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  • the efforts of people like yourself that new methods are developed which help the business to progress. I have also been asked to convey the thanks of the General Plant Supervisor. A copy of this letter along with associated papers pertaining to your
  • going to come through-­ just at the time when the press is giving big play to current arrivals. I told Farr you understood the urgency and promised to relay the political point. HHS ·:;,--,:.. 9 1j ~rL~ ~1'\ THE SECRETARY WASHINGTON January 28
  • COPY H1MEDIA'rE RELi£ASE October 15, 1964 Office of the White House Press Secretary - -- -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - --- ..- - - - - --- - - -- --- - -THEiiJHITEHOUSE ETATEMENT OF THE ?RESIDENT Walter Jenkins has worked with me faithfully
  • COPY H1MEDIA'rE RELi£ASE October 15, 1964 Office of the White House Press Secretary - -- -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - --- ..- - - - - --- - - -- --- - -THEiiJHITEHOUSE ETATEMENT OF THE ?RESIDENT Walter Jenkins has worked with me faithfully
  • but erodes the stabilizing sup- public press and then by congressional end of town. of port of those who would otherwise agree. Thus, a policy, or a set of policies, may CONCLUSION OF MORNING be emasculated, not because they are BUSINESS wrong or because
  • gap which, if not financed externally, will result in recourse to further inflationary borrowing at the Central Bank. Ecuadorean officials, on a recent trip to Washington, pressed for a loan of $20 million to cover the budget gap. In response, AID
  • official f~r appropriate and/ or ha:r.dling. 11) ?rocessing 11 of State ranges Cards and the Office from 1300 to 1800. for Social of the Press Correspondenc~ Secretary to the . Lady •. ~~Q) c4uq a>JL- Christine Stugard Staff Assistant
  • during which he wandered far afield in explaining his alleged association with a number of prominent individuals in the Government. He also indicated on those occasions that he had several ideas on fighting communism in this country although he furnished
  • project was delayed in the Cleveland r area when the low bidder DOT subsequently _State until plementation Press also also held support from some quarters. by the Cleveland of the equal supported up $125 million 23 was resolved. DOT did
  • of September 9, I sensed that the moment was ripe and took advantage of it to give him a piece of my mind, which I had long been contemplating, about the disastrous nature of his press relations. I began by asking him whether it would not be possible for him
  • . FROM THE MOMENT OF THE ISRAELI VICTORY, THE RUSSIANS AGREED TO THE CEASE-FIRE. THEY SAID SO IN THEIR OWN WAY, TO BE SURE, BUT THEY ARE Nor PRESSING FOR TOO MANY COMPLICATIONS. THEY WANT TO KEEP THEIR POSITION AND THEIR REPUTATION OF BEING FRIENDS
  • request ArnbassadorHarmanJoined 111e this 01ornlng to discuss to lsroel and the associated lsrc,ell support of -the .resumption of arms•del lverles to certain of the Arab . natlons. After a long conversation during which I expressed our need
  • some ground with the Greeks duri.ng that vi~it. Mr. Bundy felt less opti.lnistic , notir1g Greek peevishness over the President' s latest letter . T he President recalled that Papandreou had pressed for a US formulc.. when he was here. Mr . B all
  • . President Truman stopped me in tre receiving line at the Women I s Press Club Reception last Thursday evening to compliment the fight I made with oth3 r Senators against the Republicans violating the spirit of the new Reorganizaticn of Congress Act
  • '.'oductivc:" ~lil these poi.t\ts a~- -~~.e~~ , . 0 PRESERVAT,o~~ C·OPY . . . - 2 c. The Preferred Agenda: If we are to press for an agreed agenda before stopping the bombing, we need to have agreement among ourselves as to the desired order of events
  • NO, 2 IN, HIERARCHY• AP· CALLED MF'APRESS SECTJON FOR COMMENTAND MET' WITH FIRM DENiAL• IC) BELG1AN MA, LOTHAR LOWE OF FRG· PRESS, AND ANDERSONOF NYT REPORT RUMORSTHAT BREZHNEVAND MARSHALGRECHKOSOON WILL BE F~RED• SHELEPIN WILL, BE DISMISSED AFTER
  • of land than the_dispersed pattern associated with automobile­ oriented development. 2. Optimal Use of Environmental Resources. This is cer~ainly one of the major reasons for the urban trans­ portation program; i.e.) its less adverse impact
  • . 6. The counter audio survey has found numerous places where there is accoustical leak.age fran sensitive offices. M:r. Moyers' office could Convers.a tions in be heard through the wall into· a press area and through an old sink pipe down
