Skip to main content
-
Collection >
National Security Files
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Folder
(remove)
-
Type >
Text
(remove)
-
Date >
1965-xx-xx
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Series
Specific Item Type
Time Period
12 results
- . Williams,
AlC Curtis
Clark,
USAF---------------
JWGA
USA
JWGA
USAF--~--------------------
AlC Richard G. Hall,
JWGA
USAF--------------------
JWGA
Mrs. Marion E. Boland-----------------------Mrs. Wilma Matasic :..__________________________
JWGA
- )
REPRESENTATIVE
-
Lt Col Charles D. Ford.,. Jr,
-
Major
RED TEAM(North Vietnam)
REPRESENTATIVE
USA
Richard
W. Uobb.c,
USA
USA
USA
YELLOW
TEAM(Red China)
REPRESENTATIVE
-
Col Samuel N. ·Karrick,
GREENTEAM(USSR)
REPRESENTATM
Commander Harold
- . Bromberger-Barnas, Maxwell R. Brooks, Richard Chase,
Bernice Cohen, William Coleman, Guido Crocetti, H.Z. Cummins,
Marsha CUmmins, J.E. Deese, Sara deFord, Clinton DeSoto, Eugenio Donato,
J.D.H. Donnay, Gunter von Ehrenstein, Leon Eisenberg, Jerome Frank
- . Calltornla 90012
(
\1)
(
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March 20, 1965
MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
Press Contacts, Week of Marc),1.15
On March 15, Crosby Noyes brought in one of his foreign reporters,
Mr. Richard Critchfield. Most of the talk was about
- }"
.,
export sales of surplus agricultural commodities tp the United
~
Arab Republic under title I qf that Act.
'·
A
B
t
E
Deputy
~
- undertaking as to what would happen but the
Soviet Union would not try to influence North Viet-Nam while they
were being bombed.
The Secretary remarked that only the United States is not supposed
to have face. During the Berlin blockade we had talked
- privately.
For public purposes, the principal subject of conve r sation is the recent
Communist harassment of Berlin, and there might be some advantage
in having an agreed statement on this subject released at the end of
the meeting.
The text of a possible
- Germany -including Berlin and its access - - incumbent on them since the
end of the Second World War, obligations and responsibilities
which they share with the Government of the Soviet U~ion.
"\
j
l
I
I
I
\
i
I
The initiatives to be taken toward