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  • on this and other flimsy work copies before delivery to Telecommunications Opera;ions Division -SEGR-EX-- Tuesday, October 31, 1967 7:00 p. m. Mr. Preeldent: Thie Indonesian evaluation of the ev0lutlon 0£ the war and lts present situation 1a worth reading
  • place on the plane to Fort Worth and then to the Dallas thing . And I was driving with our woman director and the educational director of the United Steelworkers, Mr . Eddy Ball, and we were in Bastrop about to stop for a sandwich to come up here
  • to the fact that the Regional Office is now moving from Denver to Fort Worth, it appears to me a good time for any changes that might be made, and certainly I am interested vecy much in the proposition, and from what you had to say I believe you can get me
  • . · SCOTT .I t .... 6. The results of Ronning Mission relating to Prisoners of · ·. · · War is being .aent to the -Department ·by. separate telegram.- .: ·>-· . . ... ·, . ~: .... '·· .· :• • ~ •• I:: • ,• • 411 : t, • • ,., • ~ • ' .J
  • Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] 11 tentat ive list. Do you th i nk h e's anybody worth my see ing 7 Do y ou think he had en ough r elations with Johnson in those Ei senhower y e ars? C: I thi nk he probably did. Not a great de al of di re ct re
  • --"You've been talking to the women-folks." (Interruption) MG: He was briefed by you each morning, I gather. G: The ritual was that I would be up and ready with a handful of four or five or a half dozen telegrams, one of them being the ritual State
  • worth the risk. Woulda•t Wla Browa•s arriYal he a good time to him with aoxne woria &om the Prealdem; we cCNld t&Sea few .fareip policy plaans before November :. aD4 B.OK/ Jap imnnal• izatioa might jwrt be made bato one. spJioathis one? We could avan
  • IN RECENT SPEECH CEMBTEL 947) AND PROPOSALS FOR MAX.IMIZ ING EX.PORTS. BOWLES Br . ., {· I INCOMING TELEGRAM Department 2 Action NNNNQSA456 of State S!CKEr RR RUEHCR RUEHOT NEA DE RUSBAE6448 2881500 Info ss G SP SAH L H ZNY SSSSS. R 15 133 0Z
  • of the bill was finally paid by the farmer, the worker, the small banker, and the small investor. Europe finally got free of charge from the United States less than t wenty billion dollars worth of goods, but the failure of the United States to pl
  • bs idiary st ocks of his radio and all other news papers exce pt the Star ·group where he was only a ble to buy t he oper ating ha.lf. He charges 15% on h is radio into Centra l and puts oper a.ting fews on t he pa pers. He say s t hat he has
  • directions to take and how much effort it is worth. I think that some Commerce soundings are about the only way to get a feeling for scope of the problem. On the impact, we could probably pick up information on the bond underwriting problem without too much
  • of contributing to the realization of this great humanitarian object~ve. · ,,,.- ·-· I am fully convinced tha~ our concerted ef­ forts in supporting the UNESCO activit;es in this field would constitute a historic step on the way towards the progress and happiness
  • operational theory was that the key to a successful ad campaign was identifying the product's "unique selling position." Reeves realized that Eisenhower -- a five-star general who managed to be plain old "Ike" to millions of Americans -- was h1s own unique
  • operational theory was that the key to a successful ad campaign was identifying the product's "unique selling position." Reeves realized that Eisenhower -- a five-star general who managed to be plain old "Ike" to millions of Americans -- was h1s own unique
  • at all that if a visit to London should have to be paid for by another visit to the hospital, it is not worth it in terms of what the world and your own countrymen ask of you. But I will admit if pressed that I do not see why this particular visit should
  • . Recommendations for contracting the new and expanded capital and operations programs have been made in various sections of this report. It is worth listing here the more important of these programs and activities that should be contracted out to indicate
  • : ~~~~ft~?:i:l . ·1 ' ;. ;;f ;t~ ->~~f.ENDfAND HOLD,FOR,ACKS • ,./ • - !-:f~~ ~t;~· ... ~ • ;-,;:--:, ,, ,f SEC~;f:'.;,NQ{QR.~;;:~~;&);~s ·w. ·.. ~,,·._.,· . • .,:,·;:,:':~: t;,~~ -~~ ~ . •· .. .- !INCOMING TELEGRAM Department of State
  • second most important tradin ·g partner, next to Canada. In 1962, we sold $1.41 billion worth of agricultural products, machinery, coal, scrap iron and other products to Japan, while buying $1.36 billion worth .of goods from it. Over the five­ year period
  • :. s; not .. : ~ ,; ; .:- :-.-: :-~1: :..:,.- dee 12.ss ~~: ~ ...1 ·I I OUTGOING TELEGRAM Department INDICATE:0 0 CHARGETO 1/-0 Origin ss Info, ? of State 65 COLLECT ~ ACTION: Amembaaay LORDON Amembaasy NEW DILBI lNFO: Amembasay KABACBI ,S