  • COURT/75 E.55 ST .• N.Y.C. IAN & SYLVIA i'Ul International Talent Associates, Inc. 75 E. 55th St., NYC Plaza 1-33•4-4 9538 Brighton Way, Beverly Hills, Calif. Crestview 5-4562 tRAt4Sf ERRED to STILLflOTO COLtECTmtl TRAHSffRil L Ian Md s
  • press for flBENflAl ~--- 3 substantive rather than token cooperation. (3) Cooperation with the Soviet Union should be well defined and the obligations of both sides made clear and comparable. (This will facilitate implementation as well as clarify
  • CULVERCITY CALIF 24 THE PRESIDENT THE WHITEHOUSE STRONGLY URGEWITHDRAWAL COLEMAN APPOINTMENT FIFTH CIRCUIT INCOMPATIBLE VITHFREEDOM IN SOUTH JUDGESHIPSUCHNOMINATIONS PARENTSMISSISSIPPI FREEDOM ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA 11169 BRADDOCK DR CULVERCITY
  • parties, the press, and the formation of the Inspectorate and the .Supreme Court. It says it will set up a committee for "Foreign Affairs and Information", and it has sent a delegation to Quang Tri Province to investigate reported incursions of Communist
  • are not going to run out on South Vi etnam. We are not g oing to break Ameria' s word. ·.· However long it takes , · we will persist until the Communists end the fighting or until we negotiate· an honorable peace. REMARKS TO THE PRESS, LBJRANCH August 14, 1966
  • that some of the four-digit serials may be associated with rear service work and can reasonably expect an unknown number of men to be assigned to these tasks. I. Using the same movement factors, we have estimated the time required for the serials to arrive
  • a regional fertilizer trade association. This topic }Till be f'Urther discussed at a follow-up seminar to be held in Ie.tin America. A report will be made available to participants of the fertilizer work group of CIAP within the next two months which
  • ," and prior to his appointment as Ambassador in August, 1967 Mantilla served as Executive Director of that newspaper. He has been active in Ecuadorean and inter-American press organizations and was President of the inter-American Press Association from 1949
  • Marshall D. Shulman Russian Institute, Columbia University Donald B. Straus American Arbitration Association Kenneth W. Thompson The Rockefeller Foundation James C. Thomson Department of History r Harvard University Stephen J. Wright United Negro College
  • to let 15 trapped ships out. The UN is now pressing Israel to let the Egyptians begin surveying the northern half. This could lead to re-opening the whole Canal. Eban has warned \ U Thant that Israel will oppose that, and this morning's firing along
  • Ka.shmir is still his- chief concern,. and he will be him infor1:1ed. The attached watching sharnly for signs that we are favoring India. letter assures him that you presa,ed Mrs. Gandhi 011 this subject as hard as you pressed him. '\Tbil we cannot report
  • National Intelligence Estimate (SNIE) to study the technical capa­ bilities and incentives for the Soviet Union to deploy weapons and associated delivery systems on the seabed, and the corresponding capabilities of the U.S. to detect and identify
  • - Discussion on Vietnam, Robert Kennedy, Eisenhower, Alliance for Progress, role of ror. 42. 9 December 1963 - Briefing. General revi·ew. Press, McNamara, Vietnam. I 43. 13 December 1963 - Introduced DDCI, Peer de Silva., reviewed checklist. Discussed
  • baa fel~ for 1SG to be helpf•lo tbroughcut tiuat vidiout • - dear• of c®®p®rati@n ancl reapoulveaeea frcm both •diatioll efforto partie•~ tbe~e WOQild be p©>i111t in pressing We have no deaf.re elbow our•elvea into attattica in absence deaire
  • . He disclosure referred specifically to the report in Newsweek about the Berlin proposals which had appeared in the press before they had even reached his desk. He expressed the hope that the individual guilty of this particular disclosure could
  • November Z2, 1965 MEMORANDUM FOR RECOAD I invited myaelf to lunch. with B. K. Nehru today &ad made clear to him the ri•k• 111 such 001-inapired, press atoriea a• the ~ria-on article in Monday'• Poat ( 'Shastri Objec:t1 to New US Military Aid to PaldatanPJ
  • technical inconvenience. In political terms, on the other hand, the consequences of denial could be very serious. we do have an agreement, made in 1959 in good faith. we are already publicly associated with this particular program, by virtue of the agreement