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483 results
- out to be one of the g a y e st And Noel and J o e C lark - - I w as happy to ; g e t the opportunity to w h isp er to N o el that I n eeded h er h elp on our p la n s fo r th e C apitol G rounds. 'G o v ern o r J a ck B u rn s of Haw a ii, L in co
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- Bundy said he thought Secretary Clifford's proposal would have a short life diplomatically, but he was not against it. He agreed with Rostow that if you wanted to do more later, it is smarter to do less now. ,_:;.._, _ - ~ - -- .. -------· . . 'ii
- ~~ , . ,, ... ..1 .. ' .. -~ - : '" . ' I ·!!'' c \CESE'i ,• ... . ,., f:TC.) TO ?R~f2SE ""' -(""· • • "'t "f'I' ~. · ...,i.i-\,.. · • • ~~ :_ ,. i . II i
- ... -.. . '• ; - '"''"'' .- .. -: . ;- .. .. ' . ... .. . ~ .,• ~ 1l J ' . ·.. . ·~;. . __:.·:· .~. . ~-.~-~'. ':'-·. ~~_: -: . . ...._. -. ,.. .. . . . . : .~ .. . . ... ·.,:.. . . ~· -.. . -. - - ....... _, • '.. ~ ' II
- ? The new one? ) ,, '· II r. mjdr June 4 , -, O' / l THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON June 4, 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR JUANITA ROBERTS: The President said he wanted to autograph a book to ·each of the Congressional Liaison officers he spoke
- .""-"- ~zz7 . . . -f~-- _/Z _-:_ _ 5:hc_,.,k~(., __} L.,f_ .Ii"'""~ {__l-:
- II"~~ ...~·~!'+'...';;:'~· - SHEET ,(PR ESIDENTIAL. LIBRARI S) OCTOBER 20, 1967 - 7:30 p.m. Secretary Rusk Secretary McNamara Under Secretary Katzenbach Walt Rostow Professor Henry Kissinger Mr. Justice Abe Fortas General Maxwell Taylor Clark
- . II""~/ ... -;:., ,. 'WITHDRAWA SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL lfBRARIES) CORR-ESPOr;.JOENTS OR T l from 11/21{6 7 - 8:30 a,,m. me,e ting with VP .Rusk, · ~am.er Wbe.e l·e r, Westm.o reland 1 ~~~~........~M-*H;] ~ ·c RICTlON CODES . ' ) CtDllfld
- and then let him fight the war. I asked him how many allies he had under his command duxing World War II. He said, including U.S. and allied troops, he had about five million. MEEftM6 ''10:Y:ES Poblkotion C.Of' Y'.i: . - ..... ,... ~IWT;r.ns Pet mission
- ./, ln~rnc.; 1 ;;t,,, s ~n l SERVICE SET MEET!t~S Mu I c~ (O?YRIC.f.ITED ...I?.. 1hljc.f; -.•;· • 1":· '··~'• '1:~,... gt•y "''~?''\,.:Ii~.:'> -7 If the troops for South Korea and the naval units are disapproved, the figures would be decreased
- MEMORANDUM Q THE WHITE HOUSE S a t u r d a y , F e b r u a r y 5 , 1966 WASHINOTOH Page 1 L y n d o n ’s d e p a r t u r e to H a w a ii - w o u ld I a l w a y s b e s o r r y t h a t I d i d n ’t g o ? I t w a s t o t a l l y s e r i o u s
- REGIMENT HAVENOTBEENTO DATE~ . • 7. IN THEWESTERN HIGHLANDS, EVERYVC UNITWASCOMMITTED ALONG WITHELEMENTS OF THE.24THAND958 NVAREGIMENTS. THE 1ST NVADIVISIONRETAINED ANOFFENSIVEPOSTURE,BUTDID OOTATTACK.ALONG THE COASTS OF II CTZ, THEPAUCITY OF VC TROOPS
- CTZ 15 MINOR 4 MAJOR II CTZ 7 MINOR 0 MAJOR 2/0 III CTZ 8 MINOR 0 MAJOR 0/0 IV CTZ 24 MINOR 2 MAJOR 1/0 9 ·3/3* 19 ""} .: .uvti.s "c..f 2 . 4 '" fvJ F 1 *- MAJOR ATTACKS WERE GROUND/FIRE ATTACKS ON TWO REFUGEE CAMPS AND ONE HAMLET
- ■'h1'Mcl 1 O\.ll1I I •~•amomt1nt 1maa 1t• - ........ ' nan 1r .-.4 •. lNm V 't - 2 - ,t,- II. 5 101 12t45. 5 5 21 51 5 91 7 10 12,15» 7 41151, 7 9 121 o, ll ,, 11 13 1 1 l. 11 l 1 101 1 7 l 10, - I
