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  • g all, •I did. If ,. to. give ·do is ito -B~ar~'a 1 Giddy how much witti~r, American Firsters Minds gi·tldy minds brief co·uld aitations and Foreign li~eliet. were a~d than the f o r e 1 Ftn been have from hint
  • collective pursuant of the Second Extraordinary the next ten months, so that and legislative liberties to Resolution Inter-American action . Twenty-Six Conference held in 1965. In highest /s/ esteem and sincere Romulo Betancourt friendship
  • . Private investment in Guinea is for the time being limited almost exclusively to the mining sector, in which Olin Mathieson, Harvey Aluminum and ALCOA, to mention only American companies, have sizeable investments. These companies, and their European
  • letter of September 26th which arrived today. l baYe taken the liberty ol paaalna along your requeat for a __,,,,meaeage to the appl'Opriate office here that I handle• meaaag••• . . \ Your llltereet le appreciated. \ Wltb be•t reaard•• Sllacerely, w
  • , that the projected five year military build up is unrealistic and so have most of his Civil Service staff. (See Embtel 3 3 28, for example) . Although there will undoubtedly be more discussion on this subject during the Chavan visit, I think you and Mac should urge
  • to be developed by the American Arbitration Association. The 7 community representatives shall include 4 per sons who are residents of the City of Los Angeles and 3 persons who are residents of the County of Los Angeles but not of the City of Los Angeles. 6
  • Civil rights
  • presently proposed .resident American staff (one . experienced ·F s0-3, one junior officer and a secretary in e·a ch instance) • . (2) This arrangement will save residence . ·c onstruction and other expenses that assignment . of resident Ambassadors would
  • that was related to the refugee relief program, a program governed by legislation that kept it in effect for three years. I went to the Far East, to the American Consulate General in Hong Kong, and that led to a return assignment to Washington in a somewhat dull
  • ; 1967 Middle East war; the Liberty incident; preparing for press briefings; relationship with Secretary of State Dean Rusk; the Pentagon Papers; phone call from LBJ; relationship between American press and government
  • . . Though C02741287 their capabilities have not been tested by major civil strife, these security forces have generally proved able to maintain order. We cannot be sure how severely their competence or willingness will be affected by ~e British decision
  • . The Soviet Union 1 s actions in the present crisis, particularly the Shelepin visit may be very, very significant. Does not believe that Soviet would support ChiComs i n a "civil war" which would erupt with a "return to the mainland. 11 P resident Johnson's
  • came to a conference at which the Soviet Union and the United States were present that Peiping would not use force to prevent it. It was significant to me th~t he showed no bluster or threats about the matter of Soviet support for Hanoi that he
  • of Guatemala in Matters Affecting Business, Wash­ ington, D.C., Pan American Union, 1959 (Supple­ ments available dated 1961 and 196 5). GPO: Kelsey, Vera, and Osborne, Lilly de Jongh, Four Keys to Guatemala, New York and London, Funk and Wagnalls, 1939
  • to report a conversation he had had with a Russian-American well known to Bohlen, Thompson and others, whom Bohlen cons~ders to be completely reliable, but whom Chip did not identify by name: Source told Bohlen that about; twb weeks ago he had a long
  • -- V -- 2 really a rather funny thing. The Republicans had operated under the mythology for many years that the Yalta agreements signed by Roosevelt had been treacherous agreements which turned over all kinds of things to the Soviet Union. Well
  • ~ ST~TE 202941 l • EMBASSY REQUESTED TO TRANSM,1T To PRESiOENrr· SENGHQR, FDL~OWINr-3 QUOTEa • I AM DEEPLY GRATEFUi. FOR YOUR CONGRATULATORY' MESSAGE! ON! THE ANNlCERSARY OF THE AMERICAN' INDEPENDENCE~ I. AND AL.L; OF, THE AMERICAN PEOPLE SINCEREI.Y
  • countries while her husband conferred a handy cable description wife, Mrs. Johnson the type of women she sought out in foreign with g0vernment officials. The term became for American Embassy officials. In a speech to Radcliffe graduates this June
  • Service that was related to the refugee relief program, a program governed by legislation that kept it in effect for three years. I went to the Far East, to the American Consulate General in Hong Kong, and that led to a return assignment to Washington
  • in the Middle East and where the phrase came from; the Liberty incident and whether or not it was accidental; preparing for press briefings; Joseph Stalin's daughter seeking asylum in the U.S.; an attitude of secrecy in the Foreign Service; McCloskey's
  • estates when the property. ij 1: i I 0 M. L. Null The condemnation case referred to above is Civil Action No. 22. In the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas, Victoria Division, entitled United States ?f America, Petitioner
  • December 22, 1967 MEMORANDUM TO: Milan Miskovsky FROM: Harold Hair SUBJECT: Minutemen In my visit on December 21, 1967 with Lt. George Fenil, Chief of the civil Disobedience Squad, Philadelphia Police Department* I a sked him about a newspaper
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • a very powerful committee and as time went by they had jurisdiction over civil rights legislation. But the significance of Price Daniel going on the Judiciary Committee over Governor Lehman was basically a civil rights fight. I think this one move
  • urdered Americans In addition, there have been a number of mining and other attacks on bridges and railways in South Viet-Nam as well. as assassinations and ambushes involving South Vietnamese civil and military officials. The Governments of the Republic
  • was just rambling in his conversation. "Could it have been Castro? Could it have been the Soviet Union?" And I told him no, that the investigation had been very thorough, that the Warren Commission had confirmed the conclusions of the FBI
  • with Martin Luther King, Jr. FBI role vs. Secret Service role; FBI jurisdiction in cases; FBI involvement in civil rights cases, especially the murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi and Viola Liuzzo murder.
