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  • ; I.N.R. briefing note, Hay 9, 1967, confidential; memorandum of conversation be­ tween Lucius D. Battle, Sir Patrick Dean, and Charles Luc e t, May 15, 1967, confidential. - TOf ~~Clt!I /!WBI3 TOP SECR:EI/MODIS -6- Israel was becoming concerned
  • , if they don't stay home, it's because we haven't given them anything to stay home for." Charlie began getting worried that his august consultant might be offended. Liz was so direct and so irrefutable and so to the point and so 10 LBJ Presidential Library
  • A. Douglas Joseph A. Beirne, United Community Funds & Councils of America, Mortimer B. Doyle, Nat'l Forest P Karl R. Bendetsen - . } ** ^ Marvin Caplan - Leadership Cong. on CRts Assn Richard Billings { ^ David Carlson, HUD ! Wm Duchessi, Textile Wkers Union
  • THAT IF THEY RETALIATE AGAIN , IN RE SPO SE TO ANYT Hir SiORT · OF A MAJ OR ATl ACK, OUR ABIL I TY TO .STABILIZE THE AREA MAY BE CRIPPLED. . 2. · -BRINGING HOME TO THEi4 THAT THEY• VE· UNDERCUIT YOUR POL I CI £S WILL ST RZ NGTHEN ·YOUR HAND '"FOR WHATEVER WE MAY HAVE
  • .:.:lS!.!J..8 SEC!tE'l' INFOR.MA TION Monday, December 16, 1968 Mr. Pre.tdent: Walt R.o ■tow la at home runnln1 a fever . .Attached l• the a1uda for the luncheon ■ cheduled tomorrow. In the event that Mr. R.o ■tow com•• ln ln the momlna, we can
  • from the investigation of Iv.Ir. Jenkins which had been launched for the Atomic Energy Commission in 1957. After the President learned on October 14th of the arrest of Mr. Jenkins on October 7, 1964, he ordered the Honorable Douglas Dillon, Secretary
  • been accomplished, resulting in the elimination of this business on ..?~!q_ !?~~_ is, to the General Aviation operators of this country. At this time the Department of Agriculture has 14 Twin Beechcrafts, one Douglas DC 3, numerous mechanics and pilots
  • received at my home a telephone call from Tcherniakov, his DCM. Tcherniakov reported that a message to the President from Kosygin had just arrived, on Vietnam. We consulted together as to where the message should be delivered. We decided to minimize
  • finished my Ph.D. I went down to Woods Hole where we had set up a laboratory. All my biographies say it was the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, but in fact that was just the home for a small laboratory on one of the small islands, Nonamesset
  • , are there congress- men who really have studied and learned the details of the International Education and Cultural Excha.nge Pro;ram and contribute positively to your program? F' Oh sure. home-work. By the ,'lay, I have to say this about Rooney. He does his He
  • desk--and he looked up from his desk, and he said, "Can you take a good picture?" And I didn't need that either. ing, "Yes, sir. I just blurted out without even think- I think I can," and then I realized what I had said. And I said, "Oh my God
  • INTERVIEWEE: MARGARET CHASE SMITH INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Senator Smith's home in Skowhegan, Maine 20~ 1975 Tape 1 of 1, Side 1 F: Coming in and out of the:inter~iew was General William Lewis, Senator Smith's long-time administrative
  • INTERVIEWEE: HARRY McPHERSON INTERVIEWER: T. H. Baker PLACE: Mr. McPherson's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 3 B: This is a continuation of the interview with Harry McPherson. Sir, we were talking last time about civil rights activities generally. To talk
  • he went out there mainly--these sort of misfits back home, very often, I think . And they went out there and they found a cause they could believe in, and Pop was fiercely devoted to the Meo . est people who ever lived, He thought
  • permission of author. with­ PRESERVAl IUN ~Ot-'Y - JAR The Newspaper Put to PreH With a Smile VOL. 21. NO. 4 COLUMBUS, OHIO*** JUNE 14, 1952- EXCLUSIVE: Home Delivery, Newsstands or By Mail-lOc 56 PAGES Says Discs ArePowered ByRadio Wave
  • . Santiago Toast at Frei dinner: . Themes Strength of Chilean democratic ins ti tut ions. Fo:r;ward-looking policies of President Frei: "Revolution in Freedom" at home and leadership abroad in econ­ omic integration, arms limitation, port enclave
