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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
  • the development of the weapon; President Truman authorized its first wartime use. And Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and J'ohnson have lived daily with the overwhelming responsibility and knowledge that only the President can authorize the use of this dreadful
  • (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,.
  • as Presidential yacht in 1945 and served in this capacity under Presidents Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Placed out of _commission in June 1953, the ship remained on reserve status until 1962 when President John F. Kennedy made her available
  • than Dewey to support an independent State of Israel, they voted for Truman in 1948. They preferred Stevenson to Eisenhower, though by a smaller margin. - 3 - 2. 1968 As Compared With The Previous Two Elections Goldwater, regardless of any elements
  • 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
  • . 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • ~ · 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
  • .. 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