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  • with the Communists" Militarily more difficult and costly than Alternative I .. 4. Throw probably unbearable burden on ARVN. 5. Rather than trigger negotiations, it might lead Hanoi to decide to press its advantage with all-out "Dien Bien Phu" efforts against
  • . MOTHER PREV IOUSLY HAD COLLECTED $171 FRIM CITI ZENS OF SANTIAGO AND WAS GIVEN · ADDITIONAL $216 FIR EXPENSES !Y OFFICERS AND- ENLISTED MEN OF U.S. ARMY'S 16TH GENERAL SUPP8RT GROUP IN SANTI DOMINGO. BGSTIN NEWSPAPERS AND ASSOCI•TF.» PRESS PICKED UP STORY
  • press leaks .,w,tti:tjl was sent to you earlier ,(Cap 81904) ~ , Rusk 1 s today •. DECLP. !FIED WhiteHousoGui el na , F , ~ ~ y 4! • , NARA. Cate a-,1- 1 FJlOM BllOMLff SMITH TO THE PltESIDDff Oar •earcll up to aow llu aaco .. red •ly
  • . They responded enthusiastically and asked us to keep them posted, Deriving our information i'rom networlc television and press re­ leases, we informally 1"elayed info1•mation in regard to the rnost 1mpo1•tant aspects of' the flight. tous about; the welfare
  • ' F'OR CATEGORY I• NUMBERS OF SPORTING ASSOCIATIONS MAY PURCHASE 1 AND OWN· LlMITEoBOTH THESE I
  • --- PARISTODEL 1. ·- FORHARRIMAN AD VANCE. I You will note the reports fro f of Le's special press Paris conference of today. highlighting Hanoi's demand that we talk with them and the NLF, leaving a eat for Saigon. I . ' It seems obvious from all
  • text avatiab.le froo Press Director by starts u.s. u. S, President process of selecting U.S. and .Australia plan new joint tracking next week station National ~ook awards News sunnary on Cyprus situation * Section: ) Rowan (lead) to go
  • about 60o/o greater than in March, not two or three times as suggested in press reports from Saigon. An updated and slightly revised version of the PSAC report will be available in about a week's time. I would then like an opportunity to discuss
  • department to work until they fall in their tracks," . the response was tumultuous. The press quoted him as continuing: ·question of law and order. "It's hot a We are not concerned with peace. We are concerned with the liberation of black people. We
  • detente strongly his cooperation to press Nasser:to bombing attacks viable (b) To assure disengage; USG ~ coalition Faisal urge Faisal in efforts we will currently inclined: withdraw his troops; on Saudi Arabia; with SAG, and to support
  • as representative. of the U.S. Compared ($3 billion), economy and are expressed For instance, in extreme the persistent is, of course, A. I. D. has taken remedial the •iollar outflow associated about $50 milli)n competent There· has been an increasing
  • and Urban Development before the end of 1968. Commission Staff Executive Director--Howard E. Shuman. Associate Director--Allen D. Manvel. Assistant Directors--Frank T. Destefano, Arthur S. Goldman, Richard K. Guenther, Stanley D. Heckman, Jack Noble, David
  • , the list is not at all inclusive and you should add any other pr-oposal that you believ_e .is worthy of consideration to assist in solving pressing transportation· problems. i_Q.Il __qf_.feder~._lly supported I. Develop proposals for ~he ~~-~~s__ re~c:!,_C
  • Dear Mro Secretary: Attached is a copy of my letter to you of September 19th. As I have not received an acknowledgement, I would appreciate your confirmation that it was received, and I hope br ought to your personal attention. In the press reports
  • for a Vie tnam peac e settl e m e nt. The effect of this concession on the Viet Cong will be very great. ~p 5ECRE'I' - SENSITIVE -12­ +GP SECRET - SENSITIVE (Secretary Rusk, continued) Following a gap of two or three days, we can press in Paris
  • is the same as a Cadillac now. Oaddy couldn't drive it, Mama couldn't, but they had to have a boy to drive it. His name is Guy Ames [?J. He drove Mama. you can call it a chauffeur if you want to. newspaper, you see. In other words, Also ran the press
  • , a communique in the narne of the saying that those meetings were entire polithuro a good piece of work.· The Soviet leaders seem fQr their shortly thereafter to have scattered usual summer holidays. The.Soviet press stood down its att·acks on Czechoslovakia
  • of their association, did Ralph Yarborough and the senior senator tend to get along fairly well? You've got a natural maverick in Ralph. J: I think they always got along together on the personal basis. Their personalities were such that they were never close
  • into the southern tip of the Delta in order to give impetus and support to the hard-pressed ARVN effort in that area. ·(4) Implement immediately "retaliatory" item (a) on · page 6 above (i.e •• overt u.s. air reconnaissance over North Vietnam), He recanmends
