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  • to reply, touching upon regional development prospects in the Caribbean area, the President answered his telephone . While the President was on the telephone, the Prime Minister and the Reporting Officer conversed briefly on the above theme ::c
  • w as Marshallesque and re served , but he did tell Mrs. Johnson on the telephone that he got f ull support - 2 ­ from the Commander-in-Chief. The President said that Westmoreland reported that he had a good meeting with President Eisenhower
  • Rusk left the room to talk on the telephone to Sargent Shriver in Madrid. During their absence, McGeorge Bundy said that extreme care had to be taken in the President's statements. That a speech like the one last Saturday will cost the President
  • -- (At this point, the President answered a telephone call; he did not resume the pre-Glassboro narration. ) The President said he was wary of the Soviet Union and its leaders. He said it took two meetings at Glassboro to see that Kosygin did not have full authority
  • this morning. (The President had Miss Nivens in Walt Ro stow' s office read the message over the telephone; the message thanked Wilson and Brown for standing firm despite party pressures.) We all have our peculiar problems; all of us have our setbacks