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  • zone disappears. This task at the moment is stymied. What effect Bos ch' s intended return on Saturday, September 25 will have ( if indeed he does come back) ,remains to be seen. I think the posture we should continue to take with the press
  • " Accomphshmenls, not apolo- demonstrated by the fact _that of chanoe but who will act immedigies, are what · the . American the ·$135,000,000,000 111, foreign. aid ate!/' on these reforms. As I dispeople -expect from their d_es ire to mvested by . the free ":orld
  • bring closer v1hich share bet\"1een them such great responsibilities peace and progress Mr. Prime two tnajor achievement of the world. It is especially Free World partners, and great hopes for in the world. Wdnister, I want to take
  • have continued to free lance. There have been assignments from Life, National Geographic, Venture, and other lesser pub­ lications. And I have recently completed the pictures for the proposed Sierra Club book about the Allagash River in northern Maine
  • Press relations
  • the guards at the Pentagon.. You can 1t imagine how they are faced with provocations. They do anything which would further aggravate the situation .. If we are asked, I think we should tell the press that we are prepared to maintain order. It is important
  • be en exaggerated. The security situation is much better th;-in as reported in the press. In the n1ost i·ecent large engagc1nent; the Vietnamese stood and fought very well. General Wheeler said he agreed. He called.·attention to a page one story
  • installations throughout the country so that he can salute the men "who keep me free." The President said that Eisenhower told him that we have forgotten what it means to be patriotic. The President said we need to get some of our secondary men like Kohler
  • powered Polaris submarine HMS RESOLUTIONis enclosed. This plan was pre­ pared with the assistance of United Kingdom representatives.· At the last minute the British asked that ·the press release scheduled for 5 January 1968 be delayed due to electrical
  • -~.:- _;~•-//~.~:·/\..{,:. ·-~'·/··Y~ ·:~. •.: :.~ :': r-iccLOY _: rw ICE ~:t~lPH/;SIZED .'r·o~.,- DUCKW'ITi': THAT' THE ' PRESENCE ·_ OF- BR IT ISH TROOPS - HAD :A DIRECT RELATIONSHIP :to -·US· LE.VELSor DUCK\iJ 1rz THEN REFERRED TO PRESS REPORTS -. HE>-HAD ·- SEEN · ABOUT 'IHE us
  • the reality of 127 meetings over the past decade -- meetings at which we have repeatedly and unsuccessfully pressed for exchanges of newsmen, the freeing of four imprisoned U.S. citizens, and a reduc­ tion of tensions. Our present head-count on the Chinese
  • will not wish to press this proposal because Hanoi has made clear that it does not wish the United Nations to get in a peace-making role in Southeast Asia. 3 - With respect to visit to Communist China, the Secretary of State is strongly opposed. It would
  • safeguards agreed upcn a future fu.el s\\pply can be ens-u red. -• It might be possible to include something in preamble te the Treaty that would guax--antee free access to nuclear techn.o lo.gy £or peaceful uses. Brandt: Hoped the Ge-r mans cio not appear
  • main object was to be protected against surprise decis·i ons before bis Wednesday colamn, and I was able to comfort him with no resulting damage. On July 28 I talked to Tom Wicker after he had filed bis very good story on your press conf~rence statement
  • was left free to erect tariff and trade barriers as it pleased. Many nations, including our own, tried to buy as little as possible from the rest of the world and to sell as much as possible. European countries that normally bought wheat and meat from
  • at the White House. She spent the war years in canada (the Government-in-Exile was established in Montreal) and made frequent trips to the United States. The friendship and support for the cause of free Luxembourgwhich she found in this country during those
  • . 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
  • in your office at noon today. He will deliver a letter from Prime Minister Thanom fully supporting your decision to strike POL targ~ts. This answers your message to Thanom of June Z3. Key sentence in Thanem' a letter: "The free people of Asia have had
  • of press attacks on our Latin American .,_, policy. This is an important memorandum, and to me a somewhat disturbing one. -\ Y '? Tom seems to assume that all our trouble comes from a few far-leftwingers. A lot of it does. A lot comes also from honest
  • and the press humility to his "One war at a time". concerning is brevity, some eighty Sandburg with its Mason and Slidell to the public the circumstances want another on same time." destination outcry While the Secretary was very and wisdom
