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  • -elected Vietnamese lead•rs in immediate post-election period. 1. The newly-elected Vietnamese govermne%lt can be expected to focus on only a few major problems in. its early months. In order to contribute to the new government's capability and to assist
  • : The New York Daily News, the New York Tribune, the New York Evening Post, the Chicago Times, the Detroit Free Press, the Cincinnati Inquirer, the Cin­ cinnati Gazette, the Columbus Crisis, and the Indianapolis Sentinel. On August 23, 1864, Lincoln recorded
  • for the balance of this year. The two-month old interim Yerovi Government inherited the budget problem from the Junta. The deficit last year was estimated at from $30 to $35 million, largely financed by inflationary means. The new Government is planning on keeping
  • what their action at Samu forc-e d us to in Jordan, Arthur, under continu­ ing pressure in New York, feels str'.o ngly we should rlo nearly that. (b} Israel has not yet given us permission to visit the nuclear plant at Dimona. Our la.at visit wa.s
  • . Schidlowski came _h ere from Paris for .the dedication ceremonies which were also attended by Government representatives. JTA Daily News Bulletin / September 19, 196? Russians, Arabs Renew Attack on Israel as Emergency Assembly Session Concludes UNITED
  • ~ o. 12356, Sec. 3. CQNFIDEN-'IlAL.. Tuesday, September 12, 1967 -- MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJEcr: PL 480 Package I -- Four agreements totaling $35 million in commodities Herewith, as promised, is the first package of new PL 480
  • emo #78a cable #79a ca01 e #8T caote te-xt of cable frOf!) Amb.7vjcGhe~ A'-d 13 s.eer& vv-, ll-
  • ±ed :tn:fo . #'.l!l--me~~-Hrn--nn~~e-H~t-..:l~ffl-4"1efj~~ #80b cable text of New Delhi 1025 secret 4 p ·10/19/65 A F I LE LOCATION NATIONAL SECURITY FILE , . . . .. . McGeorge Bundy - Memos to the President , vol . 16 , Oct 15 - Nov. 19
  • INGTO~ PQ:ST," A DAILY NE'MS?A?!R !N THE WASHINGTON, D.C. AREA, CARRIED .AN ARTICLE CONCERNING ~RS. ANNA CHEN~1AULT. THE ARTICLE INDICATED THAT :\ffis. CHEml A ULT INTE~D!D TO PROCE£D•TO NEW YORK CITY WHERESW- WOULDA~AIT THE ELECTION RESULTS ON NOVE~BER
  • , Sec. 3.4 NlJ . 93 -.;,.;> I ,; 0 'N~ Date l -.>t>-9'/ .. OCTO-BER : •·12 ;_. l96 8 -~_'i_.DREV - PtARSON~s ··:coLtiMN.~~tHIS ) !ORN ING :MAKES:. TWO· NEW RE?EAT· ~E~f-ALLEGATIONS ·. CONCERNING. VICE. PRESIDENT · HU!PHRE.Y .ANO THE ';VIETNAM' ·VAR
  • t l V, II-~-,~ 1 CONFIDEN'flAl.. - Saturday - December 1o. 1966 M EMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Loans !or Chile AID requests (Tab B). u.nde.r the new commitments procedure, your appxoval oi a $65 million assistance package for Chile
  • ·.:. ·.. some of their followers. But past b.i tterness"ha·s :~bee_:n smoothed over and the new ticket is working out. Diem thinks th~re is little doubt that Thieu-Ky will win the election. B_u~ _he has cautioned bot..½. _m en_·.- and their supporters
  • • (1ecoaclary eaplo ■loa.1: 3. 929 from New 1966 - Sep 1967 ver ■ u• 1, 224 from Hew 1965 - Sep 1966); ancl - enemy effort to prepoelttoa &Dtlclpation of tb• ltarrler. euppll•• W. W. 2 farther Ro ■tow 1outb in ..-6filOllli'l!-- VleatiaM 2912, N8Yemltel
  • by linking him too closely to the USG at this ata1e . That makes sense. The one name you may not know is William Webater. He is retiring as Chairman of the New England Electric System in Boston and is considered one of the e lde r states men of the utility
  • States and Swedea which ·w Ul aupereede the pre1ent A&reement algned la 1956 . The new ,Agreement. woulcl haft a term et 30 yea.ra. The primary reaaoq.s for eatedng into a aew Agreement are: (aJ To provide the framework·for aaaurlag the loa1,-• term
  • NA FORM 1429 (8-86) 1 WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE RESTRICTION 2p C (duplicate, #2, NSF, Country File, New Zealand, "Visit of PM Keith J. Holyoake") 2p C (duplicate, #2a, as above
  • Nam to the whole scene; victory in Asia: -- brief the key editors and communicators just as the group was briefed (Dick Helms has no obje·cti.on to using Carver when it•s off-the-reco,rd and no public attribution); -- let good news speak for itself
  • . 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
  • our bombing in the North is limited and timid. He does not appear to know about some pf the new developments around Hanoi, and his positive reco·m mendations were limited to two: we should put the Marines in combat pretty soon; and two, we should go
  • the Nigerian dispute. We will work for peace in Nigeria every way we can. But the solution will have to come mainly from Africans. 3. The new U.S. aid policy for Africa is designed to build regionalism and burden-sharing, not to serve a.s a smokescreen for U. S
