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  • 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
  • NATIONAL Oc, ARCHIVE\ia Allen Fisher Fwd; LBJ, New Orleans '6N Allen Fisher To: Allen Fisher Mon, Mor 12, 2018 at 1:36 PM On Wed, Mar 7, 2013 at 4:36 PM, Sid Davis wrote: I
  • NATIONAL Oc, ARCHIVE\ia Allen Fisher Fwd; LBJ, New Orleans '6N Allen Fisher To: Allen Fisher Mon, Mor 12, 2018 at 1:36 PM On Wed, Mar 7, 2013 at 4:36 PM, Sid Davis wrote: I
  • to the· total transportation picture in North America and to the role of air transport. - 3 What I will --That ask of you you be aware of --that you be aware.of new technology; of --and that your actions today is quite the desires
  • need to look at where we now are as well as where we expect to end up. 2. Ask Secretary Rusk to outline the State paper and to make additional comments if he wishes to do so. 3. Ask Ambassador Goldberg for his views as seen from New York. 4
  • and I got together late (!_o ;i. 7 p Friday night which was sent you by Mr. Macy, there were listed (!.o 3 g the Executive Editor of the Chicago Daily News (Lawrence S. (!_ o // ~arming); a foreign correspondent, now city editor of the '. N ew e_oo1.oO
  • not publish m_rname.) D.c. * PHILIP 8100 W. D. MENSING MCCALLUM 9TltKff GKltMANTOWN .. HILADKL .. HIA ""• .. A. June 26th, 1952. Mr. Drew Pearson, The Daily Washington-Merry-Go-Round, Washington, D. c. Dear Mr. Pearson: letter" with reference
  • 4, 1963, is:=;w3 of "The Richmonrl. News Leader", a Richmond, Virginia> daily newspaper, repor·:;ec1 that G~orge Lincoln Ro~k~·rell h.:id, on the previous day, again .. applied for the American Nazi ?arty to be charte:-ed in the State of Virginia
  • , 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
  • · · / 'r . .' I I \ t ' 1· . · You asked me to check on the status of Ezra~eiss as a result of your call from Congressma~mannel>
  • LBJ LIBRARY DOCUMENT WITHDRAWAL SHEET Classification Doc# DocT~~e Doc Info 023 cable Page 1 of 1 Pages Date Restriction Bundy and Komer to the Ambassador, New Delhi [sanitized 9111100] d- a i:;- P"'--f-,,.,. j 0 s I· .;J.;-11 #~J/p
  • involved calling up reserves. Secretary Rusk felt that it was important that the new military proposals have civilian (i.e., State Department) endorsement. He thought he should participate in the Congressional testimony. Mr. Bundy suggested
  • that would do if we stop the bombing. We've had maybe 200 flickers and Harriman tracks down every probe, but so far there has been nothing." ### August 7, 1967 NOTES ON PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH VIRGINIA PREWETT OF THE WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS, MARCH 14, 1967
  • ~ ~ = L; f- ~ '-' Q 01---~---c ~N-~U~S~-~c~$v~u -E~ ' ,,, "'-- THE WASWHCTON DAILY NEWS. SATURDAY, AUCUST 1. 1936 Jim F_arley Bias Adieu to His Elegant I I C. OTIOIAS gll\ -cnclO
  • for a New, More Secure System ------------------ 28 Crypto-Secure Telephones -------------------------------Besponsibility for Telephone Security at the Wh:l:te House ~~-------------------•----~---------------- 30 31 Other Telephone Becamnendations
  • !Plfj. 4 ' u. J am uvzi.i:1..ng, M /Ji.Aedo11. o/. t.Ae Natwnal !ln.v~M CorrmU.i:.ee on F. O-:1. (!]ff 1fledi..on aAiAM /Mm ma.nu pM an4, ·i?p,i 'CJJnmerd:✓.J . . made b!J, t.h.e 'Pll.e44 and. oih.eA new-:1 medi.o.. AILe !JOU adve.lt.4e
  • Record, 10/18/65~ p. A5856-A5857. Reprint of editorial from Chicago Daily News, October 18, 1965. Klan modernizes its terrorism. Drew Pearsono Washington Post, 10/18/65, p. Bll. Story of Klan use of citizens band radio, infiltration of police forces
  • equi;:,ment Washington substantial number But even at the anot~er ½;ii:c Laos.** and flow of new weapons in and perhaps Hanoi * rifles Chinese) became highland border ;:aobili ty basic (mostlv regiment, in If was Cong
  • is that it is 6n its way to becoming [9 of 26] ­ - 6 - a paper of major national influence. Certainly, its new crew, headed by the young Chandler, is genuinely con­ cerned about exercising ' leadership to straighten out the sorry state of affairs politically
