal party went'by he only gave It a quick glance. Princess Margaret, wearing a pink silk dress and' a multi-colored lace-wool turban, chatted animatedly at.the reception. It was held in the Indonesian Lounge—so called because two wooden figures of peace and prosperity that adorn it were given by Indonesia before it left the UN earlier this year. She and her husband sipped drinks and smoked. The only African at the reception was UN Under Sec- retary Godfrey K. J. Amachree, of Nigeria. There were. Negro UN delegates from Jamaica. Trinidad and Tobago. The Snowdons then attended a lunch for 42 persons given by UN Secretary General U Thant In the penthouse of the Dag Hammarskjold Memorial Library. The hostess was Mrs. Tin Mylnt U, Mr. Thant's daughter, who was dressed In Burmese garb and who, it developed, shares the same birthday—Aug. 34—with Princess Margaret. Hcrala Tribune photo by IRA HOSEMBERQ A GIFT TO TREASURE ARD MARC CHAGALL'S stained-glass memorial win- dow to Dag Hatnmar&kjold caught Princess Margaret's Among the guests were Amlntore Fanfani, Italian For- attention in the world body's Secretariat Building. eign Minister and president of the General Assembly; Am- bassador Fernando Ortiz Sanz. of Bolivia, president of the Security Council; Ambassador Boger Seydoux. of France, John Hay Whitney, on E. 63d St.. where the royal couple and Ambassador Nickolai T. Fedorenko, of the Soviet Union. are staying during their visit, which ends Nov. 24. Mr. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg was unable to attend be- Whitney is a former ambassador to the Court of St. James's. cause nf n. virus infpnhinn T,u.u Uu *ii,w_ j.vin, puUlkBU UUl; WIG SlgaiS 10 HIS W1T6. He showed her the needle-topped Chrysler Building, the slab of the UN building and they gazed into Queens. Lord Snowdon sailed no darts this time. A VIEW TO KEMEMBEB. The Princess, her mink • coat wrapped around her against the chilly breeze, kept murmuring, "Beautiful, beautiful." A dozen or so tourists on the 86th floor seemed to be more enchanted with the near view ot the Princess than the far one of the metropolitan area. The Snowdons rode up to trie 1024 story Jor. a quick Herald Tribune photo, by MORRIS WARM AH look and then came down to earth for the ride to the UN. U TflANT gave her a United %-itions luncheon ... More than 100 diplomats and UN employees ap- plauded as the royal couple.entered the building. The Se-: curity Council, which had .been discussing the Rhodesian flrisis, recessed a half-hour before the. Snowdons arrived, j The British Commonwealth nations that boycotted the Deception for the Snowdons given by Lord Caradon, chief sir the United Kingdom delegation to the UN, wei'e Zam- bia, Malawi. Kenya, Uganda. Tanzania, Ghana, Nigeria^ Gambia and Sierra Leone, • ' The African1 nations have called on Britain to take a tougher stand against the Rhodesian rebel government; which has denied civil rights to the black majority In that country. Ghana's Foreign Minister, Alex Quaison-Saekey,'Who was president of the Assembly last year, was asked' by1 a reporter why he stayed away from tile reception. "Please go away," he said curtly. When the royal party went by -he only gave it a quick glance. Princess Margaret, wearing a pink silk dress and' a multi-colored lace-wool turban, chatted animatedly at .the reception. It was held in the Indonesian Lounge—so called because two wooden figures of peace and prosperity that adorn it were given by Indonesia before it left the UN earlier this year. She and her husband sipped drinks arid smoked. The only African at the reception was UN Under Sec- retary Godfrey K. J. Amachree, of Nigeria. There were Negro UN delegates from Jamaica. Trinidad and Tobago. The Snowdons then attended 'a lunch for 42 persons given by UN Secretary General B Thant in the penthouse of the Dag Hammarskjold Memorial Library. The hostess was Mrs. Tin Mylnt U. Mr. Thant's daughter, who was dressed in Burmese garb and who, it developed, shares the same birthday—Aug. 24—with Princess Margaret. Herald Tribune pljolo by IRA ROSENBERG AND MARC CHAGALL'S stained-glass memorial win- A .GIFT TO TREASURE . dow to Dag Harnmarskjold caught Princess Margaret's Among the guests were Amintore Fanfanl. Italian For- attention in the world body's Secretariat Building. eign Minister and president ol the General Assembly; Am- bassador Fernando Ortiz Sanz, of Bolivia, president of the Security Council; Ambassador Roger Seydoux, of France, John Hay Whitney, on E. 63d St.. where the royal couple and Ambassador Nickolal T. Fedorenko,.of the Soviet Union.- are staying during their visit, which ends Nov. 24. Mr. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg was unable to attend be- Whitney is a former ambassador to the Court of St. James's. cause of a virus infection. Princess Margaret is president of the Girl Guide Asso- The royal party visited three UN conference rooms'. ciation of Great Britain, the British equivalent of the Girl There was applause when the Princess appeared and three Scouts. She was a Brownie at the age of six and remained of the men applauding were Africans, but they were from active in the organization until she became 18. former French territories—Niger. Upper Volta and Mali— The Princess was greeted by a bevy of Girl Scouts and not from Commonwealth nations. all dressed up in immaculate uniforms and white gloves. When the Snowdons arrived at the British Government They were remarkably calm, under the circumstances. Office, 845 Third Ave., British government work had Hope Taylor, B. of Orange. N. J., presented a small obviously come to a halt and it was doubtful'that much of box containing a Scout friendship pin to the Princess. any kind was being done in the area, judging from the "This is a bond that represents a love between the Girl large crowds on the sidewalks and the number of persons Scouts of America and the Girl Guides of Great Britain," gawking from windows. said Hope. "I'll always treasure this," replied the Princess. Princess Margaret walked across Third Avenue to the Princess Margaret was also given a Brownie doll by Girl Scout headquarters, '830 Third Ave.., causing ft minor Jan Happen, 8, of North Bergen, N. J., to take back home traffic jam. Vehicular and pedestrian traffic was stopped to her daughter, Lady Sarah Armstrong-Jones, 19 months. as she made the trip, escorted by foul' Girl Scouts. Lord Snowdon had left for the home.of Mr. and Mrs. LUNCHEON

