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  • Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther Dr. George B. Kistiakowsky John M. McCloy Dr. James A. Perkins Arthur K. Watson William Webster Dr. Herbert F. York the Vice President Secretary Rusk Secretary McNamara McGeorge Bundy William Foster Glenn Seaborg John McCon e
  • the future of Germany and without qualification or reser vation, be­ therefore, in the light of history, · the hind the Chinese faction which General future of war in the world, we have from Marshall had found corrupt, incompe­ Mr. John Foster Dulles, famed
  • Cohen Hon and Mrs. LeRoyCollins Mr. William Crofut Mrs. Walter Cronkite Mr. Leo T Crowley Dr. Lawrence A Davis Mr. Roscoe Drummond Mrs. John Foster Dulles Mr. and Mrs. John S. D. Eisenhowe r Mr. and Mrs. NormanFischer Hon and Mrs. Eugene Foley Mr
  • . in '56. This policy had been inaugurated by John Foster Dulles I think the first shipments were made in '57. The hope was that it would lead Poland to pursue a more independent and friendly policy toward the United States. It did not work out
  • See all online interviews with John M. Cabot
  • Biographical information; association with LBJ; John Gronouski; Poland foreign policy; policy of building bridges to the East; Battle Acts; most-favored nation treatment; Chinese Communists; Warsaw; Averell Harriman; Foreign Service officers
  • Cabot, John M. (John Moors), 1901-1981
  • Oral history transcript, John M. Cabot, interview 1 (I), 2/28/1969, by Paige E. Mulhollan
  • John M. Cabot
  • , 1977 INTERVIEWEE: RALPH K. HUITT INTERVIEWER: MICHAEL L. GILLETTE PLACE: Mr. Huitt's office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 G: Let's start with what you were saying earlier about Johnson's relationship with John Foster Dulles. H: All right
  • of a 1958 labor bill supported by Senator John F. Kennedy; how LBJ would gain votes for other senators' bills; LBJ's ability to get Republican senators to vote in support of Democratic plans; Senator Bill Langer's vote; how opposing senators would help each
  • General Oma r Bradle y Jame s Perkin s John Cowle s Secretar y McNamar a Allen Dulle s Georg e Ball, Actin g Secy o f Stat e Paul Hoffma n Ambassado r Llewelly n Thompso n George Kistiakowsk y Willia m Foster Arthur Larso n Joh n McCon e Morris Leihma n
  • The Johnsons are in Washington. LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) attends a luncheon at Secretary Dulles’ home and later a bipartisan White House briefing where Eisenhower asks for support of his proposed Mideast Resolution. 1/2 LBJ attends a meeting of the Foreign
  • [remark was]? Was it in connection with Quemoy and Matsu? G: Let's see. There is the . . . . B: I am sure that this was John Foster Dulles, who Eisenhower deferred totally to in foreign affairs. Chiang Kai-shek. John Foster Dulles' law firm
  • ; drinking among senators; Grace Tully; LBJ’s problems with kidney stones; Chiang Kai-shek; tax bill controversy; foreign policy issues; John Foster Dulles; Clinton Anderson
  • •. Paul M. Popple Aseistant to the President aer :, (White Home File Copy) H. L. HuNT ------ -- MEK>#3 June 2, 1966 MR.DULIES // Fr011 1920 to He was affiliated Government. the Roosevelt Dulles was a paid 193.5 John Foster with the State
  • to do of getting a plane, had to get Doctor [Tom] Mattingly from Walter Reed and everything. Jerry and I went over who he would call and who I would call during this half hour. I had to call the Vice President, Dick Nixon, and John Foster Dulles
  • leaders of free world after WWII; Little Rock and civil rights; Ike against forced bussing; states rights; Senator Joseph McCarthy; Ike and LBJ had heart attacks in 1955; Dulles and foreign affairs; 1956 Hungarian uprising; Israel and Suez Crisis; Sputnik
  • of a hand at having Congress come down there and talk with him. strictly on foreign relations matters. and working was with John Foster Dulles. I'm talking So most of our negotiating He got along quite well with Dulles in foreign policy. G: How about
  • See all online interviews with John Sparkman
  • Sparkman, John, 1899-1985
  • Oral history transcript, John Sparkman, interview 2 (II), 6/9/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
