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THE DWIGHT D. EISENHOWERTHE DWIGHT D. EISENHOWERTHE DWIGHT D. EISENHOWERTHE DWIGHT D. EISENHOWERTHE DWIGHT D. EISENHOWERNANANANANATIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILES
1953–19611953–19611953–19611953–19611953–1961PPPPPARARARARART 1:T 1:T 1:T 1:T 1:
SUBJECT FILESSUBJECT FILESSUBJECT FILESSUBJECT FILESSUBJECT FILES
A UPA Collectionfrom
The Dwight D. EisenhowerNational Security Files,
1953–1961Part 1: Subject Files
National Security FilesGeneral Editor
George C. Herring
Microfilmed from the Holdings ofthe Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, Abilene, Kansas
Project CoordinatorRobert E. Lester
Guide compiled byAlice Chen
7500 Old Georgetown Road • Bethesda, MD 20814-6126
A UPA Collection from
Copyright © 2005 LexisNexis,a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.ISBN 1-55655-960-7.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The Dwight D. Eisenhower national security files, 1953–1961 [microform] / project editor, Robert E.Lester. microfilm reels. — (National security files) Summary: Reproduces documents from the Papers of Dwight D. Eisenhower in the custody of theDwight D. Eisenhower Library, National Archives and Records Administration. Accompanied by a printed guide compiled by Alice Chen. ISBN 1-55655-960-7 (pt. 1) — ISBN 1-55655-961-5 (pt. 2) — ISBN 0-88692-678-5 (pt. 3) 1. UnitedStates—Politics and government—1953–1961—Sources. 2. National security—United States—History—Sources. 3. United States—Foreign relations—1953–1961—Sources. 4. Dwight D.Eisenhower Library—Archives. I. Lester, Robert. II. Chen, Alice, 1982– . III. LexisNexis (Firm)IV. Series.E835327.73'009'0945—dc22
2005040740 CIP
iii
TABLE OF CONTENTSScope and Content Note ...................................................................................... v
Source Note ........................................................................................................... ix
Editorial Note ......................................................................................................... ix
Acknowledgments ................................................................................................ x
Abbreviations ........................................................................................................ xi
Reel Index
Reels 1–6NSC Status of Projects ................................................................................... 1
Reel 7NSC Status of Projects cont. .......................................................................... 13NSC Subjects ................................................................................................. 14
Reels 8–13NSC Subjects cont. ......................................................................................... 16
Reel 14NSC Subjects cont. ......................................................................................... 29OCB Subjects ................................................................................................. 30
Reels 15–20OCB Subjects cont. ......................................................................................... 31
Reel 21OCB Subjects cont. ......................................................................................... 44Special Assistant Subjects.............................................................................. 46
Reels 22–30Special Assistant Subjects cont. ..................................................................... 46
Principal Correspondents Index .......................................................................... 63
Subject Index ......................................................................................................... 75
v
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTEThe National Security Files (1953–1961) from the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration
provide an excellent overview of the U.S. government’s perspectives during the Cold War.The competition and tension between the United States and the USSR casts a longshadow over the collection and forms a subtext to each letter, report, meetingtranscription, and paper.
The National Security Council (NSC) operated under a process they called “policy hill”that included three functions: recommendations, decisions, and implementation ofmilitary, international, and internal security policy. The Special Assistant facilitated thedecision making of the NSC’s regular, interagency reviews of major foreign and nationalsecurity issues. Eisenhower’s Special Assistants included Robert Cutler, DillonAnderson, William H. Jackson, and Gordon Gray. Under these assistants and the policyhill process, the NSC evolved during the Eisenhower presidency to be a major player inpolicy making.
Dwight D. Eisenhower National Security Files, 1953–1961, Part 1: Subject Files isdivided into four series that are organized alphabetically: NSC Status of Projects, NSCSubjects, Operations Coordinating Board Subjects, and Special Assistant Subjects. Thespecial assistant was a person who supported the president by facilitatingcommunications within the NSC.
The collection begins with NSC program status reports on topics from psychologicalwarfare to the lingering effects of the Korean War (Reels 1–7). The status checking ofU.S. resources found in the first two reels continues throughout the collection, as docomparisons of U.S. and Soviet military, economic, political, and nuclear capabilities.These early reels disclose much about the varied government methods used to combatSoviet communism, including several examples of funding foreign anticommunist films(Reel 3, Frame 0955).
Government planners in the 1950s operated on two assumptions: a nuclear attackwas imminent and the United States must be superior to the USSR in every arena, fromweapons and military strength to foreign opinion. The pressing fear of nuclear attackemerges in a discussion regarding the wartime formation of the Executive Office and thedevelopment of warning systems (Reel 4). Hints of the Soviet-U.S. science andtechnology race appear early with military encouragement of scientific education (Reels4 and 8). The struggle for U.S. supremacy permeates the discussion of the politicalimportance of the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 and the Suez Canal crisis. To calculatetotal U.S. resources, the NSC collected volumes of information detailing the military,economic, and political strength of U.S. allies and enemies.
The U.S. and the Soviet governments poured money into the economies of countriesthat did not fall distinctly into either the American or Soviet sphere of influence. TheUSSR launched its Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive and, in response, the United Statesincreased its foreign military assistance and economic aid programs. One example ofthis struggle appeared in Cuba-U.S. relations, where a sense of urgency about Cuba’s
vi
political direction leads to the detailed documentation of Cuba’s history and communistactivities. U.S. officials showed increasing concern over the geographic proximity of FidelCastro’s anti-American government. Foreign aid became a propaganda tool to promoteU.S. interests, although the results could not always be controlled. An NSC paper entitled“The Decline of U.S. Prestige Abroad” comments on the American shock at not beingwell-perceived overseas despite billions of dollars in aid (Reel 9, Frame 0846). The authorof the paper makes a timeless observation that debtors rarely feel positively toward theircreditors as a possible explanation for why dollars did not translate into the expectedgratefulness.
Conflict over influence went hand-in-hand with the development of weapons. U.S.formation of an Arms Control Policy included discussions about the usefulness of atomicweapons, weapons custody within the United States, and the morality of building moredestructive weapons (Reel 7). The United States continued to develop more nuclearweapons even as the nation and its allies showed less willingness to go to war (Reel 13).The government gauged the possible radioactive fallout in American cities, assessedSoviet capabilities, and outlined possible signs of imminent war with the USSR (Reels 8and 13). The Killian Report, in particular, contained an analysis of U.S. defensecapabilities and vulnerabilities and a comparison with the Soviets (Reel 14). Among thetopics compared are missiles, nuclear bombs, fall-out possibilities, air and sea defense,and intelligence activities. A complete chronology of the U.S. Missile Program and papersdetailing the U.S. justification of nuclear tests and development can be found in Reels 17and 18.
With escalating weapons development, the U.S. government placed great value onpublic opinion, both domestic and foreign. A paper on the Human Effects of NuclearWeapons Development poses the question “How does knowing you could be annihilatedby one country and that your country could annihilate it affect the civilian population?”(Reel 10, Frame 0290) The desire to improve foreign public opinion led to the idea ofassigning one person in or near the White House to direct publicity (Reel 15). Thegovernment wished to secure information and to control public knowledge and instructedthe FBI to investigate newspaper and magazine articles revealing supposedly classifiedinformation (Reel 28). The presence of a large number of news clippings in the collectionsheds light on how the government evaluated the success of its propaganda.Government officials also begin to recognize that the USSR used the fractured racerelations within the United States, such as school desegregation in Little Rock, to cast anegative light on American culture and to promote communism. One result of thisrealization was a recommendation to hire a “highly qualified negro” to the NSC panel(Reel 24).
The United States had its own psychological weapons. The government incorporatededucational exchanges, art performances, and international trade fairs into its foreignpolicy (Reel 15). The People-to-People Program receives the most attention in thiscollection. Reels 18 and 19 contain the history of the program and outline variousprojects such as the Polish Medical Aid Project. President Eisenhower embraced theidea of every citizen being an “envoy” for the United States and printed this message onpassports and military papers. In addition, the U.S. government sought to take advantageof the Tibet Revolt and the Polish Poznan riot to effect a negative world view of the Sino-Soviet bloc.
With the creation of the National Aeronautic and Space Administration (NASA) in 1958came the beginning of the Soviet-U.S. space race (Reels 19–20). Both countries usedspace satellite research and propaganda to influence world opinion, while the UN
vii
negotiated rules of peaceful uses of space. Reel 21 details the Soviet launch of moonvehicles and the U.S. response. The space race, however, was only a part of thescientific competition between the two countries. The collection includes Atomic EnergyCommission (AEC) programs, questions over the use of atomic war, and the appearanceof the phrase “limited war,” which relies on limited military objectives and politicalposturing. In Reel 27, the effects of McCarthyism appear in a series of documentsconcerning AEC scientist Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer’s security clearance. Documentsalso show an obsession with seismology that arose out of the need for undergroundnuclear test detection. Documents concerning disarmament and nuclear inspectionsnegotiations, which were colored by fear of a surprise attack, begin in Reel 24 andcontinue until the end of the collection.
This collection scrutinizes U.S.-USSR relations in every field. The improvement ofintelligence communications, the furor over Korean War POWs breaking underinterrogation, the consequent military Code of Conduct, and the shooting of the U-2reconnaissance plane were all interpreted with an eye on the Soviets. A “Code of anAmerican Mother” even called on mothers to teach U.S. history to their children in orderto fight enemy indoctrination. When the Soviets blocked access to Berlin, the U.S.considered responding directly in Berlin as well as in a pacific counter blockade of theUSSR (Reel 25). When considering its stance toward NATO in Reel 12, the United Statesoutlined three possible approaches—all of which hinged on relations with the SovietUnion. The first approach considered time to “be on our side” and depended on foreignaid, the second established a no-cross line for the Soviet Union, and the third advocatedfor aggressive anticommunist and pro-American propaganda around the world. The flowof intelligence focused on the Soviets, from Iranian elections to European opinion of theUnited States and its leaders. Some documents detail a long history of Vladimir Lenin andJoseph Stalin and show that the Russians found Stalin to be rather rude (Reel 30). Reel24 offers the speech of Frank Rockwell Barnett of the Richardson Foundation Inc.entitled “Carthage, Too, Had Luxury Standards of Living.” In it, he theorizes that countrieswith low standards of living destroyed countries with high standards of living because itscitizens were willing to die for their cause. Barnett draws comparisons between Romeand the U.S. as well as the Visigoths and the USSR. He notes that the “missionaries andconquistadors of the Communist church militant are prepared to die for their strangedogma” while the United States seems no longer to believe in its own values. Even U.S.assessments of its own mentality were evaluated in comparison to the USSR.
The NSC Files thus provide insight into the external development of the United Statesas a world power as well as the internal development of government agencies such asNASA. This collection also records trips by government officials, interagency opinions onpolicy, and science and technological advances in fields such as seismology. LexisNexishas published other collections on the Eisenhower presidency and the NSC, a short listof which appears on the back cover.
ix
SOURCE NOTEThe materials microfilmed for this publication are from the Papers of Dwight D.
Eisenhower, Papers as President, Office of the Special Assistant for National SecurityAffairs, at the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library, Abilene, Kansas.
EDITORIAL NOTEThis microform collection comprises the documents accumulated and/or produced by
the Office of the Special Assistant for National Security Affairs. The records office of thespecial assistant consists of 115 boxes of material arranged into three general series: theNSC (National Security Council) Series, OCB (Operations Coordinating Board) Series,and Special Assistant Series. Each series is further subdivided: the NSC Series hasAdministrative, Briefing Notes, Policy Papers, Status of Projects, and Subject subseries;the OCB Series has Administrative and Subject subseries; and the Special AssistantSeries has Chronological, Name, Presidential, and Subject subseries.
UPA’s microfilm publication, The Dwight D. Eisenhower National Security Files, 1953–1961, consists of three parts encompassing almost all of the subseries listed above.LexisNexis has not included the Policy Papers subseries in this microfilm publication. Inaddition, LexisNexis has not included the NSC meeting agenda and minutes portion ofthe Administrative subseries of the NSC Series. These materials are contained in theUPA imprint microforms entitled Documents of the National Security Council and theMeetings of the National Security Council.
