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Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 111: Dec. 18‑25, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 43
(Item)
- was "to feel free to manage this in the way that makes the most sense." I have attempted to be responsive to the terms of reference, although I have also proceeded in this com plicated and highly sensitive problem as seemed to make the most sense to me
- ... ··.• · .. ... ... ···-~ ·-•· ·· . ·-~-~ --,,~····· , ~ 0/J/J/JiIJfjJJ . \!illlc}J ©J ffi.lliJLtlf ~t9l*1Lt?W November 3, 1967 FOR THE PRESS: . .• .- ijJj ~. I . ; · .• • -• :·,'. ' 1.ttttt~ {~AWfi!t( /J.MtJJl~)_: No. 1~60-67 . ; OX£ord 5-3176 (Info) OXfor.d 7-3189 (Copies Secretary of De!en~e
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 113: Jan. 1‑15, 1969 [2 of 3]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 44
(Item)
- start was made in developing a beef cattle industry in the Magallanes area, which is Chile's southernmost province and free of foot~and-mouth disease. Adverse Effects of the Drought and Weather According to the Chilean statements to CIAP in November
- . (ultimately about $350 inUUoa in sale& over next aeveral years may be involve4 Other problem la that McNamara wamato lay ofl this paper with Ex-Im. thm freeing MAP credit fund for other ulea. n will take a WH whip, of courn, to get Lmder io do thl•. r I
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 107: Nov. 19‑22, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 42
(Item)
- --- PARISTODEL 1. ·- FORHARRIMAN AD VANCE. I You will note the reports fro f of Le's special press Paris conference of today. highlighting Hanoi's demand that we talk with them and the NLF, leaving a eat for Saigon. I . ' It seems obvious from all
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 112: Dec. 26‑31, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 44
(Item)
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 71: Apr. 6‑11, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 32
(Item)
- MEETINGNEXTTUESDAY. 2. IN DELIVERINGMESSAGEI EMPHASIZED ABSOLUTE NECESSITYFOR COMPLETE SECRECYANDREQUESTED THAT. P.A-RTY NOWIN HONOL,ULU RETURNTO KOREANADVANCE KOREATODAYAS PLANNED.POlNTtD our THEIR CONTINUED STAYTHEREWOULD GIVE RISE TO PRESS SPECULATION WHICH
- OPTIMISTIC THAT QATAR, BAHREIN AND ABU . DHABI COULD BE RELIED UPON FOR CONTINUING CONTRIBUTIONS. 5. LOCAL PRESS HAS NOW PUBLISHED SUMS RECEIVED FROM BAHREIN, Q\TAR AND ABU DHABI, WHILE ONE PAPER REPORTED FEBRUARY 20. IHAT HAD PLEDGED BETWEEN 4 AND 4.5
- ~ecomtnendation (attached) an the .tactic of freeing rupees fo.r the :1nm.~ foundatio-JJ. However. he ,a,giteeu that LBJ himself sb.owd have final. say. •• be• .::irepa_rb1ga 1.emo for the to come over tb:rough ".'ermJt ,JOrdon. I residen.t The i _sue ta
- ·tu Coaar•••• It , • 9. We ougld to pff lt to tum. • • '{ fn~a '• S0Om.Wloa people &l'e ·• blllwa•k of. Free A ■ la aplut CWcom ea,peaaloalaa. Jadla bu 'IM _reaoarc•• aD4..people lo llec..,_. a maJor world ,owe• ,la lta own r&,ai.a, .aad
- b e f o r e THE PRESS. at t h is o THEREAFTER, IF HE FELT HE HAD TO RETURN TO DALAT TO CONTINUE H IS h e MIGHT BRING THE TR IU M V IR A TE BACK W ITH HIM AND HOLD MEETINGS W ITH PROSPECTIVE MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL OF n a t io n a l u n i t y
- the Chief will (see zero perimeter (SZ) probes not free RAMS some in the atmosphere, of the minimum time required (usually after have been reported one aircraft monitoring the H plus and will relay (1) below) to the designated 3 flight
- ~ , , •. ~· ~ This worldng paper is .a selective and by no means comprehensive list of developing 'situations of potential concern to the US in Free World countries. It is issued informally, and primarily for use within the Bureau by INR briefing officers. FAR EAST
- be prudent to continue the techniee.l i'rork now unde:r-.·:ay revision cf tt.1;:, cu1'".i-entembargo c:.efini 2.-:d to press in cooa1tor a realistic tion. With respect to the computer complex that Control D:1.t.e.Co:..1>oration proposed to ID..'Portto East
Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol. 2, Tabs a-z," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 47
(Item)
