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  • strenuous schedule, 1 want you to know how delighted been that you were able to make this visit. conversation, throughout after what must have 1 profitted and I know that you have been a strong greatly from our and articulate the country for your
  • , Date 8- JS - J> t./ Authority McG. B. CJ j1 '41 ~' ~ I ; ) .. 9 December 1965 .~ MEMORANDUM OF TELEPHONE CONVERSATIONS WITH MEMBERS OF CONGRESS RELATING VIETNAM TO SOUTH I called but was unable to talk to the following men: Senator Lister
  • . D'Orlandi, reflecting our conversation before he lelt, asked Sihanouk whether he had told Peking and Hanoi that if they had accepted President Johnson• s offer of April 7, 1965, negotiations would have started with obly 30, 000 Americanaivi8er _s in Viet-Nam
  • -- and if you thin~· i:: makes sense -~ that the Vice President host a small lunch for E1·hard on the Hill. Obviously, Senators Mansfield and Fulbright mus t b e invited. However. the Vice President could manage the conversation if the lunch wer~ kept reasonably
  • . -=-(). i:'z.~ . St. . 3 A~ Wvi ,+~ I +c:,.,. s~c;~Jtl, s N4U If ' • b. 7.4,19 bate (,2_;!_--i( DEPARTMENT . Washiniiton, l ·i OF STATE O.C. -8'.l!!CrcET 20520 November 13, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT At the end of our conversation
  • . Mr. President: This is the tabulation 0£ Presidential telephone calls to CIA which you requested of Mr. Rostow. It is as complete as existing records permit. Bromley Smitb CONFIDEN'flhl:. _ BKS:rln Df.'Tr;:RMINeO TO BE AN AD!,~iNISTRA;l;,:'­ Ri
  • the Secretary that in his conversations with Gromyk o in New· York the latter had been completely intransigent on Viet-Nam ) merely reiterating calls for unconditional cessation of United States bombing and United States withdrawal. Brown thought, however
  • ve,"l ~,'tt,/ 6 rRf '> /1/ eMl)tiJi'l~a.. ii' &re 18] re-. Conversation between Presidents Johnson confidential v~ ~ - ~ , _., b &.-~ om Lodqe ~ -.?-fg #L..J 04/30/66 A ,1 ~ I, - ,S-/ +,.;t;1~~&3;€ieRt-4~~iwR-- - -rne:!'::: -rl"!s:>1r
  • in Saigon would be safe ·during s11ch a tour). t -COMFIDENTU ...1.. Friday - November 3, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT .... SUBJECT: Latin American Nuclear Free Zone I understand that in your conversations with President Diaz Ordaz you
  • DEPART URE I cm~VEYED FR0:-1 BONN, THE SA ME ·_. .'~,: ~N F0ftt,fA!.!0N ' TO HIM OVER THE TELEPHONE~ BTI ANDT· M£RELY T}l.~trnED r•1 E. H~J.\.l ~f9~r~_AT ION · GIVEN. ·. /~)~b,tt·· 'tr! ,~ •·•~· ,_ ~-· ,.,?~
  • . Said all possible was done by President Johnson. and others to make it useful and successful. 1n subsequent conversation, he added he had had most uselul talk with President which he greatly appreciated. Said he was ready at all times to assist
  • FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: News Media Contacts -- Tom Lambert. Los Angeles Times, telephoned about your State Department appointments. I backgrounded him on each man. Hugh Sidey, TIME magazine, telephoned to ask if there was anything in reports that TIME had
  • Rusk's report of Ambassador Goldberg 1s conversation with Secretary General U Thant was based on the attached summary of a telephone report from New York. The full m~morandum of the conversation is not yet ready but will be available by morning. Bromley
  • made on this group. McCloy stated he had this not from beer-drinking lobbyists but from first-rate people. The conversation occurred just before the news conference and I did not have time to find out just whom he was quoting. n, "'· McG. ($ , B
  • , as President of Senate, he will write to Parliament Speaker Sjaichu (the ide~ was checked with Suharto who. welcomes it). The Vice President, _both in the November 5 working session and in November 6 final conversation, strengthened the hands of those _in