  • File unit description: The events and aftermath of the riot in Watts, Los Angeles, August 11?15, 1965; calling up of federal troops; decision whether or not to declare Watts a disaster area; situation reports on daily events; programs to improve
  • STATES:MIGHT BE MADE'. •-:°'.'-'. .. , .... ' ,,r 1 1I~' • •· . IT WAS LEVISON'S SUGGESTION THAT.':.PEOPLE LIKE-:JQHN KENNETH GALBRAITH,,' . ,_..:;·;-· :: ' KING, JAMES WECHSLER, ·THE EDITOR ·or THE' "NEW ·YORK POST~, DR.,'.JOHN .. BENNETT, PRESI DENT OF UNION
  • " indicated him to be a Negro, a new element of ·tension was injected into relations between the races. In December, 1966, a jazz musician named Posteal Laskey was arrested and charged with one of the murders. 1967 he was convicted and sentenced to death
  • . The Crown Prince's feat was a source of great pride for Greece, and was warmly applauded by all segments of the population. The young King is of national and world closely and by reading News and World Report well-informed on current events. He keeps
  • 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
  • newspapers of significance and four English-language dailies. The Japanese publishing industry brings out more new titles each year than its American counterpart. There is a tre~endous variety of magazines, appealing to all tastes, many of which have very
  • -·..·,•· • .-·.:·:._.· .,,•. . . .-.· ·.,.• ·._... ,, ,. . •.· ,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
  • -thirdo eventual]3 through the m111tont ant unshckable Southern and Weotern support that r,ould ronult. !hero is n eentJ.mont here that 90 New York votes 1·,111 oont .more than -90 votes olsewhero. The oame eoonomio pressure thEit 1e rapidly puttins Hoover
  • PAGE-SIX -FORT. MYERS NEWS-PRESS THE ·FORT MYERS ·PRESS.. -abllahed 11·8'. -1 • daily 11iDce HU. and THE TROPICAL 'NEW .. Published by thti NEWS-PRESS PUBLISHING COMP.ANY' Collier Arcade. Fort Myera. Fla..· Every mominR", seven dais a week CARL HANTON
  • tment t o a n art icle in t he New York Tines o f Febru.ary l5 in which Janes Rest on ncr;1ed s everal USG offi ci c..ls who are former NS..ll... of :::'i c e rs a nd i ndicated that t hey had · b een p ri . .;y to t he ?1T3A-CLA · financ i a l
  • a realignment of politi­ cal parties. His weaknesses appear to be his arrogance and unknown political strength be­ yond his home island of Crete. Mitsotakis enjoys the support of the Athens daily Eleftheria, which is one of the most influ­ ential journa.ls
  • . The "Alabama Journal," a daily newspaper in Montgomery, carried a news item on November· 29, 1967, indicating that the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery will observe its ninetieth anniversary on December 10, 1967, the same day·the Klan march
  • . But this fact does not imp:y that contac~s between our two cou::1tries are scarce. During the last century hundreds of thousands of Norwegians made the Un~ted. States their new homeland, and there are few people in this country who have not relatives in Americ
  • 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
  • on April 5 it was stated that "aircraft types will not be discussed with the GOI in New Delhi". It was not until April 11 (Deptel 2060) that I even received authority to discuss the possibility of HF-24 development which I proceeded to do the following day
  • 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
  • were first int~0duc84 it might_. have been worllh public money to .make some demonstration of the new method of rat killing. But a~~ually the aae of anticoagulants is very simpleo Labels on packaged bait for sale in 50,000.00 stores all over America
  • might do some writing for Hearst papers after his retirement. k. Geo.rge Christian # # # I ). t July 30, 1968 NOTES OF THE PRESIDENT'S MEETING WITH VIRGINIA PREWETT, WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS July 1 S, 1968 Miss Prewett: I have been thinking about