The Dwight D. Eisenhower National Security Files, 1953–1961, Part 1: Subject Files,collection consists of the subseries listed below. A brief description of the contents ofeach subseries follows. The documents in these series have been filmed in their entirety.A very small number of documents remain classified. LexisNexis has microfilmed theEisenhower Library’s withdrawal notices for these documents.
NSC Status of Projects subseries consists of four primary components: status ofprojects reports, state of U.S. national security programs, current policies of the U.S.relating to national security, and records of actions by the NSC for 1960.
NSC Subject subseries contains the alphabetical listing of national security topics,including atomic energy, continental defense, nuclear testing, President’s Board ofConsultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, and capabilities.
OCB Subject subseries comprises an alphabetical listing of national security topics,including atomic/nuclear energy, cultural/educational exchanges, missiles, space/
x
satellites/rocketry, countries, policies, government agencies and committees, and theNational Aeronautics Space Council.
Special Assistant Subject subseries contains an alphabetical listing of nationalsecurity–related topics, including government agencies, committees, and organizations;policies and programs; and countries.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTSUPA would like to acknowledge the assistance and cooperation of the Dwight D.
Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas. Herbert Pankratz, Michelle Kopfer, ChalseaMilner, and other staff members were most helpful and patient in providing the supportnecessary for completion of this microform. Their efforts are greatly appreciated.
xi
ABBREVIATIONSThe following abbreviations are used at least three times in this guide.
AEC Atomic Energy CommissionCIA Central Intelligence AgencyCOMINT-ELINT Intelligence communications–Electronic intelligenceDOD Department of DefenseICA International Cooperation AdministrationICBM Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile ProgramIGY International Geophysical YearMATS Military Air Transport ServiceMDAP Military Defense Assistance ProgramMSP Mutual Security ProgramNASA National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationNATO North Atlantic Treaty OrganizationNSA National Security AgencyNSC National Security CouncilOCB Operations Coordinating BoardOISP Overseas Internal Security ProgramPOWs Prisoners of warPTP People-to-People programSAMOS Satellite and Missile Observation SatelliteUK United KingdomUN United NationsUSIA U.S. Information AgencyUSSR Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
1
REEL INDEX
Following is a listing of the folders that compose The Dwight D. Eisenhower National Security Files, 1953–1961, Part 1: Subject Files. The four-digit number on the far left is the frame at which a particular file folder begins. This is followed by the file title, the date(s) of the file, and the total number of pages. Substantive issues are highlighted under the heading Major Topics, as are prominent correspondents under the heading Principal Correspondents. Major Topics and Principal Correspondents are listed in order of first appearance and each item is listed only once for each folder.
Reel 1 Frame No.
NSC Status of Projects 0001 NSC Status of Projects as of January 26, 1953. 17pp.
Major Topics: USSR; national defense. 0018 NSC Status of Projects as of February 2, 1953. 19pp.
Major Topics: USSR; National Petroleum Program. 0037 NSC Status of Projects as of February 9, 1953. 21pp.
Major Topics: China; Asia; USSR; civilian evacuation; NSC policy. 0058 NSC Status of Projects as of February 16, 1953. 24pp.
Major Topics: China and Formosa; USSR; Middle East; National Petroleum Program; civilian evacuation; radio.
0082 NSC Status of Projects as of February 23, 1953. 25pp. Major Topics: NSC policy; Asia; China and Formosa; USSR; Middle East oil; National
Petroleum Program; civilian evacuation; radio. 0107 NSC Status of Projects as of March 2, 1953. 26pp.
Major Topics: Iran; Japan; China and Formosa; USSR; Middle East oil; National Petroleum Program; civilian evacuation; radio; proposal for Volunteer Freedom Corps.
0133 NSC Status of Projects as of March 9, 1953. 26pp. Major Topics: Iran; Stalin’s death; Japan; USSR; civilian evacuation; radio; NSC
policy; proposal for Volunteer Freedom Corps. 0159 NSC Status of Projects as of March 16, 1953. 25pp.
Major Topics: Japan; China; Asia; USSR; radio; NSC policy; nuclear power; proposal for Volunteer Freedom Corps.
0184 NSC Status of Projects as of March 23, 1953. 28pp. Major Topics: Asia; USSR; armaments; China; radio; NSC policy; nuclear power;
proposal for Volunteer Freedom Corps. 0212 NSC Status of Projects as of April 6, 1953. 27pp.
Major Topics: NSC policy and costs; Asia; USSR; armaments; Middle East oil; radio.
Frame No.
2
0239 NSC Status of Projects as of April 20, 1953. 18pp. Major Topics: Asia; USSR; Eastern Europe; Near East; Japan; radio; armaments;
NSC policy. 0257 NSC Status of Projects as of May 4, 1953. 20pp.
Major Topics: Japan; China; Korea; Volunteer Freedom Corps; USSR; NSC policy and costs; foreign policy.
0277 NSC Status of Projects as of May 11, 1953. 21pp. Major Topics: Spain; Japan; China; National Petroleum Program; armaments; radio;
Eastern Europe; Latin America; Africa; national defense; NSC policy and costs. 0298 NSC Status of Projects as of May 18, 1953. 21pp.
Major Topics: Korea; Spain; USSR; armaments; Japan; Eastern Europe; China; National Petroleum Program; Latin America; Africa; NSC policy and costs.
0319 NSC Status of Projects as of May 25, 1953. 10pp. Major Topics: National Petroleum Program; USSR; Japan; radio; China and
Formosa; national defense; NSC policy and costs; Italy; Korea; psychological warfare.
0329 NSC Status of Projects as of June 1, 1953. 30pp. Major Topics: USSR; Latin America; Japan; radio; China; Latin America; Asia;
national defense; NSC policy and costs; psychological warfare; Korea; National Petroleum Program; armaments.
0359 NSC Status of Projects as of June 15, 1953. 18pp. Major Topics: Korea; China and Formosa; Germany; USSR; North Africa; Asia; radio;
national defense; armaments; Italy; National Petroleum Program; psychological warfare.
0377 NSC Status of Projects as of June 22, 1953. 20pp. Major Topics: Japan; Korea; China; USSR; Germany; armaments; radio; national
defense; National Petroleum Program. 0397 NSC Status of Projects as of June 29, 1953. 19pp.
Major Topics: Korea; China; radio; national defense; armaments; psychological warfare; National Petroleum Program.
0416 NSC Status of Projects as of July 6, 1953. 20pp. Major Topics: Psychological warfare; China; National Petroleum Program; national
defense; armaments; Latin America. 0436 NSC Status of Projects as of July 27, 1953. 19pp.
Major Topics: Economic defense; armaments; China; national defense; psychological warfare; Latin America.
0455 NSC Status of Projects as of August 3, 1953. 23pp. Major Topics: Psychological warfare; Austria; communism; USSR; Project Solarium;
armaments; Coast Guard; refugees; Hong Kong. 0478 NSC Status of Projects as of August 10, 1953. 24pp.
Major Topics: Psychological warfare; Thailand; China; national defense; Iran; South Asia; Project Solarium; armaments; radio; Middle East oil; Indochina; Korea.
0502 NSC Status of Projects as of August 24, 1953. 21pp. Major Topics: Iran; China; national defense; Project Solarium; armaments; USSR;
Indochina; Thailand; national defense; Korea. 0523 NSC Status of Projects as of September 4, 1953. 24pp.
Major Topics: Indochina; psychological warfare; Coast Guard; national defense; China; Project Solarium; radio; Eastern Europe; USSR; Italy; Austria; Latin America; refugees.
Frame No.
3
0547 NSC Status of Projects as of September 14, 1953. 21pp. Major Topics: China; Coast Guard; national defense; Project Solarium; Korea;
Indonesia; South Asia; armaments; Finland; Latin America. 0568 NSC Status of Projects as of September 21, 1953. 20pp.
Major Topics: National defense; China; Coast Guard; Germany; Austria; radio; armaments; Finland; National Petroleum Program; Hong Kong; Latin America; Korea.
0588 NSC Status of Projects as of September 28, 1953. 22pp. Major Topics: Germany; Coast Guard; Germany; NSC policy; China; Korea; radio;
Austria; South Asia; North Africa; armaments; Finland; Latin America; national defense.
0610 NSC Status of Projects as of October 5, 1953. 22pp. Major Topics: NSC policy; radio; Austria; Coast Guard; Korea; Indonesia; armaments;
USSR; Finland; national defense; USSR; Germany. 0632 NSC Status of Projects as of November 1, 1953. 25pp.
Major Topics: Hong Kong; Korea; China and Formosa; national defense; Coast Guard; Indonesia; Asia; armaments; Japan; Finland; Germany; USSR; nuclear power; Latin America.
0657 NSC Status of Projects as of December 1, 1953. 24pp. Major Topics: Korea; nuclear power; Iran; Yugoslavia; Asia; Eastern Europe; Latin
America; Finland; Germany; NSC budget; China; National Petroleum Program; Japan.
0681 NSC Status of Projects as of February 1, 1954. 21pp. Major Topics: Germany; China; Philippines; Asia; Italy; national defense; NATO;
economic defense; Iran; Latin America; North Africa; radio. 0702 NSC Status of Projects as of March 1, 1954. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.] 0705 NSC Status of Projects as of April 1, 1954. 21pp.
Major Topics: Italy; Iran; national defense; North Africa; Latin America; Germany; China; Korea; armaments; antitrust laws; internal security.
0726 NSC Status of Projects as of May 1, 1954. 27pp. Major Topics: National defense; Spain; communism; Europe; China and Formosa;
North Africa; rubber; Germany; nuclear power; military assistance; armaments; Iran; radio; Korea.
0753 NSC Status of Projects as of June 1, 1954. 26pp. Major Topics: Spain; national defense; rubber; Latin America; China and Formosa;
North Africa; Germany; Europe; Asia; nuclear power; military assistance; Korea; internal security.
0779 NSC Status of Projects as of July 1, 1954. 26pp. Major Topics: National defense; rubber; internal security; nuclear power; China and
Formosa; Latin America; Europe; North Africa; military assistance; armaments; Korea.
0805 NSC Status of Projects as of August 1, 1954. 27pp. Major Topics: Psychological warfare; internal security; China and Formosa; Latin
America; Asia; atomic energy; North Africa; Europe; Korea. 0832 NSC Status of Projects as of September 1, 1954. 23pp.
Major Topics: Internal security; military assistance; Europe; North Africa; China; Korea; Hong Kong; China and Formosa; antitrust laws; psychological warfare.
Frame No.
4
0855 NSC Status of Projects as of October 1, 1954. 22pp. Major Topics: China; Korea; Hong Kong; Indonesia; China and Formosa; Turkey;
radio; antitrust laws; psychological warfare. 0877 NSC Status of Projects as of November 1, 1954. 20pp.
Major Topics: Antitrust laws; China; Korea; Hong Kong; Afghanistan; rubber; Asia; internal security.
0897 NSC Status of Projects as of December 1, 1954. 20pp. Major Topics: Asia; NSC policy; Turkey; Iran; Korea; Greece; rubber; internal
security. 0917 NSC Status of Projects as of January 1, 1955. 21pp.
Major Topics: NSC policy; armaments; Iran; Asia; Turkey; warfare; economic defense; antitrust laws; internal security.
0938 NSC Status of Projects as of February 1, 1955. 21pp. Major Topics: Armaments; atomic power; Asia; Japan; Korea; warfare; antitrust laws;
rubber; internal security. 0959 NSC Status of Projects as of March 1, 1955. 20pp.
Major Topics: Atomic power; psychological warfare; Japan; Korea; Asia; Europe; warfare; economic defense; antitrust laws; rubber; manpower mobilization; radio; national defense.
0979 NSC Status of Projects as of April 1, 1955. 16pp. Major Topics: Japan; atomic power; psychological warfare; economic defense;
manpower mobilization; rubber; internal security.
Reel 2 NSC Status of Projects cont.
0001 NSC Status of Projects as of May 1, 1955. 15pp. Major Topics: Indonesia; Germany; Western European Union; Communist bloc;
rubber; internal security. 0016 NSC 142, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1952 (1).
77pp. Major Topics: Army, navy, and air force capabilities; air defense; Ground Observer
Corps; effect of Korean conflict on U.S. military; military supplies and equipment; military personnel; foreign military base rights; defense expenditures; guided missiles.
