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32 results
- Fran the Sea Service of the Office of the War on Hunger is ·1in ~~uch with the Canadian worker• and with the u. S, Bureau of CarmerciaJ.---rt'sheries on this matter. The United States Food and D -~1stration is also awe.re of thi1 problem • .You may b o
- be transmitted to the President. It was impressed upon the .Chancellor that the United States had already made substantial sacrifices and was prepared to make even more in .co operation with our Allies. Specific reference was made to the £act that the President
Folder, "Travel – Foreign – Berlin (Pro) [August] [2 of 2]," 1961 Subject Files, VP Papers, Box 109
(Item)
- or treodom. Freedom must be maintained at all cost rogardle's s or peril involved. Reapocttully yours, GB. ~~/ Ben~n Havard BH/sd cc: The Honorable L. B. Johnson, Vice President of the United States of .America, Washington, D. c. The Honorable Senator
- See all scanned items from file unit "Public Activities -Travel [1961]"
- Radio except WNBC at 6:30 p.m. EST; WNBC time 6:35 p.m. F.sT.) PRESS DEPARTMENT, NATIONAL. eROADCASTING COMPANY, 30 ROCKEFELLER p':-A~A1 N .EW YORK 20, NEW YORK [10 of 16] -Reproduced from United States of America Vol. 107
- See all scanned items from file unit "Public Activities -Invitations [1961]"
Folder, "Berlin, Germany Berlin Papers for the Vice President," VP Papers, VP Security Files, Box 2
(Item)
- the United States . D:.· r..1_~:-11 mo / .ulhori!y By 77.[tLlt-,y/9/~., & .l.£i:{a_ ",0/n .c, ~?'/1,, , 1'1;,1:f!, D· 1L0 .$"~ '-1~1 111ANSFERRED TO MUSEUM -// I 'f/'f>- ·SECRET Page 2 If we failed to rise to the level of these s ombre events, all
- c, 4o--1C, \ . Republic of China LATIN AMERICA Brazil,... Colombia NEAR EAST AND SOUTH ASIA India Pakistan Turkey United Arab Republic II. Possibilities for National Policy Papers in FY 1965 AFRic.A "-.Algeria Kenya Liberia* ~ Southern Rhodesia
- was a banker. As such he was of course one of the prominent men in the community, and this was a farming community. In those days, you had these little towns scattered all over the United States, but in the Wheat Belt of Kansas each village was located
- career and my life. with it. I don't think that anything else could quite compare The Court at Saint James, or the Court at Tokyo, are all more or less well knownand mundane, but presenting my credentials as Ambassadorof the United States of America
Letter, Eban to LBJ, 6/8/67
(Item)
- MINISTER FOR FOitEJON AJrfAIU T ,.n M June The Honorable President of Dear Mr. 8, 1967 Lyndon B. Johnson the United States· President: The few days that I have been here have been spent mostly at the United Nations in an effort to explain
- . (Not printed at Government expense)
- ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 13, 1968 P: Mrs. Anderson, in August 1965, you were named the United States Representative on the United Nations Trusteeship Council with the rank of Ambassador. A: Do you currently hold this position? No, I
- your government ,,. Page 2/50 and the people of the United States of America all the best for the future stop the great achievements of your country and the victorious sp~rit by which your count;ry won her independence gave us encouragement in our
- See all scanned items from file unit "UGANDA (CO 300)"
- File unit description:Pertains to proposed visit of President (Sir) Edward Frederick Mutesa.
- urging me in the beginning to try to let him go. And I kept realizing the more I learned that this would be just disaster for him and also, I felt, for the United States because r felt that the Bulgarian government must know that we had him
- ve complex adminis trative and personality questions. 7. Vice President Johnson then told Ambassadors Gavin and Finletter that there is a widespread feeling in the United States that America's allies are NOT putting as much into the defenses against
- WU1iam Attwood Amertc:an Emba.s9y Nairobi, Kenya .Afr.i ca .. 1 ) EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA PERSONAL AND Go~w IDEWTIAt American Embassy, Nairobi, Kenya, FeQruary 28, 1966. Dear Bi ll: A' Just a note to let you kn ow that Mike Cowl
- [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 3 and age when we have to communicate with the whole population, an ambassador today, in my opinion, an ambassador of the United States shouldn't just
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 2 (II), 12/5/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- and in the United Arab Republic, in Syria, to a less extent in Yemen; they certainly have a vital interest in the area. They're also interested in Iraq. They have a vital 1 interest in that part of the area of the world and have been trying to c r e a t e
- and from the White House. The simple fact is that for 15 months now NSAM 341 has not been implemented. I have felt the lack on many is sues; for example, the Middle East, Viet Nam, counterinsurgency problems, 'tf+ Latin America. I have come
- of the world. Demands for help in learning English are, therefore, wide spread. The United States ought to respond to these demaz:ids. English is a key which opens doors to scientific and technical knowledge indispensable to the economic and political
- correspondents who were with him all the time. I was then based in London, and I picked them up in Manila and went with them the rest of the way, including all the way back to the United States. But much of the time I was traveling on a press plane separate
- to that, in the immediate past, you had served as Ambassador to OEeD and then prior to that in the Kennedy Administration, both as Director for the United States and the World Bank for a short time-L: Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs
- portance that you eombine l'aptd growth with stability. From the experience oi La.Un America. and elsewhere, nothing la m ore capable of ulsrupting ·nd distorting a sound dev'clopment program than rapid infiatlon, some of th,,e speclfic eifecta of which
Oral history transcript, Lucius D. Battle, interview 1 (I), 11/14/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- being moved out of Educational and Cultural Affairs, and he simply would not permit it. There followed nine weeks in which the question of what I was going 1 to do next w'as caught up bet'tveen the President of the United States and the C h
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- the war to the North in the form of aerial attack and the second was to commit organized units of American forces to combat. M: Were you closely involved with the presidential decision-making in either or both of those cases? J. I was still
- in a logistics setup with respect to the MAAG [Military Assistance Advisory Group] that we had there then. But I was in Vietnam from 1954 to 1957. Then I came back to the United States. The Army insists that one go to school and so forth, and so I stayed
- . That was the one division, two-thirds of one division plus assorted pactical air units. That was the equivalent of one division. M: Now, this was about May 19671 F: Yes. Kiesinger came in August, I think. And as I said, the Trilateral Negotiations
- an instinctive feel for a lot of this stuff and everybody had told me, "God, watch him like a hawk, because here he is outside the United States and he won't know what to say and he'll put his foot in his mouth." I didn't find that at all. In fact, I found him
- it. However,we felt that the That is, it was hopeless for West Therefore, the best thing to do was for West Pakistan to cut its losses as quickly as possible. However,the President didn't want us--the United States--in any way to be responsible for what
Folder, "[November 30, 1967 - Luncheon in Honor of Governor Connally]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 2
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- Latin America
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