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25 results
- , particula rly in view of the fact that he had read in the press all about what it was sup posed to contain. He expres Bed his irritation that war plans leak to the pr es s. He had gotten almost to a point where he hated to meet with Foreign Ministers b
- . Bunc!y said that the President might get a press quel"'y a.bo\.!t tear ga.:; ii he held a press coI'..ie:-"'nce tor."lo:.·:row. McNamara suggested that the President respond by stz..ting (1) tear gas is a hu~ane way to restore order under certain
- - 2ls against the dron es . Secretary McNamara replied that great pilot skill is required i( a MIG actually shoots down a drone. S ecretary McNamara 'said that the possibility of our using drones was leaking to the press. This disturbed him greatly
Folder, "Meetings With the President -- 6 January 1964 - 1 April 1964," McCone Memoranda, Box 1
(Item)
- to ascertain through President Chiari's Press Secretary that President Chiarj_ would receive the telephone call. t I r I B) Mr. Mann wonlct head a delegation representing President JohnGon to leave for Panama immediately, include Messrs. Vance, Martin
- at length, ·and, as he has stated to the press, considered him a prime suspect ("one of history's most important individuals"). Ferrie began his own investigation, presumably to clear his name, and on 2/18 referred to Garrison's -2- inquiry as "a big
- of Cubans - no mention of Guantanamo Pres.• - says no one in govt. see anyone until we settle Cuba Rusk says low level no high level on account weather. U Thant knows. we are going to survey - cancelling Press Conference - bui Ids up pressure quarantine
- . 2. AS THE PRESS \~ILL HAVE REPORT[D IN DETAIL., KHRUSHCHEV MADE TH~[[ :3HORT EXTEMPORANEOUS SPEECHES CONCLUDING IN TOASTS: FIRST TO SOVIET PEOPLE AND BUILDING OF COMMUNISM; SECOND TO SOVIET YOUTH, I.E., THE FUTURE; AND THIRD TO 11 AMBASSADORS 11
- :•-"' July 30, 1968 NOTES OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH BEN MEYER, ASSOCIATED PRESS July 16, 1968 Mr. Meyer: I thought your Central America trip was very useful. Luci stole the show. The President: (Read talking points, attached, a copy of which he gave
- hel.p:ful if I could have a reply by the end of this month. i From time to time I have been asked to appear on television programs ot the "meet the press" type. Presumably, I would be on for about an hour answering q ue st ions frow a panel of nowspa
- of the Pathet Lao in the face of credible U.S. signals of in tent to intervene militarily. It may be tempted to press on for some few additional gains, possibly for bargaining purposes; but it almost certainly has no stomach for a major military en- • gagement
- - Discussion on Vietnam, Robert Kennedy, Eisenhower, Alliance for Progress, role of ror. 42. 9 December 1963 - Briefing. General revi·ew. Press, McNamara, Vietnam. I 43. 13 December 1963 - Introduced DDCI, Peer de Silva., reviewed checklist. Discussed
- . He disclosure referred specifically to the report in Newsweek about the Berlin proposals which had appeared in the press before they had even reached his desk. He expressed the hope that the individual guilty of this particular disclosure could
- to in the attached. He did promise and give them a larger HHFA loan last year, which made the Interama thing possible. It's my impression that everyone in the Administra tion regards the pavilion as purely a local boondoggle. Press stories of the Senate hearing
- REMOVAL WHAT PRES CALLED OFFENSIVE WEAPONS AND ALL EQUIPMENT RELATED THERETO. IN RESPONSE TO FURTHER PRESS ING BY STEVENSON AND GILPATRIC, KUZNETSOV SAID HE REGRETTED SAY SOV AND US VIEWS ON QUESTION WARHEADS ENTIRELY DIFFERENT. STEVENSON AND GILPATRIC
- of Central Intelligence Director McDermott, Office of Emergency Planning Director Rowan~ U. S. Information Age:icy Deputy Under Secretary of State Alexis Johnson McGeorge Bundy, Special As3istant to the President Pierre Salinger, Press Secretary
- As published IL s 1 1-t>nthl.y IL u 2 As published International (Selective Politics Bibliography) Press Releases ~ino-Soviet /5oviet Affairs Affairs Notes (SAN) • 1-IL Routes 1-IL - eOffll'Im!lft':Etdi CE:tf.l'RAL INI'ELLIGENCE AGENCY TITIE
- that, with Vietnam cooking, NSAM 311 has been pushed to a back burner. 2. While I realize NSAM,311 (issued.in July,, 1964) is not a terribly pressing problem, we should prob able keep moving on it. Al Friedman agrees that the best way to have this happen is a needle
- aspirations 81' an adverse combination of national. and foreign factors. The efforts of the Revolutionary Government are precisel3r aimed at gradually fulfilling those aspirations and to that end it has, to begin nth, tackled the pressing problem