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CONSULAR TRAINEES-Participants in the Consular Course held at the Foreign Service Institute, July 3-28, were, seated, left to right, Lauralee M. Peters, Karyl M. Seljak, Marcia L. Norman, Annette L. Veler, Holly Gosewisch, William P. Boswell, Coordinator, FSI Consular Training; Bonnie Frank, Mary E. Swope, Irene Barbeau and Bobbie Sue Wood. Standing, left to right, are Nancy A. McKee, Dale L. Shaffer, Richard P. Livingston, Frederick B. Cook, Clayton Y. Amemiya, Ward D. Morrow, Lance G. Hopkins, Edward P. Brynn, Richard D. Belt, Philip B. Taylor, D. Kim Lutz, Marshall Adair, David H. McMahon, Drew S. May, Judith M. Heimann, Alan S. Hegburg, James V. Ledesma, David Charles Joyce, Ann E. Darbyshire and J. Michael Davis. Participants not pictured are Edwin L. Beffel and Alford W. Cooley.

Funds Management and Congressional Presentations Staff.

Adeolph W. Jones, Jr., has been designated Chief, Program Staff, Office of International Conferences (OIC). He replaces Thomas Ainsworth, who has been reassigned to PER. For the past ten months, Mr. Jones has been serving in IO as Staffing Management Officer.

Richard Scully, whose last post was Athens, has reported for duty in the Office of UN Political Affairs, Oceans, Outer Space and Disarmament. Charles Schaller, previously in EUR/BRY, has been assigned to UNP, Security and Political Affairs. Sheldon Krebs, who had been in the Directorate for Health and Narcotics (IO/HDC), has also been assigned to UNP.

Mary Vance Trent has reported to Saigon as the new POLAD, replacing John Dorrance, who has been reassigned to EA. Douglas Forman has been designated Officer in Charge, Programs. Operations and Evaluation Division in the office of the Coordinator for Multilateral Development Programs (CMD). Mr. Forman was formerly in the Office of the Inspector General of Foreign Assistance.

Jim Marshall, from INR, has replaced Donald Born in the Policy. Planning and Review Division of CMD. Mr. Born has transferred to NEA.

George McCurry, Administrative Officer in OIC, has been reassigned as the Budget Officer of OIC. Edgar Garwood, whose last post was Rio de Janeiro, has replaced Mr. McCurry

in the Administrative Conference Staff.

Donnell Smith, previously in London, has reported for duty in the OIC Conference Program Staff. Harry Glazer, previously in Viet-Nam, has replaced Carol Moor in the Conference Program Staff. Miss Moor has been assigned to Tokyo.

John Mills, formerly in E, has been designated Agency Director for Agriculture, replacing Edward B. Lawrence, who has been assigned to Geneva. Elliot Rothenberg, previously at USUN, has reported for duty in IO/HDC. Carl Grip has been designated Agency Director for Transportation and Communications (IO/TRC). Mr. Grip was previously in S-S/O.

Sidney Friedland, whose last post was in Yugoslavia, has reported for duty in IO/TRC, replacing Robert Yoder, who has been reassigned to SCI. Larry Thompson, previously in Bangkok. has been assigned to the Agency Directorate for Science and Technology (IO/SCT). Commander Richard Aldermann, previously with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Department of Commerce, has also been assigned to IO/SCT.

Richard Forster. previously in Paris, has reported for duty as Edcation Cultural Officer in IO/ in IO/ UNESCO.

International Scientific and Technological Affairs

Dr. Robert Woolridge, Office of General Scientific Affairs, represented

SCI at the Eighth Meeting of the Joint Committee of the U.S./Japan Cooperative Medical Science Program, held in Tokyo, August 21-25. The Joint Committee meets annually, alternating between Tokyo and Washington, D.C. The U.S. delegation was chaired by Dr. Ivan L. Bennett, Jr., Director of the Medical Center and Dean of the Medical School, New York University; the Chairman of the Japanese delegation was Dr. Toshio Kurokawa, Director, Cancer Institute Hospital, Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research. The purpose of the annual meetings is to plan future joint research studies, promote further exchange of junior and senior research fellows and to annihilate parasitic diseases and plagues through cooperative research planning and development.

