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  • and that country were being ta.ken to people's hearts. Moreover, he took !lrm position• on the great is&uee of hls time. Be in no doubt whatsoever: the new governr,"lent wlll carry forward the pollclea that Harold Hold had lnltlated. through to the end
  • which the Secretary General believes is something new. The message from the French Delegate General as cbnveyed to Thant by Berard includes the following principal points: · 1. If the U.S. stop~ bombing, Hanoi will hold ta lks with the United
  • message refers to anti-Vietnam demonstrations in New Orleans and Philadelphia. It does not appear to be of direct concern to the White House. CHARLES Attachment SITHER ~ECEIVED ~1.'.Mt\RVlt~Vl/\TSON 1966NOV11 PM 4 15 . ,. • RECEIVED ..' -WHCA
  • the new arrange­ ments may have on the administration of the area. A month after the issuance of the President's order in 1951, the Secretary of the Interior issued his own Order No. 2658 to "delimit the extent and nature of the authority of the Government
  • , in the interest of decency, a strong government and a stable society in the Dominican Republic, for the American troops not to leave until well after the new, elected government has established itself. 4. The American troops have behaved spectacularly
  • they It If they violate the facts of life, we would be back with "business as usual. " SERVI,. ..: SS'" Sf!!@!f& y• -4­ Secretary Rusk noted that we had just pulled back the NEW JERSEY from around the Vinh area to a point closer to the DMZ. The President pressed
  • Andreas and other political prisoners their lives. In any case, we think our chance of getting him out of jail and out of the country will be a lot better if we play-1. it this way than if we pick a public fight with the new regime. The attached response
  • in Washington prevented it. I hope you vvill tell him that Mitzie and I are thinking 11 of him. TJohnson t , ' \- - . ... ... PidUC ACTjVHtES ourtesy Letters e r ob: L y Bird nd 1 ao much en ·oyed eeing you. la New York. The p rty t the rim' • d
  • ~rnber 1966, June 1967, June 1968 and June 1969. The last two are those referred to in the attached reply. The Shah hasn't yet defined his new program precisely enough for us to know how it would be related to the present program. DECl.A.SSIFIED NSC
  • ideas about new ways to end the war. The Vietnamese have agreed to (1) Add 65, 000 more troops (2) Lower the draft age to 18 (3) Extend the length of service. General Taylor said it will take at least a year to get these troops into combat although
  • RUSK: We do not know if we have anything yet. MR. ROSTOW: We are coming to a stage when we can begin to put the war to the American people in a new way . We have achieved self-determination in South Vietnam. We have pushed the North Vietnamese
  • ,. The President said it would be useful to point out that there is a new sense of dignity in the . co~~~ry!~ particul~~ly since the elections. V i ce President Humphrey said that Thieu told him that if South Vietnam could not make progress on its own the y did
  • how to handle tomorrow's Paris meeting. We either must speed up delegation or slow down talks. There was nothing new on the first day. We must not get too itchy to move on to new steps. We may want to repeat a few lines on Laos and Cambodia. I am
  • proposals when as ked a bout them -• . !" ...) some days ag o . SECRET J SERVJCESET -, . I - 2 ­ Mr . McCone said the photographic intelligence shown the President was so new that there had been little time to analyze it. He said that neither
  • tons) at 100 percent US uses, and put the subject of a rate change to the new GVN as soon as it is organized and operational. 7. In sum, our negotiating aim will be to make exchange rate unifica­ tion at Pl 18/$ more attractive to the GVN than
  • says their information is that they have attempted to secure 1, 000 bus ses in New York. However, the indication is that they will be only able to secure about 150 buses. 2. McNamara pointed out that as of now no buses have been contracted
  • , that they are expecting us to hit the air field any time we go into that area. Secretary Rusk said that we should not keep referring to targets being shifted from one list to another. Everytime we hit a new target, there is a notion around the world
  • and the new Senate President the Holy Father may be able to 3. ~OM£ ~F n-to~_c..-­ persuade them to begin informal thalks with (illl•,.._ ~S~ oO ,._.T_e-~ vJ\ 11~ 1"\t"f;,..J ~"fJ(F'. -Ultimately South Vietnam must settle its problems in South Vietnam
  • or two in a new government. II. Harriman 1 s instructions Ori monitoring by the ICC in the north half of the DMZ, Secretary Clifford and Mr. Ro stow were both opposed to this proposal. The President refused it. III . Cambodia Secretary Clifford said
  • , the Attorney General, Mike Manatos, Joe Califano, and myself. Senator Byrd asked about the Pueblo. The President discussed it briefly and said essentially that there was nothing new to report. The President also discussed the progress of the Paris Peace Talks