  • John Sparkman
  • , in 19.520 [3 of 3] From Facts on FJle: State Secy. John Foster Dulles told his news conference Apr. 5 (1955) that the U.S. was in close touch with other nations in a continuing effort to ease the "highly danger­ ous" Formosa situati on . But he emphasized
  • classmates of mine also in high school: John Scribner and Bill Bogen. Wearranged a car pool to drive from Glendale every day over to the college, which, as I recall it, was an eight to ten-mile drive. Myfirst class in the morning, I'll at eight o'clock
  • Foster Dulles, a letter which, when it got into the public domain--how it did is not altogether clear. But he wrote this letter to John Foster Dulles taking a very strong stand on it. You know, I'm under the impression that Jim Rowe was the original
  • , without any warning to him, landed troops instead. Then that bloody French- Vietnamese war that lasted from 1948 until 1954 with terrible loss of life on both sides. The Geneva Accords, where [John Foster] Dulles first agreed that we would respect
  • November 11, 19.54, he questioned S9 cretary Dulles, · as follows: · Senator Fulbright: Mr. Chairman, I, like Senator Green, have not had a chance to study this, and I have only l or 2 questions. I was not clear about the status of this understanding
  • or movies. I remember he did go to one and embarrassed me highly by crying. It was Grapes of Wrath by [John] Steinbeck and one of those highly graphic description of starving people. And about the Dust Bowl days in the depths of the Depression. And he had
  • for JFK for the vice-presidential nomination; Rebekah Johnson's declining health; international issues at the Suez Canal that kept Eisenhower from focusing on his campaign; John Foster Dulles; the Johnsons' trip to Europe, particularly Paris, in 1956
  • statesman the same way. You could send Adenauer thirty-seven embossed assertions of the policy of the United States and have them hand-carried by John Foster Dulles, but it wasn't half as good as one message through a private agent delivered over on a dark
  • it its coloration?" So he got Frank reluctantly to say we could release it, and he immediately called his brother [John Foster Dulles] over in the State Department and said, "I'm going to send you over something, and I think we ought to get it out
  • of the Suez Crisis. or 1957? It doesn't matter. I'm Was that 1956 But I think it was either in 1957 or 1958 he wrote a letter to [John Foster] Dulles on the whole Middle Eastern question and the Israeli question, which had considerable impact. I'm a bit
  • and less on separate staff operations than perhaps Mr . Acheson and Mr . Dulles and Governor Herter . Even there, it's awfully hard to generalize, Mr . Dulles had a very close relationship with Bob Bowie, who was head or chairman of the Policy Planning
  • where John Foster Dulles very wisely said that, and with the approval of President Eisenhower, that we would not support the French except through "united action." In other words, that we would not go it alone. M: Multilateral-- F: It had
  • Biographical information; Finletter Report; 70-group Air Force; George Mahon; Adlai Stevenson; Vietnam; decline in power of Democratic party; John Foster Dulles; NATO; meeting with LBJ on 4/10/64 on MLF; lack of support of MLF; Ottawa speech; Non
  • was that? Was that May or June? G: I believe it was June that he announced he was stepping down. Yes, June the ninth. J: Yes. Occasionally Lyndon would be asked to a small meeting with [John Foster] Dulles, and sometimes I would sit by him at a White House dinner. I
  • ; Wright Patman; hosting Sid Richardson for dinner and socializing with Philip and Katharine Graham, among others; the possibility that Allan Shivers would run against LBJ in 1954; attending events with John Foster Dulles and Ezra Taft Benson; first seeing
  • Walter Jenkins Mrs. Johnson Justice Carmody of New Mexico - requested by Sen. Anderson Depart P-38 Arrive Dulles Airport Depart Dulles Airport Arrive Dallas, Texas Depart Dallas, Texas Arrive Austin Municipal Airport, departed immediately thereafter, via
