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  • by you at 11 a.m. will best whistlestops) is: by you to each Gov. to discuss and Lindy can come sit the telephoning ~oody, Dewey Long(the it (Bill Friday be good to have all for in on it for planning) 2) A further se~ if additional stops
  • at lunch one day about souvenir and record group pictures of the people in the Mail Room, Correspondence Section, File Section, telephone operators, White House Police, Secret Service and Garage. I think you have an excellent idea and if I could have 15
  • ..~./ This kind of encouragement and support for the Shah's reform program was given frequently. It formed the keystone of subsequent exchanges and conversations. The closeness of personal relations between the Shah and the President lent
  • /16/63 Mem­ - 3:B::ftET US/MC /9· ----i- UNITED STATE5DEIIDATION TOTHE THIRTY-SECOND MINISTERIAL MEEI'ING OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL Paris, France, December 16-18, 1963 4 ff]~ MEMORANDUM OF CONVERSATION Date: December 16, 1963 Time: lunch
  • for consultations in The occasion n 1ay be a meeting of the Supreme Soviet. If you approve a Pen Pal letter, it would be helpful to let Dobrynin see it when transmitted, before his return. 3. If you prefer no letter, a Thompson-Dobrynin conversation along
  • . 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
  • simply stated: DEAR BILLIE SoL: In accordance with our telephone conversation, we are enclosing our check for $400,000, together with 90-day note at 5 percent in this amount for your signature. Sincerely, s/-BILL w. s. LEONHARDT. OPERATIONS OF BILLIE
  • 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
  • Washington University. Se has a telephone which may be in the new book, or you can get through in­ formation, if you ever need some young man on the guest list. Jon's father used to be with Dept. of Justice under Tom Clark, and I guess it was Harry Truman who
  • and Rabago were of the opinion based on their conversation with Sirhan that he had come to the Ambassador Hotel alone since no one appeared to be accompanying him during their approximate ten-minute conversation with him. Three of the five individuals who
  • ~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
  • indications that the USSR might be interested in joining INTELSAT under somewhat changed circumstances. I attach for your in­ formation a Paris airgram, A-2053, in which Bohlen reports an interesting conversation in this connection. I also attach the recent
  • ON UNDERTAKINGS CONVEYED BROMELL YESTERDAY CCAIRo•s 7153). CBROMELL HAS APPOINTMENT 6i00 PM THIS EVENING TO RE.CEIVE WORD AS TO WHAT STEPS HAVE BEEN ACCOMPL.ISHED AS A RESULT HIS ·MAY 5 CONVERSATION.> ( TO PLEAD TOO FREQUENTLY FOR HELP WILL NOT O~LY
  • 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
  • the dust Douglas Dillon has just telephone{ to say that he has the flu. I told him you might wish to call him in the nex t few days, and he said the operators w
  • • j • flFP THAT A SUPPOSEDFATN TELEPHONE CALL OFFEREDTO EXCHANGETHE • .J SIX AIRPLANE~HIJACKERS FOR-CHENAULT CEMBTEL632>. AFP NOW·,. SAYS··; ·"' l . • tfHAT CAWlt:.AL·so~,.ST!'~~~-~ ~!~ .THEY DO NOT RPl' .NOT R~UR~ OUR
  • .·~· ~:~~: : .. T~fl_~~ ~~~.:.·. ::::·:,:~~~ .~-~.:. ~-'; MEMORANDUM FOR RECORD SUBJECT: ;.:·~.~ --- 9 ~:::!.Y..)!~v. . ·. ~ ~·-,; ~·, ..... \\. ·-··-vw....., .:.'. .___·. . 1:.._.._-~ u·.-.. 1.11..:. /0-1',L#j~ ii! c Telephone conversation with General
  • Oeo~so Ball to answer Adlal'e memorandum ot February 17 (Tab A} and hor• ta my own euggoatlon as to what you might eay to him 1f you wlah to telephone blm. ta the curreat eltoatlon. I do not tblnk auch a phone call l• urge11t. 1. Stevenson saggeeta
  • that he was contemplating proposing the opening of negotiations or conversations, or talks I think is the word that was very carefully used, with CommunistChina and proposing me as the U.S. representative, I accept. and would I was somewhatstartled
  • the conversation lea• interesting to me than it might have been otherwiae. He claimed that these people :·=' f "\. - The Honorable Roy R. Rubottom. Jr., · Asaiatant Secretary !or Inter-American Affair a. Department of State, · ' - · -.. '-· Washington. D. C. G
  • 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
  • R7 RB R9 RlO BUILDING, ROOM, ETC. 1. Wh i te House Hon. Lee C. White 2. 3. 4. 5. D D D D D D D D D D HANDLE DIRECT D IMMEDIATE ACTION D INITIALS D NECESSARY ACTION D NOTE AND RETURN D PER OUR CONVERSATION D PER TELEPHONE CONVERSATION
  • Armstrong and Scott incident to Gemini 8 mission Your memorandum of August 17, 1965, announcing the President's policy on promotion and decoration of astronauts Further to your telephone conversation with Mr. Webb on March 17, 1966, we have now had
  • : ) The attached papers cover the Zanzibar problem and Dea.n Rusk and I / would like to talk with you about them on the telephone at your conveni~ )' (.l,N....; (: 1 ence on Monday. The one question which you may wish to decide today \ (. o-~, vd is whether you
  • House Busby, Horace President 9 s House 50201 Cain, James, Dr. PresidentVs House 50201 Carpenter, President s House 50201 RoomNo. Telephone 0 s House 50201 • Elizabeth, Mrs. 9 3 50101/3 Guest House Annex lA 50101/lA Crockett
  • conference todci:y. I also had very brief phone conversations with Frankel and Hightower from which nothing interesting developed. March 18. 1965 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT-; Telephone aervlce at tbe .R anch 1. You have previously lodlcated both
  • January 13, 1967 MEMORANDUM /!fl -W To: The President The White House From: Orville L. Freeman Secretary of Agriculture Subject: Public Law 480 - India - .Food for Freedom Financing This is to follow up our conversations re financing the Food
  • , 1/30/95, tate Dept. UUt12et;le, By-.oJ.IQ'---' NARA,Date ,~- ,-,-1 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Tuesday, January 18, 1966 12:40 P. M. MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT This is Gronouski 1 s flash report of his conversation with Foreign Minister Rapacki
  • of these conversations is: .. CONFIBEH'fIAL CQNFII>ENIIAL - 3 - A. The Argentine. and Chilean Foreign Ministers commented favorably on a draft "Annotated Agenda" that we provided in an attempt to get the discussion started but noted that the specifics had
  • Avenue. The telephone number is 72-951. USIS offices are located number is 30-761. at 9 Venizelou Street. The telephone language Greek is the local l.e.nguage. English and French are widely under­ stood and spoken. Time Differential
  • The scenario for the day (Thursday, Janua ry 19) looks like this: Noon Full Board of Trustees of Johns Hopkim meets to confirm appointment. Between noon and 1:00 p. m. -- Milton Eisenhower telephones Line informing him. of final decision
  • OF DRAFT REPLY IS ENCOUNTERED, PLEASE TELEPHONE OFFICE OF THE SPECIAL ASSISTANT. Date Odol>e~ FROM THE SPECIAL ASSISTANT u:r tr: 'ZG•g4 C-ell.e r zo, £/")£~ f,:O .;,,,_., "'-· ' . 'I .. " i' •• . For appropriate handling _ _ _ _ __ _··_.· _XX
  • is encountered, pl~ase telephone the undersigned immediately, Code 1450. ~ . ~ Suitable acknowledgment or other appropriate handling. · ···=-· Furnish copy of reply, if any. I ~'I' Basic correspondence should be returned when draft reply, memorandum
  • ~: ; ._~ . ;·_·,·~"~::· ... :· .'"'.~ :to note ~ that ·.in a JtUle 1965 '.·conversation vi'th ·a US .official; Braga. . r~- · :::,,·~ ..": ''\.~· .~ . -,. :.0: __,~7.·~
  • if this were called for. According to Diem, Ky considers that the role as head of the Armed Forces is vitally important and he hoped Thieu would come to see it this way. Diem said that following these two conversations he was persuaded that personal relations
  • 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
  • ---------Approved See me ---------- HECEI\ ED '1 M HVIM'\ATSON 1)~" JUL 6 ,. l ~ -, - ~ '/J/" 1-~ ~ r t L­ ~ r , ~~ ""' ~~ ~ ~ ~~ 0 , ,r' ' ..e.,~ --~ , f r The President•S wishes relayed t o ~, by telephone from the LBJ Ranch by Jake Jaco
  • MOUNT HOLYOKE, PACIFIC PALISADES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A. • TELEPHONE: 454-5458 August 13, 1965 Dear Mr. President: I write you on behalf of seven hundred fifty members of the Western Region, International Platform Association •.. to express our
  • .~MENACE.}: THESE.__.AHE . ONLY A-- FE1' _SELECTIONS FROM· THE !.IRADES 1 HAVE HAD, AL~AYS IN PRIVATE. CONVERSATION. I HAVE ' SI\/EN DAVID AND CHET ·A : FULLER . ACC0Ut'JT OF WHAT HE HAS SAID. HE DESCRIBED -IO -ME THE STATE OF ECONOMIC -WARFARE BET~EEN