Discover Our Collections


  • Series > Meeting Notes (remove)
  • Specific Item Type > Meeting notes (remove)
  • Contributor > Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (remove)

9 results

  • consultation. To maintain the price of gold through operating on gold markets and through the cooperation of our partners in the London gold pool. 2. Maintain confidence in the stability of the dollar What we do about our deficit is in itself an important
  • cooperation in the Assembly. · . This outlook is, nevertheless, moderated by our expectation that the UN will continue to support its two principal peacekeeping operations in the field (th~ UN forces in Gaza and Cyprus) as· well as its economic and technical
  • brought abou; .: __ ~-' - by ~ --,~..:--_:·· . .. national$> and broad 9 cooperative regional effor1s, 7. The six nations providing help to South ~1iiet~Nam solemru~- their determination to stand by that country 1s side until its c.f.:f
  • African sen­ sitivities over outside intervention in the Nigerian civil war. This will not be a historic General Assembly. The time is clearly not right for major ne\v proposals for international cooperation. In the fields of international economic
  • to us of what decisive importance a strong North Atlantic Alliance is for the security of all of its members and for a successful peace policy. I am happy that our two governments serve these goals through close and under­ standing cooperation
  • . On the international scene, Indonesia has: rejoined the UN and associated agencies, settled its quarrel with Malaysia, supported regional cooperation. Economic More progress than expected. Tough stabilization program imposed and runaway inflation checked. Suharto
  • with lower _f'ranchise qualifi:cations, permitting a limited number of Africans to qualify. The African leaders refused to cooperate in implementing the constitution, which they considered a device to::: perpetuate minority rule, and few Africans registered
  • at something that is basic to our ~hole military effort here, namely, the cooperative relationship between the U.S. and South Vietnamese military leaders and forces. If this is shaken, it could have not only the serious political consequences which I mentioned