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  • c ib birnlftht White (Idaho). • • • • No Schisler (Ill.). • • • • Next week Rostenkowski. (IU .. )11A M sign Bandstra (Iowa)..... Will call Speaker back Perkins (Ky.) •••• sign Hungate (Missouri}.. Albert will call Thompson {NoJ.) ... Next week
  • of the United States losing jurisdiction Chicago and Detroit. over Similar "inside jobs" were im­ pending in other cities when Prime Minister Ky with great skill and courage finally put the If there had been a well-organized II II strugglen down
  • that Ky was in a solid position here, Sihanouk said that Ky was the only Vietnamese who "has not· smeared me in his speechas." He evidently felt less antagonistic to Ky than he ha.a to any other ~ ietnamese. 3. He said he wanted to resume tiormal
  • planning figures. Sat. • Ft 11, 1967 10:30 a. m. MR. PRESIDENT: You will wish to read these. especially Saigon's. That fellow Ky has his head screwed on right. w. w.R. TOP SECRET/SUNFLO.,VEft/PLUS attachment (SAIGON 17822) (LONDON 6488) Sat. • Feb. 11
  • information. ___ For comment. ' -T ' REMARKS: ·1 t ·. Description: --XA-- Letter: Telegram: Other: 1- ..... _, _ . To: - The Preside-nt · From: ,J .G.G~rest, Mayor of San:-du-s ky, Ohio Date: .Jhly 2.7, 1967 I Subject: Suggests- easy and inexpensive
  • own itinerary and arrange interviews as he saw fit. I talked to some Vietnamese newspaper editors who opposed the Thieu-Ky ticket. I also talked to Associated Press and United Press Interna­ tional bureau chiefs and to experienced reporters
  • arrival in Saigon, we were assured that each observer could map his own itinerary and arrange interviews as he saw fit. I talked to some Vietnamese newspaper editors who opposed the Thieu-Ky ticket. I also talked to Associated Press and United Press
  • and interrogated by Saigon police, the-:-V-1e~Cong°pfaii..to.:.:.lfrg:-aiii~~~ ..~:ti'o,­ ti~o1.:Paople:!2.~:llM~.=-iiegoJiate~for peace,.: /.rhis new Front plans -t;·-• substitute General Duong Van Minh for Thieu and Ky as National Leader of South Vietnam
  • - SAIGON22548 Mar 20 -· RECENTINITIATIVES BY KY ANDLOANTHATSOMEOF THEIR FOLLOWERS. OF WAR • URGINGA "MARCHTO THE NORTH"AND f!.. DECLARATION :AGAINST NORTHVIET-NAMPROBABLY REPRESENT,INTER·ALIA, A .·~E~CTIONTO THIS FRUSTRATION. J3. THIS FACTORHAS A BEARINGON
  • ~ght 5 p Holder· w Thomes-Johnson The President: Will you get 135, 000? General Abrams: Yes. The President: Are they drafting 18 year olds? General Abrams: -Yes. Thieu and Ky are determined to do it. The President: What ·percent of the ARYN
  • requirements = total consumption minus local production. - 2 ­ 6. At this point my preference for strategy follows: a. Make clear to Thieu and Ky that we wish maximum progress before the election but that we ,expect the new GVN to take early
  • to Vanderbilt Universit)· students; two of liis aides wen, arrested. Cleveland, Ohio, _April 16 •· Violence eruptl•d in the pre­ dominantlr Negro Hough area, with n,ck throwing, window break­ ing and lootiµg. Louisville, Ky., April 20 •· Police fired tear gas
  • , call up 18 year olds and give the American people the impression that they are doing as much as we. Secretary McNamara: When I was in Vietnam I talked with Thieu and Ky. They told me then they intended to call up 18 and 19 year olds. The President
  • was talked over with Thieu. By the end of June Thieu and Ky had agreed that this was the best practical way to proceed. In July, Vance spelled out the your-side, our-side formula to Lau. Nothing came of it, however, at that time. In mid-September
  • There cannot be anyone alive who knows the names of aJJthe children who carried us and Mr. Johnson to the place where he stood last night. There was a little boy named James Gonio n, who lived right by Clay, Ky., and travele d 20 miles to school because Clay
