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  • resolution. We are ready to serve yo'LUPdocumented information any time. Call: N.Y. NR2-7948 at evening 8:00 P.M. IN.TERCONTINENTAL U. F. 0. RESEARCH INSTITUTE ORIGINATOR COOPERATION 01" PROJECT.G 01" ALL ANC DlftCCTOR COLMAN OP' THI
  • will be tranamitted ua telegram or ordinary cablegtam. WESTERN UNI 0 N NEWCOMB CARLTON CHAIRMAN OF THIE BOARD A, N, WILLIAMS PRl!:SICENT 1213 CHECK ACCOUNTING INFORMATION TIME FILED J, C. WILLEVER FIRST VICl!·PAl£SICllNT Send the following telegram. subject
  • Burnham of the University of Texas led off the morn­ ing session, with Robert Strauss, for­ mer Chairman of the Democratic Party and one-time Ambassador to the Soviet Union. The three joined in agreeing that, overall, the political culture in Washington
  • , and the cook has recovered. . . . For the time being we seem to be getting along very well.” 4/26 On FDR’s orders, Army troops take possession of Montgomery Ward and Company after Sewell L. Avery, company chairman, and company directors refused to obey
  • pendltu.r es .and no s.uperscnics -- has given his Finance Minister the greeu light to segotiate with us. I think we hav-, a.chleVQd our lmmedlate objective of buying time on th« purchase of anperaoai.cs by ou.r Latin Ai::nerican friel'h.is. W. 'fl
  • Scranton is coming to the end of his term, and is not eligible for reelection. He has worked in the Department (1958-60).. Walter Reuther has won elections in his union as well as sought to influence them on the national level. In the Board of Consultants
  • had been shifted elsewhere--after a decent interval of time had elapsed--and if someone else whom Tshombe was disposed to trust, or who was more capable of winning his trust, had been assigned to represent us in Leopoldville. This brings me to my
  • the four-power treaty with a three-power arrangement, or to place the Berlin issue before the· United Nations at this time. The latter was amplified by pointing out that the General Assembly was currently in­ volved by the Bizerte problem. The Mayor a 'g
  • • Deferred Cable ( 02 }-.- ' . PRESIDENT .. .. tune shown .m the date lme on telegrams and day letters IS STANDARD TIME at pomt of origm. nu, fi.lllig . WZ079 PD=LAREDO TEX 13 1015A= HON LYNDON B JOHNSON= U S SENATOR SENATE BLDG• SYMBOLS NLT•Cable Nlskt
  • , in exchange for the Front's recognition of Cambodia's existing borders. Prior to that time, several high-ranking National Liberation Front officials have periodically visited Cambodia.) The Front leaders themselves admitted that harassment of their supply
  • than his information. We have spent a great deal of time on this situation. I have received reports from 90 ambassadors. I asked Clark Clifford, George Ball, Henry Cabot Lodge, and General Taylor to c,ome in Sunday and go over this. We are calling
  • , or wanted recommendations on how to cure rural poverty, poverty in rural America, within ten years. Angeles. And that came just about the time of the riots in Watts in Los That weekend I sat down and did a lot of talking back and forth with my wife who
  • -- V -- 2 really a rather funny thing. The Republicans had operated under the mythology for many years that the Yalta agreements signed by Roosevelt had been treacherous agreements which turned over all kinds of things to the Soviet Union. Well
  • drinkir).g -- some fences. Wednesday I_had a very hectic day -- fl.Ying to Kansas City to speak to the Packinghouse. workers, then into Minneapolis to speak to the . . . .AmalgamatedLithograph Union, and had dinner with Mother who_·seemed in tolerably
  • -time job, and supposedly was given a half-day Ivork. So during that summer I went to school from eight to twelve, reported to ,mrk immediately thereafter, and asually left about twelve or one that night. I found out most of my part-time jobs
  • deal . I remember talking with LBJ on this subject one time and I said, "I'm not sure that you understand the aid program in India thoroughly, but I know your grandfather would ." He asked, "What do you mean by that?" I said, "Your grandfather
  • of surplus wheat as a stop- have begun to run short of gap measure to me 't Jndinn wht•t1t hy th ('nd of 0
  • · of living v ersus slavery and a , lower stand­ a rd ot living fo all ex cept the Nazi g overning class." · · ".Time afte r Ll ""I" thr? Pr'!~[de .t v oiced th e broadest pcssib!e waru ­ i n gs to the p ublic in an e•..ort to s ti r ou r peopl e -from the:i r
  • . II. PURPOSE OFVISIT. Paycholo1ical: There is a large reserve of good will for the United States in the Benelux countries. At the same time, these three relatively small countries feel that the United States often takes them for granted. The visit
  • , "butchered" it. "Ii' . ._ .... .,.. ' ~ ~ . - i ,. Nonetheless NEWSWEEK apparently picked up the q\lote used by Breslin. TIME intended to use it but, after checking with me, abandoned it. What I told Breslin -- again confirmed by Pierpont -- was simply