  • , ·-· ·· ... .. . The President - TO: ~ ,Jtr¥ FROM: H. SUBJECT: American Observers ·of~the Vietnamese Elections c. Lodge l~ -··· . . . ,., ... . Anothe -expression of . opinion concerning the Vietnamese elections from . one of the American Observers has come to me
  • because of the press of work that is piling up in the Budget session, State of the Union Message, and your legislative program. 4. At the same time, I think it may well be in our interests to have Wilson here in December, both to make sure their defense
  • nation on sea and l and- our Ar m3--and our Navy personels have been limited in freedom of speech and freedom .of action. ur cons titution makers designed a protection of civil liberty grom a pO$Sible military des potism. The Hatc"h Bill according to its
  • •v,e. th :t thit br48k1nfI • tro ell formal political rally linff ie j•uetitied ·tha't Roo•-n:elt dMa -,tud for yout . e: d the rutu.r , _ u · tor ~tM,ag. o I •11-.-n t h 11.t American yout .le e(l11c -ion ha 1 t- place heN. -OM o.f' our t-hs-e
  • Conference last September, it was agreed that the two co-chairmen, the Soviet Union and the United States, would consult and agree on a date for resumption after which the other members of the Committee would be consulted in order to obtain their agreement
  • . THAT THE. GERMANS WOULD BE PREPARED t.0 L\JCREASE THEIR CIVIL PURCHASES TO -DM250 MILLIO_N , WHICH, ii. ITH ~1ILIIARY PURCHASES IN THE ORDER OF DM200 MILLION WOULD Ai'1 0UNt ·-ro Dr,1 450 MILLION c1.E✓• IN -THE NEIGHBOR .HOOD OF . 41 ~ILL ION . POUNDS). 11CCLOY
  • by helping lead the American Veterans Committee'~ ... He . is . . ,,, ' , : ' ' . a graduate of Yale University, swmna cum laude, and ' was a Lowell Junior Fellow at Harvard for three years. ·'' 5. . The·s~· officers should complement each other
  • are, of course, the American reporting from there, and backed up by strong feelings-- D: Do you mean the reporting of the press? B: No, I mean mainly the government, the embassy, and backed up by the interested agencies in the U.S. He gets the feeling
  • · PICKLE, J. J. Daniel J. RONA1'ITIOUSE, SPRINGER,William L. STAGGERS,Harley o. WATSCN,Albert W. Wil.LIAMS, John B. ADA?£, John G. Wash., D .C • AMOS, John, American Trucking Assn, Inc., Wash., D.C. DEAN, George Baker, Harvard University Cambri~e, Mass
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT DATE CORRESPONDENTS O R TITLE F.Cf, ~ v6i t1- n tt1 "Elantiago,, ~ JI.. ~, .. &/I 3.1,5..1.- RESTRICTION NI. J C,/... 'i I ,, Inter-American Meeti.ng o-f ·-P1esi:-dents unda-t-ed
  • this: In the pe_riod ·#H~#HH-#H#Hff#4 Former Presidei1-t Eisenhower ashs priority efforts to _ensure Viet,iam, victory: Page 3 . .#############H#####H##H#H#H##~####~~H-##########1. f before the massive American build-up be• gan, about two years ago, the war was go
  • with the United States of Brazil relating to cooperation in the civil uses of atomic: energy. The amendment has been rovlewed by the Bt.treau of the Budget. particularly fi-om tho standp0int of the budgetary and fiscal aspects. and lt recommend$ that you approve
  • was then Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Civil Division. Then in late July of 1966, I came over here as a staff assistant to the President, working for Joe Califano. P: Who brought you on? G: Califano. The background is somewhat complicated. John
  • America'• aympathy for CncboalovaJda in a D.Clll-political and American ■ ettiag. W. W. Roatow ---- Speak to Jim Jones tentati•ely about a time No ---- Speak to me _ _ __ -· ·•:i~" . ·· • ,. • , ~ T0 B~ :'\}.! f..Dt
  • another recruit in Wiesbaden, [Germany]. So I went to law school, thinking that law school was essentially about constitutional matters, matter of civil liberties. I discovered it was about torts and private property and was somewhat taken aback. B: Did
  • Civil Rights Bill; LBJ’s 1964 campaign speech in New Orleans; Johnson treatment; immense capacity to judge people; Johnson-Rayburn relationship; first signs of Presidential ambition; LBJ’s relationship with oil and gas industries; relationship
  • some tiichly org,mized church cnlitici;. 0 0 H. L. HUN1' • KOREA U.S. DEAD AND WOUNDED BEFORE PEACE TALKS U.S. DEAD AND WOUNDED AFTER PEACE TALKS HEAR ... 74,715* Hon. John Distinguished Americans ... Meeting at this crucial hour ... to arouse
  • Civil Liberties Union has us in court now, and, in fact, today we are making an appeal. The District court ruled on last Saturday that the regulations we have prescribed governing demonstrations in front of the White House and Lafayette Park