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  • re1utions with the United States. They appi::areo to be turning to the we.:;t, rathrr than to the · Soviet Union, ior help in obtain­ ing an Israeli troop withdrawal. Soviet arms 511ipments taperzd oft I · Israeli Lin!! Hardens At •about this• time
  • for the increased North Korean activity was a hope by the Communists that they could at some time in the proximate future get the U. N. General Assembly to repudiate the United Nations Com~and in Korea. Since the matter was of such great importance and so complex
  • permitted to dlvert f~om prepared schedule to one of their own and their right to (lo t)lis was plainly stated several times. Some, took .advantage ~ of this right. particularly Guy diverted to " Trang . people he left a fixed schedule and was favorably
  • . Private investment in Guinea is for the time being limited almost exclusively to the mining sector, in which Olin Mathieson, Harvey Aluminum and ALCOA, to mention only American companies, have sizeable investments. These companies, and their European
  • November, and constitutionally the present Assembly assumes the functions of the Assembly after tk,e inauguration of the President and until the new Assembly 1n vonvened. The newly-elected Upper House might be installed by the time the President ls
  • in Khartoum in anclllar-y meetings between myself and President Oamal Abdel Naeaer. Together we arrived at an agteeme.nt which we believe thi• time to be final, God willing. In conclusion, I send Your Excelle.ncy my sincere wishes ·-Co~ health and happiness
  • a letter ~f designation. The designation has these antecedents: From the time he took the OAS-CIAP job, Sol Linowitz has been pressing to establish an OAS Mission comparable to Goldberg's UN Mission. ARA has resisted -- as it had done with effqrts of some
  • a. rn. Departure from Andrews Air Force Base aboard the President's aircraft. (Flying time: 4 hours.) --. {Time change: 2 hours.) (Luncheon will be served aboard the aircraft) a.m. , 11:00 a.m. • MDT Arrival at El Paso International Airport, El Paso
  • SIGNIFICANT. STEP HP,S1.'"·_.)~.i.' '_BEEN ._. _TAKEN; A MOST' IMPORT MF OBJECT IVE RE~C'HED. IN' LIGHT -rr ··,. ,_. OF' _'_THIS .. t ~ . . .. . IS N0\•.1 TIME ro REAPPRAISE OUP. PLANS FOR THE FUTURE." : ·i . . .··. SECRET ·•Ill
  • of impro.v ement. Wednesday. September 13 Hush Sidey (TIME magazine-) came in to see me on two points: our bombing policy and the situation in Viet Nam. I explained the bombing policy in much the same terms as I did to Lucas, but, under his questioning, I