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  • NATO. The US has proposed for consideration at Reykjavik a resolution (declaration) on this issue which indicates NATO is studying the problem, expresses the hope that the USSR and other countries of Eastern Europe will also study it and be prepared
  • - the week of Feb. 12-18. We hope your readers will again let our veterans know they are appreciated. - Jesse Brown, secretary of Veterans Affairs DEAR JESSE BROWN: I've always known that my readers are the most warmhearted, responsive people in the world
  • Vietnam and are in touch with the Pathet Lao in Laos, to whom they supply money and arms. To counteract this increased Communist pressure, Prime Minister desired to increase Laos fire power and hopes for early delivery of United States commitment of Ml
  • of the boycott. The hope is for a series of meetings with this composition to grow from this first session as specific plans are mad~ for implementation of the ad. 3. Dr. King and t he SCLC staff with five ~ six of the key Alabama plant managers. Such a meeting
  • that the Demonstrations protesting our armed as_s istance to the Vietnamese people in their str·ug·g1e against .COMMUNIST AGGRESSION and TERROR are having a demoralizing effect on . our troops there~ Thus we hope that our activity today wi 11 serve as an emphatic i
  • and , wit h Mr. Clarenc e Fason , selected dogwoo d an d othe r tree s tha t migh t b e used . Mrs. Johnso n hope d a magnoli a woul d b e include d i n th e landscaping . Al l agreed th e landscapin g shoul d b e simple , no t contrived . Also , ther e
  • in the White House Theatre for TAPING of Live to Statement The cease-fire vote of the Security Council opens a hopeful path away from danger i n the Middl e East . It reflects responsible concern for peace on the part of all who voted for it. The United States
  • (pl) today's schedul e --Marvi n als o tol d him tha t Henr y Wif e on was re g lunc h w / Chairma n Mill s an d hoped h e coul d tal k t o Pres . soo n e Califan o Jo Henry i 1:14p Marvin-Watso 1:15p - | 1:35p - | ^ 4:0 C> 4:0 y o Ova l Office
  • friends to come join us for lunch to discuss the purposes of this institution. .its future and its hopes." j Datr .August White House ^ THURSDAY George Meany - Chicago, Illinois (Pres. t h i s G e o r g e c a l l M e a n y took this call
  • - an d Luc i had written o n the picture -"To the Ma n we will alway s lov e and respect -- Here's hoping thi s littl e pre-Halloween gift wil l scar e all the evi l spirits away and make you well again, Luc i & Pat October 18, 1965 N. N . M. C
  • r happines s an d succes s i n the comin g ;yea r 3) T o the President - - w / the hope that this year wil l be brighter tha n th e last . . . a an d w/ th e questio n of whatever sh e coul d do to "eas e th e burden " that sh e would be there at his
  • of free peoples . He sai d --"Our stand must be as firm as ever" and commented how America had stood firm in Europe and now must to do in other parts of the world. He talked of the hopes that both leaders of America and Viet-Nam held for the meetings
  • :05pm, CST , Februar y 9 , 1965 ) The Presiden t release d a statemen t followin g th e meetin g with th e genera l ton e of a goo d meeting, deliveranc e o f the lt r an d Unite d State s hope s fo r Germa n reunification.
  • th e President' s office . Mr . Horne r gav e th e Presiden t a churn Presiden t hopes t o use i t a s decorativ e piec e a t ranc h i n Texas . Wanted Ceci l Stoughto n to tak e pictur e o f the Presiden t wit h Garnet t Horner . Picture taken
  • t 1 , 196 5 Autographed a cop y o f "M y Hope fo r America " t o Chancello r Erhar d o n the occasion o f his visi t - - "T o M y Friend Ludwi g Erhar d wit h warmes t regard o n the occasio n o f his visi t t o Washington , June , 1965 , Lyndo n B
  • Washinc;ton visit on September 11, the King will hope to receive firm assuranecs of US support as a reward for his efforts to moderate the junta's excesses, to reduce the military comIJlexion of the government and to influence it ~CRET/NO FOREIGN DISSEM
  • ith D r . Stanton , I, w h om I hope v e r y m u ch to b e a b le to p e r su a d e to c o m e dow n and h e lp us out in s o m e c a p a c ity . Our p o o l o f th e h igh c a lib r e b r a in s lik e h is is not to o d e e p and w id e and w e do
  • uch in evidence and having a good tim e and, I hope, a r e m ee tin g som e of the p r e s s , B ecau se Lyndon w as la te , L uci stood in lin e w ith m e and re c e iv e d r V. r MEMORANDUM ' THE WHITE HOUSE M onday, J a n u a ry 6, 1964
  • guidelines that two of the administrations have laid down, and the flow of the American capital has continued. I hope it will go on continuing. F: Has there been ever really a strong movement for the Australians to limit the amount of capital that coul d
  • -- 6 M: I hope it is G: It i s ~ helpful~ I nd eed ~ [End of Tape 1 of 1 and Interview V] LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library
