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  • , :,nd message swi1.:hing. :all in one system. Equipment~Pan Am pniliahly will he the next new cw,­ Electronics-There\a new name nwv1ng into the spot­ tomer for the Hoeing 727. It spent too much money in the Berlin i.lem,mstrations ·(some say $50,000 l
  • has breakfast with Tom Clark. LBJ goes to New York with John Connally. They planned to have dinner with Eddie Weisl and Dick Berlin of INS. 4/2 LBJ has appointment to see Bill Paley of CBS and also the SeSac people. 4/6 CTJ contemplating moving
  • see the truth. You ride spring down the street in their in West Berlin step and a smile on their and you see people with a face, their chin up, their chest out and a hope for tomorrow. You cross the line and you see how Communismhas taken
  • from expanded world trade:, Trade Expansion ·i .. the provisions using to ease Act; for our peop~e. · of a:he • problem_s of adjusanenc. PROGRESSFOR FREEDOM .. •. The united : . . .. Berlin . . • '.l :J- American policy of Sovie
  • , 1960 TELEPHONE CONVERSATION BETWEEN DICK BERLIN AND WALTER JENKINS Dick Berlin called and said substantially as follows: "Eddie spoke· to me and said that Lyndon talked to him about the fact that we were treating him badly in San Antonio
  • have fits that [George] Shultz or whoever it is has ruined everything. Don't worry. They couldn't ever do anything about Berlin. They put on that Berlin blockade for a whole year but we got the old planes out. We do pretty well when we're in trouble
  • have fits that [George] Shultz or whoever it is has ruined everything. Don't worry. They couldn't ever do anything about Berlin. They put on that Berlin blockade for a whole year but we got the old planes out. We do pretty well when we're in trouble
  • to what had happened in 1961 in the previous Berlin crisis, was not going to act alone, and that if there was a need for a NATO response, and he thought there was, to show a strength in NATO defenses, we had to be sure that the Europeans would do something
  • was vice president that you recall? H: I don't belfeve so. No, in the sense of projects per se I don't at the moment recall anything. worth recalling. But the 1961 "Berlin Crisis" is perhaps Kennedy faced a fundamental decision as to whether
  • JFK oral history project; first contact with LBJ; JFK press briefing breakfasts; biographical information; LBJ as VP; SST; 1961 Berlin Crisis; JFK assassination; transition; Eliot Janeway; poverty program; tax cut; Christmas meeting at the Ranch
  • primary, the Berlin blockade. I don't remember whether the airlift started now; I think the airlift had started a little earlier. I'm speaking of the Berlin airlift. Anyway, it appeared to the public that we were getting awfully close to going to war. We
  • . Johnson's foreign policy role was during the John Kennedy Administration? P: I don't think he played much of a role then. M: He did, of course, have a couple of trips to Berlin and Vietnam, and there were several crises, but you feel that as Vice
  • - - - : - - , - - - : - - - - , - - , - - - - - . - . , . - - ~ ~ _ , . . . , , - - - - - -· - ~ - -~...--...-,-...._.....,.,........,.......,,_.....,........,.....,.............~....,.,...,,..._....----__, 6ECnET Frlday, April 7, 1967 12:00 noon Mr. Prcaldent: Herewith an account of the Vice President's talk with Kleslngcr. w. W. Roatow Berlin 1350 •Ct TED E.O. 12: ';f , Sec. 3. (b) Whi C } I esc G~iddu1u, ~cb. 24, 1983 . , , Ct/-;;, 3-o/ I
  • which one, but the one that led to the Berlin Wa 11? G: That's on August 13, 1961 . F: Right . G: At that time I was in Europe. I had gone to be the Assistant Division Commander of the 3rd Division and had just received word that I would
  • Meeting with LBJ; General Parsons; Bryce Harlow; comparison of Presidents; Arthur Larson; Sputnik, briefing during Eisenhower's illness; U-2 and Geneva Summit; missile gap; Dulles; Nixon's TR to South America; LBJ's TR to Berlin Wall as VP; JFK
  • : 1958, excuse me. And others included London, Moscow, Brussels. C: And Berlin. M: And Berlin. In July 1961 you returned to the United States to become host and moderator of the “Today” show, which position you held until 1962. You've also covered