  • , 000 tons more in the pipeline than earlier this week.. While this will carry Indian shipments in­ to November, delaying our decision on the new agreement until you get back will still~- cause shipments in November and December .to ·d ip. WC· thought I
  • GOVZRNf1ENT. THIS CAN ONLY BE DONE SO LONG AS ERHARD REMAINS IN - OFFICE. AFTER HIS RESIGNATION THE FEDERAL PRESIDENT WILL PROPOSE A NEW CHA NCEL LOR. CUSTOMARILY, THE PRESIDENT FIRST TURNS TO THE SfHO.~GESf PARLIAMENTARY -PARTY, I.E., THE CHRISTIAN DEi10CRATS
  • is one of toughness and confidence. Although leaders expect Hanoi and Haiphong will probably be destroyed and that the war may last many more years, they feel the worst is behind them, that the daily bombings are absorbed into the country's ~rganism
  • -·..·,•· • .-·.:·:._.· .,,•. . . .-.· ·.,.• ·._... ,, ,. . •.· ,6 ,:.··..:.•.: ·', ~/1· • • .-''· • : 1 • I ,'. .• , mischie·;qous. •, " .. ,·•., · - 2 To emphasize her determination to rea~h equilibrium, • the U.K. Government has announced a series of new domestic measures de.signed to resolve her
  • has announced a series of new domestic measures de.signed to resolve her balance of payments problem. The United States is confident that with this broad u.nder~:tai-iding and the actions cited above the United Kingdom will· achieve its objectives
  • by the Gilpatric Report. Neither the ACDA nor Rusk Memorandum includes this point. 3. The third proposal:, suggesting that the partial test ban treaty be extended to underground tests presumably without on-site inspection, is a new proposal that has very recently
  • Rusk's report of Ambassador Goldberg 1s conversation with Secretary General U Thant was based on the attached summary of a telephone report from New York. The full m~morandum of the conversation is not yet ready but will be available by morning. Bromley
  • NO. PSX3184 Tunis 3950 26 0200 Tunis 3950 26 0200 Presseh USINFO Washington, DoCo Bourguiba speech at KEF Aug. 23 to new UGET officers as carried in Tunis daily La Press~ Aug. 25; ~In your motions, you took up the most varied international problems. All
  • On this 1fu1ti proposal, I thought it umdoe to ex­ ~I I \_ ·, pose the Inter-Jmericsn Davelopm~nt Bank to potential criticisn1, •P ~rticularly ~hen we ~ould be going up to .. · ·.·· . Congrass next sesoion for new funds for the Bank. . Even . ,. t11ough the S
  • •oughly lta pi-eaeni foirm at least untU March. Tbe latter l• Coope~'• choice. and tt h ~lea.rly Mu Taylor'• .as well. It haa the advantt.a• that 1n March m.\d.er cover of a new Natlonal.A1eem.bly meet1n1 there could be a reconstructlOA ol the government
  • To: The President The White House From: Orville L. Freeman Secretary of AgricuI Pursuant to your req~est that a plan be developed to make use of rupees in India, such a proposal is now being developed. The new Public Law 480 gives authority for the use of rupees
  • text of New Delhi 779 secret 1 p 09/24/65 A 11-S fil HlQHlQ.. #~..mame-~--roe--~~~~Lent.,_j::J:Ow......J;i+-.W-~~~ F ILE LOCAT ION National Security File~lll. . . .111!. .~ McGeorge Bundy , Memos to the President , vol . 15 , Sept . 23 - Oct . 14
  • , and San !Mia and Nogalee, Arizona; ... Parks are being built or renovated 1n Browns• ville and El Paeo, Texaa, and Tecat•, California; •· Public bu.lldin • a.re being landscaped Yeidro, California; •· A ewinunlng pool is boing openod in Columbus, New
  • ,, _. of writing a story -- they recognized there was nothing new in what I ~ said. The only one who did was Breslin, a New York feature writer who is not up on foreign policy or politics. ,J : } ,..:. • -.-:, _ • ·=.;. i·-....._., '.. .. February 6. 1967 Mr
  • will total no more than $285 million at the new rate. ~ The F-111~ cancellation is now estimated to reduce U. K. · procurement from the U.S. by $861 million - or $731 million after the $130 million in estimated termination costs are taken into account. ~ts
  • {the number of Soviet merchant ships going there increased slightly in July}, we would read _the increased stridency as a logical continuation, rather than as a new departure, i.n Soviet efforts to defer us. Inc.id~ntally , the Soviets do not appear so far
  • , understand the extent to which the job in New York is and must be limited in its authority and, ultimately, subordinated to the Secretary of State. He has come to understand the inherent limitations of the post. 3. On the other hand, he is intensely loyal
  • ~ i 11"/rnfl'a ho,, to the President from McG. B. Secret '1 to Karachi and New Delhi secret Fran~~sBator memo 09/03/65 A I() 'j. I t,.s /.I 2 p 09/02/65 A 0'1/0'2.,/fDS 4 1 p 09/02/65 A 2 p 09/01/65 A 2 p 09/01/65 A I 1f ·o