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  • of our first meeting at the State Department two years ago. I would hope that you would be able to speak in bringing to a conclusion the six Regional Meetings which we would have held by that time. Judge Lawson would be asked to serve as Conference
  • the State of the Union message. NOTE: Check with Henry around NOTE: Tom Atkins should NOTE: Bob work out the still the 10th of January. work out movie end of it. arrangements co, December TO: MRS. JOHNSON FROM: OKAMOTO 20, 1966 Thi• letter
  • Launching of main new institute for industrial research and development: hope to have profound effect. 12. Industrial Extension Services Early stages of developing effective industrial extension services from the Korean Productivity Center, and some
  • ; 15 MORE SITTING AT SUBIC BAY. ·\ PAGE 3 R U~J I R 19 12 1 ~ E e. R E 'f - HOPING TO GI VE THANG LEVERi WE HAVE PASSED RU MOR TO GVN THAT NO SHIPS LEAVING US PORTS BECAUSE OF TIE-UP AND ~ESULTING / UNBEARABLE DE MURRAGE CHARGES. · 4 • ~crCFF' : ~m
  • , and have him tell the Japanese and others that "while we are unable to participate in the first phase of this project, we. would hope the restoration of peace in Viet Nam or other changes in the situation would permit substantial U. s. participation
  • and he will attempt to return the two Americas into a position of isolation hoping to minimize and s.tave out any war congre­ gation by saying that the ammunition or food stuffs. estern Hemesphere does not fit in .either with I think he is ready to go
  • a Presidential aircraft to transport an ailing Bustamante from Jamaica to Walter Reed Hospital. I understand that you will be receiving a memorandum from State, via General Clifton 1 s office, this afternoon. I, for one, hope you approve State's request. 2, I
  • decide., p. 4 ..,.. to exclude the double-bracketted passage as Bob McNamara suggests - - to keep open the option oI a. pauae on faith rather than. prior understanding; -- or to keep the bracketted pasaages, soften the language to a "decent hope
  • the Corps is giving Congressmen the pitch that such an arrangement will make it harder to get these projects dear to a . Congressman's heart. We have found this reaction from McClellan, Jim Wright, Edmondson and Bob Jones, and second hand we are told
  • OF SITUATION BUT WOULD AT SAME TIME INCLUDE SOME HOPEFUL EXPRESSIONS WITHVIEW TO EASING IMPACT ON PUBLIC OPINION. . . . . . ' BENNETT .... ...__.... ...... INFORMATION SEGRE'f /Omo Wednesday, Z:ZS p. m. Mr. September 18, 1968 Preaident: Thl• tele1ram
  • Ila..-. v&luod your owa lrl•c.dshlp an .. ,-..r long teauo hero. ! hope you will take th1 a.\lMlmhome wldl ,oa IIOt only & rocord el 0110 of Ille mlleetonos ol pu time lier• but &110 •• an oxprosdon. ol my pei-aonal pleaeur~ la our happy
  • was the .cause of agric:uHurc ~nd there grant thr T,r1shmir plebiscite Pa,s, ned m 19GO for a 4-year pro- is promise that in India's fourth kislan demands. al lhou
  • ;~ OPOS AL FOR A t·1.D.T C:H ;•JG :S 5 S i'• :ILLIO :·J f£r(TILIZER LOAN WOU~D HAVE REQUI~ED . ·4. FULL SCOP ~ OF CAS I ~ET D~CIS I0 ~5 WILL BE REFLECTED IN _SU 3R At:AtHAl'l !..OK S!\B HA STAi z:,: :: ;·~T DE CE: [E5::R 7. l;j £ URGENTLY HOPE FOR QUIC K
  • instructions to which I'll check. Holmes !or clearance, IDlS F/2u.! . f/dJI.K tl,-:/1-t/? f' -9-&S-- SECRFZ June l9, 1964 MEMO FOR MESSRS. TALBOT ~ MACOMBER Bob asked me to send you a copy of atta.ched for your por o:nal in!ormatla-n. Hal Saunder
  • proposal Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford has made in the Hague on the question of compatibility of the NPT with the activities .of the Nuclear Planning Group. As to a nuclear guarantee we are hopeful that we shall also reach agreement on the means
  • later when he became majority leader and what pride he took in the diversity of people who nominated him, such as Dick Russell of Georgia, Theodore Francis Green of Rhode Island, but no, I don't remember. G: Someone else had recalled that he and Bob
  • chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, a very astute, shrewd, conservative politician--sort of a Bob Taft-type politician. A perfectly decent man, but he considered politics a reasonably rough game; and he knew more about the OPA, since he
  • Neustadt; Dean Acheson; Bob Kerr; Brien McMahon; John Sparkman; James Webb; Senator Richard Russell; Secretary Marshall; General Bradley; Forrest Sherman; General Vandenberg; Lawton Collins; joined Covington & Burling; Albert Gore; lobbyist for Theodore
  • and Bob Kerr. They worked for these states. God, they stood by them! They got them appropriations, flood control, everything else. Yet some of these--I like to call them peckerwoods--that Johnson did the most for were the first to turn on him. I think
