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  • , relying on a previous experience when, after withdrawal of their units, the crowd had dispersed, decided to send no more patrol cars into the vicinity. · This time the maneuver did not work. tawdry night spots patrons joined the throng. Haphazard looting
  • Poat, and c. E. 11. Tuesday Night 10130 Ba How ere things going! la the President ~leeted up there yatt are a little slow obont 1t d01'11 here. Jh Understand Ua,vor Holcomb has announced tor either Garner or RooseTelt •ithin the last day or two
  • cODtrol in the comatry•lde a.t reamne mom.atmn ia reYOlutleaary deYelop­ meat.2 A• I read the latelllaence. it aeema more &ad more 11.kely that they are aoial to try to pill ua cheaply la the cltle• with mortar aad haraa•U.1 attack• la D. m aml IV Corp
  • . the pamphlet yours, September 16, 1949 Mr. Lo Zara Z!ff•D Publishing Company 185 North Wabash Chlcago, llllnols Dear Lew: I thought you interested 1n the enclosed letter, whic eoelved from Mr. Frank Wozencraft here 1n Wasblngton. to me. When o read
  • rally identified himself as a representative of the Concerned Group for Students from Orangeburg. Another speaker at the larger demonstration was Julius Lester of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. He read a letter received last Friday from H
  • silenced. Which is as it should be , for wars are not won without discipline . That, to repeat, is why I write now, before I am under any restrictions . I leave civilian life with the concern that any man must have who has eyes to see and read and ears
  • OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH THE DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP January 30, 1968 In the Mansion The President: I want to tell all that we know about the Pueblo incident. We are spending days and nights on the situation. I want you to treat this as a very confidential
  • , Marsh election night, Reid suffered a dizzy spell c, paper (and radio ) empires. Not long controls, besides his Spartanburg buys, while reading about the sweep of his be­ loved Republican party in the Congres­ ago, the Ridder brothers-Bernard H
  • , are forwarded to· the President's secretary for inclusion in · the night reading file, delivered by a White House messenger to the Head Usher, handed to the '. Doonnan, who either gives them to the Sergeant valets · on duty or takes them directly
  • would share it. But I am afraid she is a little too dependent upon us, upon the haven and privacy of home-now this house. When I look at the newspapers and read, "President Comes Badefrom Texas," "NATO, Vieb1am, Among Problems Crowding Calendar," and I
  • would share it. But I am afraid she is a little too dependent upon us, upon the haven and privacy of home-now this house. When I look at the newspapers and read, "President Comes Badefrom Texas," "NATO, Vieb1am, Among Problems Crowding Calendar," and I
  • is involved. That realization must heighten the urgency with which we consider our own responsibilities, and the responsibilities of our allies, in dealing with the issues raised by the Berlin crisis. -2- When I left Washington on Friday night, I ventured
  • that I had read personally to the Senator last night, which had had the President "express the hope 11 that we could reach a timing agreement within a few years. The administrative assistant undertook to inform the Senator promptly, and to let me know
  • that I had read personally to the Senator last night, which had had the President "express the hope 11 that we could reach a timing agreement within a few years. The administrative assistant undertook to inform the Senator promptly, and to let me know
  • Johnson Attached are the notes of your meeting Monday night in the Cabinet Room on additional troops for Vietnam. Those who attended were: Secretary Rusk (departed before meeting actually began) Secretary Clifford General Wheeler General Taylor Under
  • m.any people are charging., 1 ../1 On another issue, the President said that the leadership of Congress indicated to him in a meeting Monday night that it would not tolerate the large demonstration which is planned for late October. I have told
  • interest to Mr. MoMurr;y. I believe a reading of the full transcript will indicate that there has been no weakening of the United Stataa position on Berlin aa expressed by the President, and in statements whioh you have made on such ooeasions as your
  • J_ac~Va~enti/3'* I I'm afraid your immunity is nearly over, my friend. We will be bac{ , in" he US of A, about the first of March. I hope you have not had too-difficult ---.
