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  • Contributor > Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (remove)

235 results

  • 1Donohue, Hildegard Jr., 8. Mrs. 9. Peter B. Swiers, 10. Alec. G. Toumayan, to the Ambassador USAF, Executive Assistant S/S-S Secretary C. Jensen, S/ AH USN, Stenographer Interpreter Secretariat B. Shishkin, Staff Officer P~rsonal
  • . THE DEMONSTRATION OCCURRED AT A TIME WHEN U.S. IMPERIALISM IS BEING ROUTED BY THE HE?.OIC VIETNA~·1ESE PEOPLE ON THE VIETNAM BATTLEFIELD AND ITS POLICY OF AGGRESSION AGAINST VIETNAM HAS COME UNDER EVER STRONGER ATTACK AT HOME AND ABROAD. THE HUGE CROWD
  • : Appointment with Sir Robert Menzies You have agreed to receive Sir Robert Menzies at 11 :00 a. m. Tuesday, December 13. Sir Robert, who was Prime Minister of Australia from 1949 until ;his resignation this January, is currently the visiting scholar
  • called to report the following. about the 1. He ls seeing Gen. Eisenhower who ls ''enthusiastic" Douglas committee. Cabot believes that Gen. Eisenhower's strong backing for this u:middle position" will not only give your posltlon strength but make
  • their homes in order to route the Viet Cong. There have been some encouraging indications of Cao Dai cooperation with the Government of Vietnam in Tay Ninh in driving Viet Cong out of villages and towns and in connection with recovery operations. D. IV Corps
  • of this is progress, but we are by no means home. If, as seems most likely, Thieu and Ky win the election, there is a possibility that certain of the defeated candidates may band together in an effort to invalidate or at least discredit the election. I am
  • and one Congressman, one from each party) .. Senate: Senator Morse {D-Ore.) Senator Sparkman {D-Ala.) Senator Ai.ken (R- Vt.) Senator Kuchel ( R-Calif.) *Senator Paul Douglas (D-Ill.} Senator Montoya (D-N. M.) House: Congressman Armistead Selden {D
  • , to clarify our position beyond all shadow of doubt both at home and abroad. SEGRE'¼ E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 NIJ q"l-3b~ IIJ----~-, AR.A, !ft:, ll-lJ-, 9~ -SSCRE'i' Friday, Septembe,r 22, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Comment on Evron•s Talk
  • LtAND~O MORA ANNOUNCED THAT ONE 0~ PER~ONS CAPTU~E6 ·lN AUGUST 25 DIGtPOL OPERATIONS AGAINST DOUGLAS RQYNo•s· UR8~N TERROR UN1T WAS CUBAN ARMY SERGEANt MANUEL PAGE TWO RU~SRS !227 JNCLAS tS?lNOZA Dit.Z~ .·, UNCLASSIF"IED PRESERVAT: COP
  • to by all the other parties to the treaty; they accept our understanding in that respect. Senator Fulbright. That is contained in the last paragraph; is it not? Secretary Dulles. Yes, sir; it appears just above the signatures. Senator Fulbright: All right, I
  • to and from their homes during the hours in which the curfew would be lifted, from 8:00 A. M. to 5:00 P. M. Thieu emphasized the necessity for keeping adequate forces in the area to protect Saigon and said that Vien would be ready to start his Saigon
  • thought about the crises which have blown up week, particularly in Viet Nam and Korea, but also at home. In general, it appears to be the judgment of our enemies that we are sufficiently weak and unc_ertain at home, sufficiently stretched in our military
  • Secretary of Detense Special .Assistant for Foreign ·ffatrs .s we enter a phase ol the war in Viet Na.m which may be critical ln military and diplomatic toru1s, as well .ao ln ·p olittcal terms at home. I would wlsh you all to exercise the greateet caution
  • of battle -- fighting there for us tonight -- are h~lping the entire _ · world avoid far greater conflicts, far wider wars, far more destruction, than this one. The peace that will bring them home someday will come. Tonight I ha:ve offered the first in what
  • Pool Paul H. Douglas Leverett Saltonstall Roscoe Drummond Dwight D. Eisenhower Henry P. Van Dusen Eugene P. Wigner John W. Hanes, Jr. May 1968 A world in conflict Finally, America must not expect too much to flow from a resolution of the conflict
