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  • DIRECTED AGAINST THE· INNOCENT' CIVILIANS or SAIGON ARE TAKING PLACE. •• • . · ~-... . · . .. . ..,. . -· ... .·.• . .,. ;;"ROMTHE' END OF TH£ GENEVA CONFERENCEUNTIL TODAY THREE AMERICAN PRESIDENTS.HAVE REPEAT[DLY-~AOE CLEAR THAT 'JE WOULD HAV·:t TO TAKE
  • W.R. MacBrien Deputy Commander In Chief North American Air Defense Command Ent Air Force Base, Colorado 80912 Dear Lieut~nant General On the ·occasion Chief, personal or your departure North American Air Defense expression accomplishments
  • to m e _ FMB:LSE:mst PROPOSED MESSAGE Each year thousands of Danes and Americans gather here at Rebild to celebrate together the anniversary of the Iddependence of the United States. We have always been proud of the close ties between our two
  • Johnson and other leaders attending the service , while the Statesman anu the Express had the same Associated Press photo on an insiae page . RAWALPINDI : The Pakistani press gave considerable prominence to McEwen's reassurance of Australia ' s continued
  • , CAMEOUT WITHMUCHMOREMDERATE ANDCNSTRUCTIVE EDITO~IAL JUNE 8, ATTRIBUTINGQTE MUCHOF HEATTHATTHIS DECISION GENERATED ~UNQTE STATESMAN HIGHLYLAUDATOY QF ACTIONFROMOUTSET, WHILE .HINDUSTAN TIMES ANDTIMES OF INDIA HAVEBEENEXPRESSING MIXTUREOF REGRETAT
  • , the United States is ready to se1_14 i~ representatives. to ·~y ' }#~ (o~m, ··a~ ~ny, t\ai~, to_~scuss the ·means of bringing this war to an end. . · . -.~ · ~,~~~ · I ~- 4e~P,~~ one _o( our most" distinguished Americans; Ambassador Averell
  • Maybor n (Templ e Dail y Telegram ) Charlie Gree n (Austi n America n Statesman) . Lunch - Sta g - Se e gues t lis t Newspaper guest s leav e Nap Driving t o Scharnhors t - Mrs . J . , Mr . & : Mrs. Ton y Taylor , Dr . Lamb , MF , Mr . & Mrs. Kellam , Li
  • leather with titles in gold lettering. Autographed copy of "A Time for Action" (leather-bound). "To President Diosdado Macapagal, a great Statesman and Friend, LBJ, October, 1964" PHOTOGRAPH: Autographed photograph in sterling silver frame with seal
  • . The President: Senator Mansfield says Sihanouk is a great statesman. I would show him these maps and photos of the enemy positions . .. ---- MffTIMC 1 1\1 r-& rr: s {'' n i''t ~; l f:~ un~ D )"..~bli-~;ti1:in ::·:( ::1.?'..~ tk~~~i·i'~'~r
  • _________ _ 'h e jus t rant s away , afte r thi s speec h o f th e President' s fo r i t woul d be to o late fo r „ | Kosygi n t o change hi s speech . Th e President's speec h i s ver y muc h tha t o f a statesman . " - - | H— I | —- —— I Dinne r ended--th e
  • on political matters. work. It Lodge was a poor organiHe did not appreciate staff Taylor was the reverse; he was not an accomplished diplomat, sometimes rubbing the South Vietnamese the wrong way. Bunker was a combination of the two, a statesman
  • was a great statesman and a great humanitarian. F: You've had a pretty considerable career. Did you ever think about doing an autobiography? S: I haven't done exactly that. I wrote another book on Nuremburg. F: I've just about gone through what I wanted
  • think he was a statesman by a hell of a sight. I know Malone wasn't. G: Yes. How about Margaret Chase Smith? How did Johnson appeal to her? S: I think he admired her because she was a very independent person. She was the first woman to take the floor
  • . Lyndon Johnson was much more serious, much more of a doer and--maybe history would record--much more of a statesman. That we'll never know, because time didn't allow one to really set the mark of the other. G: In terms of cultivating relationships
  • l Johnson , Edito r - Ne w Statesman is no w w/ th e DOS . U . S. \ Willia m Donaldso n Clark, Directo r o f the Overseas Developmen t Institute Embassy, Rome , Ital y I \ S! Thi s grou p o f Britis h Journalist s i s i n tow n t o tape a 4 0 minut e
  • that Lyndon Johnson was a great statesman, a scholar and the best man of the time, or something to that effect. Anything less was not quite good enough. K: Yes, yes. G: Can you remember any specific time he tried to manipulate the news through you
  • , and that if the Hawaii amendment was added to that Alaskan bi.11, it would probably mean that neither of them would become a state. It was a statesman-like thing for John Burns. He did that and risked his political life doing it, and Lyndon Johnson delivered on his
  • exactly, but by flattery to an elder statesman. Capehart he had no use for. G: Did you ever hear him talk about Capehart? M: Not except when [Robert] Kerr called him on the floor a tub of rancid ignorance or something. me about it. He laughed like