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Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973
(9)
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Wallace, Henry A. (Henry Agard), 1888-1965
(6)
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Park, Chung Hee, 1917-1979
(4)
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Pepper, Claude, 1900-1989
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Sato, Eisaku, 1901-1975
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Rostow, Eugene V. (Eugene Victor), 1913-
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State Department
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Steinbeck, John, 1902-1968
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30 results
- .
COOPER
AND MR.
THOMSON
Pak Visit to the U. S.
l. As you know, President
Pak of Korea will be in Washington
on
May 17 and 18 to visit with the President.
The program
which State
has in mind and which involves the President's
schedule is as follows:
May
- to Canada, where the Publisher and Author shall
cooperate in securing copyright. The said work shall be copyrighted either ( 1) in
the name of the Author or (2) in the name of the Publisher; if in case (1), the
Author shall hold the copyright as hereinbefore
- campaign letters this morning.
But I am not going to thank you. I am going to t.ek yoUl" torgiveneas tor rnrytimlt
that I miebehand und.er the preuure. I shall alway• remember the hour• and ti.
loyalty you put into the tight.
Kr. Gordon Fuloher
Austin
- the partners hip of the two countries which
grows out of common beliefs and the shared objective of a lasting peaciJ
based on justice,
freedom and prosperity
for all peoples.
They expressed
a
firm determination
that the two countries
should cooperate more
-
and education
leaders
possibilities
for u.s. cooperation
in establishing
the~e
an Institute
for Industrial
Technology and Applied
Science.
It was President
Johnson's
thought that
the Institute
and its laboratories
could both
provide technical
services
- cooperative
attertlon. Houslffj,
pollution,education,h11lth,Jobopportunities
- noneofthese
fallsIntoa specificgeographical
Jurisdiction.
,
Theyare nationalproblems.becausetheyaffectweryone
of us. Buttheyare alsolocalproblems.Theydemandlocal
solutions,because
- .
We know that our immediate deciaiona concerning the uses ot outer space
technology tor the good of mankind can, and will,
halt any advances into apace
as merely adding a new dimension to warfare.
COOPERATION
NEEDED
But this is not a one nation Job
-
in the days ahead.
sake of opposition,
will seek to state their
We will neither
nor will we cooperate
oppose merely
merely
for the
for the sake of
cooperation.
We will examine
the proposals
in the light of two standards
Are there
alternatives
- ourselvesstartingtogether
on a newyearand newtime of opportunityin our
r~ctive lands. Webothsharethe hopeandthe
. determinationthat theseshall betimesof closer
3.
r- ·cooperation
andunderstanding
between
our
..,, countries.
Thedistancesof the Pacificare longbut for us
- countries.
It is well known that for a long time Korea am the United state8
have been bound together with a bond of friendship too strong ever to be
broken.
Our two nations have been making concerted efforts,
in cooperation
with ether freedom-loving nations
- of the strength
and stability
of the dollar
-... To the expansion
trade --
of our foreign
... To the reinforcement
of our
programs of mutual assistance
and
cooperation
in Asia and Africa -··· And to our Alliance
1n this Hemisphere.
On the 20th
John F. Kennedy
- destiny.
Through the CommodityCredit Corporation our farmers now find suppor·~s
for their prices.
Through the cooperation of the Soil Conservation Service more than
districts have been organized, covering more than four
six hundred thousand farms.
2,000
-
will and by their unstinted energy, the
Korean people have pioneered in selt-help
projects that have reclaimed
marsh lands and barren hillsides
for new and now much more e:f'f'icient rice
production.
They have established
cooperatives
in f'ishing and seeweed
marketing
- -making
(8)
accelerate
the nuclear
(9)
eliminate
all overtime
(10)
increase
exchange
(11)
build shelters
and store food and machinery
caution against Russian attack;
the
required
process;
submarine
program;
limitations;
cooperation
with our
- cooperation,
including tax measures to encourage industry; additional
public works; supplementary
unemployment insurance; and surplus food grants.
ll.
Amendments to the Immigration
they are fair and just.
12.
A Constitutional
13.
Disaster
•measures
-
(9)
eliminate
all overtime
limitations;
program;
increase
cooperation
with our allies
exchange of information;
(11)
build shelters and store food and machinery
caution against Russian attack;
( 13) increase
our interchange
the free nations
- .
from the
12
The program
emphasize
to help
.,
1
this
that
I shall
propose
cooperative
one-fifth
will
approach
of all
-
American
t#tf
families
with
incomes too small
to
7 tdNI 1MM fM t1•a111-.
meet their
basic
needs.
wr:u n nzwr s
-
herself." 1
I want Americana to be well
clothed, well fed, well housed and
free from fear. I belleve that
democracy and cooperation with
I
~ -
·• r
~ --
•• -
---- - ---
other people• through the United
Natlona can ■ecure tbe■e condl•
tlona.
I
- hasdeclinedandthe soundnessof our dollar is
--
-
unquestioned. I pledJie
to keepit that way. I urge ~u.siness
--
and laborto cooperate
to that end.
Weworkedfor two centuriesto climb this peakof
prosperity. But weare only at the beginningof the roadto
- of such cooperative
challenges
good faith.
enter
enterprise
and should
the
If the
a new era of
in World War I
it in World War II.
People who work together
in great
projects
of this
kind are unlikely
to want to fight.
One condition,
formed by technicians
-
spectrum of nuclear
its
together
cooperation.
the Johnson Administration
was distinctively
rather
in a
And it would enable
to launch a nuclear
own, rather
it
policy
which
than merely a continuation
of past efforts.
7.
larger
Defense
- but the cruel mas
tery of the whole European economic
system as well. Rather than rely upon
the cooperation of many hands to re
strain a new German giant in the future,
the men at Potsdam wisely chose to keep
Germany from becoming a giant again.
In short
-
-2Is production so great an enterprise that it demands not only
the full use of the energy of all the people, but also government?
Is government cooperation an indispensable factor in securing full
production?
In time of war, yes.
war, undoubted.ly
- through
another
war with that antiquated
mechanism.
He had in mind a certain
goal of a
unification
of the services
in which there would be
strong civilian
control
and a real tight and close
cooperation
and integration
in the operation
of the
three
services
- of the Pre&,ident as
these: 'The cooperation which we seek is
the cooperation of free countries, work
ing together in a friendly civilized
society.'
We may wonder whether the long and
bitter fight put up by the isolationists in
the decade of the twenties
- and political chinanery and misDBll8.gement haven't got enough to eat and given
technological means for production this is preposterous.
This seems to suggest
a closer cooperation internationally- than has yet been suggested by any decument
except the Atlantic
- democracy at home and cooperation ~broad
shall not succeed.
Let us come out unequivocally for a general world organizatio,
(MORE)
with power to keep -t he peace. , Let us not plac~ our reliance in men
or
parties
who subscribe to interna"t,io!'al
- they were led to ueliave. But aoove all perhaps the
solid ouainesa forces of the state who do not partiOi?&te in politioa ,
have noticed• laok of energy or kno -how in Coke Stevtinson ~s • s.lea
man for Texas in getting things done in cooperation -1th