  • an official visit was Prime Minister Moro in April~ 19650 DECLASSIF ED .0, 12356.· Sec. 3.4 J_........______ ..;i;_ ~----- N CONFIDENT I.A .;,,-~- ,~ CONFifJEMTIAL President Diaz Ordaz of Mexico During your conversation with President Diaz Ordaz
  • of "Meet the Press." .The questioning in this program reflected the same uncertainty and insecurity that was reflected in our offi ,::ial conversations. The ,show was taped for later broadcast during prir.1.'1e evening time. It will also be shown in several
  • lasted for more than three hours. Various political and economic problems in the hemisphere were discussed in these conversations, and in particular the grave situation in the Dominican Republic. It was agreed in these interviews that with respect
  • DECLASSIFIED . ~Lutz_; t-'£3-tf/ Authonty . -PRESEAVATfOtJCOP'{ By,~1f., NARA, pate 6-'7-V Tuesday, June 6, 1967 11:00 a.m. MR. PRESIDENT: Arthur Goldberg called this morning to tell me he. had received a telephone call from Jerusalem from Chie! Justice
  • d'Affaires ad interim, in which you were so good as to give me information and your impressions concerning the conversations that you held -on June 23 and 25 with Mr. Kosygin, Prime Minister of the Sov:tet Union. "I have always believed not only
  • Forces is suited to the pacification security role. (their cultural mo~es and attitudes/needs of the people; conversely, U.S. /FreeWorld forces ha~e much more fi~e support/ mobility ava-ilable and ·are a -better match for the North Vietnamese Army units
  • on the attached summa~y of·v a telephone report from New York. The full memorandmn .of the c ·o nversation is not yet ready but will: be available by morning. Bromley Smith ~ECL A lrlf'.0 t ,o . t2J!S/o Sec '$.1(b) WM· · lHO$.
  • . 12356, Sec. 3.4 NlJ By '11- ~,~ k7fj' , N ~ Date l/-lo\Jitf GONFiDEN'ffAL September 8, l.967 MEMORANDUM GF CONVERSATION .M r. Eqene Black telephoned me on Thursday, September 7. 1967. to the following effect. · 1. Ho had lunch with Axnb
  • .: · . ... ;.;.. ' • •• f l . , ·, • \ . j j {- . 1 j SECRET :··. . ... ,• . . .. . . . . .. , ~ "). Monday.t . June 12. 1967 6:15 p. m. MR. PRESIDENT: I assume from earlier conversation that Mac Bundy ,vill be along at lunch tomorrow· (Tuesday
  • assistance legislation now pending before both Houses. 8ECRE'f GROUP 3 Downgraded ·a t 12-year intervals, not automatically declassified. I.J - JS -'jf 5EGRE1' -26. The President recently had a conversation with Senator Fulbright in which the Senator
  • their climate is not all that much healthier than Peking's.) Reports of conversations held with Mao at Canton last March present the picture of a man complaining that his s.ubordinate s do not tell him everything - - which is undoubtedly true - - and in the grip
  • with Pakistan officials here and are awaiting your report on conversation with Ayub in your meeting October 6. 2. In conversation with Uquaili yesterday (septel) Walt Rostow described enormous problems President faces in trying to sustain whole Aid program
  • AND THE SECRETARY Ref: USUN 4760 In reviewing subject of reference telegram with the Secretary, he suggested I might in further conversations with Seydoux intimate that if de Gaulle were planning trip either to UN or to French Canada this might provide appropriate
  • today just how we wish to mesh our high cards against Co .m ·m unist concessions. But we will need to be in such a position soon, if only to exchange views with Quat. On this .m ore general point, we believe more exploratory conversation today
  • PARIS ~125 I PAGE 2 RUFNCR . 5199 SE e RE 1 TELEGRAM REPO~TED RECENT CONVERSATION OF FRENCH DELEGATE GENER.AL nE QUIRIEL.t..E ~ IiH SOV!ET AMBASSADOR TO ORV. REACi{Q~~s OF" oE =QUIRIELLE WER~ NOT REPORTED. SOVIET AMBASSADOR SAID FOLLOWING& (Al
  • 196 8 MEMORANDUM FOR: Mr. Eugene Black The White House · SUBJECT: . Conversation with House Minority Leader Ford on Asian Development Bank Special Funds At your request I called Congressman Ford to answer the question he posed to you: does