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DIA's and first
During the spring and summer of 1961, as Cold War tensions flared over the Berlin Wall, Air Force Lieutenant General Joseph Carroll ( soon to become DIA's first director ) took the lead in planning and organizing this new agency.

DIA's and on
DIA's Director is a three-star military officer who serves as principal adviser to the Secretary of Defense and to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on matters of military intelligence.
Following DIA's establishment, the Services transferred intelligence functions and resources to it on a time-phased basis to avoid rapidly degrading the overall effectiveness of defense intelligence.
The Defense Intelligence Agency has conflicted with the Central Intelligence Agency ( CIA ) in collection and analysis on the existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and has often represented the Pentagon in the CIA-DoD intelligence rivalry due to DIA's alleged clandestine HUMINT collection and often overlapping analysis products.
Incoming flights on the airport's B Concourse made very limited use of the system, and only United, DIA's dominant airline, used it for outgoing flights.

DIA's and capabilities
This has been seen as an upgrading and rebranding of DIA's current HUMINT capabilities.
It is still unclear whether the Defense Clandestine Service will supplant DX similarly to how the National Clandestine Service supplanted the CIA's Directorate of Operations or whether the Defense Clandestine Service will operate separately and concurrently to DIA's current capabilities.

DIA's and military
The DIA's mission is to provide timely, objective, and cogent military intelligence to warfighters, defense planners, and defense and national security policymakers.
During these early years of DIA's existence, Agency attempts to establish itself as DoD's central military intelligence organization met with continuing Service opposition.
In 1992, Montes was selected for the DIA's Exceptional Analyst Program and later traveled to Cuba to study the Cuban military.

DIA's and with
In 1977, a charter revision further clarified DIA's relationship with the JCS and the Secretary of Defense.
" Yet the DIA's postwar exploitation of the facility found " no information from Salman Pak that links al-Qa ' ida with the former regime.

DIA's and .
The earth represents DIA's global intelligence mission.
Following the promulgation in 1979 of Executive Order 12036, which restructured the Intelligence Community and better outlined DIA's national and departmental responsibilities, the Agency was reorganized around five major directorates: production, operations, resources, external affairs, and J-2 support.
The " Toyota War " between Libya and Chad and the turmoil in Haiti added to DIA's heavy production workload, as did unrest in other parts of Latin America, Somalia, Ethiopia, Burma, Pakistan, and the Philippines.
Defense Counterintelligence and HUMINT Center ( DX ): This center manages DIA's and the DoD's human source intelligence collection, including the Defense Attache System, and is the primary interface between the Department of Defense and the National Clandestine Service.
He served as Chief of Naval Intelligence, Defense Intelligence Agency and later as the DIA's Chief of Staff, and Director of the Intelligence Community Staff, Central Intelligence Agency.

publication and 1981
* 1981 – The Washington Star ceases all operations after 128 years of publication.
Initially it was a supporting material publication for White Bear and Red Moon but for its 11th issue, in 1981, it had become the official RuneQuest magazine.
ISBN 0-262-08259-4 ( reprint of 1981 publication ).
The 2011 publication " The Generation X Report ", based on annual surveys used in the Longitudinal Study of today's adults, finds that Gen Xers, who are defined in the report as people born between 1961 and 1981, are highly educated, active, balanced, happy and family-oriented.
IPv4 is described in IETF publication RFC 791 ( September 1981 ), replacing an earlier definition ( RFC 760, January 1980 ).
The emergence of nanotechnology in the 1980s was caused by the convergence of experimental advances such as the invention of the scanning tunneling microscope in 1981 and the discovery of fullerenes in 1985, with the elucidation and popularization of a conceptual framework for the goals of nanotechnology beginning with the 1986 publication of the book Engines of Creation.
More recent usage was Peter Read's 1981 publication of The Stolen Generations: The Removal of Aboriginal children in New South Wales 1883 to 1969.
The Computer Contradictionary is a follow-on to Kelly-Bootle's The Devil's DP Dictionary, published in New York by McGraw-Hill in 1981, ISBN 0-07-034022-6 ; the later publication shares only a little material with the original.
* Literary Machines: The report on, and of, Project Xanadu concerning word processing, electronic publishing, hypertext, thinkertoys, tomorrow's intellectual revolution, and certain other topics including knowledge, education and freedom ( 1981 ), Mindful Press, Sausalito, California ; publication dates as listed in the 93. 1 ( 1993 ) edition: 1980 – 84, 1987, 1990 – 93
* My: Roman, ( We: A Novel ) 1927 ( translations: Gregory Zilboorg, 1924 ; Bernard Guilbert Guerney, 1970, Mirra Ginsburg, 1972 ; Alex Miller, 1991 ; Clarence Brown, 1993 ; Natasha Randall, 2006 ; first Russian-language book publication 1952, U. S .)-Wir, TV film in 1981, dir.
After little further discussion of the issue in the 1970s, the 1980s saw the publication of three scholarly editions of The Shrew, all of which re-addressed the question in light of the by now general acceptance of Alexander's theory ; Brian Morris ' 1981 edition for the Arden Shakespeare, H. J.
This eventually led to the 1981 publication of the NRC Fault Tree Handbook NUREG – 0492, and mandatory use of PRA under the NRC's regulatory authority.
In the 1970s he became an editor of a children's magazine, and began working on his memoirs, which were serialized in the Party publication, the quarterly Xinwenxue Shiliao ( 新文學史料 ) ( Historical Materials on New Literature ), but he died on March 27, 1981 before he could finish it.
In 2006, the same publication recognized the importance of the album's contribution to popular music in the 1980s by including it in their " The 200 Greatest Albums of the 80s " as one of the twenty greatest albums of 1981.
He oversaw the publication of three volumes of the monologues by or associated with him: Monologues ( 1979 ); The Stanley Holloway Monologues ( 1980 ); and More Monologues ( 1981 ).
The publication Cultural Transmission and Evolution: A Quantitative Approach ( 1981 ) made use of models from population genetics to investigate the transmission of culturally transmitted units.
According to Diamond: " The idea of taking dominion over secular society gained widespread currency with the 1981 publication of ... Schaeffer's book A Christian Manifesto.
In 1981, the publication was split in two: AtomAge Rubberist ( similar to the original AtomAge ) and AtomAge Bondage ( which contained more overtly S & M content ).
#" Toward Competitive Provision of Public Record Message Services ", ETIP ( Experimental Technology Incentives Program ), National Bureau of Standards, Washington, D. C., October, 1981 ; " domestic Public Message Services ", FCC publication 71FCC 2d 471 ; " Telecommunications Competition and Deregulation Act of 1981 " ( FCC Computer Inquiry II ), Docket 20828, December 30, 1980 ; " Denial of AT & T Petition for Waiver of Section 64. 702 of the Commission Rules and Regulations ", October 7, 1981, Federal Communications Reports 88FCC 2d.
Brinkley appeared on three consecutive Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue Edition covers ( 1979, 1980 and 1981 ) – the first time that had happened — and appeared in the publication ’ s annual swimsuit issues and television specials for years to follow. Brinkley was featured exclusively in the first Sports Illustrated Calendar and also released two of her own exclusive calendars to unparalleled success.
Since its first publication, in 1981, it has been progressively adopted by Australian schools, businesses and courts as their standard dictionary.
In 1981 Freer Spreckley first articulated the triple bottom line in a publication called ' Social Audit-A Management Tool for Co-operative Working '.

