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  • are a part? •I . i I •• "The Sena.te also had to face this issue in giving its consent to the network 0£ treaties which are the bash for such order as we have in this dangeroue and disorderly world. specifically "And that ie the question to which Dwight
  • -~r• and I find that this . r- .. ·~. number of visltora \YOuld be i\. littlo bit ltlSS than tho I
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FOR M OF DOCUMENT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE RESTRICTION ~-me:mo-- t - --GGQdpaste~~e.cwd 5P ~ -s '5·(,.Jt.l Mf
  • ,-,vL:T/ tl!FI S 4 pp . _.,,.~,.e(jt: 10 ;,o , , 4' '- J 'il'->/;'/S 17c cable .G);:=~e1,,,tv Rostow to the Pres. re Middle East s 7/22/67 ~ -,.,q_, ')' .:/-/21/6 N'-J t:/'1-/(,,,,:.L [duplicate of #16, NSF Name File, "Eisenhower, Dwight D
  • : 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
  • 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
  • Pool Paul H. Douglas Leverett Saltonstall Roscoe Drummond Dwight D. Eisenhower Henry P. Van Dusen Eugene P. Wigner John W. Hanes, Jr. May 1968 A world in conflict Finally, America must not expect too much to flow from a resolution of the conflict
  • LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT DATE CORRESPONDENTS O R TITL E s RESTRICTION ~lf-"7--vO [duplicate of #54b, NSF Country File, France, Vol. 12; 1 p. exempted NbJ 8~ 16] 'r.J--cl-2"1 [duplicate of #18, NSF, Name File "Eisenhower , Dwight D., General [l
  • 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
  • (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,.
  • was a classmate of mine!' "He kept up the clip in Africa, Sicily, l\ormandy and the sweep to Berlin in World War II, as Veterans Affairs Adminis­ trator, Army Chief of Staff, Joint Chiefs Chairman thereafter. He is the last, along with classmate Dwight D
  • was a classmate of mine!' "He kept up the clip in Africa, Sicily, l\ormandy and the sweep to Berlin in World War II, as Veterans Affairs Adminis­ trator, Army Chief of Staff, Joint Chiefs Chairman thereafter. He is the last, along with classmate Dwight D
  • Service Association Senator Milton Young Foreign Policy Association, N.Y. 2.' As you directed, I called on General Eisenhower in Gettysburg on June 29 and gave him the latest information which Mr. Rostow had given me on Soviet Middle East Arms Policy
  • DISTORTIO NS MA Y CAUSE YOU. I . WITH WARM REG ARD. AND GREAT RESPECT, SIN C~RELY, . . .. .. . ,• , . ·•• •• ' ~ --{ -·· - -\. DTG: 04/1606Z MAR 67 " --- . \ .· DWIGHT' D. EISENHOWER
  • 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
  • ~ · 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
  • forthcoming, which could not be financed under present levels of national and international DECLASSIFIED Authority N L.J 8 5- ~ 7- By ~ , N . , Date 5- 7- 8S- SECRET - 2 - aid. 7his could be -related to General Eisenhower's 195l:. promise that a large
  • , 1967 4:25 p.m. Mr. President: Herewith Andy Goodpaster'• account o.f tho discussion at WalteJ' Reed Hospital yesterday with Oen. Eisenhower. As indicated, 1 am. already working wlth Bill Leonhart on the pooslbllity of pre-empting rlce buying in Cambodia
  • !. Emile Despres Professor of Economics Stanford Unj.versity / . . • Milton Eisenhower Robert Everts Netherlands ✓ Representative
  • 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
  • are confronted with a dilemma not unlike that which faced us in Korea a decade ago. It will be recalled that Mr. · Eisenhower 's resp onse was not to pursue the war to vic tory but to go to Ko_r ea to make peace, in reality, .a truce. 2. Similarly, there may
  • 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
  • they no longer choose · to pay ; it has certainly run into great difficulties. But the reasons why the policy ·was ;tdopted by President Eisenhower and continued by his successors have · ·not · vanished. Let it be said again. There can be no •' compromise