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  • 13, 1966 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: ACTION Heart Operation for Dominican Boy You will be interested in a moving story in which our Embassy and militaryfurces in the DR and the Boston Children's Hospital Medical Center worked together
  • ratings for three successive years. According to the April 15, 1958, issue of the "Boston Globe," John P. Gardiner, a retired State Department Foreign Service employee, had appealed a ten-dollar fine imposed on him after his con­ viction on a charge
  • was plagued by indifference and actual discontent through­ out the war .•. Pennsylvania was so full of disaffection that it was the despair of the patriotic party ... upstate New York had long been indifferent and Tories abounded." 2 Even in Boston James
  • Globe &: Mail editorial on Pears on' s troubles of last week, and the other is a report from Ralph Bunche about the troubles J:hat U Thant is having in delivering his Vietnamese message to Hanoi, Peking, and the Viet Cong. ~Jf) ~ McG. B. Copy
  • to weapons that ~~ show up in northern lati­ t We need a globe-girdling 1y1tcm, KaRning all directions and sufficiently. accurate to pinpoint a satellite 10 that we could 1CDdup a defensive vehicle to intercept iL 1J • Pioneer ;,.,;e,tor aatcllitc1, poised
  • quarters which will arguments of the globe, The country meant to be preliminar_y for, from this way problem? may be general in each capital; each case is unique. of course, What follows proliferation Although some of those policies quite
  • the earth to explore the universe beyond, man can orbit satellites to send our voices or televise our activities to all peoples of this globe. : -·} ;:_~ / ~/ Here are examples of what satellite communications have already meant in terms of hum.an
  • ? Vlould Eui~ope and the world be better ofi oi~ worse? Vlould th.e possibilities of detente be on the present r.oriz011? Thon turn the globe :u7.d loo!t at Asia. If we had made no co:-~11tr.acnt.
  • :.£A~~,-.P~~=-l?.,3.:P.Y.~d7_.~.M-~eP-E:,""'9-.:£.~..!=,~~---··lF....~§Jgfil}.t_s talk. In Brazil,·-= -·..:""Rios important daily O Globe ~~n·.afternoon
  • on the globe, and he may hope to gain their ultimate acceptance of his concept of a Europe from the "Atlantic to the Urals." He is motivated partly by a desire to encourage diversity among the Communist bloc nations, but he is also intent on a larger role
  • to make a stand, · and importing, from the opposite side o·f the globe, a vast Western army to fight against the revolutionary leader who secured Vietnamese inde­ pendence from the ·French, reflects a failure to comprehend the great historical forces which
  • to this. after Congress bas continued to appropriate to i:bab prosram -- with growing conf'idence-sums which now, I believe, add up to more than $3 billion. American experts have traveled the globe to every continent, bringing their skills to the world-wide war
  • . • would wane, not only in the Far East, hut around Flying over Camranh Bay, once little more the globe. Our int~grity as a nation would be gravely questioned. ' . than sand and water and now a teeming complex In Han'oi, there is no free press, radio
  • , and a development bank for financing the objectives the eradication the establish­ and water, the training industry the of -- typify of the Food for Peace Programme, which today se.rves m=>r6than one hundred nations around the globe. 11 Malaria
  • . • would wane, not only in the Far East, hut around Flying over Camranh Bay, once little more the globe. Our int~grity as a nation would be gravely questioned. ' . than sand and water and now a teeming complex In Han'oi, there is no free press, radio