- b v i o u s , in w eiim a y "Seem t o h a v e a r e l a t i v e a c t i o n and w i U ii^dt’h a v e b u il t ' t h e m a j o r n e w b a s e of c o m r a i t m e n t andi of a u t h o r it y v ^ ld ch 'iriy th ^ ^ eS tjo f c a s e s s u c h a r e s o
- ty and we Ire goi ng to hang him and we mi ght as well get thi s trial over as quick as \'/e can. II So we got it over as qui ckly as vie could and we sentenced the man to death. The news got out. and people started calling Terrible nickname. me
Folder, "South Vietnam and U.S. Policies [X-File] [1 of 2], Files of Walt Rostow, NSF, Box 19
(Item)
- '1 1 T ii~ J'\CK r.; 1D I"lE CO NTt, CT .• ) M • T'Wll' 1'1 BUtJ OF ' FI 'T ; Ct? T ,Py OF 1'1.{_: v1 : r IA E3: - ~a'\ Y, ~'I\ 'I.f l l"TO ~ , D. c . (I/Or ) , I\ D 1"1 .. '1 l\ !'.\ -; -·.. 'ff .. TO i1wE L'!\tCH TO"l TH ~ T'l1 I 3 Dt\T
- ...., .. ... · r..JV v - ' ---· . . ,... __ ~- .,_\; ~ .. •• s: .:::~ ' (\ :t I I 4 () ~:: ··l ; t•1 II •"I ' } U ( > ,· : O ::i: Pl ·•1 ::,.. 0
- would lead his forces in Iowa--Kennedy's. And I told him that I just couldn't do that, I was completely committed to Stevenson. And he said to me, can't win?" II~Je 11, don It you know that Stevenson I said, "Well, I can't argue that with you
- in the South. General Maxwell Taylor expressed two reservations: 1.) the close defense of ·the frontier on the DMZ and in the highland area; 2.) no clearcut decision has been made on what we will offer the Viet Cong. 0 II. What about ·our·· C'OurB"e-br-1'.'f
- TI"Z::: -- T~!~Y • OF cz:cHOSLOVAKIA AS A ~~ ~ 6~?U3LIC . r ! .~ FG '.~ THIS -~E~i ::ATI:J ·' · rc; sr CAM:Z TH:: Si.i::.vE:.sro :.i A!') SU::JJ!.JGATIO:! OF cz:::cHJSLOVAi
- minutes. Well. luckily, John Taber of New York, as soon as I was presented to this Conference Committee, said, "Mr. Hoyt, what do you think of the D.P.A.?II interrupted, of course. I was Instead of five minutes I got forty-five minutes, LBJ
Oral history transcript, C. Douglas Dillon, interview 1 (I), 6/29/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- well kept secret. M: Yes it was. Were those real cuts, that extra billion or so, or were they shuffled figures? D: Well, there was some shuffling of figures to get down to the ninety-nine and a half. Then there was some more to get lower, but II d
- , "I'm gOing to get them. I'm smarter than they are." Then he elaborated and said, "I'm going to offer fvlorse a job that he won't refuse, and it wi 11 rui n him. II That job was a job to be the negotiator in the airline mechanics strike, which
- and said, "That was a fine talk you gave. Have you consulted with Lyndon Johnson on this matter?" And I said, "No, I haven't." And he said, "Do you know- the role that Lyndon Johnson has played in this? gets passed, it will be his doing, not yours. II
- ,, ~~--: . :·.~_;"'\;~~.... ~ .. : _.; :· ~ ..-:~.i..~: ;•: GSA FORM 7122 (7-72} :t NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE II WITHDRAWALSHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORMOF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE RESTRICTION DEP't'. l FOR CONSULTATION ~ i";l./-"11 ~ ,, ~ WH to president
