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  • President, The White House, WASHINGTON, D.C. sincerely, Bahadur -::-_i..T iONAL August SECURITY cou ~crL 4, 1964 Bob The attached is from a· recent to me from Chet Bowles. ( letter 11 drawing with The issue" is the old chestnut India
  • if Israel would make the deal proposed by David in the first part of paragraph 16 (p. 17). Exports to the U.S.: DOD is pressing this as hard as it can; perhaps Bob McNamara could press it a little harder. Desalinzation: This should go forward urgently: Jack
  • wishes for a year which will certainly be hard but he hopes will be rewarding. W. W. Rostow WWRostow:rln 1 ::3j '@µ;mcnrp -- SENSITIVE Saturday, January 14, 1961 2:30 p. m. Mr. President: Herewith three moves in the peace field reported by Gov
  • ,~ 11Vn Zif:' (.iIJ.~C..,)-,) ~;J!."/·°'c.,::;r n •
  • that the quantity likely to become available for reallocation would·be very small in comparison with the 200,000 ton reallocation which the Dominicans had originally · hoped to obtain. The Embassy has confirmed that allocation of even token quantities should have
  • roll. Discuss speech unit, spaoe etc. Hope yr week-end was somewhat restful Call me, ton~ .w • - MEMORANDUM SUBJECT: Dewey PART WAY FARES Long has informed the train. go to car All reporters number where a railroad collect all part
  • the meeting by repeating a sentence which he had read at the beginning~ i . e .: 11 The greatest single requirement ;is that we find a way to ensure the survival of civilization in the nuclear age . A nuclear war would be the death of all our hopes
  • with or the violation. of our word. TJ.e peace I speak of ls a peace under whlch a man can go to bed at night and feel confident he will awake in the morning. when he awakens, slaughtered. hope. A peace in which. he will not find hie neighbor or his village elders
  • under whlch a man can go to bed at night and feel confident he will awake in the morning. when he awakens, slaughtered. hope. A peace in which. he will not find hie neighbor or his village elders A peace la which men can raise their families
  • for your letter of June 14 on the tragic events of recent weeks in the Middle East. 1 value the opportunity it presents to share with you some of our own concerns over these events and our hope that this time the peoples of the Middle East can build
  • is in vcey general teTms. known if it Wo a!_)provc a.."'ldstrongly tn.\pport your going t,, the Ill,1.F~ Ap:irt !rom the meneures it shows th-, U.S. b ready to ncilve the problem. • l i . I • I! :I I i We very much hope tho'lt tho progr~ will be 1
  • and Drew Pearson wa.rmq commending both of them tor their part in the anti -Klan broadcast and got back a very gracious letter from Drew about it . I have also sent him and Henry Wallace a cow of this letter. I hope to get to see you soon . Fnclosure
  • for your timely and constructive report. As always I greatly value your views. I hope that at a mutually convenient time after your return there will be an opportunity for you · to meet with senior officials in the Executive Branch for a further
  • •BFSTRJCTEP DATA 1 ~ M§T¥G!!D DAT£! - z. - 5. . The Bureau ol tb.e .Budget ha.a reviewed thia propo ■ al. BOB believe• Chat aome obaolete weapona ahould be retired on a faster echedule than 11 now being propoaecl. lt doe• not recommend that you
  • of friendship that link our two countries, and will neve:r forget your dedicated work in the cause of peace and freedom. You have·, old friend, my hopes for your happiness and health in the years to come. UNQUOTE ~ /(a-~ .,....__. following confirmation
  • and the ranking Liberal Party member of the Belgian Government. Mr. de Clercq hopes very much to have the opportunity to meet you and the Belgian Embassy supports his request. At considerable political risk, the Belgian Government forthrightly agre ed last year
  • ft.AN ARE BEING POSTPONED IN HOPE, AS ONE PLANNING OFFICIAL Ptrf IT, THAT INTERNATIONAL SITUATION WILL BECOME CLEARER IN THAT PERIOD.