0093 NSC 142 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1952] (2). 24pp.
Major Topics: Production of military supplies and equipment; survival research and planning; stockpiling program; wholesale prices.
0117 NSC 142 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1952] (3). 67pp.
Major Topics: MSP; NATO; foreign economic growth; foreign defense expenditures; European military programs; military supplies and equipment; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; Point Four Program.
0184 NSC 142 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1952] (4). 46pp.
Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; assumptions about nature of possible war; wartime preparedness; government-citizen relations; stockpiling program; government supplies and property; government spending; mineral resources; metal resources.
Frame No.
5
0230 NSC 142 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1952] (5). 50pp.
Major Topics: Psychological Program; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; U.S. psychological warfare; Mutual Security Agency projects.
0280 NSC 142 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1952] (6). 43pp.
Major Topics: Foreign Intelligence Program; Internal Security Program; subversive activities and government prosecution; federal facilities security; immigration policy; data security; nuclear weapons; port security.
0323 NSC 161, Vol. I, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953 (1). 28pp.
Major Topics: Foreign relations with Europe, Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin America; NATO; economic foreign relations.
0351 NSC 161, Vol. I [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (2). 127pp.
Major Topics: Military Program; army, navy, and air force capabilities; Marine Corps; military supplies and equipment; antisubmarine warfare; air defense; Ground Observer Corps; effect of Korean conflict on U.S. military; military personnel; production of military supplies and equipment; military contracts; defense expenditures; guided missiles.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Charles E. Wilson. 0478 NSC 161, Vol. I [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (3).
99pp. Major Topics: MSP; NATO; foreign economic growth; economic capacity of and U.S.
aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; government spending; UN programs.
0577 NSC 161, Vol. I [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (4). 37pp.
Major Topics: MSP; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; military strength of European, Middle Eastern, Asia, African, and Latin American countries; government appropriations; Atomic Energy Program.
0614 NSC 161, Vol. II, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953 (1). 39pp.
Major Topics: Mobilization Program; military supplies and equipment; stockpiling program.
0653 NSC 161, Vol. II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (2). 31pp.
Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; government-citizen relations; government supplies and property; communications; wartime preparedness; defense expenditures.
0684 NSC 161, Vol. II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (3). 62pp.
Major Topics: Psychological Program; government spending; escapee program; repatriated U.S. prisoners of war; Foreign Information Program; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; U.S. psychological warfare; Mutual Security Agency projects.
Frame No.
6
0746 NSC 161, Vol. II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (4). 63pp.
Major Topics: Foreign Intelligence Program; Foreign Service; Internal Security Program; subversive activities and government prosecution; government spending; federal facilities, data, and port security; immigration policy.
0809 NSC 161, Vol. II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1953] (5). 33pp.
Major Topics: Government spending; U.S. budget; defense expenditures; Soviet bloc military strength; Soviet bloc procommunism efforts; communism.
0842 NSC 5407, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953 (1). 36pp.
Major Topics: Foreign relations with Europe, Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin America; NATO; economic foreign policy; Korean conflict resolution; French Indochina; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
0878 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (2). 85pp.
Major Topics: MSP; NATO; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; foreign economic growth; European military programs; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; military assistance; government spending; private investments; foreign agricultural production.
0963 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (3). 41pp.
Major Topics: MSP; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; military strength of European, Middle Eastern, Asia, African, and Latin American countries; Navarre Plan (French plan for joint U.S.-France aggressive action in Indochina).
Reel 3 NSC Status of Projects cont.
0001 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (4). 34pp.
Major Topics: Atomic Energy Program; reactor development; Mobilization Program; wartime preparedness; government supplies and property; stockpiling program; mineral resources; metal resources.
0035 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (5). 39pp.
Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; wartime preparedness; government-citizen relations; survival research and planning; communications; defense expenditures; government-citizen relations.
0074 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (6). 30pp.
Major Topics: USIA; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; U.S. psychological warfare; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; Foreign Intelligence Program; foreign defense expenditures.
0104 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (7). 60pp.
Major Topics: Internal Security Program; subversive activities and government prosecution; Communist Party front organizations; visas; immigration policy;
Frame No.
7
customs administration; identification of potentially dangerous persons; federal facilities, data, and port security; clandestine attack potential; government spending.
0164 NSC 5407 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1953] (8). 30pp.
Major Topics: Soviet bloc military strength; nuclear weapons; Soviet bloc procommunism efforts; OCB projects.
0194 NSC 5430, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954 (1). 55pp. Major Topics: Foreign relations with Europe, Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin
America; USSR; balance of power; foreign economic growth. 0249 NSC 5430 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954] (2). 57pp.
Major Topics: Military Program; army, navy, and air force capabilities; marine corps; antisubmarine warfare; air defense; military supplies and equipment; military personnel; foreign military base rights; defense expenditures; nuclear weapons.
0306 NSC 5430 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954] (3). 56pp. Major Topics: MSP; NATO; military assistance program; foreign economic growth
private investments encouragement; government spending; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; foreign military strength.
0362 NSC 5430 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954] (4). 38pp. Major Topics: Mobilization Program; wartime preparedness; survival research and
planning; stockpiling program. 0400 NSC 5430 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954] (5). 51pp.
Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; assumptions about nature of possible war; wartime preparedness; government-citizen relations; stockpiling program; survival research and planning; communications; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; government spending; USIA.
0451 NSC 5430 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954] (6). 35pp. Major Topics: Foreign Intelligence Program; Foreign Service; Internal Security
Program; government prosecution of subversives; data security. 0486 NSC 5430 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1954] (7). 41pp.
Major Topics: Soviet bloc military strength; nuclear weapons; guided missiles; Soviet scientific and technical capabilities; Soviet bloc procommunism efforts; OCB projects.
0527 NSC 5509, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954 (1). 83pp.
Major Topics: Military Program; army, navy, air force, and marine corps capabilities; wartime preparedness; air defense; antisubmarine warfare; military supplies and equipment; guided missiles; military aircraft; military personnel; foreign base rights; military reserves; defense expenditures.
0610 NSC 5509 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (2). 27pp.
Major Topics: Military Program; army, navy, and air force capabilities; NATO ground forces; Marine Corps; guided missiles; military research and development.
0637 NSC 550 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (3). 146pp.
Major Topics: Military Program; government appropriations, Military Defense Assistance programs; defense expenditures; military supplies and equipment; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; Mutual Weapons Development Program; offshore procurement contracts; foreign defense production; MDAP effect on European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; NSC
Frame No.
8
policy toward European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin America countries; foreign military strength.
0783 NSC 5509 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (4). 55pp.
Major Topics: MSP; foreign defense production; foreign economic growth; foreign defense expenditures; economic capacity of and U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; government spending; Foreign Operations Administration.
0838 NSC 5509 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (5). 17pp.
Major Topics: NATO ground, naval, and air forces; foreign military strength. 0855 NSC 5509 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (6).
56pp. Major Topics: Mobilization Program; wartime preparedness; survival research and
planning; government supplies and property; stockpiling program; health services; communications.
0911 NSC 5509 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (7). 47pp.
Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; wartime preparedness; assumptions about nature of possible war; government-citizen relations; stockpiling program; survival research and planning; communications; health services; government supplies and property; government spending; USIA; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries.
0958 NSC 5509 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on December 31, 1954] (8). 55pp.
Major Topics: Foreign Intelligence Program; Internal Security Program; government prosecution of subversives; visas; Communist Party front operations; immigration policy; federal facilities and data security; clandestine attack potential; OCB projects.
Reel 4 NSC Status of Projects cont.
0001 NSC 5525, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955 (1). 11pp. Major Topics: MSP; government spending; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle
Eastern, African, and Latin American countries. 0012 NSC 5525 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955] (2). 53pp.
Major Topics: Military assistance programs; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; foreign military strength; Korean and Japanese military strength.
0065 NSC 5525 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955] (3). 64pp. Major Topics: Government appropriations, MDAP; U.S. aid to European, Asian,
Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; offshore procurement contracts; Mutual Weapons Development Program; Mutual Defense Assistance training; foreign defense production; NSC policy toward European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin America countries.
0129 NSC 5525 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955] (4). 85pp. Major Topics: Army, navy, and air force capabilities; military supplies and equipment;
MSP; foreign military strength; foreign economic growth; economic capacity of and U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American
Frame No.
9
countries; government spending; International Cooperation Administration programs.
0214 NSC 5525 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955] (5). 52pp. Major Topics: Atomic Energy Program; reactor development; fallout studies;
Mobilization Program; wartime preparedness; government supplies and property; survival research and planning; stockpiling program; communications.
0266 NSC 5525 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955] (6). 51pp. Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; wartime preparedness; assumptions about
nature of possible war; government-citizen relations; federal-state relations; government supplies and property; government spending; USIA; foreign relations; USSR foreign relations; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
0317 NSC 5525 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1955] (7). 26pp. Major Topics: Internal Security Program; government prosecution of subversives;
data security; OCB projects. 0343 NSC 5611, Part I, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956 (1).
13pp. 0356 NSC 5611, Part I, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956 (2).
3pp. [Documents removed by library.] 0359 NSC 5611, Part I, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956 (3).
3pp. [Documents removed by library.] 0362 NSC 5611, Part I [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956] (4).
138pp. Major Topics: Military Assistance Program; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle
Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; government spending; Military Assistance Training Program; offshore procurement contracts; Foreign Military Facilities Assistance Program; Mutual Weapons Development Program; foreign military strength; military supplies and equipment; NATO ground, naval, and air forces; NSC policy.
0500 NSC 5611, Part I [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956] (5). 88pp.
Major Topics: MSP objectives; defense expenditures; Soviet bloc; government spending; economic capacity of and U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; International Cooperation Administration programs.
0588 NSC 5611, Part II, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956 (1). 54pp.
Major Topics: Mobilization Program; communications; attack preparedness; economic defense; stockpiling program; government supplies and property.
0642 NSC 5611, Part II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956] (2). 45pp.
Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; wartime preparedness; government supplies and property; survival research and planning; government spending; stockpiling program; assumptions about nature of possible war.
0687 NSC 5611, Part II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956] (3). 23pp.
Major Topics: USIA; propaganda; USSR foreign relations; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; foreign relations.
Frame No.
10
0710 NSC 5611, Part II [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1956] (4). 46pp.
Major Topics: Internal Security Program; government prosecution of subversives; government spending; immigration policy; data security; federal agency costs of operation; OCB projects.
0756 NSC 5720, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1957 (1). 113pp. Major Topics: Military Program; nuclear power; national defense; air defense; foreign
military strength; army, navy, and air force capabilities; military personnel; wartime preparedness; military supplies and equipment; military reserves; Suez Canal crisis; foreign relations; foreign base rights; defense expenditures.
0869 NSC 5720 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1957] (2). 124pp. Major Topics: Military Assistance Program; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle
Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; government spending; foreign military strength; Facilities Assistance Program; military supplies and equipment; Mutual Weapons Development Program; NATO; military sales and purchases; Military Assistance Training Program; Offshore Procurement contracts; Military Assistance Program personnel.
Reel 5 NSC Status of Projects cont.
0001 NSC 5720 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1957] (3). 129pp. Major Topics: MSP; government appropriations, Mutual Security; defense support
programs; foreign economic growth; private investment encouragement; UN; Soviet bloc military assistance to Egypt and Syria; Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive; Middle East stability; International Cooperation Administration programs; economic capacity of and U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries.
0130 NSC 5720 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1957] (4). 38pp. Major Topics: Mobilization readiness programs; wartime preparedness; National
Damage Assessment Center; economic defense; survival research and planning; government supplies and property; telecommunications; transportation; stockpiling program.
0168 NSC 5720 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1957] (5). 47pp. Major Topics: Civil Defense Program; wartime preparedness; survival research and
planning; stockpiling program; assumptions about nature of possible war; USIA; Hungarian Revolution of 1956; Suez Canal crisis; disarmament; USSR foreign relations; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
0215 NSC 5720 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1957] (6). 35pp. Major Topics: Internal Security Program; nuclear weapons; subversive activities and
government prosecution; identification of potentially dangerous persons; immigration policy; federal facilities and data security.
