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दस्तावेज़
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Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 735 East Street
Ipswich, Mass.
Tel. Ipswich 205 or 760
June 20, 1957
Mr. Robert L. King
Assistant to the Vice President
Office of the Vice President
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. King:
Certain aspects of the recent Taiwan incident
caused me to address a letter to the Secretary of State indi-
cating how future matters of like kind could be most effici-
ently handled without bloodshed. The letter was written on the
12th. I gave no details and only asked that an accredited agent
should call on me to whom I could safely confide the solution.
There is always the possibility that somewhere
a mob might rise up and attack the Embassy on the spur of the
moment. The Office of the Vice President should be likewised
concerned in this matter. You may know Dr. Lyman J. Briggs,
Director Emeritus of the National Bureau of Standards, Trustee
of the National Geographic Society and Chairman of its Re-
search Committee. If you call him up and ask him how can Mr.
Victor H. Czegka claim that he can take care of any size mob
and do it without neccessarily shed blood, you will get a sur-
prising answer.
PINC
If the answer satisfies you, pass it on to the
Vice President and then do something about it. I am at your
disposal.
KINDLY
Sincerely,
Victor H. Czegka
Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum
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