  • . s. c1tizell8 whose properly maybo expropriatedJ and e.xpresaes hope ror further exchan;1ea ot views. June 12 Amba~st.tdor Bonsal urges Pr-.µr..eMinister Castro the importaree ot closo relations betwae Cuba and the' U. S. because of tho
  • the Prime Minister re with dates meetkt hers on Jam,11ar.y10. the State of the tl1mi©nmeissage an.d (»the!' ®haents and first understands that a December wi~it is oot wcrkabl~p and while the Preaident would very much like convenient fully hopes
  • or Pakistan. is one of international not making any new I very much appreciate your writing and hope that hospital in In~lia will somehow receive relief from ---- '11 ~ /4 .. ,. est per. sonal __ ' ~ L) ,,~ regar~ ~ ..- - 1.1 taA__. rr
  • Exit and march to Lafayette Park. They hope to pick about 450 more demonstrators enroute to the park, where they plan a program of speeches and singing from 5: 00 to 7: 00 p. m. There are no plans to picket or to present any petition. directly Charles
  • AND RA.W .MATERIALS AND TO SIMPLIFY PROCEDURES. GOVERNMENTPRESS NOTV '.EXPRESSED HOPE THAT WITH SUFFICIENT ASSISTANCE FORTHCOMING••FROM : FRL ..NDLY COUNTRIES AND INSTITUTINS, IMPORTS CAN BE LIBERALIZED IN VERY NEAR FUTURE. •,·. . ,; .1
  • in concluding that the large bloc of silent swing voters may well decide the winner. Many of these of course will cast their vote not on the mer its of the candidates or on the issues, but in the hope of joining the winner. It is difficult to gauge the effect
  • and to reopen the downtown ~ ...' \m:eassaae;r B\:l:nk&iF £OD.firmed at 5·00 P· m today that the fii:.s..t two gt ett:ps ef ;r eeels, eensistiag of about 2 50 men e a eh, have B:lre $d.y been ~ located. He is hopeful that the 'balance ef son1e 500 700 men
  • do not think, however, that he has any real hopes of getting the nomination himself or that he would make the effort to do so. ~ Michael V. Forrestal .... rpQp SECRET M y 27 • . 1964 MEMORANDUM TO -THE PRESIDENT H re ls an important m mo~andum
  • contained in the donor's deed of qift. GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION GSA DC 73.495 GSA FDMI 7122 (7-72) .., • -· .J .Ma~ 30, 1966 . .::.~ .,_.. . .~" ! , ~8,EQ_U-TIVE "", -· //r l l ' . ' . FG,4/-f2_,) . ~· -.. Dear Bob: Don.'t
  • con·t·· rme t -o exl)lo:ce every 1Jossi le L ''11c1..L --~0:i: 0. h):·101,)rable an" I)et:.:,ce 1 solut.:.r,~r.1 a11 : ·t is _.,-i y_· s:i. ., cel'e hope th:.--1t al. :r>a~~"tit::8 to t} c c7_i,_.,;_mte wil 1 ", -! · ~spond to the endeavour o~ those
  • : Ambassador Lodge hopes to see the Pope in Rome on May 2. I / . Monday, April 25, 1966 SEC:SET FROM AMBASSADOR LODGE (Saigon 4188} I spoke to Papal delegate Palmas about the possibility of my calling at the Vatican on Monday, May 2, during my stopover
  • : As a remembrance or our talks in Washington and in Texas, and as an expression ot my gratitude for the superbly cordial given me at your ranch, I would lilce to send you m::, picture "from my life." reception and a record I hope that I can give you some
  • FOR WAL~ROSTOW REGRETDELAYIN SENDINGWEEKLY MESSAGE TO PRESIDENT,~UT HOPE TO GET THIS OF'F TOMORROW. CIRCUiiiSTANCES HERE LAST F~W DAYS HAV~ MA~EIT NECkSSARY TO CONCENTRATE ON EM~RGENCIES.AS WITHYOU, - IT HAS MEANT BEDlG ON THE JOB 24 RE I VIA
  • an added personal and contemporary character to useful exchanges of views. "I hope to write to you at greater length a little later on about your message to me a few days ago after Bob McNamara's visit to Vietnam, and to give you a few thoughts from
  • President Park. Confidentially, we are in contact with the North Koreans. meet in two days. We e.."
  • for constitutional leadership; Huong widely respected. -- Overall trend unfavorable to enemy; Hanoi1s hopes for GVN collapse or Paris breakthrough dimmed by SVN response to Tet and by American firmness. -- Thieu and Ky predict massive new enemy attacks; Bunker cites
  • to undue ties with Peiping. If the Pak military, who were Ayub's power base, became convinced that there was no hope of any more MAP from the US this would powerfully risk their moving closer to the Chicoms. We Americans felt that India• had for too long
  • Vietnam could become a m od^l that would eventually attract the people of South Vietnam to a sim ilar system. By 1960, all of these hopes had been dashed. Though South Vietnam had major latent political problems^it must have appeared to Hanoi
  • PEOPLE• DIFFERENCES-WHICH-MAY EXIST FROM TIME TO TIME IN OUR OUTLOOKS-ONTHE PROBLEMSOF SOUTHEASTASIA AND THE WORLD\-1l Ll. NOT, I •HOPE, PREVENT·THE CONTI NUEO DEVELOPMENT· AN6 .STRE~GTHENlNG ~ETHIS FRl~NDSMiP•. LYNDON6• JOHNSONEND OUOTE· GP•l RUSK
  • States Senate, Washington It is to be hoped that those who believe significant is the wide differer. in freedom will not condone the enforced salaries between states, rangin1 per annum in Mississippi of Soviet Jewry.-Yours S1R-lt was, of course, Mr
  • ---- /)li..!;r DEC . e.o.13 ~.l~,N 4 . _· --- , 196 - February ac l've been sitting on attache ption you' har paper, on ass • u ine a. icon nuclear ly fin it ur ent first hope is that LBJ ml look at tne (at .y sugge·.stion he w ,.r .1.arize