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  • to us tonight. You referred to the days of Anglo-American relationships, the days of your great master and tutor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But I make bold acclaim that relations between our two countries today, in 1968, in the years when you and I have
  • and tile alp• of your rlcb, cultural tradition■ were among •1. earliest and •J moat enduring iapreaalona. I . began •Y goverae.a.t aervlco 1D Waablngton under President , •• h'anltliD D. Roosevelt, &Dd fl"OIII Iii■ I learned tbat mtblng, I now lead
  • IN THE SURROUNDING AREA WERE HEAVILY INTERDICTED. B • . TWENTY-SEVEN AIRCRAFT -FROM THE USS TICONDEROGA AND THIF:TY-TWO AIRCRAFT FRGr1 THE USS FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT DELIVERED A COORDINATED ·srRIKE - ON VAN DIEN VtHICLE. DEPOT 6 MILES SOUTH OF HANOI·. DESPITE
  • reconstruction then·, in their our postwar struggle In the past 137 million shared tons world hu·nger·. Roosevelt freedoms Our in food pro­ looked beyond which are the is Freedom from Want. with his vision: areas through decade I nations our
  • - Secretary and Mrs. Rusk host a luncheon in the Benjamin Franklin Room for President and Mrs. Diaz Ordaz 3:15 Presidents and wives motor together to Smithsonian Institution for presentation of Pre-Columbian antiquity, followed by visit to Lincoln Memorial
  • or by a Cabinet member; these are parts of the process of decision. If you look back in history, you can see how often it was that the great judgments of Franklin Roosevelt were crystallized (and sometimes melted a week later) by the process of what he said
  • 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
  • . of ·American °foreign · policy ·in :t .h is era have been ·executive · decisions. Roosevelt's destroyer · d_e al of 1940·, for example,· under which 50 American·; shi-ps were g~ven ­ to Great Britain in her hour of peril in exchange for naval bases
  • of Chemistry, Harvard University Franklin A. Lindsay Itek Corporation -2-. Richard Neustadt John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University lthiel de Sola Pool Center for International Studies, M.I. T. Matthew B. Ridgway General, U.S. Army, retired
  • President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent to India were so outspokenly sympathetic to Gandhi and to the Indian freedom cause that their with­ drawal was requested by the Viceroy. After independence America was the first nation to offer technical assistance
  • of . , .-SECRET -3Quiet beginnings of discussions with moderate these lines, as opportunity offers. In this connection, men Black, Robert Anderson, Raymond Hare, Kermit Roosevelt helpful. Arabs along like Eugene might be Encouragement of arrangements which tend
  • for unity among free peoples everywhere President Roosevelt's proclamation of the Four Freedoms had world-wide appeal during the 0 war period. - 2 - war period. A new statement of the basic ideals of free men in the present ideological conflict could
  • of U. S. wheat to the Bloc with people from State {Thompson, Jolmson}, Agriculture (Murphy), Commerce (Roosevelt, Behrman - - Nick Johnson was unable to join us), Labor (Wirtz), CIA (Cline), Mike Feldman, and also Budget ~nd Treasury. The following
  • : Herewith a proposed response from you to Elliott Roosevelt, which, I gather from Marv Watson, is polltleally urgent - - it you wish to meet his request. W. W. Rostow May 31, 1967 Dear Elliott: I appreciate your letter of support for our policies
  • was lagging badly. Historian Charles Seymour tells us that: "The distrust and discouragement that followed brought forth furious attacks upon the President's war policies, led not merely by Roosevelt and the Republican enemies of the Administra·tion