0250 NSC 5819, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1958 (1). 150pp. Major Topics: Nuclear power; air defense; army, navy, and air force capabilities; U.S.
and foreign forces in Europe, Middle East, and Asia; antisubmarine warfare; mines and mine countermeasures; missile defense; wartime preparedness; military supplies and equipment; military reserves; science education promotion; foreign military capabilities; foreign military base rights; government spending.
Frame No.
11
0400 NSC 5819, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1958 (2). 24pp. Major Topics: Continental defense timetable; military strength; missile defense;
military assistance to local areas; wartime preparedness; air defense; navy; army; air force.
0424 NSC 5819 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1958] (3). 128pp. Major Topics: MSP; government appropriations, Mutual Security; Sino-Soviet
Economic Offensive; Military Assistance Program; NATO; government spending; MSP effect on foreign political orientation; foreign defense expenditures; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; Development Loan Fund; Asian Economic Development Fund; U.S. support to UN; foreign military capabilities.
0552 NSC 5819 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1958] (4). 66pp. Major Topics: Mobilization readiness programs; wartime preparedness; government
supplies and property; telecommunications; survival research and planning; stockpiling program; Civil Defense Program; assumptions about nature of possible war.
0618 NSC 5819 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1958] (5). 41pp. Major Topics: USIA; technological race; Little Rock, Arkansas, school integration;
worldwide media development; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; Information Center Service; USIA International Press; Foreign Intelligence Program.
0659 NSC 5819 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1958] (6). 57pp. Major Topics: Internal Security Program; nuclear weapons; identification of potentially
dangerous persons; government prosecution of subversives; immigration policy; visas; federal facility, data, and port security.
0716 NSC 5912, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959 (1). 7pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0723 NSC 5912, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959 (2). 16pp. Major Topic: Military space research and development projects.
0739 NSC 5912 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959] (3). 113pp. Major Topics: MSP; government appropriations, Mutual Security; MSP effect on U.S.
economy; government spending; Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive; U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; private investment encouragement; Military Assistance Program; military supplies and equipment; NATO; foreign defense expenditures; foreign military strength.
0852 NSC 5912 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959] (4). 62pp. Major Topics: U.S. economic aid; Development Loan Fund; economies of aid-
receiving European, Middle Eastern, Asian, African, and Latin American countries; government spending; Atoms for Peace program.
0914 NSC 5912 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959] (5). 41pp. Major Topics: Government spending; Civil Defense Program; federal facilities
security; wartime preparedness; stockpiling program; government supplies and property; survival research and planning.
0955 NSC 5912 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959] (6). 38pp. Major Topics: USIA; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and
Latin America; U.S. psychological warfare; worldwide media development; Information Center Service; USIA International Press; motion pictures and television.
Frame No.
12
Reel 6 NSC Status of Projects cont.
0001 NSC 5912 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1959] (7). 66pp. Major Topics: Internal Security Program; nuclear weapons; identification of potentially
dangerous persons; immigration policy; data security; Port Security Program; NASA program.
0067 NSC 6013, Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1960 (1). 136pp. Major Topics: Military Program; Strategic Air Command; USSR; army, navy, and air
force capabilities; marine corps; foreign military strength; antisubmarine warfare; cold war planning; military supplies and equipment; guided missiles; military personnel; military reserves; air defense; antisubmarine warfare; biological and chemical weapons; foreign base rights; wartime preparedness; defense expenditures.
0203 NSC 6013 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1960] (2). 136pp. Major Topics: MSP; government appropriations, Mutual Security; U.S. aid to
European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; Military Assistance Program; Draper report (evaluation of the Military Assistance Program); government spending; Development Loan Fund; Sino-Soviet bloc Economic Offensive.
0339 NSC 6013 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1960] (3). 30pp. Major Topics: Mobilization Program; National Shelter Policy; wartime preparedness;
survival research and planning; stockpiling program; import controls. 0369 NSC 6013 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1960] (4). 57pp.
Major Topics: USIA; anticommunism efforts in Europe, Middle East, Africa, Asia, and Latin America; foreign relations; worldwide media development; Information Center Service; Motion Picture Service; Press Service; Television Service.
0426 NSC 6013 [Status of U.S. National Security Programs on June 30, 1960] (5). 19pp. Major Topics: Port Security Program; National Coast Guard.
0445 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (1). 85pp.
Major Topics: Basic National Security policy; military strategy policy; foreign economic policy; Soviet bloc policy; national defense policy; domestic economic policy; policy after 1960 summit with Nikita Khrushchev; U.S. policy toward Eastern Europe; U.S. policy on defectors from communist countries; policy on Soviet emigration; U.S. policy toward Poland.
0530 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (2). 57pp.
Major Topics: U.S. foreign economic and military strategy policy toward Asia; U.S. policy toward Japan, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, and Indonesia.
0587 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (3). 52pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand, Philippines, and South Asia; British–Hong Kong relations; military and economic strength of Hong Kong, Australia, New Zealand, Philippines, and South Asia.
0639 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (4). 108pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward the Middle East, Iran, Turkey, Libya, and Africa; Arab-Israeli dispute; publicly announced U.S. policies toward the Middle East; military and economic strength of the Middle East, Iran, Turkey, Libya, and Africa.
Frame No.
13
0747 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (5). 25pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Austria, Switzerland, Scandinavia, and Iceland; military and economic strength of Austria, Switzerland, Scandinavia, and Iceland.
0772 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (6). 56pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Spain, Yugoslavia, Greece, Finland, France, and Cyprus; Soviet policy toward Yugoslavia; French-Algerian relations; military and economic strength of Spain, Yugoslavia, Greece, Finland, France, and Cyprus; policy toward Western European dependence on Middle East oil.
0828 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. I—Geographical Area Policies (7). 60pp.
Major Topics: U.S. foreign policy toward Latin America, the West Indies, Antarctica; Ninth International Conference of American States; Tenth Inter-American Conference; International Geophysical Year correspondence; U.S.-Canadian relations; Hyde Park agreement (concerning Canadian defense supplies to the U.S.).
0888 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. II—Functional Policies (1). 27pp.
Major Topics: Security of foreign industrial operations; defense mobilization plan. 0915 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. II—Functional
Policies (2). 42pp. Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; air defense; national defense policy; guided
missiles; evacuation policy of U.S. citizens in foreign countries; survival research and planning.
0957 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. II—Functional Policies (3). 62pp.
Major Topics: U.S., UK, and USSR peaceful uses for atomic energy; armaments control policy; nuclear weapons; government-public relations; military supplies and equipment; overseas military bases.
Reel 7 NSC Status of Projects cont.
0001 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. III—Organizational Policies (1). 54pp.
Major Topics: NSC operational policy; OCB; NSC finance policy. 0055 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. III—Organizational
Policies (2). 22pp. Major Topics: NSC policy on CIA; USIA; psychological warfare.
0077 Current Policies of the U.S. Relating to National Security, Vol. III—Organizational Policies (3). 42pp.
Major Topics: Internal security operational policy; Interdepartmental Intelligence Conference charter; U.S. policy toward Soviet shipments with diplomatic immunity; security clearance policy; U.S. policy toward Soviet bloc diplomats; Special Committee on Technical Surveillance Countermeasures.
0119 Record of Actions by the National Security Council, 1960 (1). 30pp. 0149 Record of Actions by the National Security Council, 1960 (2). 45pp.
Major Topics: Policy after 1960 summit with Nikita Khrushchev; international oil cartel case effect on national security.
Frame No.
14
0194 Record of Actions by the National Security Council, 1960 (3). 31pp. Major Topic: U.S. policy toward Cuba and Dominican Republic.
0225 Record of Actions by the National Security Council, 1960 (4). 39pp. 0264 Record of Actions by the National Security Council, 1960 (5). 39pp.
Major Topic: NATO forces. 0303 Record of Actions by the National Security Council, 1960 (6). 28pp. 0331 Key Data Book—Status of U.S. National Security Programs in Relation to
Approved Objectives (1) [1953]. 46pp. Major Topics: Army, navy, and air force capabilities; military supplies and equipment;
MSP; foreign military strength; NATO ground and air forces; Atomic Energy Program expenditures; government spending.
0377 Key Data Book—Status of U.S. National Security Programs in Relation to Approved Objectives (2) [1953]. 34pp.
Major Topics: Mobilization Program; stockpiling program; Civil Defense Program; Foreign Intelligence Program; Internal Security Program; Soviet bloc military strength.
NSC Subjects 0411 Arms Control, U. S. Policy on [1956]. 47pp.
Major Topics: U.S. and Soviet attitudes on arms control; disarmament; nuclear weapons.
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Christian A. Herter; Thomas S. Gates. 0458 Atomic Energy—The President (1) [May 1953–March 1956]. 31pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; nuclear weapons custody; Nevada Atomic Weapons Test.
Principal Correspondent: S. Everett Gleason. 0489 Atomic Energy—The President (2) [May 1953–March 1956]. 24pp.
Major Topic: Nuclear weapons. Principal Correspondents: W. B. Smith; Lewis L. Strauss; James S. Lay Jr.
0513 Atomic Weapons, Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (1) [1959–1960]. 32pp.
Major Topics: Security of atomic weapons implementation knowledge; nuclear weapon use policy.
0545 Atomic Weapons, Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (2) [1959–1960]. 10pp.
Major Topic: Request for U.S. atomic weapons to UK Air Defense Forces. 0555 Atomic Weapons, Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (3) [1959–
1960]. 4pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0559 Atomic Weapons, Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (4) [1959–1960]. 6pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0565 Atomic Weapons, Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (5) [1959–1960]. 6pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0571 Atomic Weapons, Correspondence and Background for Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (1) [1953–1960]. 27pp.
Major Topic: Nuclear weapons use policy revisions. Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Walter B. Smith; Robert Cutler.
Frame No.
15
0598 Atomic Weapons, Correspondence and Background for Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (2) [1953–1960]. 22pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons use policy revisions; presidential authority regarding nuclear weapons.
Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Gordon Gray; General Loper. 0620 Atomic Weapons, Correspondence and Background for Presidential Approval and
Instructions for use of (3) [1953–1960]. 18pp. 0638 Atomic Weapons, Correspondence and Background for Presidential Approval and
Instructions for use of (4) [1953–1960]. 22pp. Major Topic: Nuclear weapons use policy revisions. Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; Thomas S. Gates; Christian A.
Herter. 0660 Atomic Weapons, Correspondence and Background for Presidential Approval and
Instructions for use of (5) [1953–1960]. 32pp. Major Topic: Nuclear weapons use policy.
0692 Atomic Weapons, Correspondence and Background for Presidential Approval and Instructions for use of (6) [1953–1960]. 15pp.
0707 Atomic Energy—Miscellaneous (1) [1953–1954]. 32pp. Major Topics: Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program; fissionable material; Nevada
Atomic Weapons Test. Principal Correspondents: Sterling Cole; James S. Lay Jr.; Lewis L. Strauss; Gordon
Dean. 0739 Atomic Energy—Miscellaneous (2) [1953–1954]. 39pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; transfer of nuclear weapon custody from AEC to the Department of Defense.
Principal Correspondents: Harry D. Smyth; Walter B. Smith; James S. Lay Jr.; Roger M. Keyes; W. M. Fechteler.
0778 Atomic Energy—Miscellaneous (3) [1953–1954]. 31pp. Major Topics: Nuclear weapons storage; nuclear weapons; fissionable material;
Nevada Atomic Weapons Test. Principal Correspondents: Lewis L. Strauss; Gordon Dean; James S. Lay Jr.
0809 Atomic Energy—Miscellaneous (4) [1953–1954]. 32pp. Major Topics: AEC appropriations and expenditures; nuclear reactors development;
U.S.-Canadian cooperation. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Dean; Sterling Cole; Robert Cutler; Lewis L.
Strauss; Charles E. Wilson. 0841 Atomic Weapons and Classified Intelligence—Misc. (1) [1955–1957]. 39pp.
Major Topic: Nuclear weapons control. Principal Correspondents: Thomas E. Murray; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0880 Atomic Weapons and Classified Intelligence—Misc. (2) [1955–1957]. 19pp. Major Topics: Data security; classified intelligence; security clearance policy;
government spending. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Joseph D. Blatt.
0899 Base Rights (1) [November 1957–November 1960]. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.] 0902 Base Rights (2) [November 1957–November 1960]. 4pp. 0906 Base Rights (3) [November 1957–November 1960]. 13pp.
