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  • . 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
  • be insisted that all maritime unions and associations accept ·the-President's proposal (now ~eing implemented in·specific.form) for the resolution of disputes over manning and~ related.issues. * Construction subsidies should be conditioned 'upon prior
  • 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
  • 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
  • • 32 (submitted January 8, 1947) "Art1f1cial Meteors• Rockets Will Provide Tools for Interstellar periments• lJTDr. F. Zvicq Ex­ Printed in "Ordnance, the Journal of the AzTq Ordnance Association-,/ J~Auguat 1947 is1111e,vith illustrations. Dr. Zvicq
  • products . work. with some 95,000 4-H Clubs, school The Public Health Service will broaden its· groups, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, garden o! President Johnson put it very well in his program.s dealing with the problems of solid clubs, nursery associations
  • 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
  • or the President. She does many of the messages to large organizations. She has advanced Mrs. Johnson's trips with the finesse of a Marvin Watson trainee. We need her forever, but she could, I know, ring down a muc!! bigger salary at almost any newspaper in town. 1
  • 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
  • is a polished Specter's comments about speaker. A registered De­ the scenic joys of Expo 67 mocrat until he was de­ reached newspapers· be­ nied the Democratic nom­ fore the district attorney ination for district attor­ reached Canada. ney,, Specter quickly puts
  • 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
  • we can be P!Oud to be associated with, and everyone feels that Taylor can do an excellent job. State agrees that we should go ahead as economics dictate and stand our ground against any possible press reaction. Therefore, unless you have any personal
  • Eleanor Lambe rt Eleanor Lambert Co. , NYC Mrs. Dorothy Le Sueur Washington Post Miss Frances Lewine Associated Press Mrs. Luba Marks Elite Juniors, NYC Miss Marya McLaughlin CBS Mrs. Winzola McLendon Washington Post Mr. John Moore John Moore Inc.,, NYC
  • and in Sweden and Germany. He is married to·an American and has two adopted children. The Ambassador was very active i i: the communication field for t he Norwegi an Government-in-exile during World War II. After several years of private newspaper work he rejo
  • and reasoned although because hand and who as well. for the United front, indeed as befitted a close of policy have been read into no positions, and Bundy through friendly. in 1939-41--and associated diffe·rent was largely terms, any
  • and Urban Development before the end of 1968. Commission Staff Executive Director--Howard E. Shuman. Associate Director--Allen D. Manvel. Assistant Directors--Frank T. Destefano, Arthur S. Goldman, Richard K. Guenther, Stanley D. Heckman, Jack Noble, David
  • . SAYS MAGNITUDE OF ASSISTANCE DOES NOT MEET NEEDS AND BELIES EXPECT AT IONS OF GOG WHICH IS TRYING TO CONCEAL DIS-APPOINTMENT. IT ALSO COMPLAINS GOG SHOULD BE ALLOWED SELL MORE WHEAT THAN , PERM ITT ED. · co~~UNIST AND A~D NAT URE OF FAR-LEFT NEWSPAPERS
  • Minister, appeared more preoccupied with a better German association with decisions affecting tactical than with strategic nuclear weapons; President de Gaulle had not yet begun to use the French nuclear force as a diplomatic instrument; and American
  • 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
  • ment. Several papers highlight portion of arrival statement in which Vice President expressed "abiding and unchanging interest of Uanited States of America in the independence and integrity of Lebanon." Newspapers report Lebanese were delighted by Vice
  • . I doubt that he would have put the missiles in Cuba, but once he got them in, he wouldn't take them out. '' The President said that Kosygin was constrained by restrictions which had been placed on him by his associates in Moscow. The President said
  • AssooIATION OF AMERIOAN RAILROADS TRANSPORTATION BUILDING WASHINGTON 0, ALBERT R. D. G. BEATTY As&IS'EANT 'VIOB PRESIDENT September 18 , 1964 Dear Mrs . Abell : We have been able to turn up four additional items from newspapers about
  • INITIAL The Scenarios to suggest either that for SIGMAI-66 are not intended de-escalation desirable illuminating or likely. o~ the war 1n SEA is These some of the problems wlrl.ch may be associated level SCENARIO of hostilities. are aimed
  • (Preferred approach by American Banking Association) 4. Lender to Specify Monthly of Credit (Muskie) ·s. In all transactions above {$100-300 etc. some floor amount to be negotiated) credit costs would be stated annually as in the Douglas proposal. Below
  • . of but moralism Kennedy / !:ly Americans and ir. the public as Ha==i::a::. . us for the s:..:c..:: act:..o~s 7 as was mear.~· -~• somet. ...... _i:ig r.,o::::-e9e::::-so:ial. it, nerve Anglo-Saxon ulti:wate associated . or Bri t.:..sh people
  • years old, has been a Gaullist since 1944 and was a close associate during the latter's of De Gaulle period of retirement before 1958. Pompidou is a graduate of the prestigious Ecole Normale Superieure as well as the Ecole des Sciences Politiques. He
  • 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