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  • , University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston Mr. At Mrs. Ernest D. Brockett Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Mrs. Douglas Chandor Weatherford, Texas Mr. At Mrs. Herbert W. Cheshire 1,irs-Maxine Cheshire. Washington Post Mr. At Mrs. Dong-won Cho Donghwa News Agency
  • , 1965. Applicant: BEAVER product,, meat bJ1products, and article, Knox, Vanderburgh, DaViess, Pike, War­ TRANSPORT CO., a corporation, 100 distributed by meat packinghouses as rick. Spencer. Dubois, Martin, Lawrence, South Calumet Street, Post Office Box
  • -;SECRET ­ 8ECRE1' ­ at his father's urging to run in the 1964 elections. On win­ ning an impressive victory, he was brought into the cabinet as minister to the prime minis­ ter. He was subsequently trans­ ferred to the post of alternate minister
  • WITHIN NEXT FEW DAYS AN D ASSUME THE ARMY. OF EITHER MINDEF POST HIMSELF. GAR OUFALI AS, IN WH OM HE HAS GREAT TRUST AND WHO WOULD BE HIGHLY COMPETENT IN AN Y OTHER MINISTE )I AL POST, IS UNHAPPILY LABELED AS MAN OF THE PALACE. GAROUF ALI AS STRIVES
  • to that post in 1961 by President Kennedy. In January, 1965 he resigned to return to private law practice. Before joining the Justice Department, Mr. Marshall was a member of the Washington, D. C. law firm of Covington & Burling. Upon Mr. Marshall's resignation
  • also be made available to the Inf'ormation Operator and noted tor inclusion in the next telephone directoey. • Mail. Local post oftices •(in regional and :f'ield office cities) should be notitied ot the change in.name, as should commercial
  • the fann problem. And Congress gave cabinet recognition to rural needs when it created the Department of Agriculture in 1889 at a time when less than two-thirds of our population lived in rural areas. The obvious question: what would a cabinet post do
  • in the field. This represents a change in Thi' s public attitude. 11. We hear that Ky is planning to make a number of changes in key military posts and in the cabinet in the interests of increased efficiency. The military changes may in fact reflect a response
  • of "indefinite duration" and should not be "frozen into the governmental structure" by the creation of a Cabinet-level department; (6) enactment of the bill would be the first time that a Cabinet post had been established ''to serve people on the basis of where
  • to get a sense of your thinking, post-Erhard, about MLF I ANF and other Atlantic matters. The British Embassy has just called to say that they have a message suggesting December 17, after a UN appearance the day before. Pat Dean will give this message
  • ST RAT I 0 E. TH_S PREcI E IT'S OWN DEEP SENS- WAS ASK PM T 0 POST PO! 1£ V IS IT T ILL LATE WHE\J"1E WO~L D ,E P ST 4 ID HURDLE. PR,~SID~ J ~•.1S .. DV ISED TH.tiT HOW S 0. _l\GENDA 1lA ._ 1,..L 2~ T 1 IGG..:-ST ri:uT JAL PR0...,LE1 D I DI CO LO
  • • with Pear•on, ~nd to ~ autoniotlve pahS apeerneat~'-- "Tbat aareemeat ~Oatinue• . to &•ta good pri•,e except.from .the Waehialtcu.t Post nd. the Brltl•~· .Agala Dean ltuak can comment further. ... .. ~ • .• _ • .!< ' ~: ·- ; At thla point you
  • astonishment.) We have no answer back but we should know more by morning. Mann has done a similar job in other countries and is sending you a separate report. 3. I talked to Kilpatrick of the POST and Frankel of the TIMES, and Bromley talked to Gluck of the AP
  • Nations Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman POST, Merriweather Secretary of HEW John w. Gardner ROBINSON, Aubrey E., Jr. .AIKEN, George, Senator SIMPSON, Wesley W• ·LONG, Russell B., Senator MAGNIN, Jerry MONRONEY, A. S. Mike, Senator UPDIKE, John
  • and university teachers and researchers of Baltimore published an open letter to you in the Washington Post. The letter welcomed the concern for peace expressed in your Baltimore speech and reflected our anxieties about certain aspects of our policy in Vietnam
  • . Although Quat has told me that no decisions have been taken, the press and our informants have it that the Council confirmed General "Little" Minh as Commander-in-Chief (he holds this post now on an "Acting" basis), selected General Huynh Van Cao as Chief
  • press etoriea as the Harrison article in Monday' a Post ( nsbastri Obje-cts to New US Military Aid to Pakis·tan i) and ·the Keate• article in Frida.y's Sun (' 1 US Must ·Give .Fertilizer Loan and Six Mo.nth• PL 48-0 Before Sha.s'trl Can Comen). W-e
  • of the negotiations and/or a means of solving the problem of GVNintran­ sigence. The United States would have agreed to continue foreign aid .to South Vietnam as long as desired by a post settlement government. The USSRhad no objections to outside countries furnishing
  • ..-atiw 11;c;iuo.l. V'.ueh oo::%tecQ t ataa t.bl ~tldlmt uinteDa~ a.cii eertl!.1.Cll... ti~ ·o :l ~ ti» a;ld. att.ciance report, b1 d.:ta~ted •~l~!MS- attaadaOC4 ~ - ~ Since ,.cur• 1n ~ u· d..tt)' at&tuD Wl"lt posted o . d ~ or at t;;.a a::4 o.f ot