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  • Tag > new2024-June (remove)
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  • Series > Memos to the President (remove)

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  • own itinerary and arrange interviews as he saw fit. I talked to some Vietnamese newspaper editors who opposed the Thieu-Ky ticket. I also talked to Associated Press and United Press Interna­ tional bureau chiefs and to experienced reporters
  • ALLIANCE AND PEACE -AT HUE THE APPEALS OF WHICH HAD BEEN REPRODUCED IN THE VIETNAMESE PRESS. WHEN I ASKED HIM IF TH.ESE 'Two ORGANIZATIONS WOULD ' EVENTUALLY BE ASSOCIATED IN A COALITION GOVERNMENT, HE TOOK A RESERVED POSOTION. FOR THE MOMENT, HE TOLD ME
  • ' Despite its emphasis on a socialist-style·.economy Government realizes enterprises that private it must have t_he cooperation ·i_n the· extr~ive with the U.S. position investment _industry. on political in this area. the FRIA alumina enterprise
  • • Sttllation Room that a bomb explOlled oa the ftl1ht deck of the USS ENTERPRISE ••ttina off a fire. been requ••t•d The fire i• under control at thb time. Several lnj11rl•• r••ulted from Pearl Harbor. and medical USS ENTERPRISE Pearl i• pr•••ntly 76
  • made the J11dameat that air operatlau would be bleffediw or lmpntdeat. He c:oald aot re-ria the strike aircraft la Korea la Ume faor could tba USS ENTERPRISE aet it• aircraft over Woaaaa bay la time). BeJoacl &bat, the poor weather. pool' late
  • AHNO~CED COMPOSEDOF PRO~INENT PAN~~ANIANS OF SOME DISTINCTION. ~ PRESS CENSORSHIP IS BEING RELAXED. PRO-ARIAS NEWSPAPERS VERE PERMITTED TO RESI.ME PUBLICATION NOVEMBERt. BASIC CONSTITtrrIONAL GUARANTEES RE~AIN SUSPENDED, BUT ~ANY ARIAS SUPPORTERS
  • that some of the four-digit serials may be associated with rear service work and can reasonably expect an unknown number of men to be assigned to these tasks. I. Using the same movement factors, we have estimated the time required for the serials to arrive
  • Thurmond expressed his opposition to the NPT. man Findley questioned the wisdom of secret negotiations the Soviet Union-on disarmament. Congress­ with Today's newspapers generally carry favorable editorial and_ columnist comments. We and the Agencies
  • MATTERS, SOVIET MILITARY COMMANDERS HAVE FORCIBLY OCCUPIED AND CLOSED CERTAIN NEWSPAPERS
  • at a peaceful solution. We have, therefore, taken action ' . ·to quiet domestic pressures for a strong response. We have stopped further deploy- I I ments into the area and moved the carrier Enterprise some distance south. ~ We have now had seven private
  • ," and prior to his appointment as Ambassador in August, 1967 Mantilla served as Executive Director of that newspaper. He has been active in Ecuadorean and inter-American press organizations and was President of the inter-American Press Association from 1949
  • Deputy Under Secreta4y Char~es E. Bohlen A~bassador Anatoliy F. Dobrynin, USSR COPIES TO: --"""·- ----------l,\IQlll..-::,:C=a===:;:=---·-------- ------ 1 7 copy of a Spanish langltage newspaper which claimed th&t Arubas ador Dobrynin said t.at he
  • actions which I announce_d on September 26, before the National Security Industrial Association, wer~ under study. I believe we have a good· progress report to make on ways in which the Defense Department, jointly with industry, can contribute more
  • of the combatants and, at the same time, to adequately cope with the war-time conditions. "In brief, to · meet requirements of the war situation, to associate the rear and front lines in the efforts of a people engaged in a total war, to avoid the repetition
  • . -------DISAPPROVE ------- APPROVE DISCUSSION: Mr. Alex Behler, a Yugoslav who is President of the World Federation of the United Nations Association, has told Ambassador Bowles in New Dehli that he will be having discussions in Moscow next week with Prime Minister
  • in a distinguished newspaper, they, of course. achieved a eigrdficant part of their aim -- to call attention to opposition to the war. Meantime, the ata~ment of a high government of.fidal on a aeri.O\l&problem w-aepretty well lost in the ahadow of unthinking violence
  • Atlanta Newspapers Inc. Atlanta, Georgia. 30303 Tel: AC 404--522-5050. Mr. George Meany AFL-CI0 815 ~ixteenth S_treet N W., ~ash1.ngtr..n1_O. c. 2doo6 _...,.._e•• NA 8-3870 The Honorable Maurine·Neuberger 872 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, Massachusetts
  • . Steven L. Osterweir President Associated Merchandizing Corporation Mr. R. W. Rosevear Vice President, Merchandizing W. T. Grant Company Mr. Harold Schapps General Manager Gimbels International Buying Corporation Mr. Theodore Schlesinger President Allied
  • force the Amer icans out of Vietnam and of Southeast Asia in a matter of months. Such est imates b~sed on newspapers' sensational headlines and overt:implified facts were of course far wide of the mark. It is true that the Communist of f ens i ve has
  • (OUR TIME) BECAUSE, ALTHOUGHMY SENIOR COLLEAGUES PRINCIPALLY CONCERMEDARE NATURALLY AT ONE WITH ME IN THE ENTERPRISE, I HAVE TO SEEK THE ENDORSEMENTOF THE FULL CABINET AT OUR MEETING TOMORROW,THE FIRST THAT HAS BEEN POSSIBLE SU1CE OUR CPNFERENCE_ LAST
  • with the Indonesian government for economic development of the country. In this enterprise, our corporation is associated with Daniel, Mann, Johnson, and Mendenhall, one of the world's largest architectural-engineering firms, and with the Stanford Research Institute
  • . Pilot projects introducing fundamental reforms support from in secondary education have received enthusiastic teachers, parents, community members, and from the students themselves. Regional development associations have urged the Secretariat
  • PAVNartilleryassociated element received a message from another unidentified PAVNartillery-associated element on 3 April which stated, "According to Hl," a designator associated with the DMZFront, "we are not to fire anymore o" Additionally, an unidentified element
  • for Commerce a~d Industry, he has worked closely with United States industrial leaders and with the top figures of Irish government and private enterprise. In 1967 he led the first Unite_d States private investment mission to Ireland composed of 27
  • at least in part with record speed. It appears from captured documents that at least some of the personnel associated with the nE;wlyidentified North Vietnamese 209th Regiment in the central highlands moved over 500 miles from North to South Vietnam
  • but is making steady though slower progress. Sensit~vity about U. S. relations with the National Liberation Front were heightened by the report of the arrest of a National Liberation Front emissary, by the false newspaper accounts that high officials
  • , Detroit Economic Club, Bohemian Grove Business Council, National Association of Manufacturers, Cleveland Committee and American Council on Germany. In each c;_i~y I also held one 0.:_ mor~ ..P!J.~~~~fE:rences and TVier.formance_~-~-~u~_!_q panel
  • capabilities of the state enterprises, establishment of priorlties for future development projects and increased private sector participation in the economy. The release of the second tranche of this loan, $5 million, will be conditioned on progress alone