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  • -- .~ WAR.'DEPARTMENT IN 'Rt:Pl..Y .ftEr.a l TO· T'HE: . u>.JUTANT' GiENERAL •s OFFlCE · 2Ol JcrJd~s • . ~~alter fiila on WAsMlNGToN ·i s·. o. c. (17 Jan 46), · . · susJECT: . . ""--......., 'l'romot ion !:!~jor \'falte.r Viil.s on Tc: RHI/omh 4441 l
  • said this week, "I would never have let the United States Government go into debt." But, Governor, you can't pass a tax bill and collect money while a robber is at your f'ront door. You oan 1 t organize and equip a fire department while your house
  • of Representatives of the State of Texas, ever mindful or the important role played by distinguished sons of Texas in the affairs of our Nation since Sam Houston, make this expression of our gratitude to Vice President Henry A. Wallace f or selecting a worthy
  • at Honolulu Taylor t~at together raili tar, Vietnainese affairs" of view including units, units widely remonstrated produced with to sharply, a conference unde.::- HcNamara's coarr,anders, and c:iair- ?:-1c:~a;;.ghton and in ~upport
  • campaign. I had a breadth of experience in the highway department, State Administrative Board, Michigan Securities Commission, and later in the secretary of state's office. In that period I became a good friend of Frank Fitzgerald, who later became
  • affairs correspondent. Do I basically have the correct information? C: Yes, that's right. M: Have you ever participated in any similar oral history project? 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
  • on White House influence on news coverage, LBJ’s response to critical press coverage, preferential treatment to certain newsmen, LBJ’s decision on to run, 1968 convention, LBJ’s way of helping departing staff members, Vietnam, the effect of daily
  • -- 18 F: [He was] very pleased with it? S: Very pleased with it, yes, particularly because we didn't have any federal money. Anybody can do a job if you give them ten million dollars, but we never had any money, and we had to coordinate the Department
  • of the Kennedy tion and it fell to President Johnson to make the final on appointment, which he did in both cases on November a appeared and on the opened, The plane so as simply of International maximum, and and hindsight as Assistant Affairs
  • . VI.W.R. .SEGllET SENSITIVE attachment (Cy 5 of Paris Z0998 6/2.9/67) ~ Authotiiy ~lQ- tS-3 ~cJ ' 2' B14f/~, · ,. i • ·J-'/7-f ! SiCRET NODIS DEPARTMENT OF STATE DIVISION OF LAHGUAGE SERVICES (TRANSLATION) 55249 . LS NO. R-XXXII/R-IV French PP
  • Vietnam ia often mentioned. Oppoaeata of our Vletaam policy are waitiaa to on aome iaaue with Viebaam lmplicationa, filibuater it to death, aACi briJaa abo11t a '41ama1lq and cliYi•lv• ■ tate of affair Ii ••i•• 5. Tile Admillbtratioo ahould enaplaaai:ae
  • and on those values which are the resistant and enduring mark of our civilization. This means that each man should have the chance to share in the affairs of his nation. Each should participate in that liberating process of self-rule that we know as democracy
  • today. As I said on the phone, it iB_, polite but uninformative. I think Gronouski has slightly over-read its meaning in the last paragraph, and my guess is that is what the Poles intended. But then I am a veteran of similar treatment fr om Dobrynin
  • F'ROMFIRMl..Y HELO·pos1TIONS WILL BE 1 AKEN AS. A. SIGN THAT.TH£ NORTHVIET NAMES£ARE BADLY t~GAND WAY• . .NEED·NEGOTIATIONS . . IN A. VERY REAL - . GP..z · SUl.LIVAN BT -SECRET Depart,nent of State F SECRET AICLAiSIEIED E.O. 12958'; Sec. 3.6 NLJ 7-:J I
  • - UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION WASHINGTON In Reply, Pl«u• Re/et:to Fil.No. 25, D. C. September 14, 1964 SUMMARY .ANALYSIS OF THE RACIAL DISTURBANCES A.i.~DRIOTING DURING THE PERIOD FR01I JULY 17, 1964
  • Urban affairs
  • : nm J 8SEIU39.I !f 8B:E8 DEPARTMENT OF STATE Memorandum ol Conversation DATE: February 21. 1968 5:00 p.m. SUDJECT: Middle East PARTICIPANTS• The Secretary Deputy Under Secretary Charles E. Bohlen Ambassador Anatotiy F. Dobrynin, USSR COPIES
  • Dear Mr. Campbell: TIil• ia la replJ to JOllr letter to me aboatdle ••lWlllr of tlle Preeldeat 1re.U.1 die Jaycee ■ •• are co las to tlle Wllite Heue fer a ~ dariaa dlalr Goft••--•tal Affair• baar tile weak •f Marcia 1-5. It 1• too ■ooa for •• to aay
  • . single . · organisr.i vrlth o. will o~ its ov,n; it is a highly complox. structure; rrhoso . affairs are settled by' the intorplay of var~ous povrnr-groups both inside. o.nd outside it; if thos'o. outsida keep their h~ds. off, tho. strongest ' povrer
  • with §IJ;gtpd Latill Arnerie•Jt, .~•~sm1,. Aa in• terview with a 1roup of carefully selected, promlunt Latin American reporter ■ would aiv• rou &oed expoeue ln Latin America . You ceuld make it a.n laformal, persoaal affair 1>1 havi111 the Interview ln your
  • a run down there for something, and I rode with them. F: And had never seen that building before? C: Never had seen that building. F: That was a fine state of affairs to be turned loose in. C: It's an unbelievable story. My memory's a little
  • or rear Poland. The barbed wire is still up at their borders, and since Germany is back and beyond Versailles-why not Russia's turn. I /' j First Demonracies in America at Plymouth and Jamestown consisted in counting ~ aas, es or no in l oc ~l affairs
  • exoellont ooncerning the affairs ot the Tenth Di•triot. Sinoeroly, ·, . •.?.. ·, ·":".-~·-:.-z• :· -• ·· ~ ,-"!C~·. ,~ , ,_ ..:• c.. ·~-•~_... ~-··;.: ." -• . -.,_,, , · -;'~ "?: Bi - ™'" .,:rt.~
  • : Reply to President Ayub Ho~o is a revised. vei-·s ion of the State Department•• proposed answer to Pre,a ident Ayub. lt looks okay to me. Draft reply approved_ _ / __ ---See me · --Amend . W. W. Roetow w ..- SECRi:T Dear Mr·. President: Thank you
  • of realism in the fall of 1968 1n de.scribing any vision of the next -years in this country without beginning from the hardest single present question of our public affairs. Until the present burden of Vietnam is at least partly lifted from our society
  • details were requisite for him to callout the tha,c became a necess2.ry step, as it did. militar:;' area tvitil ,chich I ment of .Tus t~ familiar, but I 1,':'1S F: They morc the book' ::, \'laS not Depart- ::e
  • obviously came from the Soviet Troika, suggested by the Treasury Department, as I recall. So here was the Troi ka. It was these three agencies. You probabJy know the structure of it. In addition, it had three layers: staff layer; a council-member
  • and war:1.ed against a coal:tion gove:i:nrne:"lt. Arr.ong the pa2.·tic!.pants in the us emi!:a=ti were L-riflue~tial Sen2.tors Nguyen Gia Hien ana. Tran Van Lam. The Se~ate Foreigr.. Affairs Committee 0::1.January 24 heard Foreig!'l Mir.:.ister Do's views
  • - FILE COPY THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON SEC!tEI April 25, 1964 NATIONAL SECURITY ACTION MEMORANDUM NO. 296 TO: Secretary of State Secretary of Defense SUBJECT: Interdepartmental organization for Panamanian affairs The President has
  • Memorandum # 296, Interdepartmental Organization for Panamanian Affairs, 4/25/1964
  • that these institutions should not be exclusively .American-British affairs. Adherence by the governments in exile, by the South .American nations, by China, dependi.ng on the particular purpose of each institution, was felt to be highly advantageous to the growth
  • Be aid he hopecl to ■ ee Johnso affair• . 1D 1n T••• ii dlately &tter ••nd tor h1a • lOUl4 the Th• telegram tollow1 te) Por a919n.l dqa oa.ndi tea had ben or1 ioia~ Johnson and C ton at thi ■ tba, •• Die ■ tor 'being ab ent f'J'OII. HousTo
  • . aa' . P? ~ ; / / · / /v W/ [2 of 3] ELIZABETH LIPPITT [3 of 3] U LIC AC IVITIE ~~ August 26, 1961 Dear Ml•• Nave: Thank• £or the kind commentary on the ml11ion to Berlin. In regard to your questions, I am asking the Department of State
  • Baban affairs Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Mauritania Ould Ahmed MISKE G Mennen Williams McGeorge Bundy Angier Biddle Duke Rafael Sancho Bonet State Dept Interpreter Alec Senator Hartke Toumayan Governor G Mennen Williams Ambassador of Panama
  • affairs of the United flghti accord b~tween the President and States- to a sick world, they fought 11true1 Secretary Hull on this issue when him at home as Hitler !ought him . doub! most Americans were not aware abroad. aplen of the terrible storm cloud