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  • to reply, touching upon regional development prospects in the Caribbean area, the President answered his telephone . While the President was on the telephone, the Prime Minister and the Reporting Officer conversed briefly on the above theme ::c
  • the case that an open meeting with the committee now is not in the national interest. 2. Reply to Fulbright by letter now, saying simply that ' 1I have read Secretary Rusk's letter of last December, and agree with it." 3. Telephone Fulbright and tell him "I
  • w as Marshallesque and re served , but he did tell Mrs. Johnson on the telephone that he got f ull support - 2 ­ from the Commander-in-Chief. The President said that Westmoreland reported that he had a good meeting with President Eisenhower
  • ----------------------------------------tr-----------------------------------------------1ll.:35 pm Yokohama advised Fifth Air Force by telephone ot incident and requested immediate assistance. r
  • Rusk left the room to talk on the telephone to Sargent Shriver in Madrid. During their absence, McGeorge Bundy said that extreme care had to be taken in the President's statements. That a speech like the one last Saturday will cost the President
  • -------- ---------------------------- , .. . '. =10PSECRfTTHE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF WASHINGTON, 0. C. 20301 CM-2944-68 3 Feb 1968 ...__ MEMORANDUMFOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: KHE SANH DECLASSIFIED Authority Jc S II)- 3 - 7i' ~ '{P , NARS, Date By ::::s 3- /' - 77 In response to your telephone call
  • from the North Vietnamese who even refuse to acknowledge there are any North Vietnamese troops in South Vietnam. The Hanoi representatives are prepared to stay in Paris and even read the telephone directory if necessary to keep nonproductive talks go
  • in the northern period two areas." At this concern point, about the President again expressed Khe Sanh. - In a telephone Westmoreland reaffirmed When General Wheeler and Wheeler's agreement the President be informed call to General
  • .·~· ~:~~: : .. T~fl_~~ ~~~.:.·. ::::·:,:~~~ .~-~.:. ~-'; MEMORANDUM FOR RECORD SUBJECT: ;.:·~.~ --- 9 ~:::!.Y..)!~v. . ·. ~ ~·-,; ~·, ..... \\. ·-··-vw....., .:.'. .___·. . 1:.._.._-~ u·.-.. 1.11..:. /0-1',L#j~ ii! c Telephone conversation with General
  • of Refugees. January 13, 1¢4 Special Counsel to the President. January 15, 1964 121 123 no Remarks by Telephone for the Keel-Laying Ceremony of the First Automated Cargo Ship. January 16, 1¢4 125 111 Remarks to New Participants in "Plans for Progress
  • conferred tion, and made the 0910 hours this morning I discussed the Khe Sanh by telephone with General Westmoreland. He had just from a visit.to northe~n I Corps Area during which he with senior commanders, personally surveyed the situa­ finalized
  • . It did not even include a confusion ploy. Hanoi has done nothing. In all conversations -- and we have a telephone on every line - - the other party has merely hung up. We now n eed to make a report to the UN Security Council and consider whether
  • and on the actions which the Secretary of Stat~ was proposing. After con~iderable di~cussion of the~e proposals, the follouing were decided upon: f ~ f ~ ~ A) The President would speak on the telephone wi.th President Chfa.ri, provided that Mr. Salinger was able
  • ) Anti-intrusion device (PSR-1) Telephones Antennas Defoliation sets Armored Personnel Carriers Pipes and pickets Gravel mines 40mm projectiles 40mm white starclusters 32 miles 20 miles 102 ea 553 ea· 78 ea 139 ea 83 ea 302 ea ' 500 ea
  • ~O 1 ~\.-, roeSECR THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF DECLASS WASHINGTON, IFIED 11', .'~-~~;;_JJ. ~ 0 D. C. 203 1 ~~~ ✓0-3 7?~ ~ , 'AR , Date -3-/6--7'J.. ~~-~~~li~~S :utho~ty Y MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject: Telephone Conversation
  • , ashin ton Star, telephon d you. He ·aid it ''is very · mport nt,' th y are working on a story. I ask d him th ubject f his story. He didn't ~ant to tell me. When I pressed him a bit more, h said ''it is a major story about the J ohnson ad1 'linistration
  • to stand up out there. We are not about to return to the enclave theories. President Eisenhower said, · what I want most for the President is for him to win the war. {A copy of the telephone conversation with General Eisenhower is attached as Appendix