  • the polls in Fort Worth on that election, and she felt personally responsible for his election. f: That's the nice thing about that close an election. Every box that went by 37 votes can claim to have put him in. H: Don't tell me. You'll find that, I'm
  • they had ever flown the Cypriot flag. An interesting sidelight, by the way, is that the Cypriots didn't have a national anthem. And so you get into this customary thing, the exchanges of national anthems. They had a band there that could play "The Star
  • . October 9, 1968 President: Herewlth the text on the tea break. Worth reading for underlined pae•ages. The moat forthcomln1 busine • a yet wlth Hanol -- but •till utterly lnconclu•ive. w. Parla 22106 (DELTO 88S) WWRostow:rln W. Roatow -SECRET 7 B
  • the last telegram to Moscow in SUNFLOWER series that approaches could represent either: A. A sign of serious interest on Hanoi's part in beginning procese toward reaching settlement or toward mutual abatement of the conflict; or B. Part of an intensified
  • contacts here aren't too optimistic, but those are worth a try. U th.ls were a one-way trip, the Korean-American Foundation would pay for ocean travel to help get the student back. Third, tho State Department response is that any !oreigner facing
  • : I didn't think you could get from here to there anymore. C: Working that whole system out with the railroad companies was really something. But here's the thing. You got these fantastic telegrams from little two-bit towns along the way. I'll
  • County--Russellville. It's in the Arkansas River Valley halfway between Little Rock and Fort Smith. We had a good-sized colored population~ I would suppose about twenty per cent of our people in the town were black. challenge~ ism there. And it had
  • upon, it was an entirely different group. Judge Sarah Hughes in Dallas, Judge Leo Brewster in Fort Worth, Judge Noel, Jim Noel in Houston. and myself. Now I think that certainly there must have been some personality problems between the Vice President
  • scaling Mt. Everest. It fort, on .the other hand, is first, last will be a triumph for man's in­ and unblushingly miliwy. The domitable spirit of adventure; but, Soviet Union is therefore racing to WERE RUNNING THB WRONG RACE WITH RUSSIA/ win inner
  • in the field for whatever that judgment is worth examined them. That is about the extent of the informa­ to use back here as expert Monday morning quarterbacks. tion we have on it. That is the judgII1:entof the best military advice I have Q. Did you say "men
  • railroads total system. A co-winner of the 1951 Highway.Research assistant:professor Institute of Transportation old Administrator . Lang formerly Operating Lang was sworn in today as Federal of Transportation of Technology, at Fort Eustis,-Va
  • . Ogden, San Jose, California ) in the invasion on D-Day Mrs. Mary Nieman - President of Gold Star Mothers of America General Jacob Devers, USA General J. Lawton Collins, USA General Matthew B. Ridgway^, USA Major General H.W. Blakeley. USA Admiral A. D
  • American Embassy, I·I abana, Cuba, August 4, 1959. Dear Dick: I am sure that Embassy Brussels telegram No. 106 baa been brought to your attention. This indicates quite clearly that, in spite ot our various efforts to prevent military hardware from
  • . • .• . • .• UPRISING. IN ~t{F.! , 130RDER AREAS, . .THIS PHASE. \•lAS. D::SIGNED . . .. .. . . . . . . . . .. . .. , • I l. T~_~U~fORT;~rs P~~~_TO -~El~E-~ON~R~L-~~ ~~~I~~.A~~ pA~LAC . PROVINCES W1~!Cl{ WOUJ.. D. GI. 1.JE'. Hil1 l)r: CONTROJ .. . ... F/\CTO
  • . Klstlakowsky Ro•well L. Gilpatric Morris Liebman Robert Anderson .Jame• Rowe John McCone From the .List Friday, October 6:30 p. m. Z0, 1967 ,? MR. PRESIDENT: This quite oif'icial Hanoi plant is worth careful It is, in effect. l. a response It confirms
  • tbareof. alld u••t• •!fort• co&e:erJMtd by the Nazi CM• law, by dec:ret-1 •ldch w@re lD th•mael ••• XL Tile clai1U utval la• ol tile Pla!atW• llereta r••t •lllct. applh• fv~I' to ti.. b"'11&arlaht• ••' lauuan MIDI• aod wh.lch were Nlate
  • fades for any sign of weakening on our part, continue of the On the other hand, to grovr and hope ! then som~ day t.cL~·/ will conclude -that the game is not worth the candle. If one accepts this premise, then the course of action recommended
  • fades for any sign of weakening on our part, continue of the On the other hand, to grovr and hope ! then som~ day t.cL~·/ will conclude -that the game is not worth the candle. If one accepts this premise, then the course of action recommended
  • that where the Chinese were shipping in weapons and things, they couldn't come in anymore, and I think they were going up there very lightly armed, because the Cambodians weren't worth a damn, and they were going to just scare the hell out of them
  • of the pnpora woot of Ft. Worth, or one of y our Oklahotta papo r •. I feel , va.cuei:r I that there llliGb,t ba oomo aort of union between the i)npora wcot of Ft. Worth nnd your Oklohonw croup under tho d1.rootion o f your pronont Oklahomn oana er, but tht1t