Major Topic: U.S. overseas military bases. Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Maxwell D. Taylor.
Frame No.
16
0919 Base Rights (4) [November 1957–November 1960]. 43pp. Major Topics: U.S. overseas military bases; overseas bases development; Strategic
Air Command; air defense; NATO; communications; military supplies and equipment; guided missiles.
Reel 8 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 Study of Continental Defense, by Robert C. Sprague [February 26, 1954]. 127pp. Major Topics: Soviet nuclear power; city populations in the U.S. and the USSR;
Soviet military capabilities; air force capabilities; military supplies and equipment; Air Defense Command; radar net; Ground Observers Corps; guided missiles; Army Antiaircraft Command; wartime preparedness; early warning system; military personnel; government spending; U.S. defense vulnerabilities; recommendations for defense improvement.
0128 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (1). 10pp. 0138 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (2). 48pp.
Major Topics: NSC; defense expenditures; early warning system; wartime preparedness; port security; U.S.-Canadian cooperation; government spending.
0186 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (3). 20pp. Major Topic: Release of Sprague report to Senate Armed Services Committee. Principal Correspondents: Arthur S. Fleming; Robert Cutler; Thomas D. White; Lewis
L. Strauss. 0206 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (4). 62pp.
Major Topics: Wartime relocation of government; federal facilities security; assumptions about nature of possible war; wartime preparedness; nuclear weapons development; survival research and planning; government-citizen relations.
Principal Correspondent: Roy B. Snapp. 0268 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (5). 10pp. [Documents removed by library.] 0278 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (6). 42pp.
Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; survival research and planning; army, navy, and air force capabilities; radar net; military supplies and equipment; antiaircraft program; flight-interceptors.
0320 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (7). 7pp. [Documents removed by library.] 0327 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (8). 12pp.
Major Topic: Soviet jet aircraft. 0339 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (9). 24pp.
Major Topics: Meeting on atomic energy; aircraft performance. Principal Correspondents: Charles E. Wilson; Robert Cutler; Sterling Cole.
0363 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (10). 4pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0367 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (11). 6pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0373 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1953–1954) (12). 45pp. Major Topics: Military supplies and equipment; flight-interceptors; recommendations
for defense improvement; survival research and planning; government-citizen relations; public civil defense knowledge survey results.
Frame No.
17
0418 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (1). 30pp. Major Topics: Strategic Air Command; nuclear weapons; survival research and
development; wartime preparedness; Soviet nuclear power; Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy; recommendations for defense improvement.
0448 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (2). 15pp. Major Topic: Aircraft pictures.
0463 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (3). 14pp. Major Topics: Soviet military capabilities; nuclear weapons; military supplies and
equipment; assumptions about nature of possible war; recommendations for defense improvement.
0477 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (4). 34pp. Major Topics: NSC; guided missiles; military supplies and equipment; U.S.-Canadian
cooperation; Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program; recommendations for defense improvement.
0511 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (5). 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0514 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (6). 24pp. Major Topics: Military supplies and equipment; U.S. military strength.
0538 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (7). 31pp. Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; military supplies and equipment;
implementation of recommendations. 0569 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (8). 27pp.
Major Topic: Staff directory. 0596 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1955) (9). 15pp.
Major Topics: Killian timetable validity (timetable compares U.S. and USSR attack capabilities); ICBM.
Principal Correspondent: David Z. Beckler. 0611 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1956) (1). 14pp.
Major Topic: Staff directory. 0625 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1956) (2). 9pp. 0634 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1956) (3). 28pp.
Major Topics: Air defense; wartime preparedness; nuclear weapons; Soviet and U.S. nuclear power; guided missiles.
0662 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1956) (4). 38pp. Major Topics: Air defense; wartime preparedness; nuclear weapons; defense
expenditures; Soviet and U.S. nuclear power; guided missiles. 0700 Continental Defense, Study of—by Robert C. Sprague (1956) (5). 24pp. 0724 Cuba (1) [May 1959–September 1960]. 34pp.
Major Topics: U.S.-Cuba relations; Fidel Castro’s visit to Washington, D.C.; Cuban political situation.
Principal Correspondent: Philip J. Halla. 0758 Cuba (2) [May 1959–September 1960]. 44pp.
Major Topics: U.S.-Cuba relations; anti-American sentiment in Cuba; creation of committee on Cuban affairs; communism in Cuba; Fidel Castro; U.S. policy toward Cuba.
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Livingston T. Merchant; Arleigh Burke. 0802 Cuba (3) [May 1959–September 1960]. 34pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Cuba and Dominican Republic; visas; Cuba sugar and petroleum; U.S. economic sanctions against Cuba; U.S.-Cuba relations;
Frame No.
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Sino-Soviet bloc–Cuba relations; Soviet–Latin American relations; detention of William Friedemann and Edwin Sweet.
Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; J. Edgar Hoover. 0836 Cuba (4) [May 1959–September 1960]. 117pp.
Major Topics: U.S. economic sanctions against Cuba; First Latin American Youth Congress; Cuban political situation; Fidel Castro’s government; Cuban justice system; La Cabaña incident (torture of Cuban prisoners); resignation of Cuban officials; labor movements as procommunism tool; educational freedom; freedom of the press; Sino-Soviet bloc–Cuba relations; communism in Cuba; Cuban invasions of Latin American countries; Organization of American States; Cuban military strength; Cuban economic policy toward the U.S.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas S. Gates; Cord Meyer Jr.
Reel 9 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 Cuba (5) [May 1959–September 1960]. 87pp. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet bloc–Cuba relations; Cuban political situation; Fidel
Castro’s government; Cuban labor unions; Cuban justice system; educational freedom; freedom of the press; communism in Cuba; Cuban invasions of Latin American countries; Organization of American States; Cuban military strength; Cuban economic policy toward the U.S.
0088 Cuba (6) [May 1959–September 1960]. 30pp. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet bloc–Cuba relations; U.S.-Cuba relations; Castro and the
church; Dominican Republic plot to assassinate the Venezuelan president. 0118 Department of Defense Report to NSC on Status of Military Continental O. S.
Defense Programs as of April 15, 1955. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0121 Dept. of Defense Report on Status of U.S. Military Programs as of Dec. 31, 1955. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0124 Documents, Classification and Release of (1) [June 1958–April 1960]. 31pp. Major Topics: Classified information security; U.S. policy on releasing classified
information to foreign governments. Principal Correspondents: J. Edgar Hoover; J. Walter Yeagley; Robert Murphy;
Dwight D. Eisenhower. 0155 Documents, Classification and Release of (2) [June 1958–April 1960]. 21pp.
Major Topic: U.S. policy on releasing classified information to foreign governments. Principal Correspondents: J. Edgar Hoover; John F. Doherty; J. Patrick Coyne;
Dwight D. Eisenhower. 0176 Documents, Classification and Release of (3) [June 1958–April 1960]. 29pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy on releasing classified information to foreign governments; federal departments and agencies; NSC Planning Board.
Principal Correspondents: J. Walter Yeagley; Marion W. Boggs. 0205 Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Program [November 1955–September 1960]. 31pp.
Major Topics: U.S. and Soviet missiles; balance of power; intermediate range intercontinental ballistic missile programs; government spending.
0236 International Scientific Activities [1960]. 16pp. Major Topic: Scientific foreign relations.
Frame No.
19
0252 Jackson Committee Report [1953]. 41pp. Major Topics: U.S.-Soviet relations; Jackson committee report (assessing U.S.
progress in national security and defense); Voice of America; pro-American efforts in free world.
0293 [Legislative Program and Congressional Relations] (1) [January–May 1953]. 36pp. Major Topic: Volunteer Freedom Corps. Principal Correspondents: Wilton B. Persons; C. D. Jackson; Robert Cutler; Dwight
D. Eisenhower. 0329 [Legislative Program and Congressional Relations] (2) [June 1953–June 1957].
40pp. Major Topics: National Petroleum Program; atomic energy; U.S. policy toward
Formosa; NSC appropriations; NSC and AEC relations; government spending. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0369 Limited Military Operations (1) [1960]. 56pp. Major Topics: U.S. military strength; hypothetical defense of Berlin, Laos, Vietnam,
and Cambodia. 0425 Limited Military Operations (2) [1960]. 58pp.
Major Topics: U.S. military strength; hypothetical defense of Iran, Taiwan islands, and South Korea; airlift capabilities.
0483 Limited Military Operations (3) [1960]. 31pp. Major Topics: U.S. military vulnerabilities; U.S. military strength; army, navy, marine
corps, and air force capabilities. Principal Correspondent: L. L. Lemnitzer.
0514 Maritime Policy (1) [1957–1960]. 53pp. Major Topics: U.S. Merchant Marine policy; ships and shipping capability;
government spending; wartime preparedness. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Charles E. Wilson; Perkins McGuire;
Percival Brundage. 0567 Maritime Policy (2) [1957–1960]. 38pp.
Major Topics: U.S. Merchant Marines; ships and shipping capability; merchant marine mobilization policy; foreign shipping availability.
Principal Correspondent: Donald A. Quarles. 0605 Maritime Policy (3) [1957–1960]. 21pp.
Major Topics: U.S. Merchant Marine policy; airlift capabilities; ship replacement; wartime preparedness.
Principal Correspondents: Perkins McGuire; Lewis L. Strauss. 0626 Military Air Transport Service (costs of Air Transport Operations in the) [June
1959–December 1960]. 61pp. Major Topics: Government spending; wartime preparedness; military airlift
capabilities; crew to aircraft ratios; MATS policy changes; military personnel; U.S. Air Force.
Principal Correspondent: Maurice H. Stans. 0687 Military Assistance to Certain Free World Nations [1960]. 52pp.
Major Topics: Military Assistance Program; economic capacity of and U.S. aid to Belgium, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal, and Japan; government spending; foreign military strength.
Principal Correspondents: Douglas Dillon; James H. Douglas. 0739 Military Personnel, U.S.—Morale and Physical Condition of [June 1960]. 14pp.
Major Topics: Current and past personnel attitudes; medical rejections.
Frame No.
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0753 Miscellaneous (1) [March–August 1953]. 40pp. Major Topics: OCB; U.S. policy on releasing classified information to foreign
governments; government witness transportation cost; Soviet Ambassador Alexander Bogomolov at a Hungarian holiday reception; military spending; Soviet peace offensive; Soviet government hierarchy; effect of Stalin’s death on world.
0793 Miscellaneous (2) [September 1953]. 50pp. Major Topics: U.S. psychological strategy in Thailand and Southeast Asia; pro-
Communist efforts in Southeast Asia; political, social, and economic factors in Thailand; Thai military strength; U.S. aid to Thailand; USIA.
0843 Miscellaneous (3) [September 1953]. 59pp. Major Topics: Decline of U.S. prestige in Europe, Canada, Asia, Middle East, and
Latin America; European attitude toward USSR; McCarthyism; foreign attitudes toward U.S. economic policy; foreign reactions to radio broadcasts; U.S. foreign relations; foreign nationalism.
0902 Miscellaneous (4) [September 1953–April 1954]. 37pp. Major Topics: U.S. psychological strategy in Thailand; decline of U.S. prestige in
Europe, Canada, Asia, Middle East, and Latin America; U.S. foreign relations; foreign attitudes toward U.S. economic policy.
0939 Miscellaneous (5) [May 1954–February 1955]. 29pp. Major Topics: Government spending; education and exchange program; potential
stockpile areas; antitrust law; national foreign trade policy; Defense Production Act; labeling communist propaganda.
0968 Miscellaneous (6) [March 1955–December 1960]. 37pp. Major Topics: Communist propaganda; antitrust law and foreign trade.
Reel 10 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 Mobilization Base (January 1956–April 1959). 29pp. Major Topics: Definition of mobilization base; nuclear weapons; wartime
preparedness; wartime strategy. Principal Correspondent: Gordon Gray.
0030 Mobilization of the Nation’s Domestic Transport and Storage Systems in the Event of War [February–July 1950]. 50pp.
Major Topics: Traffic movement program; conservation program; wartime preparedness; government supplies and property.
Principal Correspondent: J. M. Johnson. 0080 National Intelligence Objectives [January 1955]. 14pp.
Major Topics: Soviet and Chinese military and political capabilities; Soviet bloc; Asian political and economic strengths.
