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November 10, 1955
Political Report, Minister Yong Shik Kim [Kim Yong-shik] to the Office of the President
Report on followings: Japan's inclusion on Scientific Committee of the UN, Japanese politics and Balance of Payments, Burma-Japan Reparations
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December 01, 1955
Political Report, Minister Yong Shik Kim [Kim Yong-shik] to the Office of the President
Report on followings: Japanese politics and UN membership issues
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December 08, 1955
Political Report, Minister Yong Shik Kim [Kim Yong-shik] to the Office of the President
Report on followings: Japan and UN Membership, Japan's population problem, Japanese reaction on Korean Joint Chief of Staff Statement
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December 15, 1955
Letter, Kim Yong-shik of the Korean Mission in Japan to President Syngman Rhee
Report on Japanese UN application being turned down, visit to the US embassy by Japanese Diet members, press reports, Kim's prediction on the US stance on Korea-Japan issue, his reluctance in using Ambassador Allison's name officially
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December 15, 1955
Political Report, Minister Yong Shik Kim [Kim Yong-shik] to the Office of the President
Report on followings: UN membership issue and its reaction in Japan, Japan's groundwork on atoms-for-peace
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March 28, 1956
Letter, Syngman Rhee to Young Kee Kim
President Rhee asks Minister Kim to discuss Korea's admission to SEATO with other representatives from France, Philippines, and Thailand.
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August 12, 1957
Letter No. 40 from Tai Ha Yiu [Yu Tae-ha] of the Korean Mission in Japan to President Syngman Rhee
Yu briefs Syngman Rhee on illegal entrants from Korea to Japan, criticisms about Japan's policy toward Red China, and Japan's bid for a non-permanent seat in the UN Security Council.
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August 17, 1957
Letter No. 43 from Tai Ha Yiu [Yu Tae-ha] of the Korean Mission in Japan to President Syngman Rhee
Yu briefs Syngman Rhee on Japan's plan to attend the UN General Assembly in New York.
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April 16, 1993
Record of Japan-United States Summit Meeting
This record contains summaries of: (1) the tête-à-tête meeting between President Clinton and Prime Minister Mizazawa; (2) a small group meeting involving the President and Prime Minister, as well as several senior members of the US and Japanese cabinets; and (3) an expanded working lunch. Topics of discussion included U.S.-Japan strategic and economic relations, climate change, the Uruguay Round, policies towards Russia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Haiti, and China, and Japan's status at the United Nations. Various portions of the document were withheld, including an entire section on North Korea.