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  • ways of running things that could have taught lessons to Joe Stalin. Pat had the most absolute iron-fisted rule over that commit­ tee that was ever established within my memory of any senatorial committee. What Pat wanted, went. But of course
  • Chis,ng\ Ka;~ehek in order to attack the mainland. . 11 I In 1952 these charges reached • · , \ '· i I I crescendo .of vi, riol and vituper ation. Vice Presi alent Ni.Xon a:nd 1his \ friend Joseph McCarthy were in the vanguard of attack. Even
  • States Army. He is now First Assistant to Colonel William Joseph Donovan, Coordinator of Infor­ mation, occupying himself in a heavily guarded New York building with the important matter of short-wave broad­ casting to Europe. He divides his time between
  • to abolish the poll tax, and Maury Maverick was elected the chairlTIan of it. I was elected vice -chairlnan, and this Joseph Gelde rs, who had the radical connections, was elected secretary. We went back to Washington, a.nd the first thing we did was to try
  • ■• N. C.. JOSEPH P'. GUFFl:Y I PA. C1UY M. GIU.E'IT~, IOWA COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS February 21,, 1941 BENNET1" CHAMP CLARK, M01 CAIITEII GLASS, VA. JAMI:■ P'• BYRNES, ■. C., CHRISTIE 8. KENNEDY, CLERK llr. Charles E. llarah 2504
  • -Ar.eric~"l acts ranging from ir.dividual harass­ ments to sabotage of oil installations. If' the transaction should be i.Ylevitable we should exact Isr~ .li cooperation on Jordan waters, the Joseph Johnson refugee . plan, and strenethenmg of tnrrso. Near
  • . Henshaw Colonel Joseph J. Imhoff Mrs. C. Burton Johnson Colonel Howett H. Jordan Rear Admiral Joseph W. Kimbrough Captain Albert Knox Maj. General Themas A. Lane Hon. J. Bracken Lee Brig. General W. C. Lemly Lt. General Sumter L. Lowry Dean Clarence E. M
  • ••••••••••••• f •••• MACV till ••••••• DIA D-2 n W ~ gq 8'1 - I l ~- NOFORN UNITEDSTATESTEAM Seniors Honorable Joseph Honorable Williams. W. Barr Ambassador U. Alexis Mr. William Jordan General J.P. Honorable General ................... Gaud
  • OF PURE STALINISM BEING REIMPOSED EITHER IN USSR OR ANY PLACE IN EASTERN EUROPE. 2. COMMENT: HEALEY HAS JUST RETURNED FROM VACATION AND WAS AT PAINS TO STRESS THAT HE HAD NOT DISCUSSED CZECHOSLOVAKIA AT LENGTH YET WITH HIS CABINET COLLEAGUES. ~ an --,r
  • Pledge, split over the Hitler-Stalin -Pact in 1939 and revived briefly for the period of Henry Wallace's candidacy in 1948. These earlier dissidents carried picket signs, manned soup kitchens and fo~ght in Spain. On the whole, however, their Marxism had
  • LEAGUE AND CZECH JOSEPH LENART, SWARAN SINGH PRESENTED DETAILED CRITIC-AL INTERPRETATION AND COMMENT· ON MOST TOPICS THAT WERE COV,ERED •. • I O'\J NONPROLIFERAT ION ISSUE HE REPEATED SOVIET VIEWS ON MLF AND ARGUED THAT JO INT. PARTTCI PAT I
  • ques­ tions which have divided us and also those which have helped pull us together. In 1950, in collaboration with Joseph Stalin, the Chinese mounted a major attack on the U.N. forces which were defending South Korea. The ultimate target
  • be Prime M.1n1at r so.m.e 4a7. I waa go1a& to R~sala , to the pres• • " ~ K.w>wina van said , Nell Stalin to open up the oowitr7 Bevan el.ao ma4e it olear that the gover.oment was aoin& to bu1l4 homes aD4 would exeroia• whate•er power was neoe s sary
  • Stalin the community cnJoycd compara• they wanted to push the figu1 the expenditure by the United States of $25 tive freedom and indeed encouragement, hours. The Russian instructors billion a year. Being so admirably dis­ particularly on the cultural
  • &-to you. I vau1 CS,• But Amorioe w s not .- At Chicego, .A&erlcs. throug).l the .·orld conditions demsnd th.et .no othor narce Domoore.tio Party. 1n c. del!IO()ratio vey. will tc!)ll Bitlor, Stalin, be prese,at.ed. that tb ·r e i& only encl !!ue
  • with Stalin. He's the guy that can tell anybody anything any time and "out ot the horse's mouth". He now has cast himself. He is young and good-lookin&, an accepted pinko, beloved by the bankers, the industrialists, the Protestants and the Catholics
  • this move into Afghanistan, m my opinion, was a dangerous move. It was dangerous because (the Russians) never before had u~ed their troops outside of their own areas, within the Warsaw Pact or against China. Even Tito told me in 1951 that Stalin would never
  • it was 1966 [1967]--when out of nowhere I got a question in the briefing as to whether Stalin's daughter had asked for asylum at the American Embassy in New Delhi. Now, I will admit to you frankly I did not even know that Stalin had a daughter. Well, as you
  • the nation’s security. On Armed Forces Day, 5/16/53, Truman, Symington and Omar Bradley make speeches critical of the cuts. Eisenhower makes a radio speech on 5/19 defending the “New Look.” Eisenhower’s prestige, the Korean truce, and the death of Stalin make