  • Traditionalist earl¥ elections ot a new Parliament; Amini. Rigged elections cri■ is; and Moe&deqist opposition groups have demanded relativei,- might precipitate free elections divided between reactionaries demagoguesfrom the citiee. autocratic, a new
  • and apologetic. T iis contrasts with the strong, even brute.l measures, used to su,:press the food riots. Early in ~ch a.t an inf'ormaJ. meeting ·with Members of' the Press .Asso­ Association, ~tr·s. ciation of India ~d the Foreign Corresponaents Gandhi responded
  • only a one-sentence notice on the back page of their press. The pro-Moscow Western European Communist parties meanwhile criticized Peiping for flouting the Test Ban Treaty. Some Free World and Communist governments have stated or implied
  • d by a series of factors • These included: our mutual commitment to free societies and to democratic inE.itutlons: the appreciation of most Indians for our prompt action t'lree years earlier in support of India against China: the close 1'1ers,,nal
  • allow that organization to describe the priority needs of the affected areas in Los Angeles and to make proposals to meet those needs. We would certainly press them to accomplish this as soon as possible. The principal need that has been identified to us
  • 3 MAR 1968 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT I urge reconsideration of your decision to defer our seeking a $5. 5 million supplemental appropriation for aid to the Ryukyu Islands for FY 1968. Free and efficient use of our bases in the Ryukyus demands
  • expect the entire Goverament to pull in the same direction. Examples: Panama 1964, Ayub and Shastri 1965, and the Dominican Bepublic. 2. The importance of wdty in what we aay. The press -a re continually trying to divide the Government againat itaelf
  • the case. I note in the press ~hat a program of birth contr.Ql aid to Pakistan awaiting formal approval, the first time the United States has provided direct material assistanc.e to another country for birth control work. It is my belief that no final
  • consulted in advance. Israel, i.m.ile refraining from drastic reactions to Syrian and Egyptian provocations, pressed the United States for a public statement on the extent of the American com­ mitment to Israel's security. But in lieu of making a public
  • and the situation serious. p roposals for neutralization unfortunate and even harmful. . . . . . . They. can ;l . I '! . . ! serve only t o create doubts among the Vietnamese people about the determination o f the Free world to help the.111 repel
  • #7lb cable 03/18/66 t6, the P1 1esident from Dean Rusk S-ee;r;iQ:t; ~ 1--
  • n of Czechoslova k Sporumen In Western World Central Comm lttee of Czechoalovak Leg ionn:11res Comm ittee for a Czechoslovaki a Free Council for a Free Czech:>alova k ia Council of Higher Education . Cz~ch Catholic U nion ' On October 18, 1918
  • THE DECISIONTO MAKEAVAILABLE RS. 20 CRORESOF FREE EXCHANGE FOR FERTILIZER IMPORTSOF THE NEXT KHARIF~ROP
  • .-, vhlch i• conautent with their cli:nf.ty •• human being• ln • free CO\mtry and at the 1ama tlma to recoanf.n the fundamental and urgent need to keep the iqNlct on florid& and the ll1ami area in particular to a mintmua. Thia prime bctor of ainilllidn3
  • of newsmen wonder if r.c. will be open to questions following/before his speech to the '8,sne. dave l ~ . ' ... I ( t . I • ·t :ClarkAttacked BrRep.·Ga~dner By Unlled Press International 1 Rep. John Gardne~, R-N.C., to­ day accused Atty. Gen
  • Press
  • that having fulfilled its usefulness, it should dissolve into the war effort-with its presses and its typewriters, its trucks and its 400 employees. It was still a financial failure but its owner, Mr. Marshall Field, could afford to write off the loss
  • " ed Ir~·-1 as member Free ~'lorld. abge had int.erpretN fflOD!Balipmen t: Marxist o~ Commw:d.Bto B.ecogm.au role private ente rpr ise . ll. Bazzaz ata~ed Nasser cmly Arab Wffld leader who effectively camnanism and marx1sm.o Key to good relatlcma
  • to international practice in such matters in the past. The real issue is whether the Egyptians are prepared to correct that page of history which they wrote last June 6-­ whether they'll give some authoritative acknowledgment in their press that we were
  • there is no problem. The United states understood India's position and has long believed that there must be a powerful free nation in . Asia to offset the power of China, and that that nation is India. "•.' • He stated that Prime Minister Gandhi should understand
  • • of fUteen wh.lte adml~latrators. 1 (u a N•g~o) jut alt on ,t he local advlaory boa~d. •1 (Two,• thi:-da of the youtb who antor tile three local hlgh, sc.b oola do t10t tJ1!a4ttate. ) [6 of 13] -6- School Lunch Program• "We aeed free lunchea. Our ~