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  • the likelihood of success in the Kennedy Round , · of I tariff-cutting negotiations and advanced the cause of freer international trade. • The high tariff on watch movements dates back to 1954 when ·President Eisenhower declared it necessary to protect
  • Gas es TAB C - Kennedy Position TAB D - Eisenhower Policy I • ' I·· --- ·- . \) SEGRB'f' - The summary positions of the Departments involved are~ A. Department of Commerce The case of the sale to the USSR of five beet harvesters can
  • !ly is ran opportunity for them." Klein said the Democrats "during the early stages. of the j Eisenhower administration'' gave Nixon the image· of a man who uses subterfuge and strata­ gems, but tha1t this. was not an issue this year
  • gotten. That is why we have answered this ag­ gression with action. America’s course is not precipitate. Am erica’s course is not w ithout long provocation. For 10 years three American Presidents— President Eisenhower, President Kennedy, and your present
  • of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. President Eisenhower broke new and fertile ground with the Act of Bogota in 1960 -- an act growing from the understanding compassion of one people for another. President Kennedy built on these efforts and gave them increased
  • chronologyo The Senator asked i f the President knew of this specific mission and its location, whether he knew where the LIBERTY was at the time it was attacked, and whet:her, . in i;act, President Eisenhower knew about the U-2 mission which was shot dOWllo
  • constructive. Irwin, at Bob Anderson's Instruction, will nc,1/proceed to brief Messrs. Nixon, Romney and Percy. (He briefed Nelson Rockefeller .at a joint meeting with General Eisenhower. ) W. W. Rostow cc: Wm. Bowdler WWRostow:rln -·--- Thursday, July 27
  • is IlOt so. Rco.litie3 of po.-1cr are such ~t we n.r:) tl~terntln.ed t o back India a3ainst China. Any U3 Ach!lini:stl"ation--.Republicrui or D!?mocrat -­ would do ~ enm~ . Eisenhower offered milimry a.id to India. And l eaning on u4 has ~ont)ra~cd i t5 o
  • for the following: ,\ Dr. Milton Eisenhower " Charles So Garland (Chairman of the Board of Johns Hopkins) Gale McGee, who has been doing a g~eat job on the campuses, and who was up here the afternoon before the speech Frank Church They could all be inscribed
  • 'si=:c:rt□N 3·"0; ••• ••• •• 34 • 3·.•:'~HET=,.· - NCOIS/HARVAN D~LTO .45· ; 'PRESIDENT EISENHOWER· SAID,TNAT;·•ANY.REN~AL-OF CO~MUNIST,.AGGRtSSIOt-r WOULD BE;·_V,IEWEDBY US. AS. A MAT~ER Of··GRAVE CONCERN.• ' ACCORDINGLY, WE' HAVE RESPONDED
  • .:ciene.nl~.mi.iili:r;.;~:iMe:.lie .,iRAAtiltat,ioiia which were yesterday postponed; that is, with Senators Russell and Dirksen; C_ongressman Rivers; and, via General Goodpaster, with General Eisenhower. 4. Once you have come to a decision, you will need
  • g,~e1 -c;7 lJ ;_ SECRET • ' >> _siCi·Jf !i? .-·r+' Fl - THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON 19 February 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT I understand that Drs. Killian, Kistiakowsky and Rabi expressed concern to President Eisenhower about
  • to the supreme armament." condition was the appearance of inter­ in the supreme and up to now excluded and sufficient is "the according oneself here] Eisenhower entry inferior levels to be called 115 a statement of defense, ''What is at stake
  • .: THEN COMM.ENT ED AT LEl\'GTH ON NVN PRESENCE IN. THE SOUTH, f IN VIOLATIONOF GENEVAACCORDS ANDDIRECTEDTO TAKEOVER ~-OF .'SOUTH VlET•Nl\!1 BY FORCE. I ALSO QUOTED F'ROMGENERAL \EISENHOWER•s TELEGRAM YESTEijQAY TO REPUBLICAN PLATFORM (COMMITTEE. 1 fHEN PROPOSEDA
  • armed forces. This activity was within the framework of the accords. The policy behind our assistance was stated in a letter from President Eisenhower to the President of Viet-Nam on October 1, 1954: “The purpose of this offer is to assist the Government