  • the So much so that even before inauguration we were clear that in a sense Walter Heller and Jim Tobin particularly at the council ivere going to be pressing for domestic things, and I was going to have to be saying, despite the wish I might also have
  • on to name this subcommittee, he looked up and down the rostrum of the members, and he named me and here I'd been on only a few weeks. Of course. it was a great surprise. The press made a great deal of it and called me the "Vice_ Admiral" because I
  • in, because we didn't want to jar the place too much, was to look at informational materials and speeches and memoranda and press releases and get a feel for the office. Then we continued that and we thought that they had manpower problems, but as we got more
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Judd -- II -- 21 up in Shansi [Shanxi] when he came in from Peking to see what was going on with these caravan trails and so on. And he gave this dinner for me and there were people there from the press and the civilians
  • elections.... Cuban offers to buy nitrates and foodstuffs in return for sugar might tempt the econor41ically pressed goverrunent. Cuba - Full details of Castro's visit to the USSR remain unknown, but one of the results may be fae p~ospcct of a more
  • -IL Associated Press Ticker (AP) '-8~~AL - MISCELLANEOUS (Cont'd) .-eofill'IlJEN'i'ThL - 8 SOURCE TITIE CIASS. NO. COPIES FREQUE?«:Y DISPOSITION British-Interno.tional Organizntions (Conmruni.stFront) u· l M::mthly IL British
  • to FHA functions, derive Associa­ responsibility in the Association's Secretary respect to the FNMAwill basic Mortgage Credit his line from his as one of the members of the Association's He will the for Mortgage operations entity
  • are beginning to feel that riots are all they understand. This is the only way to talk to downtown." "There will be a holocaust if changes do not come fast." The one theme that emerged in every conversation was the pressing need for jobs. Many believed jobs
  • . I don't associate it with the Presidency or the Senate or the Majority Leadership. It is a personal characteristic. It was his dominant personal characteristic as I see it. G: Can you recall him applying this Johnson treatment in persuasion? J
  • budget, which I have published for many years, which the National Planning Association has published for many years, which some other organizations have published--that is an example of what should be in the economic report as the integral starting point
  • be written, the postcard could be written, but nothing would happen, because that has been the kind of immunization for us. Many more controversial and critical things occur weekly in the Peace Corps that we couldn't even sell to the press, but it's
  • Press and it had an editor named Mefo, at least that was [his byline]. He was really M. E. Foster, I think, but he wrote a column and he used to sign it Mefo. My parents were going through the Depression and money was pretty scarce. buy him a suit. L
  • was afraid that the Court might go off in a direction that would keep us from having an exception. And on the day that the California tidelands case was argued, I went up for the National Association of Attorneys General and made a short friend
  • could get him to reconsider this decision, and the proclamation was just being signed and ready to be released. He was in the Cabinet Room with his key civil rights advisers--that's probably where McPherson was--and the members of the press
  • ; comparing executive agreements, treaties, and executive orders; the influence of OLC's and the attorney general's issued opinions; the attorney's general's rules for issuing opinions; opinions involving Federal National Mortgage Association obligations
  • part. be defined. with with be played ·all ·The as.well directly no longer been of people break in on their line. noH not their roles h~s in also interference associated that·we has line front. Ky and not It elem9nts anti
  • U M J I R 28A S~E~Cnr~&i^t^ ) OR DEPART FROM LOGIC OF HAVING f e ^ E V E L O P M w C o M T H - FLEET INITIATED FROM HONOLULU MERELY TO^ATIS^cORRESPONDENTS DESIRE TO GET SAIGON DATELINE, THERE^i^0S9,lHlLITY ' " OF' SIGNIFICANT NEGATIVE PRESS COVER/(GE
  • much from this and suggested a desperate effort by John Martin to re-establish contact in the city and press for observance of the cease-fire. Earlier in the day we sent Martin a flash message to this purpose. Tom Mann is now sending him another