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  • our resources fully to raise the standards by which all of our people live and to dedicate our national. efforts to assuring peace for nll mankind. We believe mid we know that these aro purposes that we share in commonwith you and it is our hope
  • on such a.ddltional force·s should be desla.yed until Parlt ovoreomee the acute problem, he currently faces in. puishing through a Jo.pan-Korea aettl(U'nont. ( .F~r l'?.ur info~mation: the Koreane bad hoped to use the question of further t1roops in order to pry ma.jor
  • stating his hope for combined AID-EXIM power 13/ "Iran: U.S. Economic Assistance" (Graph prepared in NEA/IRN and AID/NESA in connection with the Shah's June 1968 visit to the United States). : . , ,I., , ,-. I SECRET= (, • I " ' (,; development
  • them toward negotiations. C. I . The visits give you the opportunity to seize the initiative at the The visits fit in with our plan by providing opportunities fo r Inonu and Papandreou to ascribe their hoped-for future greater to United States
  • . Diem wasn't too well known, he didn't have too much of a following in the country. and out and that sort of thing. And Hanoi hoped Held been exiled They hoped that by terrorism, subver- sion, propaganda, and intimidation that they could topple
  • ,THIS MIGHTBE THE CZECH• S HOPE. • . . ON THE STRATEGICARMSTALKS, PRIBYL SAID HE RECOGNIZED THE OVERRIDING IMPORTANCE p- DISAPMAMENT. YET HE(uopE~ ·•E WOULD NOTBE TOOEAGER' RIO~ iO THE INVASION,HE ID, ~JVIET EMBASSY CONTACTS bAVEHIM
  • practically all of the terr! tory north of that famous Line - I hope you will have the good judgment to come to the free (almost) State of Texas. both, I am With best regards and good wishes to you Sine~ AJW:ob Alvin J. ' no,....~..rha t progress P.S
  • thousand troops there, and when we suggested that they might want to consider more, oh, my Lord! They had a list as long as a man's hopes as to why they couldn't send any more. They finally did send an additional light division, some six thousand troops
  • (8-85) April 30, 1968 Sec. Rusk wants to add: 1. Bunker's present plans: hoping to go to Katmandu May 9-140 2. Further modifications and enlargement of Barrell Roll area in Laos. 30 Mr. Rostow's idea: Possible Thieu initiative with NLF
  • measured the three hours more he granted Governor Wallace. That he gave the time seemed to me but further proof of the sincerity the President exhibited in his talk with us. Doubtless he will not see the report, and I hope he does not, in which case you
  • , Jochen Moser, by the East Berlin Communist Authorities. " I like to help get him released but I am afraid I cannot do it. However, I am very glad that you yourself was freed after a short detention by the Communists., I hope your efforts to get bd'l Cb
  • Staff, th e Chie f o f Staff o f the Army , th e tee o n Arrangement s fo r thi s event , t o hope to be a happy nation . Chief o f Naval Operations, th e Chie f o f begin s even t b y presentin g th e U.S . "Grant ou r supplication , w e beseech Staff o
  • think that this is no condemnation that his basic philosophy. I suspect sometimes, you know, if I were an 18- year- old student today I might be marching in some of the confrontations. I hope I would be a peaceful con- fronter, but as one who spent
  • . Therefore, I accept yOU' propoaal. I am prepared to dealpaate our repreaentatlv•• an llldicatlon from the other alde that they are prepared •• ■ OOII •• yo.a have to meet with them la the Vatican City. l woald oely add my hope and prayer which you
  • . him in drawing his plan is his hatred Dulles' known position and his announce­ for the Soviet Union and that, in the ment that he speaks with the approval hope that Germany would use it again of the chairman of the Senate Foreign against eastern Europe
  • JAPANESE­ EUROPEAN STEEL INDUSTRY MEETIN3 WHICH IS SCHEDULED FOR AUGUST 21. AT THAT MEETING, THE EUROPEANS HOPE TO REACH AGREEMENT WITH THE JAPANESE ON VOLUNTARY RESTRAINTS. IF SUCCESSFUL, THEY WOULD THEN APPROACH BRITAIN AND CANADA, THE OTHER TWO MAJOR
  • . Dear Walter: I apologize, obert M. Robinson, pril., 1964. I do hope, be able and beg your pardon, concerning With best in my original for us about wishes, this. I am Your friend, J JPC/nc you again which I wrote you on the fourth
  • . :' .. .. . , • '·l : .•.. ' . ' ··,· ,· . , , ·. ' •.·. . .. . ' 2 of 2 ; , l 22, 1938 Dece■ber t send you a fro■ COPJ' of a letter Honorable Louie Johnson, . Asaietant Seoret~ry of war. \ 11th all personal i~ wlnhea and..,- hopes that you ha•e
  • . , in his speech nominatin g the Negro pastor. Race Issue Hit Mr. Hawkins said he hoped the c hurch could now move l'loser to achieving " human dignity for all of God 's chil­ dren ." The Rev . Dale K. Milligan o( Beulah Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh
  • - made for the most part out of the Old World, but essentially altogether new with a hope in the future based on pride of strength and joy in liberty. And with it all, humility and tolerance. may live in a chosen land, ~t w4 do not belong to a chosen
  • earch for a workabl e program that will offer some hope t o t hose who s eek an escape f r om Communist t yr anny . We seem to have convinced t he peopl e of West Berlin and West Germany that we 11 w111 hol d the line . 11 But we have not c onvi nced
  • suppose the Kennedy Library hoping that when the Library was finally opened that they would then be able to borrow the desk from the Smithsonian perhaps. I guess what they didn't reckon with was Mr. Carter coming in and finding out about the desk
  • the things on the plane that the Air Force needed and the other things that the Navy needed, that you just had too much airplane, particularly for the Navy. Now, I hope and pray that the F-111 and its further developed models will be a good plane
  • AS THE NEij INFORMATION MINISTER WITH LINH.AS HIS .V"ICE MI NI STER . THIEU HOPED THAT THIS \dOULD STRENGTHEN THE IMPORTANT INFORMATION ACTIVITIES 6F THE GOVERNMENT, VITH WHICH, 'HE MADE CLEAR, HE IS .NOT NOW SATISFIED. P-AG~~ . . 6. THIEU THEN TALKED
  • and thUB possibly injure the regular atore sales. I enjoyed our little conversation in Chicago very auch indeed and hope to be paying 7ou a viait in Waahington before very long. Kindest regards. Sincerely youra, Zit:IS POBLISHD!G COIIPAIII Louis Zara
  • directly conc..-.ed .,.u what could be an :f.nccea•ingly danger•• •itutioao We believed thea aa we believe DOW that USG could not hope to be of any aasiatance eleaa hotb Saudl Arabia aad UAR velun1t:ar1ly aad wholeheartedly accepted our of fer ef
  • fii."10 You will ot course merely apply this on interest ot my note- and hope ~o hell that I send you some more soono No doubt you have been wondering what kind ot a bastard I was- not to have either sent you some money or written to 100' At any rate
  • to victory". There is some evidence of a hope to bring large parts of the population over to the VC side and to seize and hold control of several large population centers. 3 10. As to the condition of ARVN units, and their response, both the military
  • ,··»ALEY"SAID,·AND WI HAVEA FINE SUPPLYOF EXCELLENT LABOR.• . HE ADDEDTHATCHICAGO •vILL DO EVERYTHING .It· .POSSIBLY CANTO II THIS PROJECT. COOPERATE SEABORG REITERATED THATTHE AEc· HOPES TO OB?Alli NONEY FROII NEXT YEARTO FINANCE T·HEEN8INEERIN8DESIGN FOi
  • reat. I prcnin the guNt 11st will be limited to eight, wl tb hezlde aoross the Miaelsalppl tor the gooct or the South, aA4 the pleuun whloh I hope will be ymre e.a you reat e mimte. Sincerely, Charle• I. .Marsh (Not printed at Government expense
  • .111.de 3obalibough l ldabt ...,. IION ll0MT 1:han l haft now.. ill I IIOU1d like oat ot -q bwd.neaa· nowis a good. livins ., I· ooald ,-.,. ..,. doctor bUltl, nm~ dnc• and other nelllaat.ttea. . I don't need l:bDr1.ea. I hope I ham tt bored Jail
  • ~RRlMAN AND VANCE : . ,. . . 1. 1 PREFACED MY PREPARED REMARKS SY WELCOMING LEDUC -: THO TO OUR TALKS, SAYING THAT WE WERE WELL AWARE OF HIS t POSlTlON, IN TH£ COU NCILS OF HIS GOVERNMENr, AND THAT WE 'HOPED HIS '• ARRIVAL. WAS A GOOD AUGURY . THO
  • that have been taken in the hope of arriving at a peaceful solution of the problems in that area. This disposi­ tion was made clear in a personal interview that Mr. Nahum Goldmann, President of the World Jewish Congress, had with His Holiness, Pope Paul VI
  • . 10017, 697•5100 WNBC-TV and NBC Network DATE January 31. \968 - 11:30 CITY PM New York INTERVIEWWITH JIM GARRISON JOHNNYCARSON: Mz-. Garrison, accepting the invitation. I thlmk youAfor coming and And I hope I did not misstate a morn-antago
  • conceal the furlnamental problems of regional and religious conflicts -which inevitably come to the fore in South Vietnam. Hanoi mi ght postpone decisions about the war in the hope that, over the next yea'Z', tb.e 'Work of the constituent assembly
  • on the Potomac, which was Kennedy's old yacht, as I recall. It just happened to be that my wife and I were in the car with the President. Mrs. Johnson had gone on with someone else. The chauffeur was an old friend that I had known since 1955. I became, I hope
  • arrange on Inaugural Day in our church--a thirty-minute service ahead of the actual Inaugural ceremony. It was a very simple and a very moving service, interdenominational and interfaith at his suggestion. He had hoped for this to be a very small service
  • a project of that size-­ dam. And while we were there, we were also hoping that some of the effect would be to slough off and help the re-elec::ion of two senators: Moss of Utah and Gale McGee in Wyoming. F: Both of whom had hard races that year. C
  • of National Estimates and suggested that it is desirable not to exacerbate the situatio!l. While we cannot offer much real hope of positive developments from the Macapagal/Sukarno. meeting he believed it p·:>s sible that something might co~e out