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  • , and left 565 homeless . On September 9 they mortared a refugee camp 40 kilometers north of the province capital, wounding 12 and destroying five homes. In addition to the killed and wounded, a total of .363 homes, one school, and one hospital have been
  • an assessment of recent d v lopments in Czechoslovakia. Approve ____ Disapprove ___ _ Discussion: Ambassador Beam arrived in Washington on April 9 for consul~ tation and regular home leave. He plans to be in the Washington area until mid-May, when he
  • on September 5 At Tab A Secretary Rusk recommends that you invite Prime 1,tHnister Paasio of Finland to visit yon here on September s. on his way home from EXPO '67. (We -don't know whether Paaslo would be able to accept. Even ii he doesn.'t. Rusk thinks it wou
  • to get into details. QUESTION: Moscow? Sir, can you shed SECRETARY CLIFFORD: with Kosygin. I have not received any light on what Mr. McNamara No. I know only that he was there the report of any details as yet. is doing in and had a talk
  • MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. :MARVIN WATSON Subject: Request for appointment from General Sir Francis W. de Guingand General de Guingand, who was Field Marshal Montgomery's Chief of Staff during World War ll, has just arrived in U. S. General Eisenhower has
  • : 12:10 a. m. Moal&J moralq. w. w. WWlloatow:r ID Roatow DEPARTMENT Wa1hl11rton,0.c. OF STATE ios2O April 5, 1968 Mr. Walt: W. Rostow The White House Dear Walt: The President asked Nick Katze.nbach when the Secretary was getting home, and I am
  • out on report~, it concludes. previous Rockefeller stalwarts as the war whether or not the Paris The Sir ~cel~t ol the Gr!'-Jld Maryland Gov. Spiro Agnew, wtio peace talks succeed. Old Party will be ~usting aga_mst are beginning to think they wouid
  • going. Question: We haven't seen Mr. Nixon say anything like predicting bringing the troops home late this year - -some of the troops home late I?o you think that this year or early next year--as Mr. Humprey said. might have some effect
  • . The British Ambassador, Sir Patrick Dean, told the Secretary this mcrning that Prime Minister Wilson cannot accept the President's invitation to visit the ranch after Christmas. Meanwhile, Chairman Kosygin has confirmed that a. visit to Moscow by Prime
  • development personnel is a new and big "if.'' SECRET - NOBIS 5ECRET - NODIS -3- I have just obtained. a complete copy of Sir Robert Thompson's article in the Spectator for August 12, of which I sent you a summary. Speaking of the new Viet Cong strategy
  • - ---- . ~ .M . v r ·i MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON , GONFf:O-ENTIAL 8/30/65 -2- should be decided fairly soon because the Panamanian Congress is in October, and our own Congress should know our position before it goes home. On this basis, may I
  • of Africa stand before the challenge of building multi-racial societies loyal to these universal principles. A nation's foreign policy is rooted in its life at home. these same principles guide our policies overseas. Therefore, The beliefs which underlie
  • presenting a brief but relatively comprehensive report on my recent three-day visit to Israel and also a brief statement about my visit with Chancellor Klaus in Vienna, Au.stria .. Please bear in mind, sir, that these statements are, for the most part, my own
  • in ' ·.-1 ·. l . ·. ·. ,. . - :, ,:-1. • : : _ Mosco:w, the other half are \Ulder heavy Russian guard in -t he country- home : . · · , · · !~ : ' of former President Novotny~ · ,. · ·· , :. , -~ \''.~ . . .' know ·'.-.· ·..· :.-A i:1· ~- .I
  • to reactloaarlea Tlaere l• a anat am.all mlaorltl•• the pr.W.mu. It la time for.,.....,. teacher l,otll polltleal of the law of tale laad.- aaaly• we canflllly tva pelltlcal effort at home •••uactlft tbat die•• l• a-,1,. a•las to let a tlaJ lldaorlty
  • ,would::·come to.-~-.Wat..b.tngt~~ on Fr~dsy night ~nd·:·ca11-::w :. st· home on Ss.tur.day,i\111Dr.ning. · prefers to deal with the Under Secretary and myself. but i told him that the Governor and others might tnrn out to be the appropriate ones
  • but not agriculture last fall. There will be similar resistance to tabling our offers now, particularly from those commodity interests here at home affected by our proposed tariff cuts. The United States industrial offer now on the table is far better than the offers
  • OF COUNTRIES MR. PALMER WILL VISIT NATION LEADER Cameroon Ahmadou Central African Republic Gen. Chad Francois The Gambia Sir Dawda Kairaba Congo(K) Joseph D. Mobutu ·President Gabon Albert Bongo President Guinea Ahmed Sekou Toure
  • ~-- ·------ I / .. ~ .... 11 ..: , ' ',' . ). ,•, "~·• ... ' 'fa.,.. ....._.. ~~ ... ··.:-. ·; , ( _._ IJ.L'J:lS,. ,..;\ April 16, 1966 y clear Mr. Preaideat: I am la my home now. refreaaed and encoura1e4 by OAO of the most memonbl
  • \:iEHE SENT 'IO HiPOSE \•:ll.J .. ON 'it:!E SOUTH V.i E'MA~ll-.:SE PEOPLE BY AGC-iHESSlON• lOl>~Y H::~oi -7S WE Ct:.-1 AG'1EE TO £HIN Ci HOME OUH FORCES FROt•l SOUTH VI E1NAt•h IF '!HE 'fHH:;. NOH'iH VIE'iNl:!-H-:Sl:: AGHEl-; TO BRING 1:U~IHS HOME
  • Tlatelolco, D.F., June 29, 1967 Sir: President D{az Ordaz has requested me to convey to you the following message for President Lyndon B. ,Johnson: "Mr. President: "I thank you· for your message of. yesterday,· received through Mr. Dearborn, Charge
  • atu.clua, ~ with Ed Fried. .. our memo by Sir Patrick DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 N1.J9!>...Ali'\\ By~. NARA.Darc'.H!l·"J~ ERF:mm W. W. Roatow i■ at Tab A. Dean. I will be DEPARTMENT OF STATE WASHINGTON April 3, 1968 IN REPLY REFER
  • ? A It seems to me that many of the stories and a large number of the headlines in the papers here at home are mis­ leading. You read about _"political turrr.oil" and "mob vio- i -UPI Photo In the Mekong Delta, "where a majority of the people live
  • return to their local areas." This means, in effect, that more are deserting back home than are coming over to the Chieu Hol program. That means, in turn, that the manpower drain they face from casualties, Chleu Hol, and deserters must now be exceeding
  • at t.he top and the old people are kept at home. Is not aggression against a decentralized nation of families as bad as agg:cession against a modern western centralized nation-state? ·. ~toc--Ke-~eey--i~ains~ruption· and .agairist.slacke1 isn1 an
  • ■ aador to Ireland aiDc:• April 1965. He waa born iD New York City Novemb•r 25, 1907, and educated at Y&le Uaiveralty from which he received hi• B. A. clear•• ia 1931. He la a aecond couala of th• late Sir Winaton Ck•ffhlll. To1•tll•r with hi■ ltrother
  • wish to speak of the course we have been following the past eight years and the position at which we have arrived." He then proceeded to speak of the Presidency, to assure a smooth transition; -- and of his efforts of the challenges, at home