Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

559 results

  • that you p~opl e have got to stand up the Chur chills of some steel, not be the Cham berlin s of your time but I said. And your time. And that was my thoug ht and that was what zine this week that's what it will show I said. And just like Life maga rm. Well
  • , the Arab-Israeli Berlin crisis dispute, with the Vice President. worthy of confidence, NATOproblems, and the We have found the Shah to be and the Vice President might wiah to be quite frank with him in exchanging information and ideas
  • and Berlin. .These f.ac.ts temper but do n'Ot ·alter Embas•y view that.visit at .time and with itinerary-as proposed.would not produce .sufficient returns to offset considt1rations set forth below. Guatemalans have .previously invited President .t~ vieit hare
  • -;.'essive pressures and thrusts i::cc~:i Berlin to Ko1--ea.1 • trom tr.10 Cai•ibbea_~ to Viet-Nam.~ L11 short, we are involved in Viet-Nam.'because we know from p~iruul m:pe:dence that tho mlnlmum condition for order on ow.· pl:met ls that :J.ggrcsslo11
  • is PM'6~ 89 5 USBER BERLIN .,, .· SS r ior Chance l l or Erhar d's de pa rture from Washington June 13, Secretary G p s . ' handed h im :foll4wing message from President: USIA NSC .~ QTE Dear Mr . Chance llor : As you leave Wa shi ngton, I
  • Agency: DATE RES TRICTIO N White House, for FAA concurrence. #16 t1ern6 ll /29/63 #7fJ Memo 11/29/63 #60 Memo Bundy t o the President re J . Bu rke Knapp e~:qges witb b&t-ween a nan~aggres5io~ Berlin - Germ an¥ problem p~ct 1 p A c 12/ 7/63
  • of inspection which underlies the American proposal on "open access" when the negotiations resume in New York. --SECltE'f /NOFORN ' -6-ECR.S f"/NOFORN - 5 - Oh Berlin we had reports indicating th at the East Germans had been deliberately trying to pressure
  • mentioned the recent GDR interference with the travel of West German Citizens over the autobahns to Berlin. Kuznetsov quickly said this was an entirely different ques~ion and had nothing to do with the NPT. Mr. Bohlen said he had raised the matter only
  • ,- returned news correspondents from Berlin and Rome interpreting what they have seen and heard., This is the COWMBll ••••• BROADCASTING SYSTEM (very few cues given as to identity of speakers) Ed.tran1Scribed-B.M. Felaburg A.A. Oardiff Page Nos. 1-11 n II
  • in the way, among which are the following: 1. Can we ftnd some way to da-fuae the India-Pakistan conflict? (Although I do not think we can aolve thia la ■ue ln the near future any more than we can solve• the Berlin laaue in Europe or the Israeli issue
  • after graduating from high school working on an Israeli kibbutz. His professiona1 work spans the globe, including a medical center in Israel, a United States State Department Exposition Building in Berlin, a new town in Oahu, and a variety of projects
  • important. What do you think it could be--Berlin?" The phone rang, and the Secretary said, "Mr. Deming, it's the President." So he picked it up and said, "Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, sir. it to George Reedy. What? Huh? Yes, sir, we've got it; yes, sir
  • years from now with particular emphasis on the forces we would have several years from now. But occasionally, as during the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Berlin crises in 1960, '61, and '62, I'd bring these same techniques to bear on the current
  • , the European Command, U.S. Army in Berlin. From 1951 to 1953, you were the reports and statistics officer,the Office of Defense Mobilization. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • want to publicize the fact that one of the reasons they had to have it was recruiting was not doing well; but that is not a particularly good thing. You had to try to use the Berlin Crisis which was on at that time and was one of your main things
  • in the United States did not have any strategic reserve at home for contingencies elsewhere. And if the Soviets had wanted to heat things up in Europe, for example, or Berlin or something, we'd have been sort of hurting. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • , there was the trip to Berlin, but that was obviously a presidential assignment--was one that I believe George [Reedy] wrote for him on civil rights. He made [it] at Gettysburg on the Fourth of July, just before he became president. F: Yes. W: He just didn't do