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  • Mr. Frank Valeo Office of Senator Mansfield Mr. William J. Crockett AHlatant Secretary of State for Administration Ambassador Horace Smith Department of State Mr. Carl T. Rowan Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs
  • with Senators Fulbright and Mansfield and others .. The President said that the Ways and Means Committee shelved the tax message today. The President said he did not want any of the information which he was about to discuss to go outside of the room
  • to prove we provoked the incident. Senator McCarthy was .nasty personally. Senator Cooper was decent. Senator ·Mundt did not find the opening he wanted. Sparkman was marginally helpful. So was Senator Mansfield and Senator Hickenhooper on one occasion
  • with Hanoi, go to candidates and key leaders. 1. 6. Mansfield, 2. Dirksen, 3. Russell, 4. Speaker. Albert, 5. Ford The President: How many in State know. Secretary Rusk: Four. Secretary Clifford: The major equation is elementary. Taking Hanoi at its word
  • MEETING WITH THE TUESDAY LUNCH GROUP, OCTOBER 15, 1968 THOSE ATTENDING THE MEETING WERE: The President Secretary Clifford Secretary Rusk Genera 1 Wheeler CIA Director Richard Helms Walt Rostow GeorgeChristian Tom Johnson The President: Senator Mansfield
  • F~lbript. b\IC we doD1 t wam to do it too lOD& elae •• lo•• o•r baa• of aapport. [manuscript notes say Fulbright, not Mansfield] fh~ PR.ESl.OENl' We will .o rue•c:iay to aAtUfy yog he.re 'ODiabt. i~ Monaay night myself. However, if yoa have
  • . The President said Senator Aiken let go, had not checked his facts, but later told Senator Mansfield that he had not issued a statement but merely talked to a radio newsman .'. If this can happen with Senator Aiken, it can happen in Vietnam, the President
  • of Senator Sparkman. Others present were Senators Mansfield• Lausche, Gore, SymiL1.gton, Pell, Hickenlooper, Aiken, . Williams, Mundt, and Cooper. ·· The Secretary opened with a general review of events, the steps taken and the options open on the i~cident
  • in talking make Senator to me was to urge that the Administration Mansfield and Senator Cooper a part of the US negotiating team. This, of course, is not a new suggestion on the part of Senator Fulbright, but he was pressing it very hard in his remarks to me
  • Thuraday, Oct. 26, 1967 3:30 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: Herewith the State Department unanimously recommends a brief letter of acknowledgment to Senator- Mansfield, inviting him to an • early breakfast meeting at the White House. 1 gather
  • out with all key Senatars, who might be interested, such a .s Mansfield, Fulbright, Hickenlooper, Dirksen, et al. I have already talked with Senator Aike-n and apologized handsomely for misleading_the President as to our ability to tra-n:s late
  • Operations, " February 1967 and prepared at the Committee ' s request 5. (Page 3). The Presidential Committee referred to was chaired by Mr. Mansfield Sprague of the American Machine Foundry SECREl/SENSITIVE aECR£~/SENSI~IV'E - 2Corporation and included
  • , Senator Mansfield, Senator Long, Senator Hayden, Senator Fullbright, Senator Smathers, Senator Dirksen, Senator Kuchel, Senator Hickenlooper, and Senator Aiken. Q. Was Sena.tor Saltonstall MR. REEDY: He was imrited there? but he was unable to attend
  • )< ~ The Reverend Floyd N. Williama • Antlg_~b..J3.AP!lst Church )( 5902 Boal at Mansfield • Houston, Texaa 77018 cc: Congressman JDR/li/mek/ph .. ., , ~ 3. 1969 Dear Mr. Williams: the President• :·~1_._:·:'··· Bush gift ~rr.nvEo JAN 4 1969 ....,ti I ,r
  • he is against the Mansfield Resolution. Perhaps it would be possible for a troop thin-out in the West to come first, if the Russians would agree to follow with a thin-out of their own. The President will pursue a cautious but constructive policy
  • WASHINGTON Wednesday, September 22, 1965 2:45 PM , . , \" "' ' ., ·- c) r~ · ·< ,.. / l MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT I spoke to Mansfield, who was all aglow and full of enthusiasm for what you and Goldberg have accomplished. I read him extracts from
  • Douglass Cater Bromley Smith Larry 01Brien Chester Cooper Congreaaional Leaders : S enator Dirksen S enator Mansfield Speaker McCorma.ck Representative Gerald F ord SERVlet: ~El
  • Bank is an example of their attitud e . Henceforth, they should participate in decisions in the Bank on the bas is of their financial participation. The President then turned the discuss ion to Senator Mansfield's conce rn that the United Nations
  • ratio by even a few p~rcent it will have been wo::-th the effort. -,/ j r r j.· r . rr I !. f r Secretary Rusk addressed himself b riefly to the Goldberg-Mansfield Resolution f on bringing the Vietnam issue t'o _the United Nations. He pointed
  • June 4, 1968 Would you like to give the attached photos to ( 1) Secretary Fowler; (2) Jack Brooks; (3) Cyrus Vance; (4) Secretary Smith; (5) Senator Russel; (6) Secretary Cohen; (7) Senator Dirksen, (8) Senator Fulbright or Mansfield; and (9) Arthur
  • . SALTONSTALL, Mr. BAYH, Mr. BOGGS, Mr. BREWSTER, Mr. BYRD Of West Virginia, Mr. CANNON, Mr. CLARK, Mr. ENGLE, Mr. FONG, Mr. GRUENING, Mr. HART, Mr. HUMPHREY, Mr. INOUYE, Mr. JAvITs, Mr. LONG of Missouri, Mr. MANSFIELD, Mr. McGEE, Mr. McINTYRE, Mr. MONRONEY, Mr
  • . A. Robertson Rep. T. Downing i. 1 ,. - ----- -5Release Date Department 6/29 Army $4,199, 988 contract to HRB Singer, Inc., State College, Pa. , for 52 infrared detecting sets. Sen. J. Clark 6/29 Army $1,484,102 contract to Mansfield Tire & Rubber
  • Goldberg. 1 - He is ready to take up in the Security Council Settator Mansfield's proposals. 2 - Senator Mansfield should be clear that this proposal vill be opposed by the Secretary General and a number of other members of the Security Council who
  • terms. At the Secretary's direction, after Sato had accepted this language, I called Senator Mansfield. I explained the language carefully to him, and he fully approved, saying only that _he wqul
  • combination "liberal" on Algeria on the offshore on military posture In the flurry or men. times who was truly and he lost. Hyannisport, Advisory islands, and Nitze Committee, his close for example, Bowles and friends. or Mansfield bore his
  • terms. At the Secretary's direction, after Sato had accepted this language, I called Senator Mansfield. I explained the language carefully to him, and he fully approved, saying only that _he wqul
  • be pleased to have the bill come up now, and that he would vote for it -- in part because he feels that this is the kind of aid we should increase to make up for slashes in the Foreign Aid Bill. Mansfield was entµusiastic. Black also got pleasant noises from
  • analysis, with the Asians. And we shall be derelict in our duty to ourselves and the Asians if we fail to shape our policies accordingly." lie MANSFIELD (Aug. 8, 19·66} "The exper_ienced and astute Foreign Minister of Thailand, Thanat Khoman, has advanced
  • that he thought our South Vietnam policy wae completely wrong. That we should u1e SEATO to handle the prolJlem. Di~ksen quEiu•tioned the vlabUity of SEA TO. Mansfield supported the McNamara position. SANITIZED E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NLJ/£AC, 0\-1'1