publication and first
Four years after the publication of The History Of England, the first volume of Trevelyan's Queen Anne trilogy appeared.
His first book, Before The Brave ( 1936 ), is a collection of poems that are almost all Communistic, but after publication of this book he rejected Communism, and advocated a pacifistic anarchy, though retaining his revolutionary idiom.
Aug. 4, 1821, nearly a century after Benjamin Franklin founded the Pennsylvania Gazette -- a century during which it had undergone several changes in ownership and a few brief suspensions in publication -- this paper made its first appearance as the Saturday Evening Post.
The sequence of events leading to his important discovery still remains ambiguous but it seems that one of the advanced students at the university related that the first direct event that led to the publication of Oersted's discovery occurred during a private lecture made before a group of other advanced students in the spring of 1820.
They are the only poems that he rearranged as a group between their first appearance ( in Satires Of Circumstance ) and the publication of the Collected Poems.
The first section of this publication appeared in 1948 and the last supplement in 1960.
One of the very best is only now published in this country, five years after its first publication in England.
Since then and during the first decade, the results were given to newspapers for publication at 11 pm on the night of the awards.
As a first step, Algerian literature was marked by works whose main concern was the assertion of the Algerian national entity, there is the publication of novels as the Algerian trilogy of Mohammed Dib, or even Nedjma of Kateb Yacine novel which is often regarded as a monumental and major work.
Note: This list is limited to linguists who have worked specifically on the Altaic problem since the publication of the first volume of Ramstedt's Einführung in 1952.
An advance may be paid in two lump sums: the first payment on contract signing, and the second on delivery of the completed manuscript or on publication.
The first organized race was on April 28, 1887 by the chief editor of Paris publication Le Vélocipède, Monsieur Fossier.
The first ' modern ' publication of Alcaeus ' verses appeared in a Greek and Latin edition of fragments collected from the canonic nine lyrical poets by Michael Neander, published at Basle in 1556.
His first chemical publication appeared in 1764.
It was the first publication to focus solely on role-playing games.
Visitors were first attracted to Aberfoyle and the surrounding area after the publication of The Lady of the Lake by Sir Walter Scott in 1810.
Kirk who provided the first translation into Gaidhlig of the Book of Psalms, however, he is better remembered for the publication of his book " The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns, and Fairies " in 1691.
Living first in Philadelphia, then seeking refuge close in Virginia, he wrote a book entitled The Prospect Before Us ( read and approved by Vice President Jefferson before publication ) in which he called the Adams administration a " continual tempest of malignant passions " and the President a " repulsive pedant, a gross hypocrite and an unprincipled oppressor ".
These lectures are listed by date of delivery, with date of first publication given separately if different.
The phrase " black-letter law " was used in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court case Naglee v. Ingersoll, 7 Pa. 185 ( 1847 ), almost 50 years before the first publication of Black's.
The publication of the results was delayed and Balard published his results first.
2002 tells the story of the first publication and many editions.
However, it appears to be the first use of the word bunyip in a written publication.
Bartók's economic difficulties during his first years in America were mitigated by publication royalties, teaching and performance tours.
Its first publication was the Abridged Bliss Classification ( ABC ), intended for school libraries.

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