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- in health, education, job training and anti-poverty spending during his adminis tration. # # # 7 I I lI ·' I . \' ....I ' MEETING OF THE PRESIDENT WI'J;'.JH RICHARD WILSON ' · \\'l-, . v .\" fl·) ,. i MA y 2 0 ' 19 6 8 "(l \ t.y·t .I
Folder, "[December 21, 1965 Meeting with Foreign Policy Advisors]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 1
(Item)
- '.·. .• ' ·t, - • • i~ I j I ' ... .., : I ,! t .. ' . 1 •• 5 1. (about the Wilson letter) Is this saleable to Congress? President No, ANF is more saleable than MLF--but because details are not available, we can 1 t sell it to Congress
- -· .J .. , P resid.ent: Rusk: 1°66 .I .• 3 ·what do you recornmend, Dean? .Nla.ke firm decision to resume on Friday or Saturday. Full report submitted to Security Council beginning with Laotian Con£ere:::i.ce in 1962. "Wilson' 3 appointment
Folder, "[September 15, 1967 - Meeting with AFL-CIO Executive Council]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 2
(Item)
- and the fact that every President -- Washington, Lincoln, Wilson, FDR, and Truman had their severe critics because the Nation was engaged in conflict. He said that each President had a Chairman of a Foreign Relations Committee who was antagonistic -- because
Oral history transcript, Chester L. Cooper, interview 2 (II), 7/17/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- , there was yet another thing going on in November, and that was George Brown's trip to Moscow. When Harriman and I saw Brown when we were in London in early November, post-Manila, Brown said that he was going to Moscow; and he and Wilson made a fair amount
- Biographical information; McGeorge Bundy; William Bundy; Robert Komer; Vietnam; Bien Hoa; service on high-level review committee on Vietnam; Pleiku incident; Honolulu Conference; Ky; bombing halt; Harriman; Wilson; J. Blair Seaborn mission, 1964
- does not believe there is a danger Who should we talk to ? Secretarv Rusk: The chiefs of governments with troops in Vietnam, .-· - 4 Mr. Wilson and Mr. Pearson. Secretary Rusk: On this matter of retaliation, might the North Vietnamese try
- this morning. (The President had Miss Nivens in Walt Ro stow' s office read the message over the telephone; the message thanked Wilson and Brown for standing firm despite party pressures.) We all have our peculiar problems; all of us have our setbacks
- .;;> , The President, after thanking General Eisenhower for his comments, said he could best give the thinking of the Administration by quoting from a message being sent to Ambassador Bruce as a basis for discussion with Prime Minister Wilson of the U. K. The text he
- . I think we shaild now tell the allies that we could lose Southeast Asia without their help. The first to tell is Park. Tell him that none of us want defeat. If it takes more men to avoid defeat let's get them. Wilson implied that Prime Minister
- facilities . Se cretary Rusk: from the USSR. The President: Llewellyn Thompson does not believe there is a danger Who should we talk to ? Secretary Rusk: The chiefs of governments with troops in Vietnam, - 4 Mr. Wilson and Mr. Pearson
- a commitment that we will not bomb until H. Wilson has departed Mos cow. Authority --~!::.._~--~- ~---:_ 5 _f - - - - . I)· te- 10 - b - ~ ~ By '6.&) , l>TAl"' J. ~ -.....:.·, -· 1 SE E 1 1/20166 (2) We're going to have to double our manpower
- bombs. 3. Increase isolation of U.S. 4. More \\e destroy North Vietnam, the more we treat with China instead of North Vietnam. Dirksen: (Recounted Wilson's declaration of war, and how people applauded his declaration of death.) I am sensitive to young
- flags, and he had gotten nowhere wfth the British. At one point I said to him, "Why do you ask me? You've talked to Wilson and Denis Healy and the Foreign Secretaryo asked them to send troops. 11 You've undoubtedly What sort of response do you get
Oral history transcript, William P. Bundy, interview 3 (III), 6/2/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- diplomacy through Wilson to Kosygin . Now, the first was infinitely- M: That's the most confusing two-three weeks of the entire period . B: Oh, it's utterly, utterly confusing, but if you keep your eye on dates it gets clearer . Also, it included Baggs
Oral history transcript, W. Averell Harriman, interview 1 (I), 6/16/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- . I I I didn't see De Gaulle on the visit. I went to London. I I saw, of course, both Prime Minister Wilson and Brown. Then I went to Morocoo at the request of Ambassador Tasca. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
- see, we hadn't nominated a man from down in the South in some time, had we, to elect him. B: No, sir. I guess, if you want to stretch a point and call Woodrow Wilson a Southerner, that was probably about the last one. R: But you see he
- Wilson; Lady Bird; LBJ as VP; LBJ and the Kennedy’s; Medicare Bill; LBJ as President; Johnson treatment; Alabama integration problems; evaluation of LBJ; Vietnam; ranking the presidents; Coolidge anecdote; Congress in the 1920s; National Defense Education
- , Cottvc encl Hm.-old Wilson. (c) Govern01.· Hil l i~:ng hn:J viaitcd t!orocco, .i\lei ers, T.unisio, Ethiopia , l~enya , U::;ancia, 'fam;~ni~ , H:f.3erin, Ivory Coast end Ghnnn . I n t he n~xt L}8 houra he will visit s~nega l, Guinea , H:?li and LibcriQ
- didn't have any illusions that I would be successful but Wilson was going to be in Moscow in early February. He was anxious to get some movement toward a conference; as you remember, the British and Russians were co-chairmen of the Geneva conference
