Discover Our Collections


  • Collection > National Security Files (remove)
  • Tag > Digital item (remove)

Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

356 results

  • of c1~il rlghta, auch aa abolition of prior approval for all puhlkgtl.on9 and SCJb· et1tuUng regiatration ln its stead. (b) ebolition of the usP. nf the ''long · form" to restrict travel to J11pan and aubstitution nf a dire.ct necessary
  • density so that its gravity forces were the same as the actual earth, the trajectory illustrated in Figure 1 would be an elliptical orbit about that hypothetical earth. The total time of flight for an ICBM that will travel a range of one quarter
  • 30. 1964 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT Secr.o tary Dillon's foreign travel plan SUB1ECT: Attached ·l a Douglas Dillon's foreign travel plan for the period between now and the elections. I. recommend that i.t 'be approved, in the light
  • this propaganda . The Vietnamese are preparing to dispatch teams of defectors from the Viet Cong and North Vietnam to travel in Europe, J"\frica, and South A.'Tlerica eh"'S>laining what's going on in Vietnam . These are defector!:; v1ho have been thoroughly
  • to..promote travel and contact by Yugosl.avs in the West; (e) ot libraries a highly developed informational program, including operation and reading rooms in leading Yugoslav cities; (!) intensive promotion of cultural exchanges between Yugoslavia
  • etation 0£ the polls but on my travelling about the country. We must delay a t lea s t unti l a£te r the Ronning pea ce effort is safely out of the way so that if we take add itional action, Mr . Ronning will be unable to say th at w e got a peace feeler
  • , PRIBYL SAID THEREHAVEALWAYS BEENHALFA DOZEN SOVIETADVISERSIN THE MINISTRY,ANDTHEREARENOMORENOW THANTHEREWEREBEFORE. REGARDING TRAVEL,PRIBYLSAID PASSPOPTSARESTILL BEING ISSUED ANDCZECHSCANSTILL LEAVE.HE HIMSELFDEPARTED CZECHOSLOVAKIA OVERTHE
  • " - - CAPITOL OFFICE DIR CARL ROWAN RESIDENCES: SECY BALL SECY RUSK SECY DILLON SECY MCNAMARA SECY VANCE SECY FID~EMAN SECY WIRTZ SECY CELEBREZZE DIR WEBB SECY UDALL MR. MALCOIM KILDUFF MR. KENNETH O'DONNELL MR. HOBART TAYLOR MR. MARVIN WATSON DR. JANET TRAVELL
  • . Kahn, one of the senior editor• lor the New Yorker .m agazine, le about to publish a long article ln .s everal ln8tallment• cove.r.i.ng bl• receut eztenalve travel• la the Trust Terrbory. ·T hl• may well trlgser off another fl<ty of aovermnental
  • ...,, / ·.·>. -. . ·., .. l t-.· ~. BE RATHER DIFFICULT FOR PRESIDENT JOHNSON WHO HAD IN GENERAL . . .- . ._· .. ~ ·.,;1 iii t . ! i .NO INTENTION OF TRAVELLING ABROAD .DURING nus ELECTION YEAR. \ .· • 1 '~ 'i r·. ·.·· · f. I AL'SO .REMINDED COWE ntERE HAD BEEN A ~ERTAIN
  • in the Benj.amin Franklin Room, Depart. · . ment of State • -2- GeNP"ID ENTIAL Thursday., October 26 (Cont'd) 3:00 pm President and Mrs. Diaz Ordaz will go to Beltsville Agricultural Research Center escorted by Secretary and Mrs. Freeman (travel by helicopter
  • with the Iraqi Govern~ent. Personal Obser-rations These observations are based upon a trip ma.de recently to Iraqi-Kurdistan, during which I had the opportunity to see the Kurdish leader Hullah Mustafa Barz8.ni . and also to travel through­ out the Kurdish
  • any problem ln Bob Kom.er.•s travels. though tr' I go and Bill doesn't it will fuel A new round of a:p eculation. R. Approve_ _ __ ---- See me \1f . Komer Tuesday. March 2,, 9:00 pm 1966 ~iEMORANDUM FOR' T.H E .P RESIDENT India Food Messye
  • to this. after Congress bas continued to appropriate to i:bab prosram -- with growing conf'idence-sums which now, I believe, add up to more than $3 billion. American experts have traveled the globe to every continent, bringing their skills to the world-wide war