- SERVICE 3 WITHDRAWALSHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORMOF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE RESTRICTION ,, ,, ., ,, ti ,, top seeret ,, 2 p ., ., '1 II FILE LOCATION National Security March 31st Speech, File, vol. NSC History 7
- r e lie v e d to w h ere it can be handled by the govern m en t and the p eo p le of South V ietnam . COPY LBJ LIBRARY X If" ,1k. sst* a 4lh ' i?ii, . r 'S *. i|JS > *: ^ COPY LBJ LIBRARY POMTS FOR PRESIDENTIAL MESSAGE 1. I tiiinli
Folder, "March 31st Speech, Vol 7, Meeting Notes," National Security Council Histories, NSF, Box 49
(Item)
- another message _Draft at Tab B-~J,-,,,.4,e.,Ji.J. What is their to Kosygin ~oday? significance? (Sec~s. Rusk & McNin:ara1 . .... E. What do we -do if the North Koreans --. -- F. sta{ii\r~;the~--;~. \ '• arbitration offer? ./ ; what are results
- i.z:r~ellrigern
- without Diem," and those who said, "We cannot accomplish our aims with Diem. II It was almost a fifty-fifty spl it. Now, one of the fellows who became very key in the whole Vietnam affair, George Carver, I can recall him coming in after the fall of Diem
Oral history transcript, Harrison Salisbury, interview 1 (I), 6/26/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- to be sure~ because we didn't get any response from you. II I said, "Well, where did you send this cablegram?" He said, IIWe sent it to the address of your newspaper in Pari s. II At thi s time~ Paris. the Times was still publishing an international
- car." going to get my car. driver. He So he was LBJ said, "You see that fellow. He's my He's been the driver for the majority leader for many years, going back to Joe Robinson. II F: Joe Robinson from Arkansas. M: He said, liDo you know he
- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh INTERVIEW II DATE: April 24, 1981
- Oral history transcript, Barry Zorthian, interview 2 (II), 4/24/1981, by Michael L. Gillette
- in the press. My experience has been that after every war the underachievers come up with something related to the war, whether it's shell shock or whether it's gassed in World War II or whether it's battle fatigue in World War II or whether it's Agent Orange
- , but it is •~, ••..· _.:· ••-••: generally believed that both these a~e not in any danger of substantial 1·• '.~ii: • disint~:~at:::·re l was no popular uprising in support of the Communists . .,,, :-1 . t, -t • 4·,t . as they planned and expected. . Not only did the people
Oral history transcript, Richard H. Nelson, interview 1 (I), 7/20/1978, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- , really? N: He said, IIWhen you're the president or the vice president, or even a governor, all of your dissidents are spread out, II I think his \'lOrds were, LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B
- . There was little activity in the II Corps Area. 4. In III Corps Area the major activity was the rocket attack on Tan Son Nhut and the area around Tan Son Nhut. One round landed.not far from the house where General Wheeler was spending the night. General Wheeler
- ~e •' .' r1!cNama:::-a : t0 a Our llili tar,r ac tion approach i s an unac ceptable Nay 3u;ce3~ful ~ J~c l us ion~. 3:all: ::a:::: le? J'l!C_~.9.:ln. ra: ... ii ~~1t • rfli ,: Geer: .J U c i1 t,1...::-:.1.ll C ti on . i ~0 ...."lG ~O :J .:J".l