- how the challenge of population growth is met. We believe that the objective of family planning is the e_nrichmentof human life, not its restriction; that family planning, by assuring greater opportunity to each person, frees man to attain his
- ratio - Technology deficient; meager resources for human subsistence Sources: Philip M. Hauser and Otis 0. Duncan (Editors). THE STUDY OF POPULATION: AN INVENTORY AND APPRAISAL. Uni·versity of Chicago Press, 1959, and Or. Wilbur Zelinsky . A PROLOGUE
- Ginsburgh 4 NMCC 4 Ginsburgh memo, 4 Ginsburgh memo 5 White 5 to President, Report, authority Viet Cong account msg, in Saigon suburb VN situation, handling on Chau Doc City handling press SEA operational gravel
- be pressed. Thieu himself proposes to chair the committee on the reform of the civil service. He proposes to streamline the service, weed out incompetents, substantially reduce the number of employees, adequately compensate the remainder, thereby increasing
- us, and we should not start down this road unless the Soviets proved ready to go the route with uso How ever pressure alone -- unaccompanied by any effort to meet security problems the Indians regarded as both real and pressing -- might still failo
Folder, "South Vietnam and U.S. Policies [X-File] [1 of 2], Files of Walt Rostow, NSF, Box 19
(Item)
- . GARDINER INDICATED HE MIGHT BE ABLE TO DO SOMETHING FOR DIEN• s COUNTRY CVIETNA~). DIEN INFORMED GARDINER THAT HE, DIEN, VAS 10 LONGER IN CHARGE OF TKE PRESS, AND GARDINER ADVISED THAT HE WANTED TO TALX TO DIEN s A FRIEND or .. FATHER Dl£GA · s"
- U M J I R 28A S~E~Cnr~&i^t^ ) OR DEPART FROM LOGIC OF HAVING f e ^ E V E L O P M w C o M T H - FLEET INITIATED FROM HONOLULU MERELY TO^ATIS^cORRESPONDENTS DESIRE TO GET SAIGON DATELINE, THERE^i^0S9,lHlLITY ' " OF' SIGNIFICANT NEGATIVE PRESS COVER/(GE
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 81: June 7‑12, 1968 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 35
(Item)
- VIEW, I REMAINEDA BIT' SKEPTICAL BUT DID NOT PRESS. THE POINT' WITH THE· PR~SIOENTo t BUNKER ll!CR[T NOT TO BE REPRODUCED WiTHOUT THE AUTHORIZATION OF THE EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Department of State y..l ~GRAM 'ZP. 1b!i&1, PAGE 01 SAIGON 29,.68 ·03
- to be an atomic bomb. United States drops atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Bishop Oxnam anc. John Foster Dulles ask suspension of atomic bomb use. Soviet press urges atomic knowledge pooling and hints at international rac:e to better US bomb. Major General
- ST SEVERA L MONTHS, (CU&/A». AW^ASSADOR WHO W ITN ESSED ACTION AT HON GAI WAS IM PRESSED BY CALM METHODICAL MANNER IN WHICH BGTf» M ILITA R Y UNI: I S AND CIV) L I AN5 REA C TED TO a tta c k ,) L I T T L E S P E C IF IC INFORMATION HAS BEEN REVEALED
- condition secret. Local press has simply reported he confined to house-with cold .. Ambassador Ashenheim may. be unaware PM's actual physical condition. McFarlane ·said PM concerned any publicity over his condition might produce unfavorable political
- . policy. In fo rm a tio n a b o u t policy differences leaked to tlie press. em barr.Tssing th e Prem ier. G eneral K h a n h pn>test.ed for a tim e a b o u t h is g o v e rn m e n t’s independence of action, b u t on F rid a y p u b lic ly m odified his
- that the Director of the ,NSF is in the best position to make this Judgment and has the authority to do so. The Senator believes that, if in the Director's Judgment such a gift would assist the receiving nation in solving some of its most pressing problems, then he
- there i s a response, u n t il the aggressors have indicated th e ir w illin g n e ss to t a lk , we intend to press on. Our p atien ce and determ ination are m ending. This i s why t h is r e s o lu tio n ,th a t you p a tr io tic men and women so
- no friend needlessly fear— and no foe vainly hope— that this is a nation divided in this election year. Our free elections— our fiJl and free debate— are America’s strength, not America’s weakness. There are no parties and there is no parti sanship when
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 101: Oct. 23‑28, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 41
(Item)
- who live there but to all the free world. T he Communists of North Viet-Nam and China are eager to take over this fertile area, not by the type of open aggression used in Korea but by attack from within, by covert aggression through guerrilla warfare