  • mar alM attead. No fermal r ... rb are eapecle4 after ,- recelYe tile 111eUl. Yo. llan approwed a&atemell& wblcll will " 1..... ~ the Pi'••• Office at tbe time of tlae ceremo-, (Ta• B). YCMI mlpt waat te to.cb oa oae or two Qftlle poiat• la tat
  • the dance was to be held, I met a hostess who asked me what my fraternity was and I told her Phi Delta Theta. So, some time later, in the course of the afternoon--I didn't intend to stay any more than just to make certain that I could get in there if I
  • that it meant a substantial cut in salary and a move from a place where I had been established for fifteen years, where my children were going to school--and I still had one daughter in school. But the climate of the times was such that everybody was very
  • conversa ti ons today, 11 and then he said, "You tho_ught it was time that you and he talked." He still didn't look up. to talk about. I know him. He said,-"! don't know what there is I like him. r trust him. I need him." I said, ''Mr. President
  • . I took some of my consternations over to George Christian, who was the press secretary at the time, who was present at the ranch in Australia when Mr . Johnson was tendered the offer of the kangaroos . George said he had enough to worry about ; he
  • supporters here in Houston to have him risk a House seat to run for the Senate? S: No. I think I was what you would call an old-time or loyal supporter. I thought he ought to make the race. G: Is that right? S: It's my recollection. G: Even though
  • THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 13, 1968 TO: Mr. Jim Jones FROM: Ruth McCawley (per Harry McPherson) I called each person's secretary listed below to alert them that a meeting will be held in the Cabinet Room some time tomorrow after­ noon
  • of 100-250, 000 tons .. b. We plan to deal with this problem in November, when we have better estimates of the size of the US harvest, PL-480 availabilities, Vietnam's rice needs and the GVN foreign exchange position. At that time we will propose to you
  • ~ AT...SOME...UNSPECIF.lED-TiME:. IN::'THE:3 ISSUED AN · ORDER ..fO:.SavtET~-ONVO\'~_:-To PAST...:.THE":SOV'YE'F·-~VE~~ENT . . . .. --·· 13 4 - (a){ ) lHOS~~~I T_~ES-~I)r_ANY- ·OTHE~-- ~~~. 5 4 3 2
  • , Tennessee, involved in the garbage workers' strike, as he had a difficult time getting $10,000 from the uniono Levison said the unions should be informed that the Sout.hern Christian Leadership Conference will publicize the fact that the group Martin Luther
  • ~H..___~ ' FM AMEHBASSY KA UL / j , UE A E WASHDCl646 _ ZEN ff UEHC/ AMEMBASSY MOSCOWUNN ·STATE GRNC • L r" :AL EUR BT • IO UNCLAS MAY 3 p \ IBIA 1'GA'-CONTROLLED KABUL TIMES MAY 2 CARRIED FULL NSG TEXT AFGHAN-SOVIET ca•1MUNIQUE FOLLOWING
  • worries are: (1) the occasion is inappropriate -­ these steps have little to do wit h Austria, and (2) we have not consulted with the Allies or the Congress. We feel that this is a good time for at least one announcement and perhaps for two. Speech
  • GOLDSCHMIDT (Tape #1) INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Mrs. Goldschmidt's horne in New York City November 6, 1974 MG: Let's start from the beginning and the first time you met Lyndon Johnson. EG: Well, I met him in a very characteristic way
  • was to illustrate the fact that Mr. Weisl, who is Johnson's long-time friend in New York and his lawyer, became his committeman in New York City. Yet he had met few members of the press. Mike O'Neill knew the President very well; if I gave the impresston otherwise
  • Honorary Doctor of Laws Degree at Texas Wnman's University, 31, 1964: March "It is a go0d time tn be a womanbecaufe never have there been such "PP"rtunities unlimited for yr,u.,.how much wnmenare doinf to turn hand and brain f,..,r nur nati,..,nal destiny
  • the seeds for inflation by not getting a substantial tax increase in 1966. But by the time he had decided not to run again, he obviously had reached the conclusion that a tax increase was absolutely essential. And he had tried for 2 LBJ Presidential
  • anxieties. However, the primary Soviet concern at the present time is the internal progress of the Soviet Union, the adhesiveness of the Eastern European bloc and the general development of economic relationships with the rest ot the world. The Sov1& Union
  • pleased that you were able to find time to t.ravel in our country and meet· a truly representative I . l .J· ' ~· Our talks sample of our peoplec. together demonstrated once again the basic har 0 I j ~ •1110ny o-f val es and interests
  • ; undermining their morale and discouraging the creative initiative which is so essential to a successful foreign policy. At the -3same time •we have resigned from our respom~ibility in the · shaping of policy and the defining or its purposes, submitting too
  • which we can then go into some of the material. S: Okay. Well, I was born and brought up in New York City and spent the bulk of my time there, except when I was away at school, until about 1946. I graduated from the College of the Holy Cross