given in honour of

HER ROYAL HIGHNESS THE PRINCESS MARGARET, COUNTESS OF SNOWDON and THE EARL OF SNOWDON

by the

SECRETARY-GENERAL

on Friday, 19 November 1965

at the

UNITED NATIONS HEADQUARTERS Les

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The Secretary-General

Madame Fanfani

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Mr. Haydon Mr. Korle

Sir Keith Unwin Mrs. Hope Mrs. Tomlinson Sir Harold Beeley H.E. Mr. Yost Mrs. Owen Lady Unwin Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mr. Narasimhan Lady Gaitskell Lady MacFarquhar Dr. Bunche H.E. Lord Caradon Mrs. Goldberg Sra. de Ortiz Sana H.E. Sr. Ortiz Sana H.E. M. Fanfani H.R.H. The Princess Margaret Mrs. Tin Myint U The Secretary-General Lord Snowdon Mme Fanfani Mme Seydoux H.E. M. Seydoux H.E. Dr. Fedorenko Lady Caradon Mrs. Bunche ^) Mr. Hoffman Sir Alexander $Xj Lady Jackling MacFarquhar I i i Mr. Owen Mrs. Rolz-Bennett

i (x) ijgL. __. Mr. de Meulemeester Major Legh •f

/ Protocol and Liaison 19 November 1965

the visit of Ho^H. .TJhe.PriRcess, Margarsta .Countess of Snowdom and The EarL of Snowdon to t the ^United, Nations .HeadquartersT pn 1*? .Noyembeg_.lg65.- (Revised) The Permanent Representative of the United Kingdom and the Lady Caradon have informed the Chairmen of the Delegations to the General Assembly and the Pertnanent Representatives of all Commonwealth members that they and their waives would b© expected to gather in"the West Foyer above the Delegates8 Entrance at 12;l5 p0m0 in order to meet H.ReH,, The Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdont, . Arrangements are being mad© by the United Kingdom Mission with Mr. Tooni and Mr. Reickert for serving .drinks and for the decoration of the room0

12;30 pom* H0R*H0 Th® Princess Margaret and Lord Snowionc accompanied by Lady Elisabeth Cavendishj Lady-in-Waiting, Major The Hon» F!i>anci8 Legh, Private Secretary, and Mr0 W,R,, Haydona will 9 arriv® by car at the Delegates Entrance0 The Royal Party will be met by the.-.Persaanent Representative of the United Kingdom and the Lady Caradon and greeted on behalf of the.Secretary-General by Mr0 Pierr© do Meulomeester^ Chief ®f Protocol,, The Royal Party ^aill be escorted by the Chief of Protocol by special elevator from, the Delegates* entrance to the second floor and into the West Foyer* The Chief of Protocol id.ll beg to be ©reused,, The guests previously assembled will ba introduced to Her Soyal Highness and Lord Snatfdon by Lord and Lady Caradojio

IsOO poin0 The Chief of Protocol ifill call for Her Soyal Highness and Lord Snosrdon in the West Foyer«

The Partys composed of Her Soyal Highnesss Lord Snowdon, Lord and Lady Caradon^, La.dy Caveridishs Major T?he Hon0 Francis Legh and Mra Haydon9 iid.ll leave the West Foyer and proceed through the Neck and along the second floor corridor fco waiting on the Second floor and up to the 36th floors 1;05 p«nu The Secretary-General and Mrs, Tin J^rint U T«L11 receive Her P,oyal Hi^iness and Lord Snoisdon at the elevators oh the 38th floor and escort the Party into the Secretary-General gs private office, 1:15 P«!Bo Preceded by the Chief of Protocol, the Secretary-General escort the Party by special elevator dcvm t > ths ground floor and through the Seeretar-iai south lobby., to the Library buildiago