Principal Correspondent: Allen W. Dulles. 0094 NATO (1) [April 1953–July 1960]. 47pp.
Major Topics: International cooperation in political, economic, scientific and technical, cultural, and information issues; record of proceedings of Committee of Three; statement by John Foster Dulles to NATO.
Principal Correspondent: John Foster Dulles. 0141 NATO (2) [April 1953–July 1960]. 32pp.
Major Topics: U.S. force commitments to NATO; U.S. policy toward NATO defense; NATO Shield strategy.
Frame No.
21
0173 New Independent Countries [April 1959]. 12pp. Major Topic: U.S. foreign policy toward new countries.
0185 Nuclear Sharing with Allies [1960]. 48pp. Major Topics: Meeting on NATO and nuclear sharing; pros and cons of nuclear
sharing; U.S. nuclear weapons sales and assistance; nuclear submarines. 0233 Nuclear Testing (1) [November 1955–October 1956]. 26pp.
Major Topics: Public statements on nuclear weapons; members of study on human effects of nuclear weapons development.
0259 Nuclear Testing (2) [November 1956–June 1957]. 40pp. Major Topics: Attitudes toward nuclear weapons development; public statements on
nuclear weapons; FCDA budget proposal; government-citizen relations; assumptions about nature of possible war.
0299 Nuclear Testing (3) [1957]. 33pp. Major Topics: Middle Eastern history and crises; Suez Canal crisis; U.S.-NATO
relations; German-European relations; two Chinas; U.S.-China relations; U.S. and Soviet economic strength; public information pamphlets.
0332 Nuclear Testing (4) [1957]. 34pp. Major Topics: U.S. aid and trade policy; neutral countries; Yugoslavia; colonialism;
U.S. military strategy; U.S. foreign policy; public information pamphlets. 0366 Nuclear Testing (5) [1957]. 95pp.
Major Topics: U.S. and Soviet economic strength; U.S. policy toward Europe and Germany; U.S. stakes in the Middle East; Arab-Israeli conflict; Chinese economic growth; U.S. policy toward China and Formosa; colonialism; neutral countries; U.S. military strategy; nuclear weapons; U.S. aid and trade policy; Foreign Policy Association; public information pamphlets.
0461 Nuclear Testing (6) [March 1958]. 5pp. 0466 Nuclear Testing (7) [March 1958]. 3pp.
[Documents removed by library.] 0469 Nuclear Testing (8) [March 1958–July 1960]. 44pp.
Major Topics: High-altitude and underground testing; Soviet and U.S. nuclear capabilities; public statements on nuclear weapons; nuclear test cessation.
Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; Donald A. Quarles; Maxwell D. Taylor. 0513 Operation Alert—1956 (1). 64pp.
Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; assumptions about nature of possible war; continuity of government; communications; wartime economic stabilization; wartime food and housing supply; wartime health and transportation services; government supplies and property; wartime manpower mobilization.
0577 Operation Alert—1956 (2). 30pp. Major Topics: Proclamations of unlimited national emergency and temporary national
security measures; Office of Censorship. 0607 Operation Alert—1956 (3). 22pp.
[Documents removed by library.] 0629 Operation Alert—1956 (4). 16pp.
[Documents removed by library.] 0645 Operation Alert—1956 (5). 64pp.
Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; assumptions about nature of possible war; continuity of government; communications; wartime economic stabilization; wartime food and housing supply; wartime health and transportation services; government supplies and property; wartime manpower mobilization.
Frame No.
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0709 Operation Alert—1956 (6). 10pp. Major Topic: Press guidelines about Operation Alert test. Principal Correspondent: Willard Paul.
0719 Operation Alert—1956 (7). 66pp. Major Topics: Public information about Operation Alert test; Emergency Financial Act
of 1956; emergency financial system; inspection and evaluation of Operation Alert; Operation Alert test procedure; survival planning.
Principal Correspondents: Willard Paul; Arthur S. Fleming. 0785 Operation Alert—1956 (8). 77pp.
Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; assumptions about nature of possible war; Operation Alert test procedure; assumed casualties; radiological dose charts; government supplies and property; wartime health and transportation services; status board letter code.
Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; Val Peterson. 0862 Operation Alert—1956 (9). 12pp.
Major Topics: Operation Alert test procedure; White House Emergency Plan. Principal Correspondent: Andrew J. Goodpaster.
0874 Overseas Internal Security Program [April 1958–May 1959]. 66pp. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive; government spending; ICA programs;
procommunist efforts; OISP and Military Assistance Program relations; internal security and ICA programs in European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries.
Principal Correspondent: Elmer B. Staats. 0940 U.S. Personnel Overseas (1) [July 1956–August 1958]. 40pp.
Major Topic: Overseas military and government personnel.
Reel 11 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 U.S. Personnel Overseas (2) [July 1956–August 1958]. 127pp. Major Topics: Overseas military and government personnel; USIA, ICA, and
Department of State overseas personnel; improving foreign attitudes toward U.S. personnel; personnel language training; overseas personnel impact on local economy; use of foreign land; diplomatic immunity; automobiles; overseas community relations; American business overseas personnel; foreign employee training; aid from U.S. businesses to foreign countries.
0128 U.S. Personnel Overseas (3) [July 1956–August 1958]. 139pp. Major Topics: Overseas military and government personnel in European, Asian,
Middle Eastern, and African countries; overseas community relations; overseas personnel impact on local economy.
0267 U.S. Personnel Overseas (4) [July 1956–August 1958]. 53pp. Major Topic: Overseas military and government personnel.
0320 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to the President (1) [December 1956–August 1958]. 34pp.
Major Topics: Government spending; director of CIA; national intelligence cooperation.
Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Robert M. Macy; James R. Killian Jr.
Frame No.
23
0354 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to the President (2) [December 1956–August 1958]. 25pp.
Major Topics: Meeting about foreign intelligence activities report; CIA comments on foreign intelligence report.
Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Percival Brundage. 0379 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to
the President (3) [December 1956–August 1958]. 53pp. Major Topics: Presidential approval of report recommendations; assumptions about
nature of possible war; CIA wartime role and operations. Principal Correspondents: Allen W. Dulles; James S. Lay Jr.; N. F. Twining.
0432 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to the President (4) [December 1956–August 1958]. 21pp.
Major Topics: Presidential approval of report recommendations; national intelligence cooperation.
Principal Correspondents: Allen W. Dulles; N. F. Twining. 0453 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to
the President (5) [December 1956–August 1958]. 19pp. Major Topics: CIA wartime role and operations; intelligence testing.
0472 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to the President (6) [December 1956–August 1958]. 29pp.
Major Topics: Presidential approval of report recommendations; national intelligence cooperation; Central Intelligence daily bulletin.
Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Allen W. Dulles; Lynn B. Kirkpatrick; Huntington D. Sheldon.
0501 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to the President (7) [December 1956–August 1958]. 15pp.
Major Topic: Presidential approval of report recommendations. Principal Correspondents: Christian A. Herter; Reuben B. Robertson Jr.; Robert
Cutler; Allen W. Dulles. 0516 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to
the President (8) [December 1956–August 1958]. 24pp. Major Topics: Assistant Secretary of Defense; study of Soviet program. Principal Correspondents: Reuben Robertson Jr.; Allen W. Dulles; James S. Lay Jr.;
Gordon Gray. 0540 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to
the President (9) [December 1956–August 1958]. 29pp. Major Topics: Director of Central Intelligence; national intelligence cooperation;
presidential approval of report recommendations. Principal Correspondents: John Samford; Donald A. Quarles; Allen W. Dulles; Dwight
D. Eisenhower. 0569 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, First Report to
the President (10) [December 1956–August 1958]. 38pp. Major Topics: CIA wartime role and operations; national intelligence cooperation. Principal Correspondents: Allen W. Dulles; Arthur Radford; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0607 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Second Report to the President (1) [October 1957–July 1958]. 16pp.
Major Topic: National intelligence cooperation. Principal Correspondent: Donald A. Quarles.
Frame No.
24
0623 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Second Report to the President (2) [October 1957–July 1958]. 22pp.
Major Topic: National intelligence cooperation. Principal Correspondent: James S. Lay Jr.
0645 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Second Report to the President (3) [October 1957–July 1958]. 18pp.
0663 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Third Report to the President (1) [October 1958–November 1959]. 34pp.
Major Topics: U.S. foreign intelligence program review; minutes of meeting regarding foreign intelligence.
Principal Correspondents: John E. Hull; Allen W. Dulles. 0697 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Third Report
to the President (2) [October 1958–November 1959]. 21pp. Major Topics: DOD-CIA relations; COMINT-ELINT program. Principal Correspondent: Allen W. Dulles.
0718 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Fourth Report to the President [January 1959–March 1960]. 16pp.
Major Topic: Intelligence communications. Principal Correspondent: John E. Hull.
0734 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Fifth Report to the President (1) [December 1959–July 1960]. 28pp.
Major Topics: Warning systems; COMINT-ELINT activities. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; John E. Hull; Allen W. Dulles.
0762 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Fifth Report to the President (2) [December 1959–July 1960]. 44pp.
Major Topics: COMINT-ELINT activities; foreign intelligence program review; reconnaissance systems.
0806 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Sixth Report to the President (1) [May 1960–January 1961]. 36pp.
Major Topics: Mutual Security Act; allocation of funds; chiefs of U.S. diplomatic missions.
Principal Correspondent: John E. Hull. 0842 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Sixth Report
to the President (2) [May 1960–January 1961]. 46pp. Major Topics: NSA director; DOD-CIA relations; Mutual Security Act; chiefs of U.S.
diplomatic missions; intelligence publication duplication. Principal Correspondents: Allen W. Dulles; Thomas S. Gates; Christian A. Herter;
Gordon Gray; James S. Lay Jr. 0888 President’s Board of Consultants on Foreign Intelligence Activities, Seventh
Report to the President [October 1960–January 1961]. 40pp. Major Topics: Intelligence duplication; NSA; Secretary of Defense; Martin-Mitchell
defection case (regarding possible espionage); personnel security; intelligence publication duplication.
Principal Correspondents: John E. Hull; Edward G. Lansdale; Gordon Gray; James H. Douglas; Allen W. Dulles.
Frame No.
25
Reel 12 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security policy], March 31, 1953 (1). 19pp.
Major Topics: Policy costs and the federal budget; national security objectives and methods in regard to USSR.
Principal Correspondents: Joseph M. Dodge; George M. Humphrey. 0020 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security
policy], March 31, 1953 (2). 26pp. Major Topic: Policy costs and the federal budget.
0046 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security policy], March 31, 1953 (3). 50pp.
Major Topics: U.S. aid to European, Asian, Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American countries; federal budget; effects of revised aid program on recipient countries.
0096 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security policy], March 31, 1953 (4). 48pp.
Major Topics: Effect of expenditure limitation on MSPs; U.S. aid to European countries; European defense capabilities.
Principal Correspondent: G. W. Lawson Jr. 0144 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security
policy], March 31, 1953 (5). 54pp. Major Topics: Effect of expenditure limitation on MSPs; U.S. aid to European and
Asian countries; European defense capabilities. 0198 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security
policy], March 31, 1953 (6). 34pp. Major Topics: Effect of expenditure limitation on aid-recipient countries; government
spending. 0232 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security
policy], March 31, 1953 (7). 30pp. Major Topics: MSP costs; effect of expenditure limitation on aid-recipient countries;
effect of expenditure limitation on MSP; MDAP; government spending. Principal Correspondents: Roger M. Kyes; Omar N. Bradley.
0262 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security policy], March 31, 1953 (8). 57pp.
Major Topics: NATO agreements and protocol; military appropriations and costs; U.S. military strength; effect of expenditure limitation on military and aircraft industry; federal budget.
Principal Correspondents: Charles E. Wilson; R. B. Anderson; Harold E. Talbott; Omar N. Bradley.
0319 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultant [review of basic national security policy], March 31, 1953 (9). 37pp.
Major Topics: MSP; U.S. aid to European, Middle Eastern, Asian, African, and Latin American countries; Civil Defense Program; wartime preparedness.
0356 President’s Meeting with Civilian Consultants [review of basic national security policy], March 31, 1953 (10). 46pp.
Major Topics: National security policy; foreign military strength; NSC projects on foreign countries and wartime preparedness.
Frame No.
