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  • they say on their own. 2. Bob and I think they should tell Eisenhower that they are both very strongly opposed to any public disclosure of the special procedures which he instituted and which you have continued . Their opposition is based on the need
  • McNamara, l believe, still holds ·firm to his belief that we need $76 million for _ economic aid end about $50 mUllon on the mtlitary .-:s ide. David Bell and Kel\mlt Gordon are much more doubt!ul, and Gordon. aeks tne to repoJ"t that a eupplementa.1
  • ~ · the . diffe1'ence betweea Vietnam and Kaalunlr with reai)ect to tbe United ~tlona, and General Eisenhower atroagly agreed with lt. The General'• moat active wor:rlea appear to be about NATO. and they worries we a!aare and on which we .can falrly claim
  • -~r• and I find that this . r- .. ·~. number of visltora \YOuld be i\. littlo bit ltlSS than tho I
  • on the merits of any of the alternatives or on the views of any of the Committee members. David E. Bell cc: · Under Secretary Ball . Mr. _Sorensen L/ I Tef' Sl'!CltET ~ SY.BS ON!,,Y January 6, 1963 MEMORANDUM TO·TJm PRESIDENT StJBJE.CT: The· tr. s
  • is planning to talk some more with the British before Stewart comes in, and this memo may be outdated by tomorrow, though I doubt it. 2. The British tell ~s -- and David Bruce agrees -- that their present position is not tenable without some slight help from
  • : General Eisenhower and Hanson Baldwin Andy Goodpastc~ir has just telephonft\to say that General Eisenhower called him in a state 0£ some agitation over what he had heard of the Hanson Baldwin article. Eisenhower's first impression was that Baldb13t:s
  • , not even his own Dutchess Countyo You carried the State as a whole by over two and a half million, as against Roosevelt's i,112,000 in 1936, and Eisenhower's one and a half million in 1956. Your percentage of the total vote was 68.5%, and Roosevelt's
  • n some of those ~ sa.t &it.bflitlly thr ough the National Se c urity Council in t he &if>'t Eisenhow er y~•P-5. l a°tf'.\ not ~.mpress~d b f the n o ti on tha"'- the President is u.ni nlormetl or ine.:xperie.need or wit h out interest i n foreign
  • MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. :MARVIN WATSON Subject: Request for appointment from General Sir Francis W. de Guingand General de Guingand, who was Field Marshal Montgomery's Chief of Staff during World War ll, has just arrived in U. S. General Eisenhower has
  • need now is to get a Chairman for the review group. The six names which you approved the other day were: Dean Acheson ;;;;.· J Bob Anderson - " Gene Black _ ../ Clark Clifford v· Douglas Dillon V David Rockefeller .V As I look at this group, the two who
  • for prompt legislation on lending and a longer delay on equities, for pretty good reasons. I was enormously impressed by Cook. This was the first long talk I have ever had with him, and I would strongly recommend him as against David Rockefeller to succeed
  • by a number of senior officers of the State and Defense Departments, and of the Agency for International Development, and his trip grows out of an early visit by Mr. David Bell which was concerned with many of these same problems. ### THE WHITE HOUSE
  • to Mac when he goes up there for lunch with the Princess. 2. On MLF I ANF, you will wish to get David Bruce's views about how we might play the British. This is a very hard problem for Wilson. He must cut back on defense somewhere to make his balance
  • SUBJECT: Letter from Johns Hopkins professors The attached lette! from Baltimore, mostly from Johns Hopkins professors, is sent across your desk because Milton Eisenhower undertook an obligation to these people to see that their views were made available
  • Minister described and said he would attempt to obtain some satisfaction for the Prime Minister's request upon his return to Washington. He was informed that the matter had already been raised with David Bell and that AID was now engaged in testing
  • effort twice as big as what Eisenhower has asked for. 7. But an ounce of real progress is worth a pint of propaganda and a peck of threats. 8. Washington will back you up. 9. The spirit of Taylor and Johnson, who said "Yes 1! at once
  • . .( .. -:..---- ,, Monday, March Zl, 1966 4:30 pm · ~ ·10 the draf reply to De Gaulle , for signatur appr ove. s o attach ed is General Eisenhower's comment to Goo dpa ster on the letter • which Andy read to him . While accepting the force of Eisenhower's sugge s t e d
  • . DISAPPROVED ~ NO------ John McCone is back from a talk with Eisenhower. Would like a mome ~with ~ou in next several days. YES JV 4/27/64 0.. . THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON April 22, 1964 MEMCRANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT AGENDA FOR NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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