Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

2688 results

  • organizations involved in national security planning. The emphasis in most games is on current or potential problems associated with international affairs. d. Some games are conducted with high-level officials participating on "senior-level" teams, which review
  • : DR V Analysis of the War in South Vietnam A November 15 article in the DRV Army newspaper Quan Doi Nhan Dan offered a conventional ·effort to analyze the military situation in South Vietnam. The article assured its readers that there were limits
  • and assistance all May, would Ball, both of newspaper the Congress would -- but have and the situation readers, While would (which acti­ served not public by then not, in have abun­ any full public.* 30th then and .May 7th, until
  • told Eban) -- instead of one where they feel sleight-of-hand is necessary to win their point. Playing that theme will reinforce your suggestion to Eban last February that he try to stop Israel's friends from pressuring you via the newspapers
  • . It will be based on the present coalition of forces that is .supporting Thieu-Ky as well as. those-supporters who are successful in the Senate and House elections. Ky says that the main problem for this enterprise is going to be money and an appealing national
  • on an enterprise SANITIZm A,uthorityflk, ~ ~ ··(;~~ (]51:/O( By~ problems palaver, able to live on the same bickering. and host of other and get aid bill passed attention Add to this the risk Ayub. talk turkey from here It is not to disinvite
  • . MOTHER PREV IOUSLY HAD COLLECTED $171 FRIM CITI ZENS OF SANTIAGO AND WAS GIVEN · ADDITIONAL $216 FIR EXPENSES !Y OFFICERS AND- ENLISTED MEN OF U.S. ARMY'S 16TH GENERAL SUPP8RT GROUP IN SANTI DOMINGO. BGSTIN NEWSPAPERS AND ASSOCI•TF.» PRESS PICKED UP STORY
  • into shutdown or subcission. liable kept tab on newspapers and radio and TV the public education systet1 of disGidents, in support of its objectives; services is to move swiftly. all mjor have been instrunents in neutralizing at sooe 20,000 or oore
  • , then know it was going to be surface-to-air missiles and all that it turned out to be . And we associated Kosygin's visit in early February, with sort of refo rmalizing good relations, good Communist-bloc relations, between Moscow and Hanoi . So
  • ' •"'' ~ .. ,. to Bhutto ' s statements that in spite some difficulties the association between the people of Pakistan and the ' US was fundamentally strong and that the US still had a. - !'h• Nobbe usis- Mr. ~a1r The White House true friend in Re thanked Bhutto
  • .) b. In England, Norway, Denmark and Sweden, reactions to our policies are mixed and confused. (1) In England, divided opinion among the population and the major newspapers~which favored U.S. policies slightly a few months ago.,has shifted to a more
  • Series description: This series consists of files created by White House aides at the request of Lyndon B. Johnson. The files contain correspondence, reports, statements, and newspaper clippings. The materials cover the Department of Transportation
  • write to the local managers of each of their installations across the country. It will ask them to point out to the local managers ~t this national equal employment opportunity program will work only through the operation of the free enterprise system
  • recommeaded by th• Congress. Througheut th• field et UN affairs, it is ••a•atial to keep clearly ill mimd this distiactien between what la talk aad what is action. The newspapers de nGt make this distinctioa meat •f tll• time. But-moat o:f the UN delegates do
  • , the outcome of born, who this year received the Forrestal the Dominican crisis has been in the first Award from the National Security In­ instance a victory for the Dominican dust11al Association, well deserves the people. It has been a success as an OAS
  • went back to the newspapering business, and I think it's probably the finest thing that ever happened to me. I've certainly enjoyed my fifty-plus years in journalism, and Mr. Johnson obviously enjoyed his many years that led eventually
  • Biographical information; association with Richard Kleberg; first meeting LBJ; Roy Miller; association as a newspaperman with LBJ; LBJ’s temper; Senate race; visits during the presidency; LBJ and press criticism; W. Lee O’Daniel; LBJ
  • ," and prior to his appointment as Ambassador in August, 1967 Mantilla served as Executive Director of that newspaper. He has been active in Ecuadorean and inter-American press organizations and was President of the inter-American Press Association from 1949
  • . of Transpo­ 30., 1968, July 7., 1968 . p. 96. 1967. FAA., memorandum, September 11., 1967. Ibid. }.,32. /35. ~36. James V. Nielsen., Director to Associate Administrator October 20, 1967 Notation by Lally Nielsen to Lally., of Compliance
  • BY THE ASSOCI~TION• 7° FI~EAR~S MAYBE IMPO~T~D BY LICENSED D~A~ERS OR BY PERSONS WITH VALID LICENSES, MAIL ORD~R PURCHASE is N0°T POSSIBLE, •s 1NcE NO, ONE Is PERMI TTE6 TO SEl.:l A••GUN OR ANY OTHER FIREARM !O A'JO!HER PERSON ~N~ESS THAT PERSON PRODUCES HIS
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 7 30 years that I've been associated with the Soil Conservation Service. I think this fact is a great credit to those American
  • to FHA functions, derive Associa­ responsibility in the Association's Secretary respect to the FNMAwill basic Mortgage Credit his line from his as one of the members of the Association's He will the for Mortgage operations entity
  • as I recall; it would be in 1964. But it was no personal association at all. I mean, I was a newsman running a newspaper in Laredo, and he, of course, had some strong contacts in that part of Texas. G: You say that you did encounter him on several
  • Remarks on behalf of the UNITED COMMUNITY CAMPAIGNS OF America (United Givers Funds) To Oval where he posed for Mr. Fred Maroon, the photographer Office for the Magazine Publishers Association OFF RECORD The Association is attempting to run a double
  • year and still back your play in various constructive enterprises throughout the world
  • Deputy Under Secreta4y Char~es E. Bohlen A~bassador Anatoliy F. Dobrynin, USSR COPIES TO: --"""·- ----------l,\IQlll..-::,:C=a===:;:=---·-------- ------ 1 7 copy of a Spanish langltage newspaper which claimed th&t Arubas ador Dobrynin said t.at he
  • , a Spanish newspaper in New York, will now be largest in the world, with readers in the U.S. Puerto Rico, Cuba, Central America, South America, and Spain. The President was invited to dedicate a new high speed press -- but HHHS5if this was not possible, April
  • dedicated to, and we ne. proud to have organlzaUo~ such •• your,a, as partn-era ln thie enterprise. l wlab the N•a,:· Eaet Foundation anothoi, 4ft, yea.re ol equally ·e ucceaaful and much appreciated service. Sincerely, \ Mi-. E. De Alton Partridge Pii·e
  • actions which I announce_d on September 26, before the National Security Industrial Association, wer~ under study. I believe we have a good· progress report to make on ways in which the Defense Department, jointly with industry, can contribute more
  • of the combatants and, at the same time, to adequately cope with the war-time conditions. "In brief, to · meet requirements of the war situation, to associate the rear and front lines in the efforts of a people engaged in a total war, to avoid the repetition