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  • The President: General Westmoreland will visit with General Eisenhower. Let's not · make him late. Walt Rostow: at the DMZ. General Westmoreland will discuss future deployment .'' ~ General Westmoreland: We want to move ahead on strong-point obstacle system
  • when you see what happened in Eisenhower's years. We don't have a credible justification for what GVN is doing. Let's try to get Thieu aboard. Secretary Clifford: I would like to see both Hanoi or the NLF present. Secretary Rusk: I would like to see
  • . presence there. The withdrawals from three SAC bases and the transfer at Kenitra were in accordance with agreements between President Eisenhower and King Mohamed V in December of 1959 and, as noted above, between President Kennedy and King Hassan II
  • , Speaker McC.o J:maelc, Boggs. HaUeck, AJ'enda. and one or two others 1. The Preaident opoke at some length on the South Vietnamese policies, reading a letter of l?~es1dettt Eisenhower to preeumably Diem in October. 1954, lndi.cathls pre1ent policy
  • Eisenhower and John Kennedy anfyndon J'ohn•on had to re•pond i ft facing _the iuue of Vietnam. " .. ... . - ~·-;-. .. :i~: ;-:. ' ·: :.;;:~"ff~'::: f>:··. I '~···-- · ~- t .., _ .. , """ · !• .. ....... • .r . •~ • f
  • " ~ The Preside1.. ,: I appreciate your coming here. can be out of the hospital as quickly a~ possible. rl \ ·I.?c;pe·Sena-Yo~.....H u·s-sell Our people have talked with General Eisenhower. In addition, we have talked with Senator Russ ell, Mc George Bundy
  • as the "Committee appear~ in a National Security Council Record of Action of May 24, 1960. indicated to the "Principals", The record stlltes that President Eisenhower that he wanted "the advice of the Committee of Principals" on a matter relating to the test
  • by the members present, including Former President Eisenhower. The Committee is made up of former Presidential nominees, GOP Congressional leaders, governors and other top party officials. 'Widespread rioting and violent civil disorders have grown to a national
  • , former Press Secretary to President Eisenhower, going to Vietnam for a short while to replace Barry Zorthian, joint Information Officer . It was agreed he would be a good man for the job - - but it was unlikely that Hagerty would leave ABC to take
  • , even with the best of motivations, the more hostile one gets towards the stay. Our government in Berma is anti-communist, but we try to deal with our problems by our own means. Mr. Eisenhower and Mr. Dulles g ave us g enerous aid by way of arm s
  • Eisenhower in l.9€,owas so enthusiastic that the Presidential motorcade had to be rerouted to avoid the crowds. - 6 - Agency and the ROKArmy Counterintelligence Central Intelligence Corps -- are efficient and cooperative "Withtheir US counterparts
  • prestige to handle the information duties within Saigon. The President and Secretary Rusk agreed with Christian. General Wheeler said he, Ambassador Bunker, General Westmoreland and Bob Komer went to see General Eisenhower at Walter Reed yesterday
  • the President anything he wants. "In fact, they are trying to give me an anti- riot bill which I do not want. 11 The President said he talked to General Eisenhower today. 11 1 think you (Eisenhower) would be good for Secretary McNamara, and Mc~amara would
  • Majority Leader I voted with President Eisenhower 76 percent on foreign policy, 36 percent on domestic policy. Of course, I know you do not have as good a President to support as I did, but I know that you want to vote for what is right and what the people
  • with former President Eisenhower (on the ground at March AFB). The President will depart March AFB about 8 a. m. for Honolulu, arriving 11: 30 a. m. local time. The meetings will dis cuss hi gh-level milit ary appointment s now pending and military
  • help to us than the Democrats in the last few months. Secretary Clifford: Ike said he would be glad to see me. The President: Eisenhower has helped me in every critical thing I have asked him to help on. You would be good to talk with him. Secretary
  • the Republicans are gutting the bill." The President noted "in 1960, Eisenhower indicted only 19 people from organized crime and we've indicted l~ 190 this year alone. One of the problems today is that they didn't do anything about it in those Republican years
  • also advised the President that Doubleday wants to do the President's memoirs. He said this firm published Eisenhower and Truman. The President said he had turned all the publishing offers he has received over to a lawyer, and decisions would be made
  • .. seasworroUntltned) I ' ' Page ___ 2 BONN LONDON NEW DELHI of telegram to 4'0KYO , SEOUL SINGAPORE KARA'-'K,£--------- UNCLASSIFIED urging Prc~ident Johnson Eisenhower, US Government to a - ,·-orize population President preparations plans