  • Gardiner did allegedly make himself at home in an unoccupied office and was overheard telephoning the Attorney General's Office. Gardiner also claimed on the above occasion that he had a plan for restaffing the White House and requested an undercover
  • -- (At this point, the President answered a telephone call; he did not resume the pre-Glassboro narration. ) The President said he was wary of the Soviet Union and its leaders. He said it took two meetings at Glassboro to see that Kosygin did not have full authority
  • this morning. (The President had Miss Nivens in Walt Ro stow' s office read the message over the telephone; the message thanked Wilson and Brown for standing firm despite party pressures.) We all have our peculiar problems; all of us have our setbacks
  • ./ WASHINGTON O.C. 20036 / CABLES: BROOKINST / TELEPHONE: 202 HUDSON 3-8919 Economic StudiesProgram June 21, 1968 Mr. Joseph A. Califano, Jr, Special Assistant to the President The White House Office Washington, D. C. 20500 Dear Joe: Since my
  • public employment service give priority job placement assistance to veterans. I am directing that this assistance be extended beyond the confines of the employment office, and that each and every returning veteran be personally contacted by telephone
  • on auto.mobiles and telephone service could serve as another element in the fiscal _adjustment... • . ·; . 8. The Bureau of the Budget should remain prepared in the future, as •it is no~, to offer the President a program of accelerated expenditures that could
  • in a telephone conversation with General Westmoreland that "gravel has been laid north of Khe Sanh. " at the present afternoon. Bob said we h~ no other information available time, but would probably find out more this Art Mc Cafferty f' . ! INFORMATION
  • received a telephone call from the Departmentsaying that this announcementwas being carried from Saigon. I knewnothing about it whatso­ ever. Even though I was a memberof and attended the WashingtonSpecial Actions Group, the so-called WSAG group
  • with limited service for civil use; international faciUties are adequate; effective coverage is provi~d by radio, wired and television broadcasts; 244,000 telephones DEFENSE FORCES: (Secret - No Foreign Dissem) Personnel: army 2,325,000, navy 142,300 (including
  • Rusk's le~ter of last now, saying simply that "I have read December, and agree with it. 11 3. Telephone Fulbright and tell him "I am not going to order Secretary Rusk to go before the Committee in an open hearing. 4. Telephone Fulbright and invite him
  • strongly. I just received a telephone call tonight from your Great-Uncle Gerry, Gerry Warner, who had a call from Santa Barbara that your Great-Grandmother seemedto be failing somewhat. Her heart is not acting right, and she's very weak. The nurse said
  • MEMOS January: 30 - - Situation A in SVN #3 31 -- Telephone Conversation 31 -- Spot Report on Situation with Saigon Station------------------ in Hue ----------------------------- B C 31 -- Situation in SVN #4
  • are still in office until January 20. ... ..., ~ · "' .. · I 9'' -j- MEE~tG Ncn;s COPYRIGHTED Pubfkgt,on R~quire1 P•rmi11i~i1 cf (gpyright HoJ-'er: W. Jhgmci Jotinaon At 7:50 a. m. the President called Secretary Rusk on the telephone and had
  • PROVIDED MEAi'J ASSESSME~T OF THE SITUATIONAS OF NOWBY SECURE TELEPHONE ANDFILLED IN THE COMPLETE DETAILSWHICHFOLLOW. 2. THE SITUATIONIS STILL CONFUSED BUT IT IS APPARENT THAT THE ENEMYHASTAKENADVANTAGE OF THE GENERAL STATEOF RELAX­ ATIONEXISTINGDURI:'JGT~T
  • to the government's control measures under martial law. The functioning of public services, water electricity, telephone, has returned to near normal after various outages. Government agencies are beginning to deal with the problem of the many persons who have been
  • VIET NAM GUNBOATS AND SUPPORTING F^ILITIEg:-------------------------------- -------- “ ------- " I BELIE7E IT IS THE ONLY THING HE CAN DO UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES," SAID GOLEWATER IN A BRIEF PREPARED STATEMENT ISSUED AFTER A PERSONAL TELEPHONE CALL
  • could be of very critical importance. About three or four o'clock in the morning the telephone in my room rang. The operator apologized for waking me up, but said that Krishna Menonof India wanted to talk most urgently with me. Krishna Menoncame