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  • and· control, including PAL, and irrevocably committed , , for the life of th~ Alliance. · Wilson probably would acc~pt two other symbols ~ of community :. -· ~ · common. uiµforms and flag -- to the extent the Germans think this symbolis~ · im.p ortant. But he
  • to a balanced global policy. You made a major contribution after the war to European reconatruct.i on, but then turned to the gi-eat adventure of Latin American economic and social development. You helped formulate and bring to life the Alliance for Prog.roaa
  • the r/ELP came Into being. It was also felt that the Soviets opposed NATO as an alliance rather than the MLP as such. On guarantees to non - nuclear countrleSj Vfhlte House adviser Bundj!- favoi’ ’ed a case-by-case approach rather than a universal
  • West German entente, policies Western European bloc, this grouping is intended engage in negotiations including those related support alliance indispensable to serve as the We tern entity with Moscow for the settlement to Germany, deriving
  • ," something like this, that one day he just said, "it all sounds like a bunch of gobblety-goop," and he popped off and told some newspapers about it and that's the way--said, "That's a bunch of gobblety-goop, bunch of talk--they don't know what they're talking
  • , in their view, will be interpreted by the Soviets in such a way as to impair n u clear defense within the Alliance. This view is also strongly held by the traditionally conservative elements in the CDU/ CSU. The CSU Chairman of the Bundestag Defense Committee
  • ..• Pennsylvania is against us ••. and so the rest." He advised the President that "the only salt to save us" was the appointment of a peace commission to negotiate with Jefferson Davis. Many newspapers took a strong anti-Lincoln stand in their editorial columns
  • of President Kennedy's meeting with the Greater Houston Ministerial Alliance. At that stage of the campaign, or in that time, there was some suggestion and some belief, particularly in the South, that Kennedy's Catholicism would be an impediment to his free
  • JFK’s 1960 meeting with the greater Houston Ministerial Alliance; LBJ’s 1966 13-state campign trip for congressional candidates and its cancellation; President LBJ’s 1966 rally in Wilminton, Delaware; techniques of advancing a motorcade and a rally
  • of this,'' she told the Austin newspaper, "it will be there in that town." From the beginning, Mrs. John­ son has been intimately involved in the activities of the LBJ Li- brary. Here she holds her annual meeting at the LBJ Ranch with Li- brary supervisors
  • would be in balance or whether there should be a relatively small deficit. 2. A newspaper story alleges there is disagreement between Secretary Rusk and Clifford. (Secretary Rusk interjected to ask what are we disagreeing about now?) There is no reason
  • couldn't leave. And also the trip to the Dominican Republic. B: Just from reading the newspaper accounts, he seemed inmensely. R: to enjoy those trips Is that a correct version? Yes, he enjoyed certain parts of the trips, did not enjoy others
  • , Japsnese, and Canadian participation in the economic 1 social 1 and political development efforts of L~tin America. Dr. Sanz de Santamaria, Chairman of the Inter-American Committee on the Alliance for Progress (CIAP), made clear in the recent meetings
  • talked about this Kennedy alliance and persuading Lyndon. And I persuaded him, mostly through Lady Bird and then through Lyndon, that he should accept the vice presidency at the time when everybody else was saying that he would sell Texas out if he
  • thrust it, Perhaps the peace of world wpuld better be served if the newspapers were to publish each day a small box on the1r front pages, showing the diets and stand­ ards of living of the countries of Europe. Let me read you from a New York Times story
  • to make addi­ tional contribution• to the total defense 1trength ln Weetern Europe. Thi• would result in an effective ahow of unity among the member• of the We1tern alliance. z. U it la practicable, our moat modern weapons should be exchanged for leas
  • there is not vigorous. The MIN Party denials of rumors of a deal have retained norrvnal support of a cluster of small parties that launched Bonnelly, though cracks in his alliance are apparent. He has all but announced a shift to Balaguer and other MIN leaders