  • of the House. You may recall the trouble we had over in Lebanon. W: I do indeed. D: I recall very vividly today that President Eisenhower called us all down, the joint leadership. After giving us a briefing by John Foster Dulles, the Secretary of State
  • . John Foster Dulles begins a trip to England, France and Germany to discuss the Berlin situation with the other western powers. 2/5 Senate passes an omnibus housing bill which would authorize a 6-year extension of urban renewal and the construction
  • position as against an executive position. At that time John Foster Dulles was Secretary of State and he was a very dominating figure. Part of it had to do with him personally, just as Johnson was the dominating figure as Majority Leader. leader
  • some straws in the wind that year that really sort of cast a long shadow. Secretary [John Foster] Dulles got together a meeting of eight congressional leaders--Knowland, of course, and Lyndon, and [William] Milliken and Russell and [Earle] Clements
  • with it. the type of man that was Secretary of State. I think it was I always thought that John Foster Dulles was extremely condescending towards the committee. I thought Rusk had a tendency to be more open, although sometimes you really had to pick at him to get
  • , about [William] Proxmire, [John Foster] Dulles, and Hawaii. M: I think that is the general chronology, isn't it? J: It is, and there are many things on there that I certainly do not want us to miss. (Interruption) M: If you go down
  • gun control bill; LBJ's relationship with Dorsey Hardeman; John Foster Dulles; Mrs. Johnson's visit to FDR's home in Hyde Park, New York; Mrs. Johnson's interactions with Eleanor Roosevelt; the Johnsons' relationship with Ed Weisl and Warren Woodward
  • that mampulatJon on the American continents by foreign imperialistic powers be forestalled. Write your Congressman and Senators, and possibly Secretary of State John Foster Dulles They may be interested in having an expression of your viewpoint; enclose ~opy
  • nominated for the vice presidency in 1960? H: Well, no. I was not extremely jubilant. But I was so pro-John Fitzgerald that what he wanted was all right with me. B: Why were you so much in favor of Mr. Kennedy in 1960? H: John Fitzgerald's record
  • reorganization powers. The House votes to remove Rep. John Rankin and F. Edward Hebert from the Un-American Activities Committee because of their activity in the States Rights Democratic Party in the 1948 election. 1/18 Dean Acheson’s appointment as secretary
  • , Smathers, Frear and Clements, the 6 members of the Finance Committee proposing the plan. 3/10 LBJ’s calendar indicates he attended the funeral of Col. J.K. Stacey this morning. LBJ announces that the Senate will act on the nomination of John Marshall
  • ~T . OSCAR C . DANCY, COUNTY JUDGE TED HUNT, PRECINCT No . 1 PORT !SABEL JOHN H . GINN , JR ., PRECINCT No . 2 BROWNSVILLE JACK EHLERS, BENITO PREC INCT No . 3, SAN J. T . FOSTER, PREC INCT No . 4, HARLIN GE N H . 0 . SEAGO, COUNTY CLERK J
  • from Orange County, which is the John Birch county in the state, but he developed quite a lot in Sacramento. He was a member of the assembly; he got his law degree in 1932, and he was elected to the assembly in 1936, to the Senate in 1940, went to war
  • of our Government under the United Nations Charter. Does this have any effect on either enlarging or diminishing our relationships with the United Nations or our responsibilities under the United Nations Charter? Secretary Dulles. No, sir_~ This article I
  • 29, 1967. 2. John Robson to Alan Boyd, memorandum, December 21, 1967. J. Peter S. Craig to John Robson, memorandum, February 28, 1968. 4. John Robson to Al.an Boyd, memorandum, February 29, 1968. 5. Donald G. Agger to Alan Boyd, memorandum
  • *A. Philip Randolph - AFL-CIO *Eugene Ormandy - Philadelphia Orchestra Leonard Bernstein - N. Y. Philharmonic Samuel Eliot Morrison - Harvard Professor *John F. Gallagher - Vice President for International Operations of Sears, Roebuck - 2 - MEMORANDUM
  • imagine he did. You know, I can't remember the occasion, but I remember at one of our staff meetings he was late and Walter was presiding, and then he came in and whatever we were talking about, he announced that John Foster Dulles had returned