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  • and planning atage and ve anticipate little or no lending in fiscal year 1969. However., ve believe that this level or assistance is primarily justified as reward and encouragement to a country which is meeting Alliance tor Progress performance standards
  • : Not particularly in that area. In one area you had the Pennsylvania Dutch, who weren't what I'd call great newspaper readers. They're sort of phlegmatic and pretty well set in their opinions, and they didn't change. In the Williamsport area, I think it was just
  • the Alliance . Ba : At the time, would that specifically have been any lingering repercussions of the Skybolt affair and the possibility of the MLF force? � � LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
  • with a person staffing him on international health, another person staffing him on international food and development, then he had another staff person over here on arms control, and then he later, in the sixties, got interested in Latin America, Alliance
  • the smaller emerg­ ing nations. The Indian position has also been complicated by the emergence of an 11independent" Pakistani foreign policy. While maintaining its alliance relationships with the United States, Pakistan has attempted to create an image
  • , in that instance, where we had this unique alliance of the NEA and the Catholic educators. G: What about the press? Was there any effort to get favorable stuff to them that friendly reporters might use? O: No. No, we handled the press basically the same way
  • told Cleveland that the presentation was the sort of thing we should do more often. There was, for example, much misunderstanding about the Alliance for Progress, which many Europeans erroneously believed was not very successful. He t~ought, and we
  • put the finishing touches on the Convention Hall, the local press is advising the successful candidates on what to do, a~d·the newly-elected delegates are trying to form alliances. There is much discussion on what should go into the Constitution
  • , so they wouldn't U?set our economic program. In Pakistan, you required that "our MAP hel? should be appropriately lir.ked to satisfactorv uerformance with re spect to its alliance obligations l · · ... · ·) 4 June 1964. You were to see Indian
  • lndonula., ·w'.blcbare ••••nU.1 the maJor ,1oputa of· foreign exchan.9• for ,aconomiodevelopment bi hldstan ead India can only coma from the l'"••t. DI £§ A,ll&,9ce with ptklS19_ C. ece t eventa have demonstrated ~t alliance with P•tt tan ha• become
  • of Guarantee Article I, ibid. p. 86. ll Ibid, Article II. 4/ Treaty of Alliance, ibid pp. 88-90. SiCRET- , ) I SECRET 1 Agreements. Independence was declared on August 16, 1960, with Archbishop Makarios III (Greek-Cypriot) as President and Dr. Fazil
  • , but it was important that the White House had this interest. New why did those go? There was this alliance of businessmen with Henry Ford; the businessmen, I think the President, had an affinity for that program. Take the food program, the feeding programs which we
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Marder -- I -- 5 G: Was he a good source himself? M: Oh, I wouldn't--he was certainly not a source for me because I didn't deal with him at the White House level because of the way newspapers like ours are separated
  • . Let me ask you about the newspapers in Houston during that election, the Post and the Chronicle in particular. S: I'm not sure but what they both endorsed Coke. remember. I'm not sure. I can't I'm not sure we got either one of the newspaper
  • the · representative of the generals. ··. For him, this has inv~lved .both a reaching out to f_o rm alliances w_ith civilian ieaders and some realignment of the military . structure. · .~or the generals, and for . Ky .. in particular, it _has meant the acceptance
  • the solid alliance among allied countries working for common security and progress for the entire world . . "My fellow countrymen, amidst these great and hallowed ideas to which I have just referred and on the basis of the mandate which you have given to me
  • . ·-··-.----···--·-· \ ~ ~ ______ ! - 2"Thus today must be a ~ay commeraorating the ideology of freedom; today marks the fruits of the efforts towards democracy. It also syinbolizes the solid alliance among allied countries working for common security and progress \ for the entire world
