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  • and their wives should be allowed to come because they were closely associated with President Kennedy and are still associated with President Johnson. Mrs. Johnson should be alerted early if the President wants her to come. '} ,-He ()__M !- q ~ (,...,_.u
  • , Detroit Economic Club, Bohemian Grove Business Council, National Association of Manufacturers, Cleveland Committee and American Council on Germany. In each c;_i~y I also held one 0.:_ mor~ ..P!J.~~~~fE:rences and TVier.formance_~-~-~u~_!_q panel
  • told him that he had enormously complicated our task, and that I simply could not understand how a man who had served as a colleague could make a statement like this without any preliminary discussion whatever with any of his former associates. 2. I
  • capabilities of the state enterprises, establishment of priorlties for future development projects and increased private sector participation in the economy. The release of the second tranche of this loan, $5 million, will be conditioned on progress alone
  • million - would be for local currency of which 29 percent will be for U .s. uses, 6 percent for private enterprise loans and 65 percent for a grant in support of the Korean military budget. percent U .s. use portion of the local currency sale together
  • reaffirming their close personal ties. 2. M onnet is particularly concerned by what he interprets to be a deterioration in the U.S. position in Germany brought a bout by the hard line the U.S. ' has taken on the offset-11T he association of cash with troops 11
  • a step­ in the right direction, but not for daily newspaper consumption. If you could put Vietnam now in the context of what you said then about the nature of the struggle in the developing world and the necessity for dealing with an adversary on hi
  • of the Association of Jewish Ex-Servicemen of Great Britain, were around the table with the Chancellor, with the benefit of an interpreter. During the conversation, the Chancellor asked if I minded discussing the Middle Eastern situation since I had just returned
  • • _ • "!.- · ~ · -'· : . :. , • _. - refonna. In this reApectJ the work of the lnttfrnatJonal Longshorcmen•s. . Association (ILA) has been par~tcul arl y noteworthy. Under the patrio-tic and imaginative leadership of its president, Thomas Gleason,· the ILA has assigned to Saigon four
  • . 3039 why don't you sit down?" If these facts are knovin, I cio not hear about them. I read the newspapers daily and I listen· to the news broadcasts. One would really think President Johnson was the leader of some kind of inter­ national gang
  • that the task of Latin Americ~economic is primarily increasingly and sod~l clear development a task for Latin Americans. We .in North America are the junior enterprise. We have helped development momentum the nations of their own. partners
  • , stimulate the private sector, stimulate exp:)rts and encourage private foreign investrrent through import liberalization, related fiscal measures, and incentives to private enterprise. (By contrast, the Indian Government's new Patent Bill seems to us a step
  • have been considerably reduced as candidates associated with him in the key provinces of Guanabara and Minas Gerais suffered humiliating defeats. Gordon thinks Lacerda 1 s group is all heart and no body -- not able to co·mmand broad national support. 2
  • to let things go on as they have been. I believe that the leaders in Hanoi can never afford to look undignified or to lose face, and they can never do anything which confirms newspaper stories that they are looking for peace. A newspaper story
  • A THREAT AGAINST TH£ ROCK PILE. :-ns COl'!MUNICATIONS INDICATED tNCREASINa PREPARATIONS FOij . ATTACX. ON 24 AUGUST wE INTERCEPTED A i".ZSSAGE FROt'I AN ~.,TILLERY ELE:l".ENT ASSOCIATED WITH THE 320Tli _DIV WHICH ·osoo HRS,.. '~5 AUGUST• (~E :-.JEVER SAW
  • to a Member. But Ottinger is a pretty bull-headed type, and I simply am raising the point that he is perfectly capable of starting a pretty good flap in the newspapers about it. Attachment R a...;H ARD L. OTTINGER SOUTHERN DISTRICT OFF CE: ROOM 214 MAIN
  • place, Mrs. Chenault is very much associated with far right wing Republican politics and with the extreme hawks on the Viet-Nam issue. Should it be considered desirable to include another Republican, the Vice President feels there are many people who
  • in September in Sweden, as sug9ested in your memorandum of August 16. I feel that such a. :message would associate .American scientists: ~t least in the eyes of foreigners, too clearly with the u. s. Government... I I i l I I I It is open to question whQ
  • of the Freedom of the Press Committee of the Inter-American Press Association} in which he sald on the unlversity s ituatlon: 11 0! course I r -e gret the violence I would be ashamed not to do so. " This statement bu been widely publklzed in Buenos Aires and here
  • . First, suggest leading thing a scenario you should have a late in orde~ to present position for use of this afternoon_ press the paper itself. in every newspaper is rightly possession. paper . conference This should command the the next
  • up Joint Export Associations to help U.S. get into the export business. (no legislation) companies Reducing programs the foreign squeezing more exchange offsets cost on military of government Promoting foreign The controversial 1
  • permission the length of the treaty's effect, the first period of which expires in 1969. In the same way the United States acted as the initiator of new NATO military efforts. Already an association of naval powers of the bloc, continually operating
  • ' for this purpose and the decisions that are associated with the stabilization of our military program. (a) Complete Cessation of Bombing in the North A decision to stop the bombing is a logical alternative to our present course in Vietnam. The bombing halt vould
  • of a new South Vietnamese nation a. an amnesty offer in · -which the Constituent Assembly might be associated with the government b. enlarged and sustained efforts to defect VC leaders c. a radical expansion in Chieu Hoi efforts ..... - - -· •. - r
  • •: (TRANSLATION) LI NO. 52849 T-44/R-IV Spanish [TELEGRAM] VWAO43 UD PD NEW YORK NY 21 813P EST THE PRESIDENT THE WHITE HOUSE VERY HAPPY TO BE IN NEW YORK, WHERE I CAME AT THE INVITATION OF I KIND FRIENDS AND DISTINGUISHED ORGANIZATIONS AND ASSOCIATIONS
  • . This Foundation will be financed by rupees, surplus to our need, now on deposit in India. It will be governed by distinguished citizens of both countries. It will be a vigorous and imaginative enterprise designed to give new stimulus to education and scientific
  • ' coui·ses of act1011. 4. To ask Park publicly and privately to associate himself with our view that he too seeks a peaceful solution. 5. To obtain a reaffirmation that the authority of General Bonesteel and the chain of con1mand will be absoiutelr_ observed
  • the newspaper image of the President's position in the country with the response he got. My reply was this is a company town aud the Washington Post a ·n d New York Time,s can easily be misread. Samuel White. Paris correspondent for London Eveni3 .standard, came
  • desirable because of your close association with Dr. Erhard during his term as Chancellor and the frequent public suggestions coming from Germany that the United States did not perhaps fully appreciate Erhard's friendship. Erhard has asked to see you in Bonn