  • . And there was a great deal of bitterness. I was surprised. I had been in Europe for two or three years, and I was surprised when I came home to find how much bitterness there was among these people. All of them had been good friends of mine and I hope continued
  • or in conjunction with others, by your talents or by your powers of perseverance -- and sometimes by both -- as women you will a dd to your deeds the grace of understanding and the strength of your hopes. For it is women who will give the Great Society its
  • forget thi s visit. Standing with all of you here in this state that is my home , cannot leave without speaki ng to you of the things that are closest to my heart . I have shared my husband's politi cal hopes and dreams for 29 years , and although
  • of teaching in what seemed to me a far-off, exotic place like Alaska or Hawaii. And I was a journalism major, with vague hopes of finding a place in those alluring news rooms where the clatter of events constantly breaks over typewriters. But whatever I
  • . It was intended to be a healing meeting--a meeting that sought to reassure through this group the Negroes and other minorities of the country that this should not be a cause for violence or a loss of hope . B: It did include representatives from beyond just
  • this relationship . I suppose he was hoping that I would do something to do that, and I did try . have any effect at all . But, no, I didn't I hadn't made any public statements that I agreed with Senator Fulbright. Although he's a good friend of mine
  • of an obtuseness and innocence? W: No, there's a kind of hope that things would be like they were when their daddies were running these companies. When the word conservationist or environmentalist was raised, in their minds immediately they thought about
  • and North Vietnam and results should reinforce activities of the State Defense Study Group on China. the O. S. Military Academy is expected to act as Game Director. 3. (C). It is hoped that you will find it convenient to attend and to participate
  • :for thi purpose. We're worried lest we be over-identified with yet anot.'1er represaive campaign by one of our A ian client . Thie may also spell the end of ROK-Jap settlement hopes this year. It's regrettable that irresponsibility of a minotity
  • and traditions urge upon us a special mission in this world to help and to lead. The new revolution should be our revolution. Our interesl\ demand it. In the course of the 20th Century, America has grown up, or we hope it has. We have turned in some spectacular
  • the overriding question for any of us, Texans or Polynesians, is whether there will be anything to transition to." He xpressed the hope that "while preserving and celebrat­ ing our uniqueness as a state and working together on our present chances and problems, we
  • . a completely opposite reaction. She looked. at it as ~uch a painful incident that \\ hen I interviewed her for the txiok she couldn t even bear to bring herselt to lalk about it. I should hope that the letters that my parents v. role to each other during
  • WAITING RETURN HOME SAFE . . ·. PARS ~TS . FOR US TO THER~~ORE, GRE~.TEST WE: ONLY HOPE 9 AND IT IS TEE DES!RE: OF. J MYSF.L? ~.~D ALL MY · CRE~J ~ THAT \iJE \:! ILL BE FORGl V.EN LE: NIE ~!T LY : BY T HE: GOVE:?Ni·iENT OF Tl€ . DE
  • . The North Vietnamese came to Paris to negotiate seriously. They hope to erode support for the war in the United States by causing high U.S. casualties. They will fail in this . They will conclude that they cannot prevail militarily and will then seek
  • legal order. It appears that Miss Berneioe (it was at her house in Jefferson that Aunt Effie was staying when he wrote Unole Claud and received his antffl'er) has found thi etterUl We had given up all hope of finding it. t ght to make Aunt Effie
  • for .; 1273 marked in full payment. I am 'very .much in hopes we o.an by t.h a t time also say we have aent their libraby ba·ok to them. The Standard cabinet ia due between April 20 and 27 end as soon as it does come the Thewaurus goes back by return mail
  • . Suspending the investment tax credit would, we hoped, slow down capital expenditures. And then holding back and reducing the amount of federal borrowing that went on in the market, all of this designed to hold down interest rates and capital expenditures
  • #2,? WASHINGTON that overtak e m e when a ll o f a sudden I've had too m uch. L_ MEMORANDUM /' / I ^ ' ^ ' i THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINOTOH Saturday, F e b r u a ry 1, 1964 P age 2 and ev ery th in g i s fin a lly s e ttle d . You a re hopeful
  • Washington, the whole planeload fu ll of them, w h o I hoped would come to lo ve m y hometown as I lo ved it, and I told h er that ; r e a ll y I w ished she wouldn't take m y p ic tu re as I le ft. So she got up and went to the phone and made a ca ll
  • . Encourage Sir Alexander ·anti-communist position, and his on the side of the Free World. to continue his intent to align resolute Jamaica 3. Imply to Sir Alexander our hope that an independent Jamaica by the maturity of its leaders will provide an example