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  • -€0l'lFIDEN"TIAL - 6 - Pressures for negotiation and settlement mounted steadily in 1953, with a number of prominent politicians -- especially Pierre Mendes-France -- pushing such the111es with vigor. The January 1954 Berlin conference gave new impetus
  • Permanent Representative States my to Nations. I have taken time and energy the election this step so that I may devote all my between now and November 5 to help assure of Hubert Humphrey and the defeat of Richard Nixon. My decision has
  • -­ James F. Magdanz Consul General, Tokyo-Yokohama - Thomas H. Murfin Consul General, Kobe-Osaka - John L. Steg­ maier Consul, Naha, Okinawa (administered by Embassy Tokyo) -- Richard W. Finch Consul, Fukuoka - Thomas P. Shoesmith Consul, Nagoya - Philip F
  • . Williams, AlC Curtis Clark, USAF--------------- JWGA USA JWGA USAF--~-------------------- AlC Richard G. Hall, JWGA USAF-------------------- JWGA Mrs. Marion E. Boland-----------------------Mrs. Wilma Matasic :..__________________________ JWGA
  • and refrain from further public rev&lations on 25X1A 25X1A Richard Helms Director SANITIZED l u~ rity NLT0/
  • certain -- would China be .e xpected to intervene, and then by occupation of _, . N~rth Vietnam. The~ would probably be pressing Hanoi to seek peace, they might be putting pressures against us in Berlin, and they would . be ~arry­ ing on a vigorous
  • ) REPRESENTATIVE - Lt Col Charles D. Ford.,. Jr, - Major RED TEAM(North Vietnam) REPRESENTATIVE USA Richard W. Uobb.c, USA USA USA YELLOW TEAM(Red China) REPRESENTATIVE - Col Samuel N. ·Karrick, GREENTEAM(USSR) REPRESENTATM Commander Harold
  • world can't be played but the various games. facets can be considered for different * * * * * RED I TF.AMMEMBER: The Red I team perspective indicated that the BETA I game should alert us to the dangers actually• inherent in the Berlin situation
  • E.J. '. .fI.i '· ~· \ [ J - 2 - · C l,3(u.) , (4) ~ Richard Helms Director (s) INl'OJilMA TION _...._ ...,, JIIM 12. 19'8 -- 8:40 p.m. Mr. PreaWeat: L A State De,-rtmeat •raft. peraOllllllJ clearetl 111, Sec. Rull. for the C...-.lar Caw
  • was a classmate of mine!' "He kept up the clip in Africa, Sicily, l\ormandy and the sweep to Berlin in World War II, as Veterans Affairs Adminis­ trator, Army Chief of Staff, Joint Chiefs Chairman thereafter. He is the last, along with classmate Dwight D
  • was a classmate of mine!' "He kept up the clip in Africa, Sicily, l\ormandy and the sweep to Berlin in World War II, as Veterans Affairs Adminis­ trator, Army Chief of Staff, Joint Chiefs Chairman thereafter. He is the last, along with classmate Dwight D
  • agency Inter- TS 13-17 Aug 62 MUII-62~ Middle East Inter.; TS 17-21 Sep 62 EPSILON I-62 Berlin Inter- TS 23-25 Nev 62 EPSILON II-62*** Berlin Inter- TS J-4 lVJS.y 62 * No formal report ** Conducted at CINCNELM, London *** Conducted
  • in Viet-Nam and the Middle East. Dobrynin asked what we thought of the situation in Europe. Rostow said we had noted the absence of trouble in Berlin. Dobrynin said he thought the government had decided not to act in the face of the "provocation" in Berlin
  • to the President - Henry Hall Wilson, Jr. 654 Que,en Ann,e Terrace Falls Church, Virginia Special Aaslatant to the President USA. - P. Kenneth O'Donnell 57,0 Maeaachuaetta Avenue, Special Assistant to the President - Db.•ector, Food for Peace Richard W
  • . Bromberger-Barnas, Maxwell R. Brooks, Richard Chase, Bernice Cohen, William Coleman, Guido Crocetti, H.Z. Cummins, Marsha CUmmins, J.E. Deese, Sara deFord, Clinton DeSoto, Eugenio Donato, J.D.H. Donnay, Gunter von Ehrenstein, Leon Eisenberg, Jerome Frank
  • . Calltornla 90012 ( \1) ( THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 20, 1965 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Press Contacts, Week of Marc),1.15 On March 15, Crosby Noyes brought in one of his foreign reporters, Mr. Richard Critchfield. Most of the talk was about
  • ? , NARA Date , 11-;;,1,~r;4 ,J• ,--~ , •j , ' .. ' -..... / i i C "E ~ !, : ' . ~ -.. DECLASSIFIED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NL,J '7 ~- l~ 7 ... '\ ........ . . , EXDIS BERLIN FOR AMB MCGHEE SUBJECii ROSTOW MEEfJNG WifH THE CH~NCELLO~ i' w DUR I
  • : the problem of the credibility of the American response has in any case been less in the forefront of European anxieties since the Cuban missile crisis of October 1962 and the end of the Soviet diplomatic offensive against Berlin. Nor can the force proposed
  • from Governor Richard J. Hughes of ·New Jersey who, in a letter to me, says: - - , r •ff "I returned from this trip with a high respect for the courage of the Vietnamese people and with a confirmed belief in the • honesty of the September 3 elections
  • that the briefing was use.f'u.l., but I am equalJ.3' convinced that it did little to change the views ot the three Senators present. 8. Please let me lmov if you want more detai1. ~ ·Richard Helms Director -... =M(JII
  • WITHALLOTHERPEACE-LOVING PEOPLEAND COUNTRIES OP' TKE WORLD,FOR THE NOBLEAIMOF COMPLETELY PROHIBITING DESTROYING NUCLEAR WEAPONS. ANDTHOROUGHLY 28 OEC l830Z CF/CP 90, ATOI SMASHER VASHINGTON AP>•MATOR RICHARD J. DALEY PLEDGED CHICAGO•s COOPERATIONWITH ATOMIC
  • in Berlin-Dahlem, of which Hahn became Director in 1928. On January 6, 1939, there appeared Hahn and Strassman's first publication of "experiments which contradict all previous results of nuclear physics". The nucleus of uranium was split into two parts
  • Philip Geyelin, Washington Post, on telephone Joseph Alsop, on telephone Peter Lisagor, Chicago Daily News, on telephone Wednesday, January 31, 1968 Joseph Rogaly, London Financial Times Thursday, February l, 1968 Richard L. Wilson, Cowles publications
  • in plenty of time for a chaage) • but we did n.ot wish to criticbe him directly becauae the m.alD thrust of his article was fair and helpful. wa• 4 , . On Tuesday. July 6. I saw Richard Dudman .r the St. Louis Poat Dispatch and Max Frankel
  • With the President Wednesday, June 19, 1968 - 1:00 p.m. AGENDA 1. Abrams' Plan. (Sec. Clifford; Military aspects. Press handling. Relation to Paris z. Indian Proposal. Stop bombing 3. Berlin 4. (Under (Under Wheeler; Under Sec. Katzenbach) contacts