  • -Communist world. The government in Moscow is even now b~ginning slowly to accept the fact that its people want private automobiles and decent homes and privacy and travel. Let us be clear. There is nothing that has happened over these three years which
  • .__ la pllltllc thl• tecllalcal fact Ila• pla,.. or pr•n••· ... er ■ tuMllac of eltller n1n••lea WWRo•tow:rba ACUOJ! Sir >-....,.,.., •-••c••• tile lonae• Prime Mlalalu el 1... 1a, baa ,-r,msl _.. ,,,,. .... u .. ,-1ea .. amc. •1•• ,- • CT•~ B
  • or Description: The Price of Freedom Publisher: National Home Library Association Title of Series/Chapter/Article: Edition: Volume Number: Issue Number: Date of Publication: 1940 Page Numbers: 106 pages 1-GGG. THE PRICE OF FREEDOM HE NRY A. WALLACK
  • both 11attacks 11 and "reprisals" and referred to frontier incidents "including Harib. 11 Sir Patrick Dean said that would be tolerable. (Throughout exercise harder line being taken by UK Embassy here in discussions with Burdett than Dean with Stevenson
  • threat to _its stability. At home, we have to contend both with the national impatience of · our people and with the repercussions on the Presidential campaign which will arise from a stalemate. As long as we continue at least the present limited bombing
  • REFERREDTO " • THE DOMESTIC ANDSOCIAL PROBLEMS AT HOME,THE MASSIVEDEFICIT IN·. OURBUDGET,THE 10 PER CENTSURCHARGE, THE-IMPAIRINGIMPACTOF THIS WAR ON OUR ABILITY TO COPEWITH PROBLEMS IN NATOAND THE MIDDLE -· POLICY BY • .·EAST, AND THE SIGNIFICANTLACKOF
  • " • THE DOMESTIC ANDSOCIAL PROBLEMS AT HOME,THE MASSIVEDEFICIT IN·. OURBUDGET,THE 10 PER CENTSURCHARGE, THE-IMPAIRINGIMPACTOF THIS WAR ON OUR ABILITY TO COPEWITH PROBLEMS IN NATOAND THE MIDDLE -· POLICY BY • .·EAST, AND THE SIGNIFICANTLACKOF SUPPORT FOR OURVIETNAM
  • mentor was Paul Douglas, and he never did anything without Paul Douglas' approval. In fact, I think that was the signal to show that he wasn't going to go for the repeal of the interest rate ceiling because Douglas was against it. But the "mentor
  • Career history; Novak's private meetings with LBJ; economic advisor Paul Douglas; LBJ drunk; Sam Shaffer and Newsweek; press coverage of the senate vs. the presidency; LBJ's attitude during the vice-presidency; Kennedy staff's disregard for LBJ
  • ~UARY 27, 1933 AMENDED BY ~AW NO. '+j8 DATEDJUNE 21, I 946 • F'Of.< SMALL! ARMS (SHOTGUN~,. PISTOLS ANo HUNTING. GUNS, SIX t11LLI11ETERS OR. L.ESSI 1.!lCENSE TO, PURCHASE :-!UST13E OST A I ~ED FROM Cl-1l EF OF POL.I CE • l ~, HOME O 1 STRICT WHO· • I
  • .. .... o,,T-;-"'T("'I H(\i°'I } ',..,p ·-;--, - '\ --~ · 'D ,... ,.., ,,t'.:J .. 1 V ' .Jr . ,\ >' SIR r-iI ,..-., / I ··1'1)1". ·1t . i.J ! '~: .LL 0 ~ 1--,L; -ft._; i!!..), ,:)-:'rt t-,-;_) fl ....; Li l!-! i ~ . t_;t ~ { ,r,. t. 1 ~ ,:·1 .L; i:... ~ 1 1
  • , 1983 INTERVIEWEE: WILLIAM R. DESOBRY INTERVIEWER: Ted Gittinger PLACE: General Desobry’s home, Lampasas, Texas Tape 1 of 3 G: General Desobry, would you begin by giving us something of your professional background and education before you came
  • of $1,000,000 o provide int e p· eside:it 1 s discre io 11for emergencies affecting ·n'"erest, secur·ty, or efe sew c may arise at home or abroad." used a most e irely byte President for o. estic emergencies. i volve the reside t fairy explicitly in ai ing
  • sorties would be requi~ed. Casualties would probably number in the hundreds, ~nd homes in the village areas wo~ld be destroyed. Loss of the domestic rice would force Hanoi to import between 175,000-750,000 tons (depending on the success of the flooding
  • , he recommends two more steps: L Instruct Ambassador Thompson to follow up with Dobrynin i n M oscow, givin _him the b oad outli es of ou aircraft decision, unde rlining_ your d e sir e t o a oid a new round in the arms rac an d ur ging s m "ndication
  • SIR FATHICK jEAN. ITEM DEENMAJE IGJCWNTUES~AYTO U THA~T HJ1w1 BllEJJt rn,,_ foal! IMF% ., IF I repet die ..... Bill,... pqee , .. a IINaly tllat a, fl.rat Yiatt to GNaee occt1n oa of•• pl ... ... jl ... th of hie ••••h7 INIWilla
  • planning of The Sea Ranch, a second home community on the Sonoma coast. He is in charge of the plan to revitalize the major portion of the towntown and civic core of Kansas City, Missouri, and his plan for the $2-million reconstruction of eiqht blocks