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The names below are mentioned on the listed pages with the name BLACKWELL J KENNETH
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AARON DAVID L National Reporter 1986-SU (25) See Nat'l Reporter info below
ABRAM MORRIS B National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
AFRICAN AMERICAN LABOR CENTER National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
ALLISON WICK National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
AMOS JOHN B National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BAUM PHILIP National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BENNETT JOHN M (SAN ANTONIO TX) National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BLUE LINDEN National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BOOKBINDER HYMAN National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BOONE JOHN L National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BRADEN THOMAS WARDELL National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BRAMAN NORMAN National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BROWN IRVING JOSEPH National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BRZEZINSKI ZBIGNIEW National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
BUKOVSKY VLADIMIR National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
CAMERON BRUCE P National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
CARROLL FRANCIS R National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
CAUFIELD FRANK J National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
CHAIKIN SOL CHIC National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
CHRISTIAN BARBARA BULLITT National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
COLLINS PHYLLIS National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
DIAZ VERSON DE AMOS ELENA National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
DOGOLE S HARRISON National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
DROZAK FRANK National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
DUKE ANGIER BIDDLE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
EARLE VALERIE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
FALCOFF MARK National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
FERRE MAURICE A National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
FREEDMAN RITA National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
FREEMAN ORVILLE L National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
GRACE J PETER JR National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
HOLBROOKE RICHARD C.A. National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
HUNTINGTON SAMUEL PHILLIPS National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
HURSON JOHN A National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
IFSHIN DAVID M National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
JOYCE JOHN T National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
KEMBLE EUGENIA National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
KEMBLE PENN National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
LAUREDO LUIS J National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MAHOMO NELSON (NANA) National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MAS CANOSA JORGE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MASVIDAL RAUL National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MBOYA TOM National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MOZAMBIQUE NATIONAL RESISTANCE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MURAVCHIK JOSHUA National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
MURDOCK DEROY Timmerman,K. Shakedown. 2002 (348)
NATIONAL ENDOWMENT DEMOCRACY National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
NOVAK MICHAEL National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
OLEARY DENISE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
PERETZ MARTIN National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
PRODEMCA National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
RAISER MOLLY National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
RAPOPORT BERNARD National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
RAVITCH RICHARD National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
RICHARDSON R RANDOLPH National Reporter 1986-SU (25) RIVAS GALIONT ERNESTO National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
ROBB EDMUND W National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
ROBERTO HOLDEN National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
ROSENBLATT PETER R National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
ROSE DANIEL National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
SAKWA PAUL National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
SILBER JOHN R National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
SIMON WILLIAM EDWARD National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
SINGER MAX National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
SMILEN KENNETH B National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
SONNENBERG MAURICE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
TAFT THOMAS F National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
WATTENBERG BEN J National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
WEIGEL GEORGE National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
WELTNER ELIZABETH S National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
WOOLSEY R JAMES National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
ZIMMERMAN HARRIET National Reporter 1986-SU (25)
On the 2004 membership roster of Council on Foreign Relations, The Harold Pratt House, 58 East 68th Street, New York NY 10021, Tel: 212-434-9400, Fax: 212-861-1789.
The Council on Foreign Relations has been the most powerful private organization in U.S. foreign policy since it began in 1921. While priding itself on non-partisanship and on recent efforts to recruit minorities, women, and youth (under 35), CFR's 4,200 members mainly reflect the resources needed by the ruling class to maintain their power. Don't call them if you want to join; they call you. And don't wait for a call unless you have big money, national security expertise, CIA experience, a political constituency, or clout with the media. CFR publishes the prestigious journal "Foreign Affairs" as well as a number of books and reports. Another major activity is to organize closed meetings for their members with assorted world leaders. Everyone feels free to share views and information about current world events, primarily because CFR has strict confidentiality rules and keeps its records locked up for 25 years.
To save disk space, the several membership rosters in NameBase were entered to avoid redundancy. Citations to membership rosters prior to 2004 (1985, 1992, 1995, 1997 and 2001) were deleted if the name also appears on the 2004 roster.
National Reporter (1985-1988) CounterSpy published 32 issues from 1973 to 1984, a special issue on Jordan in 1977, and 8 issues as The National Reporter from 1985 to 1988. Back issues are no longer available except through the PIR photocopying service.
This little magazine had a stormy history. After they started printing names of CIA officers around the world, a station chief was assassinated in 1975 by urban guerrillas in Athens. CounterSpy found itself under attack by what appeared to be an orchestrated U.S. media -- or perhaps it was simply pack journalism. Their struggle to keep publishing was not always successful.
More than once this was where you read it first. The station chief in Costa Rica, Joseph F. Fernandez, first appeared in CounterSpy in 1975, even while the Washington Post was sticking with his pseudonym up until the day he was indicted in 1988. And the National Endowment for Democracy, finally recognized for its role in buying the Nicaraguan election in 1990, was first exposed in The National Reporter by editor John Kelly in 1986. This magazine will be missed by those who feel that they need to know.
And he has been mentioned in this book Timmerman, Kenneth R. Shakedown: Exposing the Real Jesse Jackson. Washington DC: Regnery Publishing, 2002. 501 pages. This biography of Jesse Jackson is written by a conservative and published by Regnery, which is very conservative. Occasionally in the book, on certain issues, the author reveals the right-wing baggage that he brought to this project. There is too much red baiting over the background of Martin Luther King advisor Jack O'Dell, a former CPUSA member. (The CPUSA played an important role in the early civil rights movement, and deserves credit for this, not scorn.) Other examples are when the author mentions Jackson's position on the Panama Canal, or his meetings with Yasser Arafat, or with officials from the African National Congress (some of the leaders in the ANC were Communists, which is all the author needed to know about that).
The other ninety percent of this book exposes Jackson's career as a huckster and shakedown artist, and is meticulously documented. Jackson's association with Chicago gangsters has by now evolved into his technique with American corporations. The approach is somewhat crude: if a corporation helps fund one of his many "nonprofit" fronts, Jackson won't sabotage their plans by flexing his affirmative action muscle. Other fascinating chapters chronicle Jackson's inept dealings with African thugs such as Charles Taylor of Liberia. Jackson traveled as a presidential "special envoy" at a crucial time in that region, which amounts to evidence of Clinton's poor judgment. ISBN 0-89526-165-0
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