  • positions which make it impossible to n~ 6 otiate a satisfactory settlement, the presence of men 1-· :
  • to arrive home with his agreement shadowed by Cypriot ambiguity. WWR DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ ~n-i1'I • By cJ:s , NARA Date'hv-1" INFORMAUON BCRET Tilv•tlaJ, 7:ZS p.m. Mr. Nonmber 30, 1967 Preabtent: You ahollld kaow we laaYe
  • uprising, order Government of Vietnam officials and Army of the Republic of Vietnam officers to go home, and publicly execute those who did not cooperate. He was also to attack and seize the radio station and to make an appeal to the people for assistance
  • at­ teJ.-:ding were: Douglas Dillon; David Rockefel!.~~:r ; Father Theodore H2sburgh, President of Not~e Da2e ; Adol~ ~erle; Robert Nathan; George Harrar, PresideD.t of t:ie RG-tkefeller Foundation, and Andrew McClellan and Ernest iee of the AFL/CIO
  • SECURITY WASHINGTON, O.C. COUNCIL 20506 .Aigust 8, 1968 MEMORANDUM SUBJECT: FOR JIM JONES Sir Robert I am infor1ned as follows: Arrives Menzies' by the Australian Austin 25 Sept. Sept. 26 Sept. Sept. 27 28 Sept. 29 Sept. 30 Oct. Oct. 1
  • Pacem in Te~ris conferenco ~s originally plantte.d. U".$ •· lfilll-~ < ~ t Dele.gation has now grovm somet,;hat and inclu
  • HE 'L-OGKED FORWARO lff)iLY 10 SEEING TSE "!Pl~SI.'ll!NT IN ·-- ··: -;:; .-:-r:~ , .)IASH}ltGTON, f,1£ FE'ELS HE PROBASL Y MUST RETURN -HOME' AS HIS PEOPLE .. _ ~WDlllD NDT UNDERSTAND HIS TRAVELING IN .PARIS A.liD ._. .V.lSl.t'IJJG. THE -¥AIR
  • difficult the flow of armed mea and aupplles comillg from the Nortb. It was necessary, finally,, and after flve long years o.f reatra.lnt, to bring home to the men ln Hanol. some ol the punlshme-nt that they had long been hullctlng on tielr fellow
  • the Nortb. It was necessary, finally,, and after flve long years o.f reatra.lnt, to bring home to the men ln Hanol. some ol the punlshme-nt that they had long been hullctlng on tielr fellow Vietnamese la the South. The bombing of North Vietnam began
  • December December 9, that Dzu was still at home (though under.house arrest), and that it appeared unlikely he would be arrested, as Dzu stated to the American journalists. Although we feel that Dzu has largely shot his bolt and is not highly regarded
  • program. Since that time we have been developing this in detail. In the meantime, with the Kennedy Round behind us and the prospect for five years of periodic tarif~ reduction and with the increasing pressure of protectionism on the home front which could
  • program. Since that time we have been developing this in detail. In the meantime, with the Kennedy Round behind us and the prospect for five years of periodic tarif~ reduction and with the increasing pressure of protectionism on the home front which could
  • £ PRESIDENT FROM MR. PRESIDENT I TR!? AND ij!LL BE WALL·NER GOLDSTEIN HAVE DECIDED TO CANCEL MY BRUSSELS COMING HOME THURSDAY NIGHT. FEBRUARY 22. BT NNNN LIMITED OFFICIAL USE • ' INFORMATION SEcii.ET Mr. Pre ■ ldeat: · The order• ba•• Nea
  • a schedule to move out of South Vietnam, to come home, to leave no troops in that area, to give up our bases--provided they will lay on the table their schedule for withdrawal, and their schedule to get their people to quit the killing and the murdering
  • :. ~AYDEN THOMA. N, W& ■STCIII DCNNla II, aoHI.CMMIIII OCOIIOC C, OUU.WUOIII. October.18, DID NOll'TH CHUIICM DTMCT T-Ma•­ AMA-DII 1967 'I'.he President Washington, D. C. Sir: Any responsible, thinking person must approve of your stand JI on Viet
  • for this kind of constructive movement. This will convey, both ab::oad and at home, ·the impression of an administration which responds imaginatively, not defensively, to external challenge. II. 3. Vietnam The Vietnamese war offers a chance to create a s