DeR.

Ambassador Wymberley Coerr, Office of Environmental Affairs (SCI/EN), represented the Department at two meetings held in Canada and the United States, with emphasis on the preservation of the world's heritage of national parks and equivalent reserves. At Banff, he attended the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources meeting on Conservation of Wildlife, September 10-16. At Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, Ambassador Coerr attended the Second World Conference on National Parks. September 18-27.

Donald R. King, SCI/EN, was in Geneva, August 27 to September 2, to follow up with the Secretariat of the U.N. Conference on the Human

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HONORED ON RETIREMENT-Rodger P. Davies, right, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, presented a retirement certificate to Thomas D. McKiernan, most recently Consul General at Izmir, who retired with 30 years of Government service. Mrs. McKiernan holds the certificate.

Environment plans for implementing Stockholm Conference recommendations.

Slator Blackiston, Jr., SCI/EN, participated in the Symposium on Inland Water Pollution Project, sponsored by the Committee on Challenges of Modern Society and held at Fish River Lake, Maine, September 18-22.

Donald E. De Haven, Administrative Officer, visited Buenos Aires, Mexico City and Rio de Janeiro, August 25 through September 8, to review science program activities and operations.

Dr. Donald K. Reynolds was appointed on August 3 as U.S. Scientific Attaché to Rio de Janeiro. He reported to post on August 25. Before this appointment, Dr. Reynolds Reynolds served as Chairman of the Department of Electrical Engineering, University of Washington in Seattle.

Recent assignments in the Bureau include those of James Sampas, formerly with EUR; Royal Wald, from INR; and Robert Yoder, from IO to the Office of General Science Affairs. Gilbert Kulick, who recently returned from Addis Ababa, to the Office of Environmental Affairs, replacing Ed Malloy; and Lt. Col. William B. Bas

tedo, USAF, assigned to SCI/AS under the State-DOD Exchange Program replacing Lt. Col. Richard Campbell.

Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs Assistant Secretary Joseph J. Sisco addressed the 77th Annual Convention of the Jewish War Veterans in Houston, Texas, on August 19. Mr. Sisco spoke on U.S. policy in the Middle East.

An informal farewell ceremony was held in NEA on August 18 honoring Ambassador Kenneth B. Keating who resigned his post as Ambassador to India.

J. Thomas McAndrew, PoliticalEconomic Officer, NEA/IAI, spoke to university and community groups in Tucson, Arizona; Claremont. California; Portland, Oregon; and Seattle, and Tacoma, Washington, July 23-28, on the Arab-Israeli problem 23-28, on the Arab-Israeli problem and trends in the Arab world.

On August 8, Glenn R. Cella, Political-Military Officer, NEA/IAI, travelled to the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland, as a member of a State Department team invited to brief participants in the 1972 Navy

Public Affairs workshop on various aspects of U.S. foreign policy.

Quincey Lumsden, from Kuwait, reported to NEA/ARP to assume his duties as Kuwait-Bahrain-Qatar and United Arab Emirates (UAE) Country Officer.

Stephen Buck, formerly in Nouakchott, has assumed his duties in NEA/ARP as Country Officer for the two Yemens and the Sultanate of Oman.

Roger A. Long, NEA/CYP, departed for Greek language training at FSI. His replacement is Gene Christy from NEA/P.

Lloyd R. George, from Athens, has been assigned to NEA/GRK as Political/Military/Economic Officer. Annette Roylos, a secretary from Tokyo, has also joined the NEA/ GRK staff.

Personnel consulting in the Bureau included the following:

Roy Bibler, assigned to Kabul; Helene Batjer, from Islamabad to the Senior Seminar at FSI; Richard G. Colemen, from Taipei to Kathmandu; Ryan C. Crocker, assigned to Khorramshahr; Richard R. Hart, from Kathmandu to Hong Kong; Alan Parker, from Moscow to New Delhi; David R. Raynolds, Economic-Commercial Officer, from Karachi to the National War College; Arnold P. Schifferdecker, Political Officer at Kabul.