  • . Discussions have been held on the use of military facilities in France in t he event of war or of NATO alert , or in circ llii\stances such as another Berlin crisis . France has now made clear that no re- entry by the US into a irfie lds or depots in France
  • a change, as so tragically there has been. Let me say, though, that when I undertook to discuss substance, as a college teacher, it was by design, because the orderly and analytic i exposition of just how people should solve a little problem like Berlin
  • about it. ! l i \ In the Secretary's vlew, · the rate an9, pace of agree­ ments with the Soviet Union (in the absence of .resolution of such issues as Laos, Vietnam, and Berlin) presented a problem. If we moved too rapidly on less significant matters
  • Hand Mayor Willy, Brandt o f West Berlin Hon. Heinrich Knappstein - Ambassado r of Germany; and Hon . McG . Bundy . Presented Chess set to President for Mayor in th e Treaty Room. Brandt Then t o the Yellow Oval Room for a shor t tal k --to th e
  • : That was the summer of the Berlin airlift. Europe a lot, setting it up. As Secretary I was in It started in June, 1948. F: Magnificent story. S: One time, coming back to this country, I was exhausted. So I called up the office and asked [them] to get me
  • . But it was inexcusable. In any event, I wasn I t. I remember one time he came down. Berlin. It was after he had been to Kennedy had sent him to Berlin. He had done a hell of a good job. M: You didn't go with him? s: No. He was coming through the lobby
  • is the foundation stone of the house of freedom all around the world. If' it is not good 1n Viet Nam, who can trust it in the heart of Europe'? But America's word, I can assure you, is good in Viet Nam, just as it is good in Berlin. M)RE Page 3 Our object
  • .in North Italy and made Musso­ In Germany it was in Berlin. (Out of all this is l.e.mont and Boyer.~ worth saying1 Lewis check in. Hillman check in. Movements of lef't against Roosevelt in Philadelphia while big business also fought him.) l LABOR
  • to an agreement to regularize relations between East and West Germany, and assure West Berlin of its continued survival, perhaps formal incorporation into the Federal Republic. (Wilson claims he has Brandt's support for this. I doubt it. There's little
  • . At 17 he was touring Europe as a member of the famed Strub Quartet, and before he was 21, occupied the chair of first violist with the Berlin Radio Symphony. A well-established concert career was in­ terrupted by the war, escape to America and service
  • . . . . The next 90 days will tell which direction we go from here.” Mussolini put to death by firing squad of Italian partisans. May 5/1 Hamburg radio reports that Adolf Hitler has fallen in battle at his command post in the Chancellory in Berlin. 5/3
  • to the public good. r ·r wttr& Today Americans side by side in Berlin They died Surely travel , 11_. : side side they races and Viet by side . I stand Nam. in Korea . • tll JI flrllidf can= by side and :a! and in America. er· We must
  • efforts to have the votes of Berlin Deputies counted in selecting a new Chancellor, Barzel said it was really quite unfiar of Brandt to try to change the rules of the game at this point and to place the Allies in an embarrassing position. Some SPD members
  • in the June 17, 1953, uprisings in East Germany--they are sometimes erroneously referred to as the East Berlin uprisings. Actually, as I recall, at the time by count there were some two hundred and thirty-seven separate uprisings all over East Germany
  • was undersecretary of war for air, and was really the author of--I forget just when this happened, but when Germany, which was divided, and Berlin, right actually in the Russian zone, but it was supposed to be a neutral spot, when we began an air lift to supply
  • fairly true. Then, of course, he went on certain missions. He went on the mission to Berlin at the time of the Wall. But it was again in a kind of public relations role rather than a substantive role. M: From the department's point of view, how did he
  • . Johnson meet Mr. Berlin, the president of the Hearst Corporation, and got him to recommend that the San Antonio Light support Johnson for the Senate in '48, which they did. F: Did you ever meet Coke Stevenson, his opponent? \01: No. F: When it c~e