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  • the interview useful. Thu.rade.y. September 14: I had Cyrus Sulzberger (New York Tintes) in to- lunch before hie talk with you. I reviewed progress and problems in Latln America and A£rlca. In particular I put him on to the developments on the inner
  • the getting of tho story is a toug~ de:na.'1dir.g task. T'heref ore, the policy element has to be built-in in adva."'1.co. This cc..--;.make t~1e diff ere1i.ce between a good job of covering a news evon t, and. the ac.var.csment of specific U.S. objectives
  • e research facilities available at the nuclear reactor. \ UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASSIFIED Page 1 of 2 Encl. 2 Tel Aviv A-493 THE JERUSALEM POST, February 5, 1967 · ISRAELI PHYSICISTS IN U.S. ISSUE 'HOME-TO-DIMONA' CALL New York (INA) - Israeli
  • • /(~ ~ ri ·_ United States plays host to you officially In New York. But-=lt warms-our -------~ . .; 4 ·-'k < ~ hearts_to play host to you personally here. ,. _. i u~~ / -~, ~ ' ltJ,s ~n,:extraordlnary experience to have ,unde~ this roof tn e
  • t l V, II-~-,~ 1 CONFIDEN'flAl.. - Saturday - December 1o. 1966 M EMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Loans !or Chile AID requests (Tab B). u.nde.r the new commitments procedure, your appxoval oi a $65 million assistance package for Chile
  • •oughly lta pi-eaeni foirm at least untU March. Tbe latter l• Coope~'• choice. and tt h ~lea.rly Mu Taylor'• .as well. It haa the advantt.a• that 1n March m.\d.er cover of a new Natlonal.A1eem.bly meet1n1 there could be a reconstructlOA ol the government
  • , and labor. Our economic statistics are the best and most compre­ hensive in the world. But they can be and need to be further improved. The costs will be exceedingly small relative to the benefits. To this end, my 1969 budget provides for several new
  • ,:- ·· FM. AMEMBASSY PARIS 1968 . !. · TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 6626· . HJFO RUEHOT /USUN NEW YORK 131&4 . ·. . · _:.· ' . · r.- -.- STATE GRNC , · ·. . . . · ·: ' • ,· ·~• . · . --·· BT · · · -. · · · · · · · .. : . · ~:;?•.· SE= e R ! . SECTION 1
  • maintaining his ties to the u. S., or reaching back into the Asian foundations oi Philippine life and developing on this basis a role in a new Asia.• Ther~uggest that you tell him: 1. o! the excitement and encouragement you have derived from the spirit
  • in New York deploring the attack. We refused to pass an Israeli message t o King Hussein justifying the raid. We will probably support Jordan if it goes to the UN {though we'll also have to deplore the Jordan-based road­ mining incident that killed three
  • 1V1ay 19-21, 1964. As this is his first visit to the United States, a brief tour of the United States is being arranged for him from May 22-27, ending in New York. From there he will ti·avel to London for talks with the British. Chavan, as Defense
  • the new arrange­ ments may have on the administration of the area. A month after the issuance of the President's order in 1951, the Secretary of the Interior issued his own Order No. 2658 to "delimit the extent and nature of the authority of the Government
  • Secretary of Defense 'l.i.nder Presidents Johnson and Kennedy and is now a New York attorney. Other members of the Committee are: Mr. Arthur the General H. Dean, formerly Chairman, Disarmament Confe1 ..ence. Mr. Allen W. Dulles, formerly U. S. Delegation
  • BUCHAR 02478 cco . , : .,, , , · · DXLA..,fJf ·.D 00,sso 00,NSCE 00,/030 "'· - .. I G'.MEMBASSY USM ISSION Us-tISSION AMEMBASSY AMEMBASSY . t'S SOFIA . •• ~ USUN NEW YORK . ·, BERLIN UNN PRAGUE UNN WAR SAW UNN i · 1 ' ,: ' 1
  • Nam to the whole scene; victory in Asia: -- brief the key editors and communicators just as the group was briefed (Dick Helms has no obje·cti.on to using Carver when it•s off-the-reco,rd and no public attribution); -- let good news speak for itself
  • Nam to the whole scene; victory in Asia: -- brief the key editors and communicators just as the group was briefed (Dick Helms has no obje·cti.on to using Carver when it•s off-the-reco,rd and no public attribution); -- let good news speak for itself
  • which originated the document. (C) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. 1/13/2009 QJ ~ NEWS CONFERENCE of SECRETARY OF DEFENSE Robert S. McNamara at Pentagon Friday, November 3, 1967 * * * Mr. Goulding
  • telling to imperialist ue 2 n childish into the whole was che µut. f(H"'~h. world n~w to Mornr.1sen·' s power uit of posts big creed history heathenr of lr. a great Great Ror:1e and prose and the Steel makers 'o"f war
  • press briefing about upgrading ·sol Linowitz' office. and the Ben Welles story in yesterday's New York Times., W~ have ~o leads on the Cornell query, -but we know-the background to the Welles rep.ort.. S01 •Linowitzi office (I gei conflicting accounts