26
0402 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (1) [1953]. 23pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; U.S. foreign relations. Principal Correspondent: James S. Lay Jr.
0425 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (2) [1953]. 34pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; U.S. foreign relations; U.S. aid to
European, Middle Eastern, Asian, African, and Latin American countries; anticommunism efforts.
0459 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (3) [1953]. 51pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; Soviet-U.S. relations;
anticommunism efforts; wartime preparedness; U.S. military strength; Military Program.
Principal Correspondents: George F. Kennan; C. Tyler Wood; R. P. Smith; G. A. Lincoln; C. H. Bonesteel III; H. E. Sears; John M. Maury Jr.
0510 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (4) [1953]. 29pp. Major Topics: Ability of U.S. economy to sustain security program; federal budget;
analysis of national security policy. 0539 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (5) [1953]. 30pp.
Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; public opinion; U.S. and Soviet bloc resources; foreign trade relations.
0569 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (6) [1953]. 39pp. Major Topics: U.S. relations to Europe; U.S. policy toward Germany and Asia; U.S.
attitude toward France; perception of Soviet threat; European economic ability; colonialism; analysis of national security policy.
0608 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “A” (7) [1953]. 36pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; U.S. policy toward the Middle East;
preventing Soviet expansion; Soviet-U.S. relations. 0644 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “B” (1) [1953]. 35pp.
Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; perception of Soviet threat; Soviet-U.S. relations.
Principal Correspondents: John C. Campbell; Elvin S. Ligon; John R. Deane; Philip E. Mosely; Calvin B. Hoover; James K. Penfield; James McCormack Jr.
0679 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “B” (2) [1953]. 28pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; Soviet-U.S. military relations; U.S.
military strength. 0707 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “B” (3) [1953]. 32pp.
Major Topics: U.S. foreign relations; analysis of national security policy; U.S. policy toward China and USSR; U.S. and foreign economic strength; perception of Soviet threat.
0739 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “B” (4) [1953]. 34pp. Major Topics: U.S.-Europe relations; public opinions; possibility of war; analysis of
national security policy; Soviet-U.S. relations; ability of U.S. economy to sustain security program.
0773 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “B” (5) [1953]. 32pp. Major Topics: U.S. defense commitments to foreign countries; U.S. aid to European,
Middle Eastern, and Asian countries; U.S. policy toward unaided foreign countries essential to national security.
0805 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (1) [1953]. 47pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; Soviet-U.S. relations;
anticommunism efforts; U.S. military strength; U.S. foreign policy toward Germany, China, and Korea.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: R. L. Conolly; L. L. Lemnitzer; G. F. Reinhardt; Kilbourne Johnston; Andrew J. Goodpaster; Leslie S. Brady; Harold K. Johnson.
0852 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (2) [1953]. 38pp. Major Topics: Pro-U.S. propaganda; anticommunism efforts; analysis of national
security policy; foreign public opinion. 0890 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (3) [1953]. 37pp.
Major Topics: Perception of Soviet threat; analysis of national security policy; anticommunism efforts; principles and methods of aggressive cold war; Soviet-U.S. relations.
0927 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (4) [1953]. 29pp. Major Topics: U.S. military strength; atomic weapons; U.S. and foreign economic
strength; pro-U.S. propaganda. 0956 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (5) [1953]. 39pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Germany and China; pro-U.S. propaganda; U.S. relations with Soviet bloc and European countries; U.S. aid to European countries.
Reel 13 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (6) [1953]. 45pp. Major Topics: U.S. assessment and policy toward the Middle Eastern, African, Asian,
and Latin American countries; Korean cease-fire; U.S. aid to Asian countries; pro-U.S. propaganda.
0046 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (7) [1953]. 42pp. Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; perception of Soviet threat; ability
of U.S. economy to sustain security program; U.S. foreign policy toward European, Middle Eastern, African, Asian, and Latin American countries.
0088 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (8) [1953]. 30pp. Major Topics: Ability of U.S. economy to sustain security program; federal budget.
0118 Project Solarium, Report to the NSC by Task Force “C” (9) [1953]. 19pp. Major Topics: Communist activities in Latin American countries; political situation of
Indochina. 0137 Project Solarium (1) [1953]. 28pp.
Major Topics: National security policy options; U.S. policy toward Germany and Asia; analysis of national security policy.
Principal Correspondent: James S. Lay Jr. 0165 Project Solarium. (2) [1953]. 35pp.
Major Topics: Analysis of national security policy; U.S. foreign policy toward European, Middle Eastern, African, Asian, and Latin American countries.
0200 Psychological Aspects of U.S. Strategy [November 1955]. 224pp. Major Topics: Perception of Soviet threat; analysis of national security policy; U.S.
foreign economic policy; communism; ideology and psychological plan toward foreign relations; Soviet-U.S. relations; cold war history; U.S. assessment and policy toward Germany, the Middle Eastern, African, and Asian countries; arms control and inspection; U.S.-Soviet budgets comparison; defense and structure of NATO; U.S. and foreign military strength; Soviet political situation; Atoms for Peace program.
Principal Correspondents: Bruce S. Old; Larry J. Henderson Jr.; Nelson A. Rockefeller.
Frame No.
28
0424 Reconnaissance Satellites [1960]. 35pp. Major Topic: Public information on and necessity of the SAMOS satellite. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Thomas S. Gates; Charles A. Haskins;
Frederick M. Raton; Jim Douglas; George B. Kistiakowsky. 0459 Scientific Judgments on Foreign Communications Intelligence (the Baker Report)
[January 23, 1958]. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0462 Security Effort Overseas (1) [April 1954–September 1958]. 42pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Indochina; military intervention in Indochina; U.S.
foreign relations; Soviet-U.S. relations. 0504 Security Effort Overseas (2) [April 1954–September 1958]. 24pp.
Major Topics: Military assistance program; overseas defense program; OISP. 0528 Security Effort Overseas (3) [April 1954–September 1958]. 66pp.
Major Topics: Anticommunism efforts; U.S. aid to European, Middle Eastern, Asian, African, and Latin American countries; OISP.
0594 Security Effort Overseas (4) [April 1954–September 1958]. 31pp. Major Topics: Overseas military personnel; U.S. aid to European, Middle Eastern,
Asian, African, and Latin American countries. 0625 Security Effort Overseas (5) [April 1954–September 1958]. 38pp.
Major Topics: Overseas army, navy, and air force levels; Military Assistance Program; military aid to European, Middle Eastern, Asian, and Latin American countries.
Principal Correspondents: Donald A. Quarles; James S. Lay Jr.; N. F. Twining. 0663 Soviet Attack, Probable Warning of (SNIE No. 11-8-54) [September 1954]. 27pp.
Major Topics: Wartime preparedness; assumptions about political and military indicators of possible war; perception of Soviet threat.
0690 Soviet Capabilities and probable Soviet Courses of Action through Mid-1959 (NIE No. 11-4-54) (1) [August 1954]. 53pp.
Major Topics: Soviet political, economic, and military status; Soviet policy objectives and national resources; nuclear weapons.
0743 Soviet Capabilities and probable Soviet Courses of Action through Mid-1959 (NIE No. 11-4-54) (2) [August 1954]. 47pp.
Major Topics: Soviet agricultural production and foreign trade; nuclear weapons; guided missiles; radar; biological and chemical weapons; Sino-Soviet bloc military strength.
0790 Soviet Capabilities and probable Soviet Courses of Action through Mid-1959 (NIE No. 11-4-54) (3) [August 1954]. 36pp.
Major Topics: Soviet bloc military strength; Soviet view on noncommunist intentions and capabilities; Soviet and Chinese policy objectives; communist efforts in the Middle East and Latin America.
0826 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1960 (NIE No. 11-3-55) (1) [May 1955]. 42pp.
Major Topics: Soviet political, economic, and military status; Soviet policy objectives and foreign relations; Soviet government-citizen relations; Soviet economic policy.
0868 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1960 (NIE No. 11-3-55) (2) [May 1955]. 47pp.
Major Topics: Soviet industrial and agricultural production; Soviet foreign trade and consumption levels; Soviet scientific and technical development; nuclear weapons; radar; guided missiles; biological and chemical weapons.
Frame No.
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0915 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1960 (NIE No. 11-3-55) (3) [May 1955]. 37pp.
Major Topic: Sino-Soviet bloc military strength and capabilities. 0952 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1960 (NIE No.
11-3-55) (4) [May 1955]. 30pp. Major Topics: Communist ideology; Soviet view on noncommunist intentions and
capabilities; Soviet policy objectives in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America.
Reel 14 NSC Subjects cont.
0001 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1960 (NIE No. 11-3-55) (5) [May 1955]. 67pp.
Major Topics: Soviet political, economic, and military status; Soviet government-citizen relations; Soviet economic policy; Soviet agricultural production and foreign trade; nuclear weapons; radar; biological and chemical weapons; Sino-Soviet bloc military strength and capabilities; Communist ideology; Soviet view on non-Communist intentions and capabilities; Soviet policy objectives in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America.
0068 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1961 (NIE No. 11-4-56) (1) [August 1956]. 40pp.
Major Topics: Soviet political, economic, and military status; internal and foreign relations.
0108 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1961 (NIE No. 11-4-56) (2) [August 1956]. 53pp.
Major Topics: Soviet economic policy; Soviet industrial and agricultural production; Soviet foreign trade and consumption levels; Soviet scientific and technical development; nuclear weapons; radar; guided missiles; biological and chemical weapons.
0161 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1961 (NIE No. 11-4-56) (3) [August 1956]. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0164 Soviet Capabilities and Probable Soviet Courses of Action through 1961 (NIE No. 11-4-56) (4) [August 1956]. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0167 Strengthening the Free World Position in Science and Technology [November 22, 1960]. 36pp.
Major Topics: Federal aid to education and research; military research and development; international cooperation; government organization and management.
Principal Correspondent: George B. Kistiakowsky. 0203 Suez Canal [July–August 1956]. 19pp.
Major Topics: Effects of nationalization of Suez Maritime Canal Company; U.S. aid to British and French interests; foreign relations.
Principal Correspondents: Maxwell D. Taylor; Reuben B. Robertson Jr.
Frame No.
30
0222 Technological Capabilities Panel of the Science Advisory Committee, Report to the President by the (The Killian Report) (1) [February 12, 1955]. 56pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; Soviet-U.S. relations; national defense capabilities and vulnerabilities; communications and intelligence; wartime preparedness; defense improvement recommendations.
Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; James R. Killian Jr.; R. C. Sprague. 0278 Technological Capabilities Panel of the Science Advisory Committee, Report to the
President by the (The Killian Report) (2) [February 12, 1955]. 127pp. Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; Soviet-U.S. military capabilities; High Energy Aircraft
Fuels; Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program; guided missiles and interceptors; national defense capabilities and vulnerabilities; attack warning system; nonmilitary defense; overseas communications; skilled military manpower; defense improvement recommendations.
0405 Underdeveloped Areas, Assistance to [August 12, 1959]. 33pp. Major Topics: ICA; U.S. aid to Asian agricultural and livestock development.
OCB Subjects 0438 Africa [June 1957–October 1960]. 63pp.
Major Topics: Foreign relations; foreign universities; Congo; UN programs; uranium; ICA; OCB; Somalia; Africa Project; foreign policy and economic study of Africa.
Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; John F. Root; Elmer B. Staats; Leslie S. Brady; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; George Gallup; Ralph W. E. Reid; Jesse C. Johnson; Frederic Fox; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Arnold Rivkin; Clarence B. Randall.
0501 Airlift [January–September 1958]. 58pp. Major Topics: OCB; nonmilitary and military airlift requirements and costs; foreign
relations; government and aircraft industry; wartime preparedness; MATS capacity and costs; Civil Reserve Air Fleet.
Principal Correspondents: Leo A. Hoegh; Christian A. Herter; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; William Y. Elliott; William Stuart Symington.
0559 American Legion Correspondence (1) [July 1959–February 1960]. 45pp. Major Topics: Cold war strategy; NSC appointments; Eisenhower press transcript;
foreign relations; economic policy. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.; James R. Wilson Jr.;
William J. Conniff. 0604 American Legion Correspondence (2) [April–October 1959]. 42pp.
Major Topic: Congressional committees on national security policy and cold war strategy.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Gordon Gray; Joseph I. Coffey; Bromley Smith; William J. Sheppard; T. A. Parrott; James R. Wilson Jr.
