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  • •o-, ·--·• .. --W•••··•• 0 •• •• .,_._____ ;_ ...... , PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER September 6, 1967 . -,,-----~ :WashingtonBackground -··- !.Gen era}SRebelling' '.Against··McN_!ma ,, . . . By JOSEPH C. GOULDEN Inquirer .Washington
  • was mustered out of the Navy, oh, I forget whether it was October 1 or November 1. It was the fall of 1945 in Philadelphia. That's right. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • "FROM A PAY PHONE WITH INFO ABOUT SAUDI ARABIA & INQUIRING ABOUT MIDDLE EAST MATTERS BEFORE UN, KOSYGIN, ISRAEL, EGYPT, ETC."; "SUMMARIZED"; RECORDING STARTS AFTER CONVERSATION HAS BEGUN; CONTINUES ON NEXT RECORDING
  • "FROM A PAY PHONE WITH INFO ABOUT SAUDI ARABIA & INQUIRING ABOUT MIDDLE EAST MATTERS BEFORE UN, KOSYGIN, ISRAEL, EGYPT, ETC."; "SUMMARIZED"; CONTINUES FROM PREVIOUS RECORDING
  • that their instructions from the Ambassador are to answer all press inquires with " No comment". On background basis 1 they are to say when the Ambassador resigns, if he resigns, he will resign to the President and not to the press. Goldberg's press secretary told Leonard
  • by the nose. President said Resnick might make this speech. The President directed Rostow to get up some speeches. The President told J. Jones if Ros tow couldn't get this done to have Ben Wattenberg write up a speech. The President inquired about
  • ." The President inquired, "is what we're asking in this communique (part B attached) when you move, we move? 11 Rostow said this enters into consultations leading to the early return of the Bonins. Some of the consultations involve their taking over the defense
  • /loh/oh PI\CE -- I -- 5 criticism. office. This had to be channeled through my general counsel's When it was identified, I had him take it to the appro- priate committee and indicate the nature of what we knew and to inquire whether this \'Ias
  • with an inquiring mind--one of the main burdens of Khanh's argument was the reason, the justification, the apo7ogia pro vita sua for having the coup was because the four generals were about to betray everything to the French. Lodge approached that, I think
  • ’ case he is inhibited by tiie domestic political situation. The foreign office has later inquired whether Japan might state publicly tiiat it had been notified in advance by the United States. 4. Macapagal of tlie Philippines said that he was sending
  • , and that a number of names had been mentioned as a possible replacement. I was interested. He inquired as to whether or not I indicated after a couple of days of thought that I was, and I followed that up with a letter to Senator Russell. say about two weeks went
  • . But it's also related to a serious balance of payments problem that any responsible official cannot ignore to the extent that we can demonstrate to ourselves as well as to inquiring newsmen and so on that the AID program LBJ Presidential Library http
  • you describe that, sir? in that? Did Mr . Johnson inquire into it, or did you, as Administrator, point out to him the problem? B: Who initiated the presidential interest How did it work? This was actually mostly before I was Administrator
  • , and his wife, Florence Hoff. P: What was he inquiring for? A: I think he wanted to get in and out as quickly as he could, and I think that he just wanted to know how this was going to be managed. A lot of people had been waiting in this room to meet
  • : This is a continuation of an interview with Mrs. Eugenie Anderson the following day on Thursday, November 14, at 3:30 in the afternoon. Mrs. Anderson, yesterday, and during a lot of both of the tapes, we were discussing your ministry in Bulgaria, and I wanted to inquire
  • . The Prime Minister a good idea but inquired a deep freeze. exploring replied that this sounded like whether this would put SEATOinto The Vice President explained be was merely a new concept since SEATOleaves many areas un­ covered and excludes
  • costly in terms of tying down assets. JCS also suggested hot pursuit operations into Cambodia which Mr. McNamara said raised substantial political problems and which consequently were excluded. J ~ l l l 4. The President inquired as to Ambassador
  • VERY IMPORTANT TIMES FOR BOTH COUNTRIES CVIETNAM AND THE UNITED STATES> . OIEN INQUIRED AS TO WHETHER GARDINER DESIRED THAT HE, DIEN, BRING SOMEONE FROM TKE PRESS OFFICE CVIETNAMESE EMBASSY>, BUT GARDINER DECLINED, STATING NOW WAS NOT THE TIME
  • to be done, say, due for November, 1964 and you started screaming or inquiring about it, say, in February, we might be able to speed up the time schedule. Say, instead of Novem- ber or October, whatever it is, can't you move it up until August or September
  • judgments, because not everybody is necessarily commanding the best platoon, and people of a more inquiring mind might even admit logically of the possibility of luck of the draw. You get good troops, good replacements out of the repple-depple or bad
  • the country and he didn't want them dressed up looking like good, prosperous Americans. G: Here these military personnel in civilian clothes? W: I don't know, I don't know if they were military or civilian. never inquired into his business that much. I
  • recall. The President asked a number of these men how long they had been in service. He asked them how far along in their education they had gotten. He inquired about their plans for the future, including their educa­ tional plans -- and in some cases