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  • will other division may, Comnission-approved be supplementary to this TOC SOP. D. PROCEDURES 1. CONDITIONI - No release units read background. times have readings e.g., a. confined Chief: assess (Note: the passage minute RAMSreadings at least
  • .. 1-- ST TE M Geor e Bundy T e w.1hite House The enc ose is for 'White House clearance prior to transmission. Ben~ min . Read Executive Secretary nclosure: Cable to AmEmbassy NEWDELHI SEC:Ee~-EXDIS CLASSIFilC .. TIO ETER t,D T I '.N N, SEC
  • will do one of two things. The first would be to veto an appropriations bill; the second would be to withhold the authorizations to the departments. THE PRESIDENT: (Read minutes of yesterday• s meeting quoting Senator Dirksen that the President just
  • to understand these things. But I do want to talk instead of fight. The President read a memo from a recent visitor to Hanoi who reported that there had been a hardening of Hanoi's position. The President also read a cable from Ambassador Bunker which said
  • about this letter. The President read and suggested changes in the proposed Kosygin letter. The text of that letter follows: Dear Mr. Chairman: I fully share the concern expressed in your letter of October 20 about the continued tense atmosphere
  • the dates. We will go and see Wilbur Mills later this week on ; - 2. ­ The President then read a memorandum on the need for a tax bill. This memorandum, from an unnamed authority, pointed out that there is a very bad situation in world trade. Britain
  • and Lippmann.S, They' re not coming aboard. McNamara: We will increase bombing. up our attacks. President: It is inevitable. We must step {The President read an editorial by Norman Cousins.) co y 2 61\ ke e:: 1:,4. / Ball: I am holding a. raaisal view
  • this kind of latitude. 11 The President said we could hit these ports if there were no ships in them. Rusk interjected that the order should read "no ships." The order should not be conditioned upon whether they are "Russian ships" or on the registry
  • will wish to read also as a backdrop for your 11:00 A. M. appointment with Israeli Ambassador Harman. 5. Other 6. Personnel (Secretary Rusk) W. W. Rostow . llECLL\S
  • :• a drink and plq poker and join t.h• Rota?T Club. • But aoaetill.N 1• it not aater and probul7 mor e accn1.n.te when one haa to "fish or cut bait• to ha.Ye a plaia ill gv.-r in th• boaa •e chair? ot us uy read th• Tl"'\IIIU aiad. . He 1!apl7 aaid
  • Mr. Walt W. Rostow The White House clearance prior to transmission. Benjamin H. Read Executive Secretarf Enclosure: Telegram to Taiz UNCLASSIFIED CLASSIFICATION k• - ,3 _} WORK TELECOMMll~ICATIONS OPERATIONS DIVISION COPY UIICUSSIIDD
  • THATT~E • EXCHANGE OF NOTESSHALLNOTAPPLYTO WARSHIPS WHICHARENOTSTATIONED AT THE.ROTANAVALBASE. CONSEQUE~TLYj . THE OPENING SENTENCE OF PARAGRAPH 2 OF MYLETTEROF 4 MAY64 SHOULDBE MODIFIEDTO READ: QUOTE: - SECREI- -----------rROHIBITED SANITIZED E.O
  • lines were down and as of Wednesday morning 98% of the service had been restored. [3 of 5] 4 - The President read a confidential memorandum from an Air Force General in Viet Nam to Secretary McNamara in which the General pointed out
  • - 9-f'f I will read the opening statement tonight. Secretary Rusk: The talk to North Vietnam the North Vietnamese the March 31 speech. answer some of their delegation leaves tomorrow morning. Habib will tomorrow about exact meeting time. We expect
  • Helms: The North Vietnamese are convinced they won after Dien Bien Phu. The President: They think we believe that we lost the war. think so. They don't Nixon: We have got to tell our people to remember that every word they write will be read
  • NUTS. Now they haven't said anything. Rusk: Yes, that is good. President: Are all your senior officials asking? Rusk: Yes. Bundy: Pres. recollection is precise and right. (reads P. telegram to Lodge which pinpoints the pause continues
  • casualties, and the estimate is 50 to 300. (Secretary McNamara read the orders, directing that the strikes be znade only under ideal conditions). General Wheeler: A POL strike will not stop infiltration, but it will establish another ceiling on what they can
  • confidence in the dollar through demonstrating fiscal responsibility and other constructive measures to improve the balance-of-payments position. Read concluding portion of state­ ment he made at November 16 press conference announcing programs to strengthen
  • the beginning and the ending because these are the tt,Jo places t1Jhere emotion can be added. These are· also the tt,Jo parts which are listened to by deligates assembled.on the first reading. • When the document gets dot1Jn to exactnesses I have made fet,J
  • , requested of the Oovemment or Portugal a tive-year extension. The Unitod States is still anxious· to obtain a long•tem extension becaus~ this would obvious]i be of acha.ntage to both_ parties. I. said that I had- read the minutes of the conversatioM which
