Word: kozak
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...early May, Abrams dispatched his deputy Michael Kozak to Panama for what amounted to a series of plea-bargaining negotiations. The U.S.'s final offer, approved by Reagan the Sunday before he left for the Moscow summit: if Noriega would leave Panama shortly after Aug. 12, the fifth anniversary of his taking office, he could return for the Christmas holidays and permanently after his country's 1989 presidential elections. Another sweetener was an offer of $90 million in American aid. Although Noriega was to ditch new President Manuel Solis Palma after the formation of a "national reconciliation" government, another henchman...
...coup attempt, Noriega was negotiating with the U.S. State Department and domestic opposition leaders for a deal that would allow him to step down with some assurances of safety. William Walker, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Central America, flew to Panama City with Deputy Legal Adviser Michael Kozak. After a promising start, the talks stalled when the emissaries refused to guarantee that President Reagan would sign an Executive Order quashing drug-trafficking indictments that two grand juries brought against Noriega last month. In Washington officials denied reports that White House Chief of Staff Howard Baker was prepared to enter...
ITHACA, N.Y.--Mike Kozak, Steve Williams and Chris Mills scored consecutive goals in the first period and sophomore goaltender John Fletcher made 33 saves to lead Clarkson to a 4-3 upset victory over Cornell in the opening game of their ECAC playoff series last night...
...Golden Knights (15-13-3), rebounded with three straight goals. Kozak tied the game when he deflected a rebound past freshman goalie Corrie D'Alessio. Williams gave Clarkson the lead, flipping another rebound past D'Alessio and Mills gave Clarkson a 3-1 lead with only nine seconds left in the first period...
When Cuban-American negotiations became a serious possibility last year, Washington was inclined to discuss only the expulsion of the undesirables in U.S. custody. Cuba, however, won assurances that routine immigration procedures would be part of a deal too. The arrangement was worked out by Michael Kozak, a State Department lawyer, and Ricardo Alarcón de Quesada, a Cuban Foreign Ministry official, in three rounds of meetings in New York City, the most recent and important one just two weeks...