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  • . PM: That was really my next question: I don't it~ and I Because I did inquire. did you inquire into the administra- tion later about this--in Washington, I mean? M: Yes, I believe I did, after the coup. You see, the coup against Bosch took
  • . The situation vas COJl.l)&rableto that which existed in 1961 when the U.S. had embarked on a MsaiTe trdn:Sng :progralll. Mr. Wilson inquired of the intentions for carry1ng the var into Borth Vietmmi. with the attenda:a.t risk ot br:SngJ-. in the Chinese
  • ., l ~: . YESTERDAY I HAD OPPORTUNITY DURING COURTESY CALL ON SECRETARY OF GOVERNMENT LUIS ECHEVERRIA TO INQUIRE INTO POSSIBILITY OF COOPERATION BY MEXICA N AITTHORITIES TO -HELP REDUCE !~CREASING NUM BER OF CUBAN NATIONALS ENTERING US ILLEGALLY
  • ’ case he is inhibited by tiie domestic political situation. The foreign office has later inquired whether Japan might state publicly tiiat it had been notified in advance by the United States. 4. Macapagal of tlie Philippines said that he was sending
  • ~­ that it was not clear how we turn at this point. We had been in touch with Hanoi and with various capitals around tho world. VJe had also had conversations with tha Hungar~ F'ore!qn 11inister Peter here in Vvashington. The Ambassador inquired if we had been in touch
  • of the fact that the Indian winter wheat (rabi) crop comes to harvest in April and l:vlay, you inquired about the pres­ sure to maintain the pipeline through those months and speculated as to whether the Indians couJ.dn't get by for a short period without
  • ] Burkley? J: Yes, just the nicest man. G: Admiral Burkley? J: I shouldn't ever not remember his name. He was so nice to me and everybody else. But the Admiral would come by and take his blood pressure and anything else, and inquire about his
  • . Couldn't even get a line into the White House. I talked to Walter Jenkins before I came back; just "if anybody inquires, Helen and Gene and I are bringing the clothes and we are on our way back and will be in the middle of the morning." B: Did you see
  • -A L 2:00 . ., EXDIS K) R Ass T REF: 'sEc·< atiNltY ;.. . . I . ./ . ·::1·': .: ', . ... .,,_. nEPTti~s~i#~:.:,Ahn331 1. FONMIN STATES :.--HE INQUIRED OF l
  • to the President The White House Washington, D. c. Dear Mr. Jones: Senator Brewster has asked me to inquire whether two messages can be sent for the President to Marylanders who are celebrating notable occasions this month..... ... .. - ? ' . '... ·\\ , \~fJ.1
  • thought you might be interested in a copy of a letter I last wee;k sent in answer to Congressman Diggs, who had inquired what ·we had done at the Commission in response to criticism that our prdcesses were too slow. It details the changes we have
  • envisioned the So locally I was asked~ in fact a 11 over the country many offers were made to me to buy it. The top offer was fifty thousand dollars, and it was by a man in St. Louis whose financial assets we inquired about and found to be absolutely
  • of them as closely as most of the people that I'm sure you're talking with, so my reactions would have to be classed as reactions and impressions rather than firm conclusions. But in the exposure I did have, Kennedy was much more the inquiring individual
  • , because we inquired "how much time do you need?" In fact, those who were opposed to the Administration's activities in Vietnam were given more time than those who supported it. vllien you look at the convention details of this sort, I can't see how those
  • . When Lyndon decided to take John on as his, I don't think it was administrative assistant but he was taking him on in his office, a couple of Secret Service men came out to see me and were inquiring about John, as they always do who gets a job
  • two o'clock that morning-he carried the press with him, and they was sitting around him inquiring about this and talking about that, and it was two o'clock in the morning. I told one of the press persons, a secretary, to tell him that I wasn't
  • near Flag Springs, where Mr. Sam lived and called home when he was growing up, also a son of a tenant farmer. I left the farm and hitch-hiked over to East Texas State to inquire about college at Commerce which is about 20 miles away. I started
  • . I would see him at different places, but I had a feeling he was angry about something. What it was, I don't know. He was easily upset. inquired because they couldn't understand. He used to quote what I said and talk Mutual friends We had been
  • a study of records, a social security case, a workman's compensation case, the department concerned is suppose to, and in most cases has been very good about sending an interim acknowledgement saying that your case is being inquired into. And then as soon
  • Oil him was that he had an inquiring mind and he was never satisfied with somebody else's judgment, preferring to make his own. Although he was quite respectful of many of the leaders and other prominent people of the time, he generally had more
  • , and that a number of names had been mentioned as a possible replacement. I was interested. He inquired as to whether or not I indicated after a couple of days of thought that I was, and I followed that up with a letter to Senator Russell. say about two weeks went
  • . But it's also related to a serious balance of payments problem that any responsible official cannot ignore to the extent that we can demonstrate to ourselves as well as to inquiring newsmen and so on that the AID program LBJ Presidential Library http
  • Russell, the staff man inquired rather gingerly, "Well, we're awfully happy to help you with this, but why didn't you take it to Senator George, who is your neighbor in your home town?" The constituent said, "Well, I wouldn't dare bother the Senator
  • . You had to make some statement. If you hadn't made the statement, then people would have certainly been inquiring quickly, particularly the New York Stock Exchange. 6 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon