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  • be grateful if you could telephone me your reaction as soon .as possible. 4-.U-)4Jlc¥. Nicholas deB Katzenbach GONFIDEN'fIAL .,. . .,.. i - ...,. 1967 FEB 4 , OfitUl' · · . vJ · { - a\•t• · ot Jl'. . .. .e ll:dHl't• 11 ' y • . 4
  • CONVERSATION ON HOW TO GET HANOI TO CONFERENCE PAGE 3 RUOKRW 185 S--! C N t ·T TABLE, MICHALOWSKI AGAIN SUGGESTED THAT VE ACCEPT •tN PRIN­ CIPLE" HANOI'S FOUR POINTS, -ND IN THIS CONTEXT STOP 80M8ING, INDICAT£ INTENTION TO ULTIMATELY WI ·1'MDRAV T~OOPS FftOM
  • the Sergeant to'turn the switch to automatic and let's see if the elevator wouldn't operate as it normally does." It didn't. Somebody said "Isn't there an emergency switch?" McNamara said "You'd better use the telephone." The Sergeant opened the telephone
  • advice you gave me. In line with your good arrangements I chatted briefly with Jim Webb over.the telephone while in Washington and we are planning to get together for a longer discussion very soon. Should anything new and vital develop, I will be in touch
  • , 1967 Mr. James Jones The White House Washington, D. c. Dear Mr. Jones: Following our telephone conversation, we shall be pleased t~ be at The White House Tuesday, April 18, at 11:00 a.m. to photograph the ,President. The gentlemen on the portrait
  • Andrews once claimed telephoned him shortly after th~~~~j._n_299~~d requested him to defend Oswald. Andrews was 1ll~atcne't:1meand later thought the call was a figment of his imagination. Andrews also claimed that Oswald had visited his office in June 1963
  • juat want to report on what has transpired sinoe our telephone conversation about "Saboteur" yesterday. The print is being readied. By Friday night or Monday morning we will know when the picture will be available. Hitchcock is a notoriously slow
  • or telephone AC 202 - 456-2511. The Social Secretary, The White House LEMBERGER, Ernst, Am.b. of Austria Sec. of State Dean Rusk GOLDBERG 1 Arthur J., U.N. Sec. of Tree.sui7 Henry Fowler FORTAS, Abe, Supreme Court Sec. of Agriculture, O:r".d.lle FreEIDB.n
  • plans for this weekend. If South Asia does not flare up badly, I would hope to take Mary to Martha's Vineyard early Friday and bring her back Tuesday morning. A friend has offered us the use of an isolated but telephone-equipped cottage there, and we
  • approximately three hour conversation, Mr. Dunne called D~ . Hector P. Garcia, vmo is head of the GI Forum of Corpus Christi, Texas , trying to get him to withdraw the statements he had been making in this matter . Dr. Garcia said that he would discuss
  • Businessmen invited to Cairo by UAR First Vice President and ¥ield Marsha l · Hakim Amer was received by President Nasser on March 28, 1967. The following is based on a telephone conversation with Mre Ernest Henderson of Sheraton Hotelse We have requested
  • before delivery lo Telecommunications Operations Division 4-. \ ----~- ·--- TELECOMMUNICATIONS OPERATIONS DIVISION WORK COPY S ECR±:T/NODIS M.:iurer's conversations and therefore press of those matters . you think with the Nr..,rth
  • with Egypt (where there is an international border rather than an armistice line) would be simpler • .Incidentally I agreed with Eban not to giv~ any . ,.,/ circulatio~ to our conversation ?Jld I should therefore be grateful· if you would restrict knowledge
  • deecribea Novlkov aa a "tough baby," tremendously ambitious, not very popular, who might push his luck too far and head for a dramatic fall • . Therefore, he auggeats that your conversation with him be k,pt general and lnnocuou1. Ae the State Department
  • immediately wired him and told him what he quoted me as saying bore no relationship to what I had said. Bob Pierpont, who was a party to the conversation, confirmed my side of the account. Breslin wired back and said he was sorry that he had, indeed
  • . 12958, Sec. 3. 1/30195, S te ~ Bromley Smith THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON May 22, 1965 r VJ MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT I telephoned Bundy to ask him to rush his promised telegram so that it would be available during your Z p. m. meeting. Bundy
  • to: U - Mr. Katzenbach M - Mr. Rostow G - Mr. Kohler IO - Mr. Sisco USUN NEW YORK HEA:LDBattle:lab 9/21/67 ~ SECffil'i' NEA:LDBattle:lab 10/16/67 ~EXDIS DEPARTMENT OF STATE TELEPHONE Memorandum of,Conversation - " ? .9 f . i/ ,,., . I~vJ
  • INFO sso 00,NSCE 00~USIE 00,CIAE 00,cco 00,/070 W SEP 68 FMAMEMBASSY LISBON TO S'ECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 2502 0 182055Z S ! I H 1! rfussoN 1976~ lIMDIS SUBJ: CONVERSATION WITHDR. HOUSTON MERRITTON PROSPECTSFOR DR. SALAZAR 1. DR. HOUSTON MERRITT
  • . LIMITED OFFICIAL USE S/F:JFFried:E/TEP:FSanderson:cb 6/4/66 action. prob­ TO: S/P - Mr. Owen FRCM: EUR/RPE - LeRoy F. SUB: DACE._~phasis on World Food Prllem REF: Our telephone conversation th s morning Here is the draft of our memo to Mr Mann
  • was interrupted by the telephone. He talked for several minutes with Senator Dirksen. After the conversation ended the President reported that he had told Senator Dirksen that we will take whatever diplomatic moves that are available, that we will meet whatever
  • ./ 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
  • a telephone inquiry to the internal security division of the Justice Department, but was unable to locate anyone who had seen the SAC message as yet. I did learn that around October 4, 1966, the Defense Department is supposed to have written to State
  • reports a conversation between Ambassador Bunker an·d Thieu. The latter expressed the view that the new government elected in September would face extremely important problems in its first six months, not only in the fields of nation building
  • Communist problems and anti-Communist improvement to the activities of our Vietnam Station. - 9 - Thursday, July 27. 1967 -- 3:15 p. m. Mr. p,re sident: This is merely to report a telephone call from Jack Irwin: He briefed Gov. Reagan. Reagan eald
  • of some of the things Congressman Johnson has done since coming to Congress in 1937, as requested. in your telephone conversation with him last Sunday. Sincerely, Walter Jenkins. SECRETARIES: GLYNN STEGALL MISS MARY RATHER MIIS. PHILIP NICHOLS, JR,, MIis
  • you do and do not wish discussed; you have the usual problem that, as qften as not -- at least in my three years of exposure -- you cannot be sure ahead of time what the principal topic of conversation is going to be. You can tell generally
  • who 1s vacationing that this could be done later by telephone since there will be additional ideas for the Governor's participation. SUmmarizing, Wachtel mentioned that Mayor Robert Wagner of New York City could have the ticker tape parade; U Thant
  • . ' · Sutherland; : himself, may be .recalled · to ·the ·witne.s s stand Friday. He appeared Thursday · afternoon when 1. the committee members .inferred that a single telephone call to Three Rivers might not have been an ade­ quate investigation of .what
  • Dean Rusk telephoned to re-e.mpba:sbe hls strong recommendation that you really ahoald spend a few mlDutes with Bowles. I have done my beat with. Bowles and wlth the Department to explahl how buay you are, but we are dealing here wUh a former Under
  • ! the conversation between Kleelnger and Barze! (who manages the CDU in Parliament), the following principles were established for presenting the security aspects of the budget cttts and acting on them: ...... Oerman.y's security system ls absolutely dependent upon
  • was not these and to provide Wozencraft the Warren setting letter answers. of Disorders; of a letter Justice ~e with we felt a draft for Control state conversation, question·s. clear in I spoke that is arrangement to able In early co.ntr·o1
  • , Birrenbach telephoned an old friend at Harvard to report that he had come to Washington resigned to discuss consultative machinery but concluded from his private conversations around town that the Germans would be able to get hardware~ When I asked whether
  • these days. Max Frankel, The New York Times. telephoned to ask if we planned to reveal more .or our secret contact ~ looking towards peace. He said he would be delighted to be the channel !or the revelation. I said that at the moment we took the":. ~lew·:'t
  • POSSIBILITY. AS · REPORTED IN - MY CONVERSATIONS . . WITH ,CHOIDAS , , I HAVE CONSISTENTLY EXPRESSED OPINION THAT IT SHOULD ' BE '. POSSIBLE FOR A COMPRCJtTISE SOLUTION TO BE FOUND WHICH WOULD PERMIT l> AGE 3
  • , Telephone, Pioneer 1-1234 Harry F. Guggenheim, President and Editor in Chief Bill D. Moyers, Publisher Dear Walt: OK, let's compromi se . Why don't you bring up to date~ in the present context, the Fort Bragg speech you -~ delivered in 1961. Leeds 1s
  • , 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
  • -------------------­ believed pp position-----­ qq man in Hanoi----------------------------­ rr of U Thant's ss account msg, away from Fanfani memo, memo, talks conversation with Mai Van Bo - - with NVN regarding Khe Sanh battle questions may be over related 5
  • in conversations alread, reported. 011 Wednesday, July 7, I had my picture taken (or the 0 .March o( Time'' at the r equeat of the P reaa Office, and I talked to Phil Potter very brlefiy ou Vietnam. Tho· Coavereatio11 was entirely routine becauae it came before