  • in Vietnam supposedly had, that high-level to that . called assimilated rank . might be the correspondents had a so- If you were the third man on the AP desk you a lieutenant, or somebody who was a correspondent for the Knight newspapers like me, I
  • convention held in Knoxville, Tennessee~ on November 10 19570 An arti.cle in the November 26, 1957, iss11e of the "Greenville Piedmont", a newspaper of Greenville, South Carolina 1 reported "the recent formation of a new poli.t.ical partyj to be known
  • Cominform or­ DO COMMUNISTS HAY!! IMPORTANT PosrTION8 ganization, through an article published IN THE GUATDS.ALAN COVERNM..EN'Tt First. Reds occupy key spots In radio, In its worldwide newspaper "For a Last­ press. agrarla.n administration and the ing Peace
  • movement centered around the slogan "'Black Power.u Through . such articles information is distributed to counter act the fantastically false stories that appear in the millionaire newspapers and magazines about Black Power." ~IFIED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4
  • letter of August 1 O. In recommending a reply, State notes (at Tab 2) that while you responded favorably to the letter in your Alliance for Progress speech, a formal acknowledgment of Santamaria 1 s letter is in order be cause of its unusual significance
  • ~A ANDBRAZIL.LATERON IN THE YEAR • . . ,. . , AS ?ART OF' Y0 1JR PROGRAM ni ELSAL'JADO?.t COVEY SUGGESTS YOU -VISIT • .. . TdE LYNDON 3. JOHNSON PUBLIC SCHOOL BUILT 1'ITH ALLIANCE: MONEY.-, ..: -•.... " -,-· _.. . .-•• _:• ...-.'·· HE 'i ILL ALSO TRY TO HAVE THZ £TV
  • . In 1964 we have active relations with nearly all nations, and alliances with more than 40. We are the citadel of human hope against the inhumanity of communism. In making this transition we have had to steer between two great dangers -- isolationism
  • this period of time that is of consequence, do you think? G: Well, I think there's only one instance that is worth dealing on at all, and that came in June of 1966 or 1967, but it's something that broke in the newspapers so it's easy to check. But the only
  • ~ ~\ ~ . l'f\~(l,~ \ Y"I~ of middle-aged white womefilAhad generated ari/\atmospt-ie re of fear in the city. ),,;~ -Alt'.J:1:0ngh tl:le newspapers Wei:'e gene.raJ J y restrained ~~ •~ - known that the tentative identification of the "Cincinnati Strangler
  • , 9,our- 8tMt17id.\\·\0 • Ot\tJL;r(X;\· \ f.45 07 memo Keeny to Bator s 1 3/11/66 A 07a memo Howard to AsstSec of Defense TS- 3 3/11/66 A 07b list "Support of French NATO Forces" TS- 0 [3/66) A 11a memo Wells to C. Johnson
  • . •- a .deta.lled explanation of how little of ·Latin A~erican nulita.ry expenditures goes into hardware (most goes fo,: .s alaries and a.llowaneesh . •• . the s -e rlous cons~quences ior the Alliance £or Progress if we do ·n ot provide a reasonable alternative
  • . For the latter, there was a photograph of him in the newspaper dres·eed in winter clothing. SECRET Monday, July 10, 1967 5:55 p. m. Mr. President: Herewith today's situation report on Viet Nam. W. W. Rostow ~ECRET DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4(b) B
  • Sheriff's Office are conducting an inv~stigation. -etJN F I DEN I IAb- ,-4- .. COMFIBEHTJ AI z-.. SELECTEDRACIAL DEVELOPMENTS AND DISTURBANCES PROTEST VIGIL, DAYTON,OHIO The "Journal Herald," a newspaper in general circulation in Dayton, Ohio, carried
  • on that. I've always understood that the Chiefs of Staff--certainly some of them-- and Secretary of State Dulles, recommended that we intervene at Dien Bien Phu. I remember quite well a newspaper man one time asked Secretary Dulles--. This was about
  • language newspaper in India. The two Statesman editorials were almost certainly written by Pran Chopra, the "culprit"· of the AP piece . J h'\ ~4'~ r~ r4~/ ~~ i ~ I appreciate your personal cables giving me a first­ Although on occasion hand view
  • the people." The currert cultural campaign is largely directed against what might be broadly termed today's class of scholar-officials, who are or are suspected of being the carriers of that ?ld culture -- not only scholars and educators, but also newspaper
  • public services and social welfare. In foreign affairs it stands for increased foreign trade; the U.S.-Japan alliance; a strengthened, pro-Western UN; closer ties with Western Europe; stability under non-Comrrrunist governments in Korea, Taiwan
  • tactics Hanoi may use to own advantage. 11 Hanoi announced "Vietnam Alliance, may be alternative to NLF. -- Rearresting Dzu may not have been ill advised. - - Indications enemy planned countrywide attacks before May 1; we must prepare for his willingness