  • and Martin. Then after Mr. Bob Calvert, Robert W. Calvert, who's a contemporary of ~lr. Johnson and former speaker of the [Texas] House, now chief justice of the Supreme Court [of Texas], was elected to the Supreme Court in 1950, we moved down with his
  • . The American Bar Association got behind it very strongly and legislation was passed in 1954. And I gather that a lot of people were getting rather impatient. But that was the background of it. F: Now Bob Kennedy was still attorney general then. Did he
  • not the son of Houghton-Mifflin published it . Nathanial and the grandson of Robert? BE : Yes . BA : A distinguished background, Then in 1967 you took the job on the White House staff? BE : Yes . Through, having met, while I was at Newsweek , Bob
  • : • A. Our arming of Pakistan befcre 1965 compounded the existing mistrust between Pakistan and India and lesser, ed whatever hope there might have been of r aching an agr ement on outstanding issues. 1 B. In the meantime, the Indians were bitt ly dil
  • , a lieutenant colonel at the time, who had been working for him named Bob [Robert] Montague who had made himself really persona non grata to almost every one of the military men out there in Vietnam to the point that General Harold K. Johnson sent a back-channel
  • place with little hope of success in civil rights in order to get some meaningful legislation without a complete war on the Hill at the beginning and eased into the major legislative commitments, civil rights, in due course down the road. The contrast
  • with Powers, O'Donnell, and O'Brien and their career plans after leaving the White House; opposition to Medicare, especially from the American Medical Association (AMA); how the public mindset has changed regarding Social Security and Medicare; the Bob Kerr
  • ) COMMUNICATIONS SATELLITE \ .1 .\ I ;.f v 1:: 1 " · ' ,,. l ,. ,.,, ' Seeret - Seeret - TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES: Man' s greatest hope for worlci. peace is to understand his fellow man. Nations fear- -as do individuals--that which
  • of foreign trade opportunities for small business. I hope I shall live up to the headlines in the English newspapers, ,Senator Pepper, the envoy of the little man, arrives from America. It is hard for a Floridian to describe England, it is something
  • ) ~ Page2 LBJ LIBRARY DOCUMENT WITHDRAWAL SHEET Classification Pages Date Restriction Doc# DocType Doc Info 31 memo Johnson to Bundy TS- 1 11/5/64 A 32 memo BOB control sheet TS- 1 11/64 A 33 rpt "Estimated Costs" TS- 2 11/5/64
  • got his papers, I hope. MLG: Sure. I'm going to ask you some question about him. VFD: Oh well, do. Anyway, the point I'm making is: Lyndon wasn't cold- blooded in that he only cultivated people who could help him. But if he was going after
  • , "Ain't any woman alive going to tell me how to put my britches on!" (Laughter) So the Vice President said--I said something about I hope his lumbago gets better or something--"Well, D.B., I think in a week or so we'll know whether it's lumbago
  • man bom of a Texas pioneer woman needs to be told that Yision wa s he rs. or' such a woman can not be fri ghtened. shall not a ak their men to alt and hope The daughter The dau&}lt.ers of suoh women hen the sighia of death and slavery are apread1ng
  • of all aid donors. • I don't think we can do anything about this on the Senate floor. We will try to handle it in Conference. There are several other less bothersome amendments affecting our guaranty and investment survey programs which we hope can
  • nominee. Many Democratic politicians deploring BobbyKeMedy as a presidentialchoice hope to defeat him by electing Hubert 1,/ Humphrey. Their wisdom should be IJ>' praised. ': Humphrey, a founder ol ADA, was lta chairman1949-50,has served as national vice
  • ONE OF TWO) E AID . ty,:~ : DEPTEL 1029 RPTD TOKYO291~ p USIA NSC INR CIA NSA OSD 1. PRIMIN HAS IN P K tlROAcHED SEVERAL TIMES HIS DESIRE~ TO VISIT WAS HINGTON1N JULY, HE SA1D HE HAD INVITATIONFROM 1::SONN WHEREHE HOPES O RECEIVE
  • , and hopefully before· then. A final draft will be circulated.Friday or Saturday, which we hope can be signed by the Secretaries of State and Defense for transmittal to the P~.esident.· He~ Owen , -~ SB8R!T/rLMITED DISTRIBUTION .. • Eo. LAS IFIE 132 1: s
  • ol the Ualted State■ ■hare my hope that eke relation• between 01l1" two coantrle• wll1 coatbaae to proeper la tll• rear ■ to come. " ___ Approved __ DlaappfOved BKS:amc Wedae1day, July 3, 1968 MR. PRESIDENT: Attached for you app:rOY<a
  • in that election. Many of those elected in 1958 went on to become committee chairmen and subcommittee chairmen. They included people like Dan Rostenkowski, Bob Kastenmeier, Neal Smith, Bob Giaimo, Bill Moorhead, Jim O'Hara and John Brademas, now the House