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  • . Hal Saunders Att: Tel Aviv A-217, 10/19/66 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE DEPARTMENT OF STATE ~ u~ru@ cu INR E p 10 'f VS wv· 'f COM FRB INT LAB TAR TR XMB AIR _s'-- ~ 050 .J/ FOR RM USE ONLY OFF~~IA~. :'USE jl] HANDLING INDICATOR
  • . \ .. . .. : . • . . .. · .. . , :· l• I· . ., ! ' •• •'•• . '• ' :• ....... • :· .. . ... ! : : .. ! i J I l .I ; .. ... · -I Department of State Y~i~Gw£AA ~ OCT 68 FM AME~PASS Y BANGKOK TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 1638 STATE GRNC D!CLASmDID BT ltO. 12356
  • will be worth $millions in aid. Approve j R. W. Komer Disapprove _ _ cc: Mr. Moyers P. S. The State Department would like you to hand the signed original to the Ambassador tomorrow, and if you approve this plan, a signature at Tab A will put us in position
  • ) ,.... ., t OUTGOING TELEGRAM Department INDICATE: □ 0 CHARGE TO COLLECT o·f State -, ' -GOOf'i.BBlf'f?:AL 5> Origin Amembassy SEOUL / ACTION: S.S. 7 s3 PM '64 2-a:> Info, tJ 1 LIMDIS Your 17320 l.. I.n our e.onversation wl th P.Alla .sugg. e
  • Poage, Roberts and Pool at Carswell AFB. 2/25 Attends WH stag luncheon for King of Laos, also later hosts dinner at the State Department for the King. 2/26 Breakfasts w/Mansfield at his home before attending WH leadership meeting. Then flies
  • in American politics. Introd. by Harry Golden. Washington, Public Affairs Press, 1962. 150 p. HS2330.K63R5 II. Periodical articles Extremism in American politics, by Arthur M• . Schlesinger. Saturday Review ., 11/27/65, p. 21-25. Historical survey
  • ---- Disapprove ____ _ LIMITED OFFICIAL USE INFORMATION Frlday, Mr. May 24, 1968 - 7:40 p. m. Pre aldent: 1 thoqht you ml1ht llke to have thl• thl• evanlns. W. W. Ro•tow rln LIMITED OfflG~Ai USE DEPARTMENT AGENCY OF STATE FOR INTERNATIONAL
  • COPY OF ACKNOWLEDGla'trT SENT SEP 3 1965 7• 1 ·e t%5 VA045 I I ,,..t ~·,,...un • {, :, r, PD ZG NEVYORKNYJUL 6 ~19P EDT THE PRESID[NT THEWHIT! HOUS[ THE REORGANIZATION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION ESTABLISHING NTLy SUGGEST FOURMAJORBUREAUS
  • the Eastport officials, - first brought the proposition to· their attention · mtroversies by "calling" t.hem to Washington ions as the for a meeting with Mr. Cohen. He itive of the has circularized appropriate Fed­ eral departments about the plan, lty. . true
  • Greenebaumwith the Federal Home Loan Bank Board; this is Mr. Driver, the head of the Veterans' Administration; and that's me and Secretary Fowler; and this is Larry O'Brien. M: That's a nice picture. C: It really is. M: Okay. Now you are a fully
  • ." But that's the way it was. He'd drift in and out. for a couple of hours or a couple of minutes. He might be out There was no way of predicting it. John Connally came up. Rayburn was supposed to make a speech out at the Veteran's Hospital on November 11
  • Thuraday, Oct. 26, 1967 3:30 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: Herewith the State Department unanimously recommends a brief letter of acknowledgment to Senator- Mansfield, inviting him to an • early breakfast meeting at the White House. 1 gather
  • ENGLAND. AND OTHERS, HE SAID HE HOPED TO DO SO IN . SEPTEMBER. I SUGGEST, THEREFORE, THAT THE DEPT FURTHER . DEVELOP PLANS :·FOR SUCH A VISIT WHICH WERE BEGUN SOME MONTHS AGO. HAYA WILL DEPART FOR LIMA FROM PARIS VIA AIR FRANCE FLIGHT 113 ARRIVING 1235
  • . 34 ?P ' ;iTI:1~ !)E:"_ ~n: , ~6~ DECLASSIF ED E.O. 12356, Sec. 3.4 .. Nl.J F?OM WALT -ROSTOW ­ !O · -~. THE:: PRESIDENT CITE CAP6~3:'75 ·, o//- ~ By~ NARA, Date PZREW.ITH . STATE'.: •. DEPARTMENT< ACTIVITIES r,AY.~; :-~.-, :,)967
  • 132112gov.ming acceH to nattonal security Information. (8) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. (CJ Closed In accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. 11/27/2007 Initials ~ .. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
  • Thursday. 3:30 p. m. Oct. Z6, 1967 MR. PRESIDENT: Herewith the State Department unanimously recommen.ds a b!'ief letter of acknowledgment t-o Senator Mansfield, ia.vitiag him to an : early breakfast meetbig at the White House. l gathe-r
  • propaganda broadcasts alleged that the chief for flooding in NVNwas American bombings, an assertion denied by _the Department of State. reason quickly It was obvious that Hanoi had taken advantage of bad weather to introduce improved Soviet missile
  • Officer, White House Situation Room Mr. Benjamin H. Read. Executive Secretary. Department of State. c/o Operations Center Subject: Opera.tional Higl1light.s SOUTHEAST ASIA The following US Air Force B-52 missions are now scheduled· to be flown during
  • 15 c:::i FEA 180 00 ._IE 18 DE WT£ 1330 c.n ..c -..J fROf1 WALT ROSTOV TO THE PRESIDENT CIT£ WH'703,5 WCLAS JUNE 30, 1967 S1'AT'£ DEPARTMENT HAS SUGGESTED LANGUAGE BE USED to REPLY TO FOURTH FROM FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS. t KE or FOL.LOW ING
  • text of the speech, departing about 6 :30 p. m. W. W. Rostow s..sa7 • Marca ,1. 1961 -- 6 :40 p. m. ••t Go.. Hanlmaa aDCI I • . . . tut y- '1•patcll tile fellowilla me••&&• premptly to Prime Mlalater Wll••: • 1 Fl'tllll tile Pre•ldeat f•r tile
  • . FORT rIS: 0: • : : • ,. . ;.J! , ·.·. arrive Vice President would · pr.o pose/ ~ .a-wwfu6x Tuni~ .. :__.· ·· . I ,_ . ·" ~ ' -·-, . ,. mid-morning Novem, Ier 9 and depart · for Washington early ·a fternoon:> November 10. ,.1 ~ Ple1se
  • on the adequacy or appropriateness of the subsequent actions taken by commanders and key officials who received the intelligence. 2. The Board consulted with and received briefings from representatives of the principal United States departments and agencies having
  • ■ countriaa cona1der the Article to be too aeneral. If poa ■ lble, Fiaher would like to have the trall8Dlittal coincide with hi• appearance before the Hou ■• Foreign Affair ■ CoaaittN on february 1. Althouah thi• would be helpful in aupporting the HP
  • Cong, perhaps under another name. b. Improvement of the armed forces. This would include fairer and more effective dependent, survivor and disabled veterans• benefits, lower draft a_g e, improced merit promotion system, and more effective punitive
  • : other Committees should be invited. The House Foreign Affairs •Committee certainly should be included. The President: Well, it looks as if all of you have counseled, advised, consulted and then - - as usual - - placed the monkey on my back agairi. I
  • Pre a ldent: Herewlth Lod1e fia1• the importance of conaul.tatlon wlth the Gerlll&Aa ll mhalle talk• are to take place. W. W. Roatow Bonn ZOZ40 WWRoatow:rln , .,... ~~~ Department of State ! :I I TEL~GRA I ,"'. lI I , ,'.~Il ~-, I. l
  • these compliments and said that whil.e not wishi.n{; to iive the appearance Sonesal was neddlir}fl in the internal affairs of the U.s., he was vel"J· pleased hr. Kennedy had been elected., and stressed tho importance which !3en~nl attached to Kennedy's role in world
  • with General Curtis LeMay who made his home in Newport Beach, California. just to get started. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. with Mr. Johnson? General, Incidentally, I'm a World War II veteran so I have been following you for a long time. L: More
  • called anyhow. But I just was exhausted. So when I went in to sign off on my [courses], one professor, who was head of the political science department out there, who's still alive, when I went in to get him to sign off on one of these graduate courses
  • all headlines, veteran politid-, observer. -.. -. along. .-'-~-• . "Tate_ is using RAM to ans are watchin~ the ¥tion's fourth largest city ,UP Fr~nt • : baak up1ii~ law and order for other reasons. For.the The silver-hair~ .m.ay~r- them¢,"' say
  • that whenever he got too short, he would call up "The Chief," as he called Lyndon even in those days, and the Chief would get him a little money even though "The Chief" didn't have much. I was with the Department of Justice running its trial section
  • it was. But Johnson wrote those kinds pf letters to a lot of people. After he became a senator--well, even before, when he was in the House and went to the wars, he came back, and I think I was_the first newspapermen he saw. He had been at the Navy Department
  • and startling has come in and the above report is the essence as it now stands. McG. B. DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ 'ib · /tJ3 By , NARA Date .,:z.-'J SEGRE'r i , .\ ..... .. .- ( \
  • Demoeratlc "Tho U. s. Government mutt Republic of Vietnam. withdraw from South Vietnam all U. S. and satellite troops. recognize the South Vietnam. National Front for Llberatlo!\, add let the Vletn.a.meue people settle themselves their -own affairs. u
  • . withdraw from South Vietnam all U. S. and satellite troops. recognize the South Vietnam. National Front for Llberatlo!\, add let the Vletn.a.meue people settle themselves their -own affairs. u Let no well-meaning observer decelve you: that remain.a
  • he entered the University of Chicago Graduate School. He began his career with the Department of . State in 1950 as a Foreign Affairs Officer. In 1952 he went to Hong Kong as Public Affairs Officer and in 1955 he was transferred to Tokyo as the Deputy
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUCATION, AND WELFARE 1 OF1''1CE Olt lWUU \T.TON 2 J ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
  • Henry Loomis’ relationship with LBJ; reorganization of the Office of Education; the Bailey Report; flaws in the former administrative management of OE; comparisons of State Departments; efforts to bring OE closer to communities and educators
  • ~,. ARE ·RET_URNBEIHUT TOMORRO•' NQ\IEMBER. 15, OVERNIGHT·_:• ~--BE LRUT,. DEPART' 'FOR. US VI.~ LON.DON-mRPJJNG ~OVEMBER 16·, • ·r • • •• • ,;. -• • • • • • •. _.· .- •. ••