  • is ln our national interest. Let me make two points about it: First, we need this treaty to protect the 18 thousand Am.erlc:an citizens who each year travel to the Soviet Union. The. Convention requires immediate notification to ua whenever an American
  • what has been threatening Saigon for so long, but which is the line of communication from the food source in the Delta to the Viet Cong north of Saigon. J. On another political front, Prime Minis t'er Ky traveled to Ban Me Thout and personally presided
  • operation, but no one group moved solely by vehicle . In collateral data, we know from four rallier s taken on 25 April near base area 101, that their group, number 4002, traveled 700 kilometers in 73 days for an average of 9. 6 kilometers per day
  • . Travel ~ ~c.~ The staff wor/goi:ng on (in Ernie Goldstein's work and in McKinney Task Force) (hleet or come close to meeting the target of cutting the travel deficit by $500 million though primary emphasis on getting more Europeans to come here
  • on the possibility of the Camtdian Delegation address being u•e4. 1 emphasised that I had no indication ol..my aovernment thinking o6. this. but in practical terms such letters c/o the Commissioner could travel from Saigon.with our normal shipments. He knew
  • Meetings and Travel File Folder Title Australia, "President's Trip to the Holt Funeral, Memos and Misc. Cables" Box Number 20 Restriction Codes (A) Closed by Executive Order 12958 governing access to national security infonnatlon. (B) Closed by statute
  • See all scanned items from NSF International Meetings and Travel Files Box 20
  • Folder, "Australia: President's Trip to the Holt Funeral, Memos and Misc. Cables, Dec. 1967," International Meetings and Travel Files, NSF, Box 20
  • International Meetings and Travel Files
  • other Ar officer, lll' ... , 11...... that~ • c "~ultau 'ft0t.fl! n~t ® mi;,,,; (at1v t,,td, v Special Aa~iltant to Under Secretary, the T,tepart:m.entand perhap• tkH%n12!) cwre likely •bout two or three reperters. 9, traveling ,_.i:n 707
  • political life. 4. Increased International Prestige Internationally, the Government is proud of its enhanced stature as a result of the Manila Conference last October and Premier Ky's January travels to Australia and New Zealand, where he succeeded
  • promotion offices, and for facilitation of entry and travel of commercial representatives as necessary; (iv) most-favored-nation treatment with respect to duties or other restrictions on the imports of the products of the United· States; (v) other matters
  • , and Widely travelled, he has visited the US several times, most recently in late October 1964 when i1e came to Washington for talks with President Johnson and Secretary Rusk. He accompa­ nied Harold Wilson on his 1963 and 1964 trips to Moscow. Married
  • of small airports and small passenger aircraft travel over the whole area to facilitate commercial and tourist connections. This could enhance sales, markets, financial transactions, and help prolong tourist visits. More rapid internal service could also
  • /'¥ , .. . .,._ .--- .: .;:::~ ,.,.. ..--- ;AM~ 'fk//--fJ ~< 3 7 1,,.. ...... SECltE'f' 2 amended. This. authorizes the payment of travel expenses to officers and employees of the Service to visit dependents residing outside Viet Nam. There is a feeling in some quarters that if we allow
  • UNLESS "UNCLASSIFIED" fu,.~ to~ . / THE WHITE HOUSE t.//-, I' I/, WASHINGTON GONFIDEP.+TI ~ AT I April MEMORANDUM SUBJECT: FOR MR. Prime Minister the U.S. 7, 1964 VALENTI Bustamante - Travel to 1. I refer to State 1 s interest in getting
  • frequency spectrum through which these communications must travel. A global system is particularly important for less develpped .Jt, l..,f.t.; nations -- for they have not enjoyed the benefits of speedy, direct I\. international communications