  • and letters might be prepared to get our legislation moving. Finally, the President presented the staff with inscribed. copies of the new book of his selected speeches and messages, To Heal and to Build. You can show this book to your grand.children, .he said
  • for briefings; substantial correspondence regarding the 1964 vacancy in the office of Attorney General and the temporal relationship between appointing a new Attorney General and the general election; correspondence regarding the nomination and appointment
  • REPRINT OF FINAL EUROPEAN SPEECH OF HENRY A. WALLA.CE FROM NEW YORK TIMES. I , I L 1 1 I - - ~.-~-:-~~~.,,. : ~--,-.- THB NBW . YORK TJMBS, THURSDAY, A;J>RIL 24, 1947. ·- ---, -- ,.. I, -···• . .. ·, . . ' The Text of ·.Wallace's Speech
  • Newspapers, Inc. 6 East 92nd Street New York 28, New York Dear M.r. Karsh: Senator Pepper left by train yesterday to attend the Sheriff's Convention in Florida, and did not get an OPPortunity to see your letter. He was uncertain as to the time of his return
  • if they provide any new insights. Meanwhile, today's developments on the grormd do not ~take us much beyond where we were when we talked this morning. )f9, Nathaniel Davis Harold OECR:E':P H. Saunders THE WHITE H1.1uSE WASHINGTON 'Tl,.:s ;, 7lvl OCJ
  • "'bite House ✓ AFC DOD At lunch today, and again at dinner, Foreign Minister Nogueira expressed himself with great bitterness with regard to the role and attitude of the Upited States Government in the recent Security Council session in New York. He said
  • ) Aggreaai-n aupport for auch 'Vital pendiag prc,J.ct• •• the excitiD.1 Downtowa Mall of Dowatnwn·~ ?roar•••• lac., the Pena­ aylYallia Aq_nae Plaa. aacl the National Park Servic.e' • new plan to add excitin& amemtiea to the Mall ttaelf. How would au.ch
  • with up to $90 million of new commitments. :. :~ , ·... "'. ~ On the other hand, President Valencia holds a different view. While, in May, he appeared ready to go along with the above comprehensive economic program, he has more recently said
  • NEW DELHI FLASH Deliver Info, Radhakrishnan. ss G PR p Will be released Johnson to President Washington 11:00 a.m. Washington daylight saving time. QUO?E Dear President USIA NSC Radhakrishnan: Once again we come together beloved man
  • MAZARAKIS, Michael-George A., Em.ba.asyof Greece TAN SRI 000 YOKE LIN, and PUAN SRI ONG, Emoo.ssy of Malaysia JOZAN, Sandor, Em.be.sayof the Hungarian People's Republic ECHAVARRIA, Herman, Ambassador of Colan.bia CORNER,Fre.ri.k, Ambassador of New Zealand
  • : Submit requests to Mrs. Stegall in duplicate Sec to White House police for new employees [multiple copies in folder] (60) --- (90) (60) ___ --(90) __ _ West Wing President's Office Press Office Congressional Liaison Executive Assistant's Office
  • and the United States, and to Korea's own resources of youthfulness and effort for self-help, Korea is now developing into a country of righteousness and resoluteness. I wish to present Korea to you today as a new country packed with aspirations. I affirm
  • i:.. DEC Rostow SSIFIED Authotity~ ~ ~ ~ ::..-."--"'- Wedne•day, December 27, 1967 B ~ -MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Surplua APCa for Israel Inatead of New Ones You will recall approving last May the aale to Israel of 100 new Armore d
  • . At the same time, new technologies of ore-finding, mining, and recovery may in some cases radically change prospective supply availabilities. New directions of public policy (e.g., as concerns air pollution, or the development of backward countries) could
  • at the Ira So Bushey Shipyard, Brooklyn, New Yorko ANTON BRUUN sunk with the dock at an angle of 45 degrees with the main deck awasho The shipyard contracted with Merritt, Chapman and Scott on July 3, 1967, to salvage the shipo Merritt, Chapman .and Scott has
  • ~';,~!Z, ~:. 4~ft..L i waa ple-a1·"4to ha."leyour 1ettet o!J~?!:'iia.'t'f2, 196&, c:omme.n~g on .my New Yf#ar1 ii! Da;y llala.nzl of Payme1tta mcea-igt>. ttou,r. ;tettet ~oa~lu c:ommeu~ two .Elt.tgi;c$tiooewhich, caU for Yoo,at.e -•~ggeal M w. ct.a
  • MEMORANDUM FOR JACK VALENTI Jack, do we koow anything about White Hou.se approaches by the J. A. Joa.es Co. of Chartoue. N. c. ? Tbue people ba.ve •&omo legitimate elalrns against Iraq, and are tryiD.5 to get. State a.ad AID to finance. a new AID pro­
  • , under a ·plan agreed to by Eastport officials and Frank Cohen, New York fi. nancier, for the use of deserted Passamaquoddy village. The vut floor apace of administratlve buildings and white coIonia.I housea of this development, 239 1tructure11 in all
  • DEPARTMENT 0F STATE ASSISTANT SECRETARY January 11, 1965 Note to Mr. McGeorge Bundy: The attached Sato interview in U. S. News and World Report might be as good as all our position papers in giving the President the feel of Sato' s thinking
  • . I know you are also concerned about prices and the state of the economy and the state of our nationo We have with us today the new Secretary of Defense, Mr. Clark Clifford, and I will ask Gardner Ackley, Chair­ man of the Council of Economic