On the way through th® Secretariat lobby9 Her Royal. Highness and Lord Snowdon will be given the opportunity to see the .Chagall window. Upon entering the Dag Hea-marskjold Library Penthouse3 the Chief of Protocol will Introduce the guests to Her Royal Highness and Lord Snowdona 1:30 panu Luncheon will be served, 2:30 p»a<, The guests invited to the Itancheon will take leave of Her Royal Highness and lord Snowdcn, the Secretary General and Mrs,, J^rint U in the Penthouse0 2s35 Pomo The Secretary-General and Mrs,, Myint U vji3JL escort th® Royal Party frcen ths Library Penthouse down to th© ground floor and through the Secretariat south lobby to the .high*»rise elevators at the Secretariat entrance0

The Secretary-General and Mrs0 Kyint U will take leave of Her Royal Highness and Lord Sxiot«don0 Escorted by the Chief of Protocol, the Royal Party will take an slsrator to the secoisd floor and start a briof tour of Headquarters biaildiag going through the thre© council ehaaib®rs9 the North Lounge^ the Neck, entering the General Assembly Hall through tha West entrance, out onto the balcoiny overlooking th® Public entrance and back into the General Ass ©ably Hall through the back East doors0 •Seats will be rssersred in block B of the General Assembly Hall should the Royal Party wish to attend the scheduled Plenary meeting of the General Assembly,, Prom the General Assembly Hall, Her Royal Highness and Lord Snowdon id.ll tales an elevator behind GA-200 down to 1-B and visit Conference Boom 8 (panelling donated by th© British Government )0

3:20 p0Hio Her Royal Highness and Lord Snowdon will depart from the 8 United Nations Headquarters Building by the Delegates ent ranee0 Mote to the Secretary-General

When Mr. Lemieux asked me to communicate to him a list of your guests at the luncheon you are giving for Princess Margaret on Friday, I thought you wanted to look over the list you had previously approved on 22 October. Since then, no other list had as yet been drawn up because I have not found it possible to finalize it, as a number of people have either declined since their acceptance or only this morning been invited and not yet had time to reply. I apologize therefore for the rough list -which you saw this morning and am endeavouring to submit to you herewith as complete a list as I can at this stage, while drawing to your attention that it may still change between now and Friday.

17 November 1965 Protocol and Liaison 17 November 1965

Luncheon in honour of H.R.H. The Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon on Friday, 19 November 1965

The Secretary-General Dr. Tin Myint U Mrs. Tin Myint U

Lord Snowdon H.R.H. The Princess Margaret

H.E. M. Fanfani Mme Fanfani H.E. Sr. Ortiz Sana Sra. de Ortia Sana H.E. M. Seydoux Mme Seydoux H.E. Dr. Fedorenko Mrs. Fedorenko (not yet replied) H.E. Lord Caradon Lady Caradon H.E. Mr. Goldberg (accepted and declined) Mrs. Goldberg H.E. Mr. Mulikita (accepted and declined Mrs. Mulikita (accepted and declined 17/11) 17/11)

Dr. Bunche Mrs. Bunche Mr. Hoffman Sir Alexander MacFarquhar Lady MacFarquhar Mr. Narasimhan Mr. Owen Mrs. Owen Mr. Rolz-Bennett Mrs. Rolz-Bennett

H.E. Mr. Yost (invited but not yet replied Mrs. Yost (invited but not yet on 17/H) replied on 17/11)

Sir Roger Jackling Lady Jackling Sir Harold Beeley Lady Gaitskell - 2 -

Sir Keith Umdn Lady Unwin Mr. Tomlinson Mrs. Tomlinson Mr. Hope Mrs. Hope Major Legh Lady Cavendish Mr. Haydon

Mr. de Meulemeester fefea...- I AdOO loaaxl

UNITED KINGDOM MISSION TO THE UNITED NATIONS 845 THIRD AVENUE NEW YORK.N.Y. 21 July, 1965.

>4tA^ It was extremely good of you to say today that you would be glad to entertain the Princess Margaret-and Lord Snowdon to luncheon Friday, 19 November. Tfiey were ffl^T"™" anxiou--.Vi^^Vyjpi^-^v&W^T^^iiaSf*;s to1' visi• • t'J tht Y e UniteT"T • J d1 »NationT -L J s and to pay their respects to you and I know how grateful they will be for your kindness in inviting them to lunch with you that day. In due course I shall consult your staff about the numbers in the Princess's party

His Excellency U Thant, ::< , Secretary General of the United Nations.