  • from the North Vietnamese who even refuse to acknowledge there are any North Vietnamese troops in South Vietnam. The Hanoi representatives are prepared to stay in Paris and even read the telephone directory if necessary to keep nonproductive talks go
  • it and as you go along the harder it gets to climb the hill; you will have the neurotics who will drop out. You read about it every day in our country because we have a free press. They have them too. The young have to defend the country for us. It was left
  • this? Abe Fortas: There isn't much difference of opinion, really. Clark Clifford wants to wait until Kosygin comes back with a reply before acting. I read Kosygin's letter differently. They are saying they may be able to get something underway, but only
  • relations you have read recently? Kould any particular kind of article/program on race relations help? What kind? 6) Do you find wh1te reporters sympathetic to Negro problems? What are the deficiencies 1n their coverage of these problems? From your
  • and they are t1nd1ng it hard atter five weeks to t1nd a •new lead• tor the next da7 1 a paper." But since tev Floridians read the Nev York Times, moat Florida newspaper readers get the impression that Claude Pepper is not onl1 Stalin• s closest budd7 but that he
  • . These have now been received and a suggested reply from the President to the Prime Minister is enclosed. C-:2=~~- D) ~n.t.xecucive Read Secretary H. Enclosures: 1. Suggested draft Copy of letter Bustamante. reply. from Prime Minister 1960.UG12 P1
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) fvR~n)F DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE Dl.JCUMENT RESTRICTION #i ,, s 11+-merrm--+---Read te S #4c rpt 1 f> Ben~ ~PALi \0,, '°
  • , however, and especially after reading the heavy criticisms in the just published report of the Senate Foreign Relations . Committee, I .have become convinced that parts of this program have now become comparable to coffeea matter of habit. My own
  • , or by Information Liaison (IL). Copies are available for your uae in the IL reading room (Room 373). Neilson Attachment: Publications C. Debevoise DECLASSIFIED List Authority YJ.s::e,4r; By ~ ~/.;u/-7"! , NARS, Date &/✓/~? -CONP"lf>ENTIAL -- ---- ee
  • to have the opportunity of a brief discussion. Your invitation to visit in due course your home state of Texas , I shall gladly accept and bring to reality on the occasion of my next visit to the United States. I have read myself a great deal about
  • DEPARTMENT OF STATE EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAT December 4, 1963 TO: Mr. McGeorge Bundy The White House Benjamin H. Read,yl Executive Secretary FROM: Mr. 3-t/ Attached for your information and files is a copy of a memorandum of con­ versation between
  • MEMORANDUM September 3, 1965 1/ · FOR RECORD I talked with Mrs. Gonella in Mrs. Johnson's office about the possibility of her seeing Princess Aliya of Afghan while she was here in Washington (See Read/Bundy Memo of 9/3/65). We agreed to say Mrs. Johnson
  • a magazine of persons carrying a banner which pj_cture read 11Black Liberation Front 11 and later heard it mentioned 11 11 that it was a 1ark and that the organization actually did. not exist. FREEMAN·mentioned. that she is the wife of MAX STANFORD
  • of President Sallal 1 s message, it is believed that a reply would not be appropriate. ~. . U i • l l H .. : "'-'• ~'-0 -~ Benjamin H. Read Executive Secretary Enclosure: Message from the President of Yemen LIMITEDOFFICIAL USE Exempted from automatic
  • -~ DearMla•·Hdmam II r We ha1e read wah • ·gRat-deal·.'Of em:e Md tnterelt ,ouw tbe dUIJCUltlea and html&hlps ,_ - . at ....._..,_.hers.,_.og • L ll -,en•••• thl8 dme. ' "1 We are .,.&n ·I H'lall• ~ I ;pr'oblim to the ICteDUOD of the 1t1elfare
  • wherever we want. This was America at it's finest." Whitney Young - "I left here with some cynicism and skepticism based on newspaper accounts which I read. However, I returned completely satisfied that these were free elections as well as could be expected
  • ASStsT A POSSIBLE JAPANESE BALLTSTir MISSitE PROGRAM•UNQTE o, PARA 4 A SHOULD READ QTE WE ANTICIPATE SPACE ?AGE 2 RuEHc 95304 C Q SIP ID 2 14 DECLASSIFIED ri'Y~3o2.~S-I > Date g;e , CttttP I OlltT IAC ,., ~ R Department of State PAGE ~2
  • . W. Tlis:::a 1 Jii:IA••" SERVICE SET •.. [4 of 7] ----··--------- ---~-··--~-----.-..-...-.------~-· MEEfll
  • will be that we have violated the treaty. If the test is detected by other countries, the reaction by them also will be that we have violated the treaty. Chairman Seaborg then read a statement which the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy had submitted
  • the Depart­ ment of State and the .Department of Defense. The President then read a letter from Mr. Brzezinski of the State Department Policy Planning Council. One of the points the President menti oned in the letter was - ~.Brsezineki 's assertion that "ae