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  • TO HOLD TVO PHONY DISTURBANCES ON THE CORNEROF STATE AND EISENHOWER EXPRESSWAYWHEN PRESIDENT PASSES SO THAT UNIFORMEDPOLICE OFFICERS• ATTENTION VILL BE DIVERTED. DEMONSTRATORS TREN Pl.AN TO GET CLOSE ENOtJSKTO THE PRESIDENT'S CAR TO THROWPAINT ON IT. GP-1
  • . The mechanism that is established here should be able to deal with a crisis situation without the establishing of any new mechanism. [Q.] Does this run the risk of the problem in the Eisenhower era, or so attributed to that, that the President gets to see only
  • of example ·r h ·: Eisenhower on nn d) and the "missil ga . n and Vietnam. Ne\v in umb o t n see reasons to chang their min once in office. Dean t inberg quoted a previous boss of hi as justifying changes in his views over time this way: 'Things do not appear
  • to do a big study of time of movement and what have you. F: Was the Eisenhower experience at Little Rock of any value at all to you in this? C: Not much. (Interruption) F: We were at Oxford. C: Yes. Oxford, I would have to say generally
  • . So I was fortunate that I worked for Jim Hagerty·. ·Hagerty had been Eisenhower's press secretary and had gone to ABC for news and was the top man. ··as the vice president So, I called Jim and I 'said, "What do I do?" He said, "You don.'t have any
  • never a question of doing what's right. It's a question of knowing what's right. Those first few days Vietnam was on top of the agenda, before the visiting heads of state got home from the funeral. In the outer office of the EOB I saw Eisenhower sitting
  • formed any opinion of Mr. Johnson before 1960? P: Yes, I'd come to admire him greatly during the Eisenhow er years when he was instrumen tal as Senate Majority Leader in passing the first civil rights act that establish ed the Civil Rights
  • the social progress program administered by the Inter-American Development Bank under a trust for the U. S. Government. It is this program which was initiated in the Eisenhower Administration and first financed in the Kennedy Administration. It provides funds
  • Fabiola suffered miscarriages in 1961 and August of this year.) 2. Visits to the United States: Baudouin visited the United States in 1949 and again in May 1959 on a State Visit at the invitation of President Eisenhower. The latter tour, his first official
  • .Presidential Task Forces This was not the first the most significant Eisenhower, previous who, in his final to the President a in the fall had made the recommendation time a President espousal had favored the of the idea had come from budget
  • See all scanned items from the Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission) Series 44 Box 5
  • Folder, "TREASURY DEPARTMENT, INTERPOL, Materials," Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission), Series 44, Box 5
  • Records of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (Eisenhower Commission)
  • . The only one that had guts enough to come was Sam Rayburn, you know. During that Shivers stall, when Shivers were there, he'd come out for Eisenhower and everything else, and we just didn't have a damn show. We couldn't win a county convention. If we did
  • , not even his own Dutchess Countyo You carried the State as a whole by over two and a half million, as against Roosevelt's i,112,000 in 1936, and Eisenhower's one and a half million in 1956. Your percentage of the total vote was 68.5%, and Roosevelt's
  • SUBJECT: Letter from Johns Hopkins professors The attached lette! from Baltimore, mostly from Johns Hopkins professors, is sent across your desk because Milton Eisenhower undertook an obligation to these people to see that their views were made available
  • and orbiting devices and 1 istening devi.ces and whatnot. There was a period of great inventiveness by tfte Ameri cans, and Eisenhower was. encouraging that a great deal. Over on as part of the job.. was counterinsurgency, whicft r was LBJ Presidential
  • redistributing because them. it promotes economic violence. for all the people and of the Eisenhower Kennedy. It seeks merely and and partnership. spokesmen Administration, controversy rather than Pan American Society Award -2
  • grave tu r n to th e already serious situ a ­ tio n in so u th east Asia. O ur com m it ­ m ents in th a t a re a a re well know n to the Congress. T hey w ere first m ade In 1954 by P re sid en t Eisenhower. T hey w ere f u rth e r defined in th e S o u
  • , ------- Saturday. April 29, 1967 Z:35 p.m. Mr. Prealdent: H•rewlth draft letter to General Elaenhower. whlch you requested that I do. W. W. Roatow April 29, 1961 Dear Oeneral Eisenhower: 1 had the opportuAlty la Boen for: a tow worda ,vlth a,.uuu·al d• Gaulle
  • Eisenhower's October 1, 1954, The final objective would _b e_a general · letter·· to · President Diem, the SEATO military neutral!z!1-ti
  • called to report the following. about the 1. He ls seeing Gen. Eisenhower who ls ''enthusiastic" Douglas committee. Cabot believes that Gen. Eisenhower's strong backing for this u:middle position" will not only give your posltlon strength but make
  • begin this reassessment with a review of our South Asian military as ..istance policies during the last fifteen years. A. In the mid-1950's the Eisenhow Administration was greatly concerned about th possibility of a Soviet move towards the Persian Gulf
  • , Pre.sident John-· with the Vietcong as Hanoi and Peking son frequently implies that whether we continually demand. But the tragic thing, Mr. President, ls like it or not President Eisenhower made a commitment to Vietnam which we are that if our position
  • . 24, 1983 "'•.izf-• NARA, te 7-Zf:'.:--3// Thtu:-sda.y, August 3- 1967 -- 7:15 p. m. Mr. President: As instructed, I have checked G·e n. Eisenhower's id~a of trading Soviet 0 supplles 0 to Hanoi for a -e eseatloa of our bombing of the North. 1
  • sent three-mm team to observe Supreme Soviet ·. ·... ::..:_· elections. . Both USSR and Romania had accepted President Eisenhower's invita~·.::~ ... ~.; , ·\-: . . tion to observe US electoral process during 1956 Presidential elections. USSR