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  • might hold for a period w1' th our help 1 but would be under grave pressure. Even th e Philip p in e~ wo uld b~cch'\e s naky, and the threat to India to the west. A~ s tral ia and New Zealand t o the south, and Taiwan 1 Korea, and Japan to the nort h
  • Col. Glenn. 2/23 Dinner with President and Mrs. Kennedy, Prince and Princess Radziwill at Kennedy house in Palm Beach; spends night at Charles Wrightsmans. 2/24 (Apparently LBJ returns to Washington.) Speaks to press secretaries of governors
  • to do inte ve re eea rch on thia man. Attached - Bio and background papers on Dr. Philip Randolph Lee 11 GENERAL rf ":- - - Lr/.L S / UJ ' r c9-//_;_/I/JU-"/~ .6...L-C 1 />1a rsc/,4)~ r,,,U• ..L' ~~SC~~ ~ ~ ? July 2, 1965 ' Mr. Bill D
  • measures we might take to fill in behind 13/ the British. Coincidentally, Battle on the same day had requested Philip J. Farley, head of the Politico-Military Affairs Section of the Departmen½ to undertake an urgent study of the naval defense problem
  • and Eugenie Anderson, Co-ordinators, and Mr. Philip Hollywood, Shoreham Hotel. They were then escorted to the VIP room where they stopped briefly. 11:08 PM The Presidential and Vice Presidential parties were escorted to the Presidential box. Regency Room
  • --although I understand why a president can't keep his promises, I always say that promises of princes are presumptive--I just simply made up my mind that I wanted to live life the way I wanted to live it and not the way he wanted to live it. For that reason
  • of drums. To go up to that cathedral to the beat of drums, to see people like de Gaulle and Haile Selassie and Prince Philip walking along the street and into the church, to look around and see these world leaders in every direction you looked, right
  • interest. Complete measured draw­ ings and photographs of the building were made and deposited by the Survey in the Library of Congress for permanent reference. Another interesting old residence is the Murat house. Prince Achille Murat, the eccentric nephew
  • , then to WH for cabinet meeting. Hosts luncheon in P-38 for Busch, Senators Symington, Brewster, Long (Mo.), Anderson, Tower, Byrd, Cong. Thornberry, Karsten, Mahon, Price, later joined by Yarborough. Visits with Prince Paul of Greece. 3/2 Flies to Detroit
  • Minister was The Lieutenant General, Prince Umberto, the Ki~g's nominal sovereign. And so· these three ~ son, was still the represeritatives of the ·three parties, the Socialists, the Communists, and the Christian Democrats, ran the _gover·n ment
  • . Prime Minister Sato, Japan (Informal) He has accepted in principle. The ques­ tion of dates remains. Crown Prince Vong Savang, (Informal) Laos December President Frei, Chile (State) He cannot come until after Chilean Congress recesses in September
  • ] the kind of questions he ra.ised it was perfectly clear to me that this man Itlas not the Philip Geyelin model. the guy who can't understand anything that happens outside of the three-mile limit. This comes back again then to the earlier point. I don't
  • Pariah and his brother in 1740 •od tbat we American however I have foun4 that there persona. of that name here before to 17g9 Register, 1720, Prince George County, ao■ e record.: ,1- 350 Jamea, son of James and Mary Pittillo b, Dec. 23, 1725, b
  • , substantially the same thing that--who was this fellow from the Washington pUblisherJ--his version was correct. ~ [Philip Graham, John Kennedy came to see Lyndon and asked him to run and all this talk, well, anyway-B: That fellow at the Washington Post, Mr
  • before any publicly known discussions got under way. The Berlin crisis of 1948 was resolved by private contacts between Ambassador [Philip C.] Jessup and Ambassador [Hakov A.] Malik in New York, and the matter was pretty well settled before the fact
  • on polltlcs ln Salgon; but I reviewed with him the bases tor a temperately optlmistlc position. Saville Davls; The Christian Science Monitor: Why no stalemate? Result attached. Philip Potter, Baltimore Sun: He has been concentrating on Middle Eaat and I
  • o ••: I, OF' STATE W.H~-"'ifon, D.C. 20$20 November 27, 1967 •• To: From: Mr. William Jorden - The White House EA- Philip C. Habi,;f}J//~ Subject: Arc Light. 1. Attached is a proposed joint State/Defense message on which we are prepared
  • Brown Perry S. Brown Philip Marshall Brown Mrs. William Adams Brown Rov. Duncan H. Browne ES1her C. Brunauer John Stewarr Bryan Edwin M. Bulkley Ralph J. Bunche J. Franli: Burke Thomas E. Burke C. C. Burlingham Henry M. Busch Nicholas Murray Buder
  • . ) (not less than 6) Philip N. Brownstein Assistant Secretary Dept. of Housing and Urban Development Room 6100, 451 7th Street, S._ W. Washington, D. C. Mary Gardner Commissioner, Feder~! Trade Commission Penn. Avenue at 6th Street, N. W. Washington, D. C
  • not because Prince Sihanouk invited him, but because he is concerned with the possibility of the U.S. expanding the war to Laos and Cambodia. The Americans have three plans: To intensify the bombing of the North; to send more troops to the South; to enlarge
  • to "very warm tone 11 which he said reflected Prince 1s esteem and confidence in Senator 1 s understanding of Cambodia; (b) expressed view that Sihanouk's cordiality was indicatinn Cambodia's determination pursue policy of neturality; (c) noted that Prince
  • the *The successive holders of this position were Sullivan till June of 1964, Michael Forrestal from July through December of 1964, Leonard Unger from January of 1965 to the spring of 1967, and Philip c. Habib from then till the opening of the Paris talks in 1968
  • ,;, , .. '. . \ ..... ,, . . .. ~ ...•.. - . . .. ~ .... -. :-: ll .., . ~ 1 • < .. .;· ·• 1 . ' _, -•-·-~- ·.• I -- I ' PROPOSED l\.1ESSAGE TO CROWN PRINCE CHARLES I extend warm congratulations and best wishes to you and the people of Burundi on your coronation as Mwami I Ntare V. I know