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  • memoranda on non-OAS countrfos which might contribute more tD·tho resources 0£ the Inter-/unorica~ Bank. Attached is the memorandum-on Auotralia. He pobts out that Latin American countries have plac:ecl orders in Australia 'for pure-bred These total some one
  • in adventure, or as partners in advancement. But I do not want tonight to wave either the Union Jack or the Stars and Stripes. We buried the need for that with Colonel Blimp, Yankee Doodle and other caricatures of yesteryear. When Americans talk today of what
  • -et of the coal mine explosion at Dbanbad. Please . accept ~ offe.-ed on beh•lf of the American peopl~ ... I sh~ld . my sincere sympathy . be grateful f.f you would convey our sentiments to the families of the men who lost their · U.v.s
  • -.ia.-cl ~as ..a; rl . 111c lndl . ,;h()uld be the h ~art of American pot,ey .. ,»t.-h Ccntw}. - fruplwQc o( Mac, • c CQOlf true - tl'tat, lnJtid.~k rule.-, tht • rtJarit! ..,ill rule A ia and wi.Hruie ~ WC)fld.Our policy t lat
  • ------------------ ----- 2. Bowles goes on to recommend that the Minister Subramaniam should be invited here discus sions. All the Indian experts here are think you may wish to defer decision until you this week .. Let Bowles invite Wait for Dean's pro-American
  • , 1978 INTERVIEWEE: JEWELL MALECHEK [SCOTT] INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: LBJ Library, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 G: Let's start out with your background. Where are you from? M: I'm from Eola, Texas. It's a tiny little town about
  • to the threat of defeat; Judd's visit to China as a congressman; Judd's experience as the Japanese attacked Chungking; Judd's involvement in a dispute between Pan American and Northwest Airlines over an air route to Asia; US relations with China in the 1940s
  • , 1960. On September 5 of the same year Mr. Senghor was elected President of the Republic of Senegal. In addition to being a well-known statesman, Leopold Sedar Senghor is also a distinguished intellectual and the author of numerous volumes of poetry
  • of, South Vietnamese forces. This would be welcomed by the American public. It is what the intelligence community believes would do most to affect Hanoi's judgment of long-term military prospects. The President could point out that pre-Tet improvement
  • . - to Prealduta. • Limited Official Use Draft J.Atter to Pre•ldent ■ MarklnJ Flr ■ t Annlver ■arr of Put& del Eat• Meetma Dear Mr. President: One year baa pasaed since we met in Punta del Este to dbc,Hs with the other American under the Alliance
  • president, the former president and now a statesman . F: Our former friend . J-9 : No, he's not a former friend because he's still my friend . He and his wife have been my friends for a long time and I've been their friend . In fact, Lady Bird has
  • confusing the German political scene. That risk, I believe, was successfully avoided . From my opening statement to my message of farewell it was my constant purpose to remove doubts and anxieti es about American policy in the face of the new Communist
  • below Austin, and I ranched there for ten years. By that time, I had gotten to the age where I shouldn't be ranching anymore, so I sold the ranch and all the cattle, and I had thirteen business places there in Smithville. Sold out everything and came
  • of the aggression will still be going on, requiring continuing presence of American ground troops. 3. It seems clear that U.S. military can prevent the Viet Cong from taking over the state, can destroy or neutralize main force units, and can destroy hitherto
  • Include Export-Import Guarantees ---- Include OECD Speak to me ------ c, CONFIDENTJA J, MEMBERS OF DISTINGUISHED AUSTRIAN DELEGATION, etc: This is a proud occasion for all Americans. It is also an occasion for hwnility and for hope
  • ·they might help. 3. To advise on possible university administrative reforms, CU could shift emphasis of the FY-1967 American specialist program from coaches to educational administrators. Their advice, if really desired and heeded by responsible Iraqis
  • of international affairs both in the United States and outside the United States. His beat had never been the State Department nor the embassies, either U.S. embassies abroad or American embassies at home, and his acquaintanceship in serious terms--how many foreign
  • lovely words that American children are brought up to say--Liberty. Freedom, Equality. It ie only in their danger the.t l.merican people begin to r ealise how great they are, in the lives of each one of uat and h011 much we would willingly do 1n
  • American affairs ln the last ebt years a. rare com'blnat!on of experience and scholarship, idealism and practical judgment. Your career in public service llluatratea the change through which we have passed in recent years: from a. primary focus on Europe
  • for strategic decisions whose implementation still depends over­ whelmingly on American owned and based weapons: they have included the revived economic strength and potential political strength of Western Europe; the danger that the nuclear weapons programmes
  • pressure sales abroad. It could not avoid reaping the whirlwind. Hindsight is al­ ways easier than foresight, and millions of Americans now look back upon those earlier policies as tragically mistaken. It would be a prolongation of the pres­ ent world agony
  • INTERVIEWEE: PRICE DANIEL INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Dr. Frantz ' office, Garrison Hall 102, University Campus, Austin, Texas Tape 1 of 1 F: Let's trace you very briefly, Governor. You are a native Texan and pretty well took every role
  • . of but moralism Kennedy / !:ly Americans and ir. the public as Ha==i::a::. . us for the s:..:c..:: act:..o~s 7 as was mear.~· -~• somet. ...... _i:ig r.,o::::-e9e::::-so:ial. it, nerve Anglo-Saxon ulti:wate associated . or Bri t.:..sh people
  • -anlsation ot Contral American State• to Join them la a meeting to on July 6 take place at ODECA headquarter• &ad 7, 1968. I accept the invitation with groat pl aaure and request you lnfoz,m my diet!ngu.lahed c:olleaaue• that I look forward to sooing them aad
  • on the subject. We were naturally concerned and worried over the possibility of a much wider conflict with incalculable consequences for peace in South East Asia and the world. We were, however, relieved to learn from your proadcast to the American people
  • . Herewith·is Nick Katzenhach•s views (Ta.b B) on Senator Ma.nsfi.eld's proposal to r ,e organi.ze the American Bureau in State. I share Nick's aonclusion, and prefe-r the firvt (Tab A) of the sug­ gested replies, -whieh i p r epa1·ed for your signature, should
  • it was a political fact of life in t"lOse dJ)t'; tMt southern members of the House and the Senate had S~~ problems. restraints about being liberal. After all, it is said that the first duty of a statesman, a politician, is to get himself elected. You can't help
  • tomorrow. ·w. w. WWRoetow:rln Roetew Draft #3 President• s Speech American Alumni Association July 12, 1966 White Sulphur Springs Words: /t"f'O The world is engaged in a race between education and disaster. The fate of all mankind depends
  • . NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS A DMINISTRATION NA FORM 1429 (6-85) Thursday, August 17, 1967, 7:30 P. M. MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Disappearance of U.S. Citizen in Prague, Czechoslovalda Charles H. Jordan, who represents the American Joint
  • factotum. was in the Eisenhower years. This I was in Washington for a meeting of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, and at some raucous late-night party I ran into Lyndon and Lady Bird. We were standing around talking and drinking--it was very
  • used this above-mentioned analogy in several debates and found it to be exceedingly effective. Such an analogy not only helps the American people to see our present roblerns in a proper hist9rical perspective but should help o & Co. not to overestimate
  • of our Federal Maritime Commissioners, James V. Day, who is from Maine and was formerly Public Relations Director of the American Legion, was reappointed by the President for four years on June 30th, 1965, as a Republican member of the Coil'DJ'lission
  • without China and Russia escalating their participation, too. It would be a very serious mistake to think the .American people would support a stalemated ground war in Vietnam for a period long enough to force the Communists into negotiating. They refused
  • : Did the Preparedness Committee help him in his relations with other senators at all? B: No doubt about it . Because in the Preparedness Committee you were sort of wrapped in the American flag . better, You were trying to make your country
  • ,will be in Washington May 17 and 18 after visiting EXPO '67. The first Belgian Fulbright grantee to gain cabinet rank, this bright, articulate and pro-American leader is, at 39, the youngest Vice Prime Minister in Belgian history. He is also Minister of the Budget
  • future. Therefore until normal relations can be established by the radical reformation of the Japanese attitude, it is matter of anxiety lest they may 1n fac~ worse~ and also our friendship with the American people be impaired ~·1r