  • ,Juanita, Providence, R.I. HEFTER,Tom J ., Madison, Wisc. IAKE, Henry, Louisville, Ky. KI.AMON,Joseph M., StL LAPAKKO,Tobey, St. Paul, Minn. LEE, Stewart, Beaver Falls, Pa. LICHTY, James, Madison, Wisc. MCE~WEN, Robert J., Chestnut Hill, Mass. MATSON
  • .c olumn. MARCH 9, 1946 - NUl!BER 48 I TOM CONNALLY, WALTER: P'. GEOIIGE, GA. ROBERT F . WAGNER, N. Y. ELBERT D. THOMAS, UTAH JAMES E. MURRAY, MONT. CLAUD&: PEPPER, FLA. THEODORE FRANCIS GREEN, R. I, ALBEN W, BARKLEY , KY. JOSEPH P'. GUFFEY I PA
  • to stop. Even a casual study leads to such profound raa1f1cationa of photographic potential that , the only feasible approach seeas to be that of patient step by step progress and improvement. Ky coapany 1& willing that I devote all necessary satisfactory
  • force appeared to be marking tii.--ne. Tri Quang continues ~to make his pitch for US aid. General Thi ~old Corcoran he still _sees no point in meeting with Ky.,, but kept the door open for later resumption of command of I Corps. In Saig
  • compound from Embassy or buildings. greatly about here: is now well protected our people press corps - - how the people attack damaging And, intrusion out of proportion of course, Ky, or both could in Saigon with an account we somehow
  • to learn to think of himself as the field commander for pacification in the aame way that Westmoreland. is the field commander for thw war -- and he should feel free to put claims on us in tlae same way ta.at Westy does. Tbe truth is -­ as Ky him.self said
  • . Ky Promises Cooperation on Prisoner Visibtl Ambassado1· Po r ter has persuaded Premier Ky to re­ voke restrictions which had been placed on visits by the In­ ternational Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to North Vietnamese prisoners and on prisoners
  • are to be of any worth to aociety we must mobilise our good qualities •nd fight with with all of our resource• against our evil heritages. Ky study and research of the Pattillo family, I find it to be a name of whioh I am not ashamed. The name does not appear
  • on political developments in Viet Nam. W. W. Rostow Att. MW:hg SECltET ATTACHMENT 1 l / 18' Cb DECLASSIFIED .ltO. li356, Sec. 3,4 SECMT NLJ __Cf_ c.f_-_,~ - • NARA. Date 1 - 12. - 'I Situation Report in Viet-Nam ! July 31, 1967 Thieu-Ky
  • a.m.. ' ~ response to your interest ta pushing Ky tow.a.l'da aa approach to the· NLF. there la attached: -- s~~'• .cable 192044. May 10, for. · .B~er &om B1Uldy., which we -l a$plred. from ·here. My.back. cbannel mes•age of May 13 -- to Bunker
  • politicai groups. 3. In talking with Thieu and Ky, you should make dear that we "'.vish to see it through at their side. If we are to be permitted to do so by American public opinion, they must 1novc fa~t to b_ring their forces back /.'-v'1 to strength
  • . that ~t !iB. m~eting 2t Prattville, Alabama, on O©t~b~r 22 1 1961 1 a m~jority of the Kl~v~rns · of the U 0 Se Klfil1Ifts 9 Knights of the Ku Klux 1\1~"1 m~rged with the United Kl~a cf Amerio~, Inco, Knigrnts of th~ KY Klu~ KlMo , FD-323 (Rev. l l-29-6
  • • ., New Have., Conn. HENDERSO r, Vivian w., Atla. WALLACE,William J. L. W. Va. HILL, Carl M., Frankfort., Ky. WF.ST.,Harold., Nash. HILL, Henry A., Haverhill., Mass. WHEELER, Albert., Ann Arbor, Mich. HOLLAND,Jerane H• ., Hamptoil, Va. WRIGH'l', Stephen
  • that most a short have roughly to act urgently and Ky so that an announcement ~ and budget cuts alreadly largely needed reasons. Cessation Bunker however, effectiveness. reserve. - free GVN and ARVN could likely period. to continue
  • Wheeler and General Westmoreland met with President Thieu, Vice President and General Vien. Topics discussed were not reviewed by General Westmoreland, but he indicated a wide-ranging, useful and realistic exchange of views. Ky 8. General Westmoreland
  • preoccupied with conspiracy 1 shifted from the new­ ly established constitutional government back to Air Marshal 'Ky and tight military ._controls. It was Wlenthusiastic about negotia't1ons. scenario projection advanced gaze time tc It confirmed wi their awal