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  • a Sabena plane, as I recall it, from Brussels to New York. Welanded at Manchester just for a refueling stop. I picked up a British newspaper there, and the big headlines were that the United States and CorranunistChina had agreed to resume talks
  • continue aa we have up to now we wlll not have the success which we all wish for. Mr. BolJ'JlOBOLTZD. Mr. Chancellor, we understand from the newspapers that you have sent a message to Soviei Premier Khruahchev •hile you have been in Wash­ ington. Is th1a
  • to DaveMcKillop about the American Foreign Service Association position on an amendmentto the Foreign Service Act on the grievance procedure. I pointed out that,if they supported the present amendment,I was sure that the Secretary and the President would have
  • before· the , . tonals of a local newspaper, I Committee : would .. authorize State ·Departments ~aJor ob- I Moscow and hs puppets slick­ an ·independent Freedom Com- jection was that the Academy ly attempted . .to destroy ..· the I mission, which would
  • at noon on Stefan Thomas, hi ghest ranking official present at SPD Hq today, end referring to advertisement attempting capitalize on cordial association between Brandt and Vice President Johnson, made clear that Vice President was disturbed by this use
  • at that point, working with Mac Bundy, and he called me over a few days after I joinej the government just to talk. So that was the first time I met him. M: Turned out to be a rather close association, didn't it, as time went by? J: Very. M: Quite
  • at a very delicate stage in our association just at that time on settling the claims, and the State Department--I speak of "the" Department as if it were an anonymous entity--which you do, you know, when you are in it--but actually by that time I really
  • enterprise•, nor d oe • it rende r flnanclal or tfich n ical • uppn rt. Our own lntereete are adequate­ ly e~rve d by the V9 lce of >rnerlca (VOA), opera ted by the Uri(tecl State• Information .At;J,en cy. VOA, the voice of the United Stat«,11 Governmetit
  • , that basis title. That job also carried with it the executive directorship of the World Bank and the International Development Association and so forth. Since then it's been changed. M: That's why I was confused. I knew that now those weren't the same
  • muat have found General Clay a great superior ln World War I. I wlsh that all persons I associate with ln the · future could·-be of hls callber·in wisdom and comradeship. He certaiDly is a gentleman~ Sincerely, . Lyn~on '· Mr. ·Lawrence Westbrook
  • pastor there. Pastor Norden, as I recall Pastor Liljedahl from Salina used to occasionally come downand preach. To go back to the Forsses: my only real associate as a young child Tape l -- 8 was my cousin Verna, the daughter of Gus Forsse who as I
  • : Yes. This was a rather astonishing crisis in a number of ways. For one thing it was a crisis for some days before it ever got in the newspapers. We were frantically disturbed in the State Department some days before this ever got in the press. I
  • and in Sweden and Germany. He is married to·an American and has two adopted children. The Ambassador was very active i i: the communication field for t he Norwegi an Government-in-exile during World War II. After several years of private newspaper work he rejo
  • shouldn't use that tenn--was still maintaining an association with Averell Harriman. And I must say hearing that what was said certainly seemed innocent to me and certainly in support of the Administration, but the President took it as indicating that Bill
  • DISCUSSION OF UNNAMED PERSON'S VIEWS ON CHANCES OF SENATE APPROVAL OF HOMER THORNBERRY, CYRUS VANCE OR HENRY "JOE" FOWLER AS SUPREME COURT ASSOCIATE JUSTICE; LBJ TELLS WEISL HE IS MEETING WITH AVERELL HARRIMAN ABOUT PARIS PEACE TALKS
  • . More details will be down in the lDBIXXK memo of conversation. Now, as far as the actions on the ground are concerned, Admiral Taylor indicates that they just don't really confirm the kinds of things that would be associated with any such major movement
  • Under Consideration within the Department: Do Repeal of Modification of Johnson Act. Eo Joint Consultationso Fo Encourage Travel to USAo Go Association of Eastern European Countries with GATTo H. ECE Initiatives. Io USSR Participation
  • Foreign Service Association on March 31, 1966_ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ __ __ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ 17 v [Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents, Monday, March 7, 1966, · Vol. 2, No. 9] WHITE HOUSE
  • must say with the wisdom of hindsight--I may be a little parochial on it--that the Middle East trip was quite successful. It was beginning of my association with Lyndon Johnson. F: That's what I wanted to ask. He was dissatisfied with his staff help
  • Linguistics (CAL). The 11 CAL, a part of the Modern Language Association and :financed principally by the Ford Foundation, was established "to serve as a clearinghouse and informal coordinating body in the application of linguistic science to practical
  • occasion very soon after that to see Wilson alone once or twice, through the accident that I was at that time the president of the Association of American Correspondents in London. We were about to have our annual dinner, and I had to_go to Downing
  • to decide. But I believe that if--we11, I believe that they should have a much closer association with the United States, and I believe that they really want to, particularly if we act fairly soon. Whether they should be a territory like Guam or whether