  • contentious questions at issue between the two Governments. Both Prime Minister Dia and Foreign Minister Thiam have attended UN sessions in New York; Dia took the occasion to pay a call on President Eisenhower here in December, and Thiam. saw Secretary Rusk
  • they were moving surprising!y fast. On the language matter, he cited a parallel: When President Eisenhower was asked what decisions Vice President Nixon had participated in, he said that if he had a week, he 1 d think of some. The President said he felt sure
  • of President Eisenhower's Reply to General deGaulle'a 1958 Letter Proposing a U.S. - UK-French Directorate. In a letter at Tab A, Senator Jackson asks Secretary Rusk to declassify President Eisenhower's reply to the famous .1958 de Gaulle letter proposing a U
  • with the members of Congress today. I pointed out that there had been 11 aircraft incidents under President Truman; 33 under President Eisenhower; 7 under President Kennedy; and 11 under President Johnsono I told them not to get panicky about the Pueblo situation
  • freshmen that in war, politics stops at the water's edge. He said he supported President Eisenhower while Majority Leader 79% on foreign policy, even when the Republican Senate leader refused to help his President. He said he didn 1 t expect these Freshmen
  • added that he does not know who is running Congress, whether it's Wilbur Mills or George Mahon or whom. He Hen said he hates to impound funds because he had given President Eisenhower much static for impoilnding funds. Last year Wilbur Mills made
  • and Eisenhower have given me their reservations. cautious about trusting them. They say be I'm glad we're going to talk, but I'm not overly hopeful. Some of you think we want resolution of this in an election year. I want it resolved, but not becalBe
  • 1 ~ ~.£7": ~ Y~1 #.Y, /6>t>i t! JOHN S. D. EISENHOWER i, A . ~~r~ & ~ o/~~~ ~~- ;lk ~ ~ ~ ,~~ I I a,,1- r O -;ti;:~,.;~ ~ I CHARLES W ENGELHARD 113 ASTOR STREET NEWARK,N. J . 07114 Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Engelhard thank
  • •uTHE SECURITY AND FREEDOM OF BERLIN, A COMMITMENT WHICH WAS DEMONSTRATED IN 19481 WHICH · ~AS BEEN REITERATED BY PRESIDENTS EISENHOWER AND KENNEDY AND WHICH ' IS AS ' FIRM AND EXPLICIT TODAY AS rr WAS WHEN IT " WAS MADE· . TH SHOULD BE KNOWN IN BERLIN
  • that this is a bipartisan operation, and I wil.l point out that Roosevelt appointed Levi Deike, and Eisenhower kept Levi reike, and we all honor Levi reike this morning. He's come a long way since he and I played baseball out here in his back yard. At that time we bad
  • and hors d'oeuvres featured in the collection of roughly 270 recipes. From FDR to George W. Bush, Hanny leads readers through the bowels of presidential administrations, detailing everything from the elaborate six-course meals for which Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • and hors d'oeuvres featured in the collection of roughly 270 recipes. From FDR to George W. Bush, Hanny leads readers through the bowels of presidential administrations, detailing everything from the elaborate six-course meals for which Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • believed 'in fair play, would have put a damper on · such a poorly _planned procedure. ~~ Another · thing that should be cleared-up, is the continual reference to Gen'I Eisenhower and Mr. Nixon as President and Vice President, living .foreign nations
  • no further dealings with this Administra­ tion on the precedent of Khrushchev 1 s refusal to deal with President Eisenhower after the U-2 incident in 1960. Ko.sygin, as he had done with Governor Harriman a year ago, held out the hope of better relations i
  • , it appears that we will leave here at some point this afternoon. I cannot tell exactly when. We will be going diractly to Andrews from here. Don't ask me when we will leave. I don't know. The President met with President Eisenhower in his home at Palm Desert
  • (Duplicate of #14b, NSF, Name File, "Eisenhower, Dwight D. Gen." Box 2] (Sanitized 1980] Ankrah to President PCI 2 p ~ 'f ·/'1-9!' Nw q 't-l9D r,7b ltr #9 -E .- Rostow, Gaud- to President f'2""1e l-ilt. !"/1,.
  • - Discussion on Vietnam, Robert Kennedy, Eisenhower, Alliance for Progress, role of ror. 42. 9 December 1963 - Briefing. General revi·ew. Press, McNamara, Vietnam. I 43. 13 December 1963 - Introduced DDCI, Peer de Silva., reviewed checklist. Discussed
  • FORM 10· 101 WHICH MAY BE USED . ( 47) I ( '1-- -6ESRET Wednesday.• July 20. 1966 - 11:15 p.m. Mr. President: k (;Onnection with the attached,Doug MacArthur called me this morning. He said that Bryce Harlow. an aide bi President Eisenhower
  • comments concerning Hprotocol.. and the necessity for having an emissary. Stated that I felt that General Eisenhower was the only man who might be able to talk seriously wf th de Ga·...&lle, but I felt this impractical becauee of the fortbcomini election