  • / TAANSFEAREO TO HANDWRmNG FILI! r3l C06271871 EXEMPTIONS APPLIED TO THIS DOCUMENT ARE ON THE BASIS xoe SEGBU OF E.O. 13526 · Wednesday Night 6 p.m. Security Council Gen. Hickey(?) advises if put over anything will have.warm session. Kuznetsov says all
  • ROOMCWOTR ING> Received: LBJ Ranch Coml't'Cen. 9 :27 PM Monday 26 Februa:ry 1968 TO. THEPRESIDENT ' CITE CAPao,96 S!eR!T 1 ~S~ECR~ET-· =-· . I MR. ~OSTOWWANT!O YOU TO READ THE P'OLLOWINOREPORT_r • . ' TODAY AT ABOUT NOON,!L!MtNTs·or A us SPECIAL
  • Wedn-..diay February 16. 1966 5:1 5 P . M . Mr. President: This is State• s list of U. S . non­ milita.ry programs in Vietnam. It do not include claseified activitie in the political area. Bromley Smith A ttachment Log# 420, Read-Bundy memo dtd 2
  • available to the press. He read the papers, he said, and noted that Gov. fttnney had explained his Vietnam views by saying he 1d been "brain-washed" in Saigon. 'lhe President observed that an;y man "brain-washed" by diplomats and generals might have problems
  • of alternatives, we concluded that - - as nearly as we could now make an assessment - - the best thing for you to do would be to give a talk on television and radio on Tuesday night and send {but not personally deliver) a message to Congress on Wednesday. We say
  • . Newsmenwere notice&bly fewer in number a.round the aoa:f'erence after the·attack. A conf-erence rule was that no delegate give a:ny statement to any newsman other than at e. fo1:ma.lpress conference and tnie ru.J.e·w~s amen~ed on Saturday to read that.no one
  • task of rehabilitation before men can become productive. And they do not tell of the social dynamite locked inside the clusters of angry unemployed men seen on the streets of the slum, day after day and night after night. These are the raw materials
  • in the nation'. Acheson pointed out the main thing is that the President should not worry about this. He said he was pleased to read in Scotty Resi:on's column that the President gave up . whiskey and took up golf, The President interjected that "he was wrong
  • sketches of sick people; they hold be­ fore us in play and story a never-ending view of miser­ able, lost, lonely schizophen- ics." Novelist Lillian Smith who is fighting her own war against cancer could not be present last night to accept the Queen Esther
  • RATE OR STRAIGHT TELEGRAM DAY LETTER NIGHT LETTER 0 0 0 December 19, 1967 Mr. Loyd Hackler White House Staff c/o American Embasy Melbourne, Australia Please make credentials on stills. sure to arrange positions for White House Photo Atkins
  • ~. , ...._ •..W .,.., i\ 2 38 0 3 POUIOrt Charrg,e to the accounto/ I CIA..C.~.fl ► :it,,,:r DOMESTIC I i,1P10 ()R01 •; "R'f DAY URGE~H'.: SERIAL DE.F[RRED NIGHT NIGHT LETTER LETTER aboak1 tbec-k ~ of P..uo. dOlittd; $ WESTERN UNI ON CABLE
  • of last summer's dis­ fire \RAM plot are awaiting a hear'' ing. nf . Super told, in his co :ss1on,, of tos ing a fire bomb rnto .a building at 1516 N. 21st t. on night O July 29; two_ days 1 after Mayor Tate put the c1tr on a "limited emergency" . basis
  • by case basis, authorize night-time _defined significant targets in unpopulated, remote areas . Vietnam-Cambodian border. B-52 strikes on clearly astride the South C. Increase the strength of our active defensive measures of short duration in remote
  • Jenkins and Marshall Green, who was assistant secretary, the Secretary and myself worked in doing up the positions for the trip. Wewere handicapped by the fact that even at that time, we didn't have, and we never have had, really, a full read out from
  • not last out the night, and I called your roother,Judy,and told her just wanted to let me knowabout it. about this, and she said that she would go intnediately up to Santa Barbara to be with her. That night I didn't sleep well and worried about her
  • - ,IM,_ T DEFERRED NIGHT LETTER NIGHT LETTER SHIP RADIOGRAM Patrons mould check dam of service desired : otherwiae the meaage trill be transmitted as a telegram or ordin:iry cablegl'Ul. 1213-CT WESTERN UN I O N ~ R, B, WHITE PIIKBIDENT
  • ---·- -- .,_.... - ~-· --- -------·----------- _______ __ .. - . .... _ ... .__ .., --~· --·~- ... ----- ------~- THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON September 30, 1965 Juanita: Mr. Bundy said to send this up for the President's night reading. Dolores MEMORANDUM ~- DECLASSIFIED E.0. 12958, Sec. 3.5 NSC Memo, 1130/95, State Dept. Guidelines By-X:l..L NARA, Date ?- · '1
  • OF THE PRESIDENT'S EMERGENCY MEETING WITH THE BIPARTISAN CONGRESSIONAL LEADERSHIP AND THE CHAIRMEN AND RANKING MINORITY MEMBERS OF APPROPRIATE CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES The President opened the meeting by reading AP ticker item 105. Text of that item follows
  • Johns6n 0 The President then introduced Secretary Vance to the group. Secretary Vance made the following report: 1. Detroit is now close to normal. 2. The re we re only a few incidents last night. 3. Traffic has returned to normal. 4. Most
  • then read again the Thompson cable . He stressed the sentence "They (the Communists) always react negatively to a show of force." Mr. President, this was not the lesson of the Cuban Walt Rostow: missile crisis or the Berlin crisis. Secretary McNarnra
  • ? Secretary McNamara: There is no problem at present. General Wheeler: We do not have with us now a recommendation on reserve call-up. The Joint Chiefs are working on that today. The first troops will begin moving out of U.S. facilities tomorrow night at 6 p
  • will give our answer. ,. ,,. .. ME°eTft\fG'"~yltfGHTED - 4 ­ J Pwt,liceitio!"I Rltquires P&HAission of '"fl~right Hotdet! W. ihomas Johnson The record is as hard as it can be short of a contract. I told the Soviets last night you know what