0646 Antarctica (1) [October 1955–July 1960]. 66pp. Major Topics: Antarctic science stations policy; Eisenhower’s Midwinter’s Day
greetings; appointments of U.S. Antarctic Projects officers. Principal Correspondents: Alan T. Waterman; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Joseph I.
Coffey; G. R. Toney; Donald A. Quarles; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Reuben B. Robertson Jr.; Andrew J. Goodpaster; George F. Schwarzwalder; G. B. Erskine; Elmer B. Staats; W. B. Franke.
0712 Antarctica (2) [June–July 1958]. 73pp. Major Topics: OCB-Antarctic projects cooperation; proposal for Antarctic board;
foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: Edward P. Lilly; Alexander Wiley.
Frame No.
31
0785 Antarctica (3) [June 1957–May 1958]. 40pp. Major Topics: Film; presidential announcement; foreign relations; post–International
Geophysical Year activities; Antarctic science stations; U.S. claims on unclaimed lands.
Principal Correspondents: Sexton Bradford; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Richard Hirsch; Oren Harris.
0825 Asian Economic Development [September 1957–January 1959]. 38pp. Major Topics: U.S.-Asia trade; U.S.-China relations; U.S.-Taiwan relations; China-UN
relations; Asian economic development and cooperation; German-Indian economic relations.
Principal Correspondents: Clarence B. Randall; C. Edward Galbreath; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; James H. Smith Jr.; John E. MacDonald; Kenneth P. Landon.
0863 Atomic Energy—Peaceful Uses [October 1957–September 1958]. 13pp. Major Topics: Atomic energy; U.S. relations with Europe. Principal Correspondents: Christian A. Herter; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0876 Australia & New Zealand [August 1959–March 1960]. 18pp. Major Topics: Australian and New Zealand political, economic, and military
developments; OCB; Sino-Soviet bloc efforts. Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; John Gordon Mein.
0894 Austria [November 1959–February 1960]. 11pp. Major Topics: U.S. military aid; Austrian political, economic, and military
developments. 0905 Chilean Disaster Relief [June 1960]. 80pp.
Major Topics: International and U.S. aid to Chilean relief and reconstruction; Red Cross; earthquake; church appeals for aid; reimbursable military costs; assessment of damage.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Robert Cutler; Wymberley Coerr; Betty D. Richardson; Walter Howe; Walter Muller; Robert F. Shea; George M. Elsey.
Reel 15 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 CFEP [Council on Foreign Economic Policy] Miscellaneous Papers [October 1955–January 1958]. 42pp.
Major Topics: Foreign economic policy; agricultural surplus sales to Soviet bloc; East-West trade; intergovernmental commodity agreement policy.
Principal Correspondents: Clarence B. Randall; William H. Jackson; Nelson A. Rockefeller; James M. Lambie Jr.; Henry A. Golwynne; Arthur M. McGlauflin; Thorsten V. Kalijarvi.
0043 Communist Economic Penetration [December 1957–September 1959]. 38pp. Major Topic: U.S. policy toward Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Clarence B. Randall; Mansfield D.
Sprague; William Y. Elliott; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr. 0081 Coordination of Informational & Public Opinion [September 1957–October 1959].
60pp. Major Topics: Nikita Khrushchev visit; OCB psychological programs and policy; U.S.
peace strategy; U.S. and Soviet efforts to shape foreign public opinion; U.S. foreign public relations.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Leslie S. Brady; R. V. Mrozinski; William Y. Elliott.
Frame No.
32
0141 Cuba [March–October 1960]. 4pp. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Abbott Washburn.
0145 Cultural Exchange & Training, Education, etc. (1) [March 1959–October 1960]. 67pp.
Major Topics: OCB projects; Cultural Presentations Program; foreign relations; effectiveness of cultural projects; foreign students; training of foreign military personnel.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Robert H. Thayer; Joseph I. Coffey. 0212 Cultural Exchange & Training, Education, etc. (2) [March 1956–September 1958].
67pp. Major Topics: Foreign educational systems; OCB projects; anticommunism efforts;
training and education of foreigners; IGY flying showcase; Soviet-U.S. health efforts; PTP program; effectiveness of cultural projects.
Principal Correspondents: Christian A. Herter; Paul F. Foster; Elmer B. Staats; Jeffrey C. Kitchen; T. I. Edwards; Ed Aldrin; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; William Y. Elliott.
0279 Cultural Exchange & Training, Education, etc. (3) [July 1956–July 1957]. 48pp. Major Topics: Harvard Glee Club foreign tour; foreign relations; press comments. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Paul C. Reardon; Max V.
Krebs; Douglas Dillon; John L. Hedges; Harry F. Stimpson Jr.; G. A. Ewing; Rudolf Widhalm; Jos Vranken; Moses Hirschtritt; Noel J. Tyl.
0327 Cyprus [September 1960]. 6pp. Major Topic: U.S. policy toward Cyprus. Principal Correspondents: Oliver M. Marcy; Ridgway B. Knight.
0333 Disarmament [May 1957–April 1958]. 59pp. Major Topics: OCB; U.S. disarmament policy; Soviet-U.S. relations; U.S.-Europe
relations; nuclear weapons. Principal Correspondents: R. V. Mrozinski; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Robert Cutler.
0392 East-West Exchange program [May 1956–October 1957]. 68pp. Major Topics: Foreign students and visitors; fingerprinting; Immigration and
Nationality Act amendments; Hungarian refugees; U.S. Soviet bloc policy. Principal Correspondents: J. Patrick Coyne; J. Walter Yeagley; R. V. Mrozinski;
Elmer B. Staats; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Dwight D. Eisenhower. 0460 Economic Defense Policy [June 1957–March 1959]. 22pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive; Committee on World Economic Practices.
Principal Correspondents: William Y. Elliott; Joseph I. Coffey; Harold Boeschenstein; Henry C. Alexander; Robert H. Johnson.
0482 Electromagnetic Communications [July 1958–July 1959]. 65pp. Major Topics: U.S. and Soviet radio broadcast jamming capabilities; U.S.
broadcasting policy; Voice of America in Russia; foreign radio. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Roy M.
Melbourne; Richard H. Davis; Christian A. Herter; Mark A. May. 0547 Elliott, William Y. [February 1958]. 4pp.
Principal Correspondent: William Y. Elliott. 0551 Ellis Island [February–March 1960]. 13pp.
Major Topics: International Institute on Ellis Island; foreign language and cultural training.
Principal Correspondent: William M. Brennan.
Frame No.
33
0564 Escapees & Refugees [August 1957–September 1960]. 67pp. Major Topics: Refugees from Communist areas; U.S. policy toward Yugoslavian and
Palestinian refugees; OCB; policy costs; repatriation and integration. Principal Correspondents: Manning H. Williams; Bromley Smith; Francis O. Wilcox;
William M. Roundtree; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Roy M. Melbourne; Joseph I. Coffey; Frederick M. Dearborn.
0631 Ethiopia [November–December 1957]. 6pp. Major Topic: Ethiopian resources. Principal Correspondents: John H. Tobler; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0637 Europe [April 1958–July 1959]. 38pp. Major Topics: U.S. policies toward Europe and USSR; disengagement from
Germany; foreign military capabilities and opinions toward U.S. Principal Correspondents: Bob Komer; Richard P Heppner.
0675 Exhibits, Fairs, etc. (1) [September 1959–October 1960]. 58pp. Major Topic: Trade Fair Program. Principal Correspondent: Joseph I. Coffey.
0733 Exhibits, Fairs, etc. (2) [August 1958–March 1959]. 47pp. Major Topics: Religion and content in Moscow exhibit; Trade Fair Program; Cultural
Presentations Program. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Frederic Fox; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Christian
A. Herter; George V. Allen; Abbott Washburn. 0780 Far East [August 1957–September 1959]. 23pp.
Major Topics: U.S. aid to Asia; Chinese economic development, public health, and attitude toward the U.S.; Governor Herter’s impressions of Asian countries; OCB.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Joseph I. Coffey; Paul White; Ignacio Chávez; Sterling J. Cottrell.
0803 Far East Trip [July–October 1957]. 67pp. Major Topics: U.S.-Asian relations; communism; thank-you notes; trip members and
itinerary. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Max W. Bishop; Olcott H.
Deming; Joseph L. Brent; Sterling J. Cottrell. 0870 OCB—Foreign Currency, U.S. Owned (1) [July 1957–February 1958]. 55pp.
Major Topics: Foreign currency fiscal policy; foreign currency balances and surpluses.
Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; J. H. Smith; Robert Cutler; Robert H. Johnson.
0925 OCB—Foreign Currency, U.S. Owned (2) [September 1954–January 1958]. 40pp. Major Topics: Foreign currency fiscal policy; foreign currency balances and
surpluses. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Elmer B. Staats; Mansfield D.
Sprague; Dwight D. Eisenhower. 0965 France [September 1958–April 1960]. 15pp.
Major Topics: Algerian-French relations; nuclear tests. Principal Correspondents: Oscar Holder; Joseph I. Coffey; R. Hirsch; Bromley Smith.
0980 Freedom Academy [May–June 1959]. 24pp. Major Topics: Anticommunism efforts and training; Soviet procommunism training;
OCB. Principal Correspondents: Robert Dechert; John S. Warner; Allen W. Dulles.
Frame No.
34
Reel 16 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 Germany, East Germany & Berlin [July 1957–July 1959]. 12pp. Major Topics: Dysentery outbreak; air traffic control. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Joseph I. Coffey; Frederick M. Dearborn
Jr.; D. W. Gladney. 0013 Greece [December 1958–January 1960]. 24pp.
Major Topics: Economic development; foreign relations; OCB. Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; Owen T. Jones.
0037 Health & Medical (1) [November 1959–December 1960]. 62pp. Major Topics: Project Hope (floating hospital training center); press clippings; Malaria
Eradication Program; International Health Programs policy; voluntary aid organizations.
Principal Correspondents: Abbott Washburn; Claude E. Hawley; G. Huntington Damon; Joseph I. Coffey; Robert E. Merriam.
0099 Health & Medical (2) [March–December 1959]. 63pp. Major Topics: Great White Fleet (U.S. emergency aid ships); International Health
Programs; Soviet bloc medical aid; Project Hope. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; J. F. C. Hyde Jr.; David A. Lindsay; Leo
A. Hoegh; John C. Wilson; J. Vincent Burke Jr.; David W. Kendall; Robert E. Merriam; Bromley Smith; Karl G. Harr Jr.; George V. Allen; C. D. Jackson; John Richardson Jr.; Peter D. Comanduras.
0162 Hong Kong [August 1957–December 1960]. 25pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Hong Kong; refugees; procommunism efforts. Principal Correspondent: Thomas P. Dillon.
0187 Hungary [May 1957–November 1958]. 64pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Hungary; polio epidemic and vaccine; refugees;
Hungarian UN delegation; press clippings; AFL-CIO speech by Philip Delaney; Czechoslovakia.
Principal Correspondents: John Richardson Jr.; Charles E. Johnson; C. D. Jackson; R. V. Mrozinski; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Elmer B. Staats; Christopher Emmet; Thomas J. Dodd; Angier Biddle Duke; Daniel A. Poling; Kermit Roosevelt; Katharine St. George.
0251 Iceland [May 1957–March 1960]. 31pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Iceland; Finnmarks; Soviet-Iceland economic
relations. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Roy M. Melbourne; Frederick M.
Dearborn Jr.; Elmer B. Staats. 0282 Image of America [June 1957–October 1958]. 29pp.
Major Topics: Foreign opinion of the U.S.; imperialism and military presence; racism. Principal Correspondents: Philip Wylie; Henry Loomis; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.;
Neilson C. Debevoise; Nelson A. Rockefeller. 0311 Indonesia [October 1957–January 1960]. 19pp.
Major Topics: OCB; U.S. policy toward Indonesia. Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; Joseph I. Coffey; Frederick M. Dearborn
Jr.; Elmer B. Staats. 0330 Information Activities Abroad [April 1960–January 1961]. 46pp.
Major Topics: Educational and cultural programs; public opinion and foreign policy.
Frame No.
35
Principal Correspondents: Waldemar Neilsen; Mansfield D. Sprague; Robert J. Phillips.
0