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2818 results
- recently submitted regarding your theory of an underground cable failure caused • by osmotic action. I realize you spent a great deal of time and.effort in preparing your material. Your papers were forwarded to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company
- Department of State UNCLASSIFIED PAGE 01 KABUL 05121 I8 INF'O NEA 13,GPM ,-4,H 02,SY 03,MC 01,CIAE 02,TRSY 08,AID 767 ACTION COPY 1811362 ACTlON L 03 DODE 00,JUS TELEGRAf i0,RSR 00,INR 01,/055 l80755Z JUN 68 FM AMEMBASSYKABUL
- •■A'""-'' ■■r V m m'^ ■4 ■' -S',:- COPY LBJ LIBRARY . i •J INCOMiMG IlMQim Departm ent o f State 46 LIMITED OFFICIAL USE - -- .y Action NNNNVV M JA 1 2 2 JIA 8 2 3 FE RR RUEHCR Info DE R U t-lJlR 545A ZNY CCCCC ss G SP SAH L H
- BALBOA, C A L IF ., AUG. U (U P I) — REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE BARRY M. GOLDtfATER TONIGHT EXPRESSED STRONG SUPPORT OF PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S COURSE OF ACTION IN THE SOUTHEAST ASIA C R IS IS , INCLUDING USE OF DIRECT MILITARY AIR ACTION AGAINST NORTH
- of confrontation between Arab Egyptian military action on monarchs like Saudi Arabia's the side of the Republicans, King Faisal and Arab revolu- Robert H. Estabrook of The Uonaries led by Nasser. Washington Post repcrted Ketaf is a key Royalist cen- lfrom
- : Well, I think they took them seriously, of course, because that's where the action was. 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral
- Walter W. Jenkins, 0-1576186, is returned without action pending receipt of additional infor mation as follows: . ·' a. Completion of i~ems 60, 71, SF88. b. Orthopedic evaluation of right shoulder. c. Medical evaluation of history of severe headaches
- □ COLLECT TO ACTION: Am em bassy LONDON 7915 IM^iEDIATE Jsn !5 9 NODJS id W'^5' EYES ONLY FOR AIvffiASSADOR FROM SECRETARY Request you urgently seek out M enzies and Wilson, preferably in tliat order, to inform them of follov/ing: 1. We have
- action agains t hostile forces , Augus t 9 through August 10 , i n the Pleik u Province , Republi c o f Vietnam. __ Toda y issued statemen t o n House passag e o f the Ta x Bill . Today issued statemen t applaudin g actio n o f the Hous e Judiciar y
- Corp s Col. Fre d B . Schoomaker . Chief . Specia l Actions Unit . Offic e o f Chief o f Staff . U . S . Arm y Major Jame s Piner , Jr . , Aid e t o th e Chie f o f Staff, Offic e o f th e Chief o f Staff , U . S . Arm y Lt. Col . Deo n N . Utter
- n a d e , and o c c a s io n a lly a dip to c o o l off. G e o r g e to ld m e of h is plan ^ alread y put in to action ^ of m a k in g a c o r p o r a tio n out o f H un tlan ds w h ic h w ill b e p a r tic ip a te d in b y th e ir fiv e c h ild r e
- Clifford: Our best course of action is to say this is a continuing study. NATO allies are very concerned about us getting ready to cut our forces. The President: Should we have a second meeting with Harriman and Vance? Secretary Rusk: Yes, we
- . We are on a sound military basis for con In the North, they are rebuilding LOC's and their facilities. moving much materiel south. The President: They are Have we lost or gained by the action of March 31? General Wheeler: at this time. Secretary
Folder, "October 14, 1968 Meeting with Foreign Policy Advisory Group," Papers of Tom Johnson, Box 4
(Item)
- : I feel they are hurting as a result of tenacity and endurance of our people. The ARVN has improved, but I doubt they feel they are going to bring about peace very quickly. We must have solid answers to back up our taking this action. I won't continue
- sites which had been unc:er discuss!o:l i.c uese c~y~. 0::. fae o:~e!" ~~"'le, i! was a question whether such action would r..o: lay down a g2.t=:Ie: to fae world. r: we s~ot:!C. ·~ake this course, the Xorth Vietnamese m::;:i: lco:.;: ~= the!r f=i·~~C:s
- ere going to give him a thorough m e d ic a l g o in g «o v e r the next m o rn in g, and tonight we only talk ed about the p h y c o lo g ica l a s p e c t s . Both thought that in action , id le n e s s , la c k of com m an d, would be a h a r d e
- could get the Government of Viatnam at thC! table that it was • advisable; and he thought in the light of what had happened in the last two -three months in the troops that they had ' f f· moved, that such action would not in any way increase
- visited by) ture Code -. 7:42p --8:15 15, ., - *!--,- RECORD: Senator Everett Dirksen Johnson (pl)--re a memo that Tom J had sent in asking for the President's approval for Asst Secy Goulding to release a statement about a plane downed in action
- action s ^^ : • • Y . Wal t Rosto w aske d fo r th e President—h e wa s o n the telephone--Di d no t tal l ; excep 1 L 7 _* Hon. Farri s Bryant , Director , Offic e o f Emergency Planning Th . y THURSDA 196 . McGeorg e Bund y Wal ;] e 8