- Biographical information; McGeorge Bundy; William Bundy; Robert Komer; Vietnam; Bien Hoa; service on high-level review committee on Vietnam; Pleiku incident; Honolulu Conference; Ky; bombing halt; Harriman; Wilson; J. Blair Seaborn mission, 1964
Folder, "[June 17, 1966 - 6:05 p.m. National Security Council Meeting]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 1
(Item)
- . A decision on bombing is not being made now and one is not imminent. The reasons for our delay include: the Secretary was at the NATO meeting, Canadian representative Ronning was visiting Hanoi, time was required to talk to Prime Minister Wilson and our
- recounted, as previously reported to us by Ambassador Goldberg and by messages from Wilson and Brown, the chronol9gy of his discussions witl1 the ~orth Vietnamese: the Secretary General's n~essagc to Eo in J
- wrote one to Wilson Anyhow, this was the letter that in effect told us to get out, get out of France. He was getting rid of NATO in France, the NATO thing, and he wanted our forces out--which incidentally happened to be a violation of some bilateral
- is not politically impossible. It is merely politically more difficult, but it isn't any more difficult than when Woodrow Wilson, a first-term minority President, when the Democratic Party was really a minority in the country, pushed through in two years
Folder, "Meetings With the President -- 6 January 1964 - 1 April 1964," McCone Memoranda, Box 1
(Item)
- ~ For the White P.ouse: For CIA: Messrs. Rusk, Ball, Mann, rwtin, and Collins Messrs. McNair.ara, Vance, and Ailes Mr. Wilson M::!ssrs. Bundy, Th.mean, Salinger, and Hoye rs M::!ssrs. ?1::Cone and HeJ..ms 1. The meetine opened at 0930 wtthout the Pre~idcnt who
- attacking George Washington, Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Truman and other American Presidents for getting involved in foreign conflicts and cited these to show that this current situation must be viewed in the context of our national history. The President
- in the British economy. This put them under heavy strain and when the Wilson government came into office, they were faced with a very heavy crisis. We had to get up several billion dollars ourselves with our partners to make available to the British to buy up
- -- White House 6. Talk t o Eisenhower. Honolulu Communique. 7. Letter to Kosygin. Clifford a nd Rusk draft it. 8. Letter to Wilson -- Rusk 2:24 p. m. CIA Director Richard Helms looked at the President, shook hands and said "good luck. " MEETH~G
- include : t h e Secretary wa s at the NA TO meeting, Canadian repr e s e ntative Ronning was v isiting Hanoi , t i me wa s required to talk to Prime Minister Wilson a nd ou r allie s , and some sounds have come from Hanoi. Every bit of information is need
- no. We never publicized this. When Kosygin met earlier with Wilson, he said he wanted to get talks started but North Vietnam said no then also. We know that China and Russia are supporting and will continue to support Hanoi. '\ .. ·~ t 8. We think
- and Admiral Dick Byrd, who had been his aide when he was Vice President. Also, that was immediately prior to the Israeli-U.A.R. confrontation, and, as a matter of fact, Prime Minister Wilson was in the White House at the time, LBJ Presidential Library http
Oral history transcript, William J. Jorden, interview 1 (I), 3/22/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- of his own party who didn't want him to run and so on and so on. Wilson went through hell when he was trying to establish a sensible world order after World War L Roosevelt went through severe criticism. Harry Truman was going to be impeached
- for a job in August of 1946. I got here the week that Wilson Wyatt resigned as Administrator of the then Nat ional Hous ing Agency and the Truman housing pl;ogram bJ;'oke up under congressional attack. In some ways it's probably the most fortunate thing
- 2 W: A.B. from Princeton. M: What was that in? W: That was in the School of International Affairs, Public Affairs, the Woodrow Wilson School. And then a Master of Public Administration, which at that time at Harvard was a sort of certificate
- would hinge on whether the British did or did not accept the idea . It was an election in Britatin and the Labor government was returned and Wilson came here in December of 64 . Before the President had a series of meetings on the problem
- about the mistakes, let's think of what he did. Usually you have a cycle, and a lot that Woodrow Wilson did was wiped out. But the great thing that you could say about Lyndon is that Lyndon institutionalized the New Deal as a plateau. As I say, he pulled
- the It was one thing for the French journalists to write what it . they wrote, but it was quite another to have these Americans doing became so I remember in Hanoi one day when Don Wilson of Life magazine exasperated with Captain de Lassuz, who was the French
- NO.• _ TO BE FUR~-ISHED LATER}~ l l •• COLONEL D. P . MC AULIFF E~ USA, •0 2 66 09 , EXEC 'TO ·cHAIRMAN,JCS {PP NO. Y 202062}~ •COLONEL ALANC. "EDMUNDS, USAF, FR 158 7 5, I ·: -.CJCS S1AFF GROUP{PP NOY 495327}~ I! MAJORCHARLESE. WILSON, USAF, FR 26347, p
- Pop Warner [?J, Colonel Warner, the senior adviser in the I ARVN Corps while there, and under Jap Wilson who was senior adviser-G: Is that J-A-P? M: Yes, Jasper Wilson. And in the III Corps he had followed Coalbin Willie Wilson. (Laughter) G
Oral history transcript, William P. Bundy, interview 2 (II), 5/29/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- world power know that the United States of Amerioa meant what it said. It wna the wisdom of Woodrow Wilson and the astuteness of Franklin Roosevelt that stopped the atotaton in their tracks after the Lusitania hnd been sunk, after they'd marched through