  • & CO., INO. 100 CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK 7, N. Y., U. S. A. Z>R• .A.NTQNm T. KNOPPERS PltUIDIENT March 16, 1967 The Honorable Sol Linowitz Department of State Washington, D. C. Dear Ambassador Linowitz: As a follow-up of our meeting yesterday morning
  • .., EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA New Delhi, India April 24, 19 68 Honorable Walt W. Ros tow Suecial Assistant to The President The White House Washington, D. C. Dear Walt: I am enclosing a_memorandum I have just sent
  • - ,.~Lrv) ID NOYember 1959, howeYel', after these new agreemat• for coopen.tlon had 1one Into effect, the Committee wu lnformallJ adriaed of a plaD whenbJ a U. S. nuclear weapon, the MB-1 (th6''Genie"air•to-air rocket) the nucleai- componBnt, would be mated
  • To: The President The White House From: Orville L. Freeman Secretary of AgricuI Pursuant to your req~est that a plan be developed to make use of rupees in India, such a proposal is now being developed. The new Public Law 480 gives authority for the use of rupees
  • ~ TO · ·_:· .TH£ PRESIDENT CITE CA?6745?. -·. · . MAY .27. '. -1967 '. -··- - ·.c» HER£ WITH GOLDBERG EXPRESSES. SOME SENSE . OF:--· PAlN . ABOUT TO~ORROV• S . CABINET · MEET ING~ ~---,, DISCUSSIONS - ARE C3 OING :. .FORti:ARD·. IN . NEW:.\ YQRK TO ASCERTA IM
  • f.;ET TOC;ETHER t]UOTE 1N A REP.Li ST IC \JAY ·UNQUOTE AND nr:: WAS I':Ovf TH I I·n< It-!(; OF P/I_~· Ii' i~ /1 ·~:ER 1[~-~ OF VI~; I Tr; ·:-o "i"EE Ai1A3 SERIES OF CAIRO -TALKS i-.:r. Ur-vii ck U:iO.HS New York (28) .... ., ••., ' ' , \ /AND 1
  • . the !ollo\.ving d - y guid .nee for our Canal Zone authorities when , hip capta~ in-quire what they a noul - do bout the new law: nu advice ts requested cl' Caaal Zane aetboritlee, the follow• mg reply•· ·01..ll be giveru A ahlp in Can~ l Z-oae water• ls i
  • /q% 11/26765 A 11/27/65 A 1 p co Delhi 1333 ..eenfidential 'lJ>cret "j.h1 f -- ZY-1 J.. µL j YtJ-f ~ '8-1.S-R't.f lVL.J 8~-18"0 ~-,.11i:1f43'~Uf'"'ft=i~t ~ ~ /P - 51 Bw:z_. cG. B. A #90a cable copy of New Delhi 1333 confidential 3
  • (reduced diplomatic staffing) in an effort to play for the long-term post-Sukarno stakes. /We have solid new reports of Sukarno's deteriorating health!_/ One item that caused concern in the press and on Capitol Hill is now dead and buried: the Indo Army has
  • Medalist 1966) Founder and President, Tile Family Care Founcation for the Mentally Ill, Inc. Born New York, Novmber 10, 1910. A.B. Yale University, 1932. L. L.B. Yale University, 1935. Practicing lawyer New York 1935-46. With .W. R. Grace & Co. 1946 to date
  • • Freaeh and the Germau la JSoaa. If you appl"OY•• Secratau-y Ruk coald a•t tlala mnlaa la ld• ~llatu&l talu with Braadt. DMre, uW Stewart at the UN 1a New York. ba•• Ycna pl'm••ly set till• a■id• a• too opulJ prcwoca&i••• TM •u.tloa las do JCN now r-.u-4
  • that impassio ned deprecations in New York streets got the upper hand over responsible debate in the Cap itol, that the American people had lost their will to resist aggression and that any further war es calation by Hanoi and the National Liberation Front would
  • The New York Times. of the kind you suggested. W. WWRostow:rln w. Rostow November 15, 1967 ~ To the Editor : Your editorial on. The Patriotism calle for some sharp dissent. of Dissent (TII4-4ES,Nove111ber 15) I find lt totally misleading
  • The New York Times. of the kind you suggested. W. WWRostow:rln w. Rostow November 15, 1967 ~ To the Editor : Your editorial on. The Patriotism calle for some sharp dissent. of Dissent (TII4-4ES,Nove111ber 15) I find lt totally misleading
  • the offensive. SeYffiOUr Toppiy,came in to meet me, in his new role as Managing Editor of The New York Times. He had two themes: Why don't we stop bombing uncondltlonally and _rally the country, if necessary, by proving that Hanoi would not negotiate. I
  • , ----------------------- Vietnam------------------------------------- memo, 13 morale evaluation 12 -- Aide Memoire, policies S to Westmoreland--------------------- post-TET msg, 12 -- Wheeler Vietnam questions 11 12 -- State Khe Sanh
  • Museum in New York City. 4. Persistent efforts should be continued in the informational field. Despite stiff Soviet resistence, proposals to permit the mutual opening of reading rooms and libraries and commercial book outlets should be repeated
  • , which Goldberg's office confirmed in New York• .... Arthur will not be debating; he will simply be talking at a. lunch.. ~- He goes on Face The Nation tomorrow, and proposes 11 in response to questions, to say that this is merely another epee1dng
  • FROMTHIS COPYIS ..::C=Q=l::.::12:..:ill==E:.:.N,;.:f;.:;ffi;.;;,;;;;;£ ___ PROHIBlTED UNLESS "UNCLASSIFIED" ·dWTBzm,rn;rtt ' .\ \\ -2- 2300, DECEMBER2., 2 PM, FRCM: \ NEW YORK _l • •' J . · \.t sur To' TAKE THESE~:STEPS: • REQUEST PORTUGAL
  • after April 6, b•t before the end ol the month, he will come down to New York to take Ida leave of U Thaat. The qae.Uoa l•: la the cO\ll' ■e of ••ch a vint. would JOI& Uke to have a farewell talk with Pear■ oa? Ritchie •uaaeated that the followlq mlpt