  • . Vietnamese Press Highlights The newspaper Doi Thoai says that the crossing of the Demilitarized Zone proves that (1) North Vietnam has no liberty of action to settle con­ flict of their own will; and, ·(2) the Vietnam war has changed in nature in the sense
  • position in the Middle East and the Eastern Mediterranean, particularly in light of increased Soviet activity there. The Greek military must be well enough equipped and trained to carry out its NATOmission-defense of the Alliance's southern flank
  • newspaper and television coverage on the Conference and that the Minister of Interior would be calling on the top communist leaders in the near future. The Foreign Minister confirmed that he was meeting with 's tudent and labor leaders early next week
  • the:t'fiATO :.iUil:1:"o"rfse.xpecfea··a:·s1gnif1cant'..i-esponseTrc5m~th-~ 7 IFRGJ on,e of the Alliance's larger and wealthier nations. Oij' -th~_-9th~!'.. --:, tiana~.tr.the:· FRG goes -:-too -£arout' 1n-r-r·c;11.t; _n _o t oajy :...¢~ .~9-Yi~J~:R-ULtll.e
  • : Herewith the ad-vanced text -of Preaident the Joint Session of CongresCJ. Dlai1 Orda3's address to We were so distarbed by the complaining nature o! parts of the speech and the absence o! any reference to the Alliance for Prog:resa and the strong
  • ... ( . \ -., .... :\·r I SECltE'i' things, because it will cost us a lot more money and because we believe that a large loan to Colombia without adequate self-help measures, would severely undercut the credibility of an important Alliance for Progr es s dimension. 3
  • John was there. What's the guy that had the newspaper over at Robstown? There was a newspaper over at Floresville, a big heavy set man. G: Oh, at Floresville. Yes, I know who you're talking about. D: Fore or--he was there. G: Sam . . . D: Sam
  • Conununist Exposed King was forced to get rid of Hunter Pitts O'Dell in October, 1962, when several newspaper articles exposed O'Dell's connection with SCLC and his communist affiliations King still tried to hide O'Dell in his organization until July, 1963
  • hurt LBJ any, “but obviously their intentions were entirely different.” Late January Isabelle Shelton writes a newspaper article about CTJ: “Texas Senator’s Wife Has Varied Talents.” Walter Prescott Webb’s book, More Water for Texas, based on a recent
  • - ponsibilities of the Department of Labor and the local employment services. I'm sure there are other conflicts that I'm less aware of, but this quarrel in Washington has to be seen in the perspective of differing interests and alliances out in the field
  • ." control of Jim Wells County. They were pretty well in Then there were other alliances: the Guerras in Starr County, and live forgotten some of the other leaders in other Valley counties. If you knew them and they were for you, you'd get the votes
  • to actually speed up? B: But, anyway, that's a side issue . I was in the class of 43E in the Air I went immediately from graduation to the Troop Carrier Command, Corps . and was assigned to an organization in Alliance, Nebraska, from there to Laurinburg
  • the New York state delegation--who voted for him in Los Angeles on the first ballot. I remember giving a newspaper an interview at the time which said that we shouldn't discount the effectiveness of Lyndon Johnson on the ticket because he brought enormous
  • in the area to take on speaking engagements wherever possible.• 6. An increase in the number of favorable newspaper and periodical articles on our Yugoslav policy this past winter and spring. 7. Secretary Rusk's maj9r policy speech of February 25, 1964, ''Why
  • , it had a civil rights aspect to it as well. We were still struggling with manpower training. We really didn't come to the National Alliance for Businessmen until the following year, if I'm right. I don't remember, 1968. B: You launched it in 1968. C
  • mac1e in the wake of crises .. For it is only in time of crisis that people are moved to contemplate large chang~s: Marshall Plan, NATO, Mutual Security Program, Alliance ~or ProgressJ etc. 2. Both the Vietnamese and NATO crises offer a chance
  • $ 550 Assistance 235 200 35 180 for Progress 625 495 130 469 ( 515) (385) (130) (389) ( 110) (110) ( 0) ( 80) Supporting Assistance 595 475 120 600 Contingency 100 30 70 10 143 144 l/ ( + 1) 130 Technical Alliance Loans
  • . His name was Howard Page. F: Did you know Alvin Wirtz pretty well in that capacity? P: Yes, r knew Mr. Wirtz. this particular problem. I didn't run into him on many occasions on I was speaking largely for the Interior before the War Production