Thomas M. Allen, Telecommunications Assistant, assigned to Athens; Sharon K. Cziok, Cairo: Esta V. Dickmyer, Ankara; April Glaspie, assigned to Beirut; Francis J. Hazard, GSO, Athens; Henry M. Howe, Jidda; W. Nathaniel Howell, Jr., Economic Commercial Officer, Abu Dhabi; Edward T. Nosko, from Istanbul to Kampala; Thomas F. Paolozzi, CRO, assigned to Amman; and Mary M. Schlereth, Ankara.

Public Affairs

The U.S. Delegation to the world Olympic Youth Camp in Munich (not the U.S. Olympic Team) was in the Department for briefings on August 18. The 23 young women and 51 young men, plus three representatives of the Exploring Division, Boy Scouts of America, and eight advisors from other cities, were briefed by John Kimball of the Office of Media Services, Owen Roberts of the African Bureau, and Sandra Sheskin of the Director General's office.

Selected in athletic competition at the Second National Explorer Olympics in Fort Collins, Colorado, the

U.S. Youth Delegation is made up of the three top teams. The team from Portland, Oregon, won top honors, while teams from Temple City, California, and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, placed second and third in overall team standings.

During its three-week stay in the World Olympic Youth Camp, the delegation will attend athletic competitions and take part in various ceremonies of the summer Olympics. In addition, in-camp activities include participation in sports competitions, tours, and the exchange of national customs among the Camp's 2,200 young people from over 120 countries.

Kenneth Strawberry, Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs, and Marie Bland, Coordinator of Scholar-Diplomat Seminars, planned and carried out the pilot program in the effort to expand seminars for scholars to non-scholar groups. Twenty members of the Washington Export Council participated in the first such seminar, July 31 to August 4. In addition to sessions in the Bureau of Economic Affairs, the program included discussions in the major substantive areas of the Department.

Constance Dunaway, Media Arrangements Officer in the Office of Public Services, recently travelled to Chicago, Boston and New York City. She was the guest of Station WGN (radio) and the Mid-America Committee in Chicago. Her host in Boston was the Editorial Board of The Boston Globe. In New York City she met with Governor Rockefeller's TV aide and the TV News Directors of both CBS and NBC.

Barclay Ward left the Historical Office August 15 on a year's leave of absence from the Foreign Service to do graduate work at the University of Iowa.

Katherine Shirley has joined the staff of the General Publications Division in the Office of Media Services as a writer-editor. Her previous assignment was as a Consular Officer at Warsaw.

Martin Paul Claussen, Jr., reported for duty on August 21 in the Foreign Relations Division of the Historical Office. Dr. Claussen came to the Department from the Library of Congress.

Jose L. Fernandez, recently assigned to San Jose, has joined the Public Inquiries Division in the Office of Media Services.

Doris Scrignar has reported for duty in the Office of Policy and Plans.

Sheila-Kaye O'Connell has left the General Publications Division for FSI language training prior to departing for an overseas assignment.

Security and

Consular Affairs

Frederick Smith, Jr., former Deputy Administrator of the Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, now in Senior Officer Training, represented

the Bureau at the Annual Convention of the American Bar Association held in San Francisco on August 14. Mr. Smith participated in a panel program conducted by the Section of Administrative Law which concerned itself with the question of what protection should be accorded refugees under International Agreement.

The Visa Office welcomed to its staff Robert N. Chiperfield, from To

ronto.

Irene Barbeau recently departed the Visa Office for training at FSI prior to her new assignment to Caracas. Miss Barbeau is a participant in the Mustang Program.

Diane Henshaw, recently assigned to Zurich under the Mustang Program, was with the Visa Office staff for three weeks training prior to her departure for Zurich.

Martha Davis and Robert Strahl, summer employees in the Visa Office, have departed to resume their studies at the University of Maryland.