- they have been passed over as Marine generals, suspending a section of the U.S. code-- a formal action) Also issued Exec Order designating the Asian Development Bank as a public internat: onal organization. Today announced his intention to nominate
Oral history transcript, Paul Henry Nitze, interview 4 (IV), 1/10/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- on this mass of decisions and being able to handle it when he was out of town or otherwise engaged, but Mr. McNamara dealt with all the substantive detail. For Mr. Clifford this was not the right course of action, and that is not what he did. What he did
- ; - the follow- through on the t-v11ite House Ccnf erence on Natur~l :Oea:1.:t~' • I For while Washir.r,:ton e;..~erts, ca~ rally together the l eaders and it is -- af tt;r all -- back in our hometowns , where i nsp:::::'ation beco:.:ies action anc.l results
- ...... ss 1382 , • ACTION: AmembaaayPAB.IS- Jt8 ~ \ ,..~ TOPOL PRI USMiaalon GENEVA TODIS PRIORITY 13 ,u ~•-·,, I INFO: G SP L AmembaaayANKARA (by pouch) " ATHENS (by pouch) " BONN " BRUSSELS (by pouch) COPENHAGEN (by pouch) THE HAGUE
- BUILDING V (X~ '"'6 ':) \ ;> ..,.. 1:'l- Charles E. Marsh Litt l efield Building ustin Texas Mr . Dear Charlie , A wire received this morning from New Orleans says : "No immediate action required . Would be pleased to arrange conference any con
- on earth auob as :J. tler t express, baa a way of d.J ing froa the date of 1ta utterance. The reason i• :noi a moral one. The reason 1• a111pl7 tbat t.Ntn ia the baai ■ of aot.1on in healtb--tbat falH informa tion when pu.t int.o action cre&t..a 111.nees
- and self determinism of his activism. But at that surrealist a pproach to philosophy for the purpose of using whatever is as the basis of ma:q. in action, it becomes much closer to what man wants than any Buddhistic Transcendentalism. it is in the right
- , had spent a good deal f time thinking about the long term consequences of his decisions. hree, the President must look far into the future at the consequences of his actions, or there would not be effective national planning. Only the Presidential
- about the actions of our adversaries in Hanoi, and our allies in Saigon? UT Professor Emeritus Ro rt Divine put the Vietnam War into context in his keynote address, "Perpetual War for Perpetual Peac ." That tit! Divine explain d, "cap tures the ess nee
- a lu e on th e se th in gs, and to talk about what w e m ight do to im p lem en t, to sup p lem en t, and to be a c a ta ly st for action." I told them a bit MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE T h u rsd ay, F eb ru a ry 11, 1965 WASKINOTON P age 3 about m
- , and t wo, the action p1·ogrm:i s fm." the new De
- of opinion I t~ Congressional ~ action$ largely be ". ·· 11 7 i cause there has been e ;no e dd e d in the Am. e· .·ican tra
- Regents to accept 800 apartments that were surplus army barracks. 9/14 Ford Motor Company halts all production at its plants throughout the country and lays off 50,000 workers. Company says the action was caused by “crippling and unauthorized strikes
- IN DEATH OR INJUR Y TO '"'NNY VIETNAMESE C I V I L I A N S AND THE KIDNAPPING OF OTHERS IN ADDITION TO s u '’. s t a n t i a l n i l i t a ’^y c a s u a l t i e s :’: THE v i c i o u s a t t a c k AND '^ELATED ACTIONS r'^VOLVIMG TH E A’lERICAN T7‘1| S^T
Folder, "Colonel Jenkins, Walter W. A0 157 61 86 [2 of 2]," Aides Files of Mildred Stegall, Box 29A
(Item)
- ~ecuted'., a ,e omtnission evidencing your/ 'a ppointment will be sent to. y· au.'• fl 3~ . l Prompt, :action is refuested~ · s inoe the· regulations require eancellatiot1 'the tender· o a:P~pintment' l f' a.ccept:ance is not" o,r receiveQ. ·within
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 23 (XXIII), 8/28/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- it was made and that sort of thing. But I don't believe we got into rubber very deeply, because we could never get a satisfactory report. But the committee did take individual actions, like that business in Akron. G: There was also the question of alcohol
- on the same side from the moment--except for the increase in discount rate action in December of 1965, Fowler and Martin were basically on the same side of economic policy once the Vietnam buildup started in July of 1965. They both felt we were going too fast
- I wa s takin g the m o n fait h - - tha t th e time s demande d thi s action . Thi s i s a ste p toward peace . Mary Margare t Valent i railed , bu t th e Presiden t di d no t tal k a t tha t time , 8:30p Fldwin Weisl , Sr. 9:00p 9:04p 9:05p
- the criticism; thi s brought sympathetic laughter. H e went on to say that in most complaints, examination of facts showed that reporters had forecast some action of his, without any firm basis, and then claimed they were mis-led when forecasts proved untrue