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  • Contributor > Bundy, McGeorge, 1919-1996 (remove)

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  • : ) The attached papers cover the Zanzibar problem and Dea.n Rusk and I / would like to talk with you about them on the telephone at your conveni~ )' (.l,N....; (: 1 ence on Monday. The one question which you may wish to decide today \ (. o-~, vd is whether you
  • will telephone and ask for your views in the morning, and on the basis of what you tell me, I will then do a one -page paper for your use with Stewart. Bruce and I believe that you can be most candid and effective with him if you see him entirely alone
  • Oeo~so Ball to answer Adlal'e memorandum ot February 17 (Tab A} and hor• ta my own euggoatlon as to what you might eay to him 1f you wlah to telephone blm. ta the curreat eltoatlon. I do not tblnk auch a phone call l• urge11t. 1. Stevenson saggeeta
  • IJieaher ~aslyhtgiott, ;i)..QJ:. · J anua.ry TO The President FROM Mike Mansfield 6, 1964 SUBJECT: · Viet Namese Situation. This memo is responsive to your telephone request during Christmas week to Frank Valeo. I have discussed thd request
  • Dean Rusk telephoned to re-e.mpba:sbe hls strong recommendation that you really ahoald spend a few mlDutes with Bowles. I have done my beat with. Bowles and wlth the Department to explahl how buay you are, but we are dealing here wUh a former Under
  • . 12958, Sec. 3. 1/30195, S te ~ Bromley Smith THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON May 22, 1965 r VJ MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT I telephoned Bundy to ask him to rush his promised telegram so that it would be available during your Z p. m. meeting. Bundy
  • by telephone and we type those regularly. ~ McG. B Send them like this Retype ----- \ \ SANITIZED IJ L1 0 IC/-(X; '>ol-~ By~, NARA, Date /~-7-0t Authority q. H4'"A.c ARE' SoME INblC.AT!ONS Tll-AT ~EGULAR.. Ml Ll7AA'( ELE"llfF>.JT.S WI TH IN T#-C REBf"L
  • , Birrenbach telephoned an old friend at Harvard to report that he had come to Washington resigned to discuss consultative machinery but concluded from his private conversations around town that the Germans would be able to get hardware~ When I asked whether
  • \f.gtl¥;-. ·M tO. I I a. . . THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON December 18, 1964 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT "Subject: Congressional opinions re Panama I attach reports on Congressional opinion obtained by others who were in the telephoning process. I
  • plans for this weekend. If South Asia does not flare up badly, I would hope to take Mary to Martha's Vineyard early Friday and bring her back Tuesday morning. A friend has offered us the use of an isolated but telephone-equipped cottage there, and we
  • than a comment on a telegram or a telephone call about .a particular issue. And you have the very large influence which, in the years in which I have been in Washington, is exerted upon the Presidency by the fact that the Presidents I have known read
  • \ /} oe,/ THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON .... COJ>TFIDE~lTL~ L Thursday, December 9, 1965 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT 1. I attach Bob McNamara's account of his telephone conver­ sation with members of Congress on South Vietnam. It is highly
  • the dust Douglas Dillon has just telephone{ to say that he has the flu. I told him you might wish to call him in the nex t few days, and he said the operators w
  • shall explain to Lord Harlech that I am doing it at the direct request of the President. As I said on the telephone, I believe it would be helpful for you to say these things to the Prime Minister, although not on the basis of a direct Presidential