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Clayton Amemiya, Naha; Bruce Beardsley, Beirut; Paul Bofinger, Dusseldorf; Mario Calvani, La Paz to Department; Ryan Crocker, Khorramshahr; Graham Fuller, Yemen; Ovsanna Harpootian, Georgetown to Florence; Wesley Jorgensen, Bangkok; David Joyce, Bathurst; Charles Kennedy, Athens; Richard Livingston, Athens; John McCarthy, III, Saigon to Phnom Penh; Nancy McKee, Manila; Marcia Norman, Abidjan; Dale Shaffer, Santiago; Donald Sutter, Marseille.

Betty Swope, Mexico City; Sue Wood, Manila; Robert Tynes, Bujumbura; Warren Swope, Frankfurt; Peter Swiers, Berlin; George Peterson, Naha; Clyde Snider, Tegucigalpa; Terrance Leonhardy, Guadalajara; Alice Smith, Ankara; Edward. Reynolds, Berlin to Tokyo; Elayne Urban, to Bogota; James Ledesma, Department, to Beirut; and Dale Shaffer, to Santiago.

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NEW DELHI-Bicycle buff Lee Stull, U.S. Chargé d'Affaires, a.i., passes another commuter while on his way to work. Like other Mission chiefs, Mr. Stull is entitled to fly a flag from his fender, but couldn't find a place to mount it.

Kenneth Todd Young Dies;
Former Envoy to Thailand

Kenneth Todd Young, a consultant to the Agency for International Development and former Ambassador to Thailand, died on August 29. He was stricken while attending a conference in the Department.

Mr. Young, 56, who lived in Larchmont, N.Y., was Ambassador to Bangkok from 1961 to 1963. The New York Times, in reporting his death, described

Mr. Young

OBITUARIES

J. Fred Doyle

J. Fred Doyle, Jr., 53, a retired Foreign Service Officer, died in Sarasota, Florida, on April 30.

Mr. Doyle joined the Foreign Service in 1946. He held assignments as an Organization and Methods Examiner in Frankfurt, Bonn and in the Department; Personnel Officer in the Department; Supervisory Passport and Citizenship Officer and Commercial Officer in Tokyo; Consular Officer and Commercial Officer in Brisbane; and Supervisory Administrative and Consular Officer in Salis

him as "an exhuberant, dynamic dip-bury. He retired in April 1970.

lomat who had been engrossed in the problems of Asia since his undergraduate days."

Mr. Young joined the Department as a political intelligence officer in 1946 and rose to become Director of the Office of Southeast Asian Affairs.

He left the Service in 1958 and

worked for Standard Vacuum Oil Company for three years before President Kennedy named him Ambassador to Bangkok.

He leaves his wife and four children-Stephen B., Edward M., Katherine and Christina.

Noel A. Kreisher

Noel A. Kreisher, 51, a retired Foreign Service Staff Officer, died in Washington, D.C., on August 13.

Mr. Kreisher had served with the U.S. Army from July, 1942, until January, 1946. He joined the Department of State in 1948, retiring on December 31, 1968.

He leaves his wife, Gloria Irene Kreisher, of the home address, 2117 E Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.; a sister, Mrs. Isabel Brown of Indianapolis, Indiana; and a brother, Peter.

Rufus A. Horn

Rufus A. Horn, an Economic/ Commercial Officer at the U.S. Consulate in Medan, was killed in a hunting accident in North Sumatra, Indonesia, on August 20.

Mr. Horn, 43, was an employee of the Department of the Army from 1948 until 1971. In May of 1971 he joined the Department of State.

His wife and son lived with him in Medan. He formerly lived in Rockville, Md.

Mr. Doyle leaves his wife, Mrs. Rita M. Doyle, of the home, 621 Treasure Boat Way, Sarasota, Florida 33581; a daughter Mrs. Sharon Quinn, of Denver; and a son, Brian, with the U.S. Army.

Marguerite P. Glenn

Marguerite P. Glenn, 52, a retired Department employee, died at the George Washington University Hospital on August 4.

Mrs. Glenn served for 14 years with the Department, AID and ACDA before retiring in April 1971.

She is survived by her husband, Robert G. Glenn, of Washington; two daughters, Mrs. Patricia G. Finlayson, of Washington, and Mrs. Barbara G. Reaves, of San Jose, California; her mother, Mrs. Mary L. Pleasants, of Washington; a sister, Mrs. Helen P. McCormick, of Washington, and six grandchildren.

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Margaret Hicks Williams;
Retired Department Officer

Margaret Hicks Williams, 73, a retired Department officer with many years' experience in informational and cultural affairs, died in Bethesda on August 18.

She served the War Department as a research analyst, engaged in free lance writing, and served with the Executive Office of the President before joining the Department of State in 1944.

In the Department she was with the Office of British Commonwealth and Northern European Affairs until she was assigned in 1951 as Cultural Affairs Officer at Tokyo. In 1953 she joined the U.S. Information Agency, going to Manila in 1954 as Cultural Affairs Officer. She was detailed to the Department's Cultural Policy and Development Staff in 1959 and served

with the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs until her retirement on June 30, 1969.

Mrs. Williams received the National Civil Service League's merit citation in 1958 and the Department's Meritorious Honor Award in 1968.

Mary Jane Maguire

Mary Jane Maguire, 57, wife of Edward B. Maguire, retired, died at Loma Linda Medical Center in Riverside, California, on July 21.

Mrs. Maguire accompanied her husband on tours in in Germany, Greece, Brazil and Nigeria. Prior to his retirement to San Clemente, California, in 1971 Mr. Maguire served as General Services Officer in Bonn.

In addition to her husband, Mrs. Maguire leaves a daughter, Mrs. Simmons B. Savage, III, of 3535 S. Stafford Street, Arlington, Virginia; a sister, Mrs. Albert Hecht, of Anaheim, California; and a brother, Richard M. Barnholt, of Toronto, Canada.

Virginia C. Ralston

Virginia C. Ralston, 58, Budget and Management Officer in Rome, died on August 10.

Mrs. Ralston joined the Foreign Service in 1942. She held assignments in Lima, San Jose, Caracas, Rangoon, Bern, Warsaw, Paris, Budapest, Rome and Washington, principally in the budget and fiscal field. Mrs. Ralston, who won the Department's Meritorious Service Award in 1963, was assigned to Rome in July 1969.

Mrs. Ralston is survived by a son, John David McAuliffe, Jr., of New York City.

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PERSONNEL/Foreign Service

NEW APPOINTMENTS

Adams, Wayne G., Vienna
Alberti, Deborah L., Yaounde
Allen, Thomas M., Athens
Anthony, Earl G., Saigon
Buchanan, George, Brussels
Chao, Yuhua, DG/MED/DD/CB
Currie, Mary L., Mogadiscio
Deem, Patsy A., Kabul
Drake, Harold A., Jr., Monrovia
Farrell, Christopher J., Monrovia
Franklin, Linda J., Buenos Aires
Glanton, William M., Nicosia
Goodman, Terry L., Manila
Grimes, Ernest E., Kinshasa
Grottenthaler, Daniel G., Manila
Grundon, Robert W., Caracas
Haverty, John James, Valletta
Horn, Mary Jo, Athens
Hunter, William J., Ankara
Jones, Emma Joyce, L

Le Feaver, James H., Jr., Beirut
Lewis, William M., Athens
Maden, Ann, La Paz
Martinell, Roger D., Brasilia
O'Neil, Francis E., Manila

Pascale, Gerald A., Georgetown
Pierce, Joseph E., Manila

Quilty, James F., Jr., Bangkok

Rayner, Raymond C., Monrovia

Reed, James S., Saigon

Reynolds, Donald K., Rio de Janeiro

Rider, James E., Rangoon

Schissel, Gregory A., Monrovia

Schlereth, Mary M., Ankara

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Adair, Marshall P., JOC/FSI to Paris Albright, Raymond J., Belgrade to M/FSI/ AOT

Amemiya, Clayton Y., JOC/FSI to Naha Amstutz, J. Bruce, M/FSI/UT to S/IG Andrew, Robert F., Kigali to Kinshasa Antippas, Andrew F., Phnom Penh to EA/ LC

Armbruster, James P., Lima to Georgetown

Armijo, Elsie M., Madrid to Buenos Aires Aschman, Francis J., Bangkok to Melbourne

Ayling, Robert S., Douala to Yaounde
Baas, Marc Allen, M/FSI/LT to Tunis
Ballou, Christopher H., EA to Hong Kong
Bangs, Gerald C., Nicosia to BF/FS/VES
Barmon, Ward Davis, M/FSI/LT to Taipei
Barnebey, Malcolm R., La Paz to M/FSI/
AOT

Basil, George T., Beirut to Cairo

Batjer, Helene A., Islamabad to M/FI/
AOT

Baudoin, Laury A., Rangoon to Warsaw
Becker, John P., Berlin to Bonn
Bell, Susan Jane, Port-au-Prince to CA/
FS/JO

Bennett, John E., JOC/FSI to Madrid
Berlin, Calvin C., Santiago to Recife

Beviano, Philip D., Bonn to EUR
Bigler, Roy C., NEA to Kabul

Blair, George M., Guatemala City to A/
OC/P

Bleske, August J., Rome to Bonn
Boardman, John S., Lahore to M/FSI/LT
Bolweg, Frank J., Bogota to ARA
Bouton, Normam M., Nicosia to Athens
Bowles, Gary R., Managua to ARA
Bradley, John A., Tokyo to EA
Bredeck, Duane R., Monrovia to Tunis
Brevig, Beverly A., Bogota to Saigon
Bridges, Lena P., A/OC to Bridgetown
Bridgewater, Irvin L., III, A/SY to New
Delhi

Brooke, Raymond W., Athens to NEA Brown, Edward H., San Salvador to Abidjan

Brown, Frances W., Paris to Marseille
Brown, Kenneth L., AF to Brussels
Brown, Richard C., ARA to Rio de Janeiro
Brown, Robert E., EA to Kuala Lumpur
Burke, Walter S., Hong Kong City to
SCA/VO

Burrows, Hugh W., Cape Town to Kampala

Bush, John M., Athens to NEA

Byron, Germaine M., Conakry to Prague Callihan, Richard N., Athens to NEA Campbell, Van C., Hong Kong City to EA Carrico, Peter Paul, Recife to Brasilia Caruso, Joseph A., San Salvador to ARA Chapman, Richard E., Bujumbura to Accra

Chiperfield, Robert N., Toronto to SCA/
VO

Clair, William J., Asmara to AF
Claus, Bernice V., Bamako to Rangoon
Clawson, Daisy Lou, Tripoli to Tunis
Clawson, Jack S., AF to Saigon

Connell, Mary Alice, Bonn to Islamabad
Connolly, John S., Jr., M/FSI/UT to DG/
MED/EX

Cooper, Allen, Guayaquil to Port-of-Spain
Cooper, Lola Sybil, Belgrade to EUR
Cornett, Robert E., Nicosia to Brasilia
Coulter, Richard Arthur, The Hague to
Tehran

Coveleski, Frank X., Rome to EUR
Craig, John B., Tripoli to S/S-O
Creeden, William E., Manila to Beirut
Curtis. Jerry G., Manila to EA

Cusack, Thomas E., Frankfurt to Bangkok Dale, Charles J., Jr., Manila to Copenhagen

David, John R., Djakarta to Lagos
Day, Terrance M.. Tripoli to Tunis
Daymont, Henry P., Rome to Frankfurt
Dehart, Thomas A., M/FSI/LT to Santo
Domingo

Dinkel, John F., London to EUR
Djerejian, Edward P., Casablanca to
NEA/ARN

Donald, Richard H., Djakarta to M/FSI/
UT

Donnelly, Edward J., London to 10/OIC
Dorfeld, Charles W., Prague to Frankfurt
Dornan, Thomas J., Geneva to 10
Dovell, Georgia L., Fort Lamy to Conakry
Drexler, Robert W., Hong Kong City to Ge-

neva

Driscoll, Robert S., IV, Bogota to Belize
Duncan, Thomas C.. Lima to ARA
Dunn, Bertram F., Kabul to M/FSI/WC
Dunn, Paxton T., 10 to Geneva
Durbin, John F., A/OC to Frankfurt

Durfey, Frank D., Kinshasa to Djakarta
Durkee, Michael L., Quito to Oslo
Dwyer, Richard A., Sofia to EUR
Edensword, Jon Goodwin, Monrovia to
Port-au-Prince

Ellis, William S., Kinshasa to AF
Emmons, Charles Edward, M/FSI/UT to
PMS/PA

Engle, Gerald L., Sofia to M/FSI/LT
Epstein, Shirley M., Islamabad to Lagos
Ericksen, Emil P., E to Kathmandu
Everts, Stockwell, AID (overseas) to DG/
PER

Farber, James P., M/FSI/WC to Blantyre
Fenske, Marvin J., Manila to EA

Fenton, Richard Lewis, M/FSI/LT to Naples

Ferry, Edward J., Accra to A/OC/PE
Finch, Richard W., Seoul to M/FSI/WC
Flanegin, Robert L., Hong Kong City to EA
Ford, George W., II, Tehran to NEA
Foster, Homer P., Brasilia to Bremen
Frank, Bonnie A., JOC/FSI to Edinburgh
Freund, John N., Athens to NEA
Friend, Julius W., Jr., Rome to EUR
Galt, Victor H., M/FSI/LT to Seoul
Garwood, Edgar F., Jr., Rio de Janeiro to
10/OIC/CAS

Gates, Charles E., Rome to Lagos
Geary, Richard M., Rabat to Guatemala
Geber, Anthony, Vienna to M/FSI/AOT
Gebhardt, Carl E., EUR to Warsaw
George, Lloyd Ronald, Athens to NEA/
GRK

Gerlach, Frederick H., Rabat to Lusaka
Gerwig, Harold E., Jr., Athens to Bonn

Gibson, Stephen R., Lisbon to Manila

Gillen, David J., Jidda to Athens

Giraldi, Clara T., Colombo to Manila

Goins, Herbert S., Dhahran to Mexico, D.F.

Golden, Ronald, ARA to Lima

Golino, Frank Ralph, M/FSI/AOT to Valletta

Gorn, Arline C., Port-of-Spain to Santo
Domingo

Gosewisch, Holly, JOC/FSI to Abidjan
Goss, Patsy Ruth, Bern to Bonn

Gothe, Arlene Ann, Bern to Addis Ababa
Grace, Charles M., Saigon to Kinshasa
Grace, Linda Ann, AF to Ottawa
Grahl, Larry C., Ibadan to REC/BEX
Grant, Douglas M., Manila to EA
Grassle, John E., Frankfurt to Prague
Green, Willie J., Valletta to Kingston
Grob, Louis W., Pretoria to A/SY/T
Grogan, Thomas F., Jr., Monrovia to MA
Grossman, Lawrence Marshall, AID (over-
seas) to Buenos Aires

Guenther, Ethel L., Monrovia to Quito Haight, Richard D., Addis Ababa to Rangoon

Hale, James E., Bangkok to Belgrade
Hallford, Scott S., Rangoon to M/FSI/LT
Hambley, Mark G., Saigon to M/FSI/LT
Hamrick, Samuel J., Jr., Addis Ababa to
AF/C

Hanks, J. Wayne, Frankfurt to A/OC/P
Hanrehan, Athur D., Djakarta to Rabat
Hansen, Terry D., Curacao to M/FSI/LT
Harcum, Gilbert M., Quito to Beirut
Harris, Bobby, Manila to EA

Harris, William B., NEA to Hamilton
Hart, Richard R., Kathmandu to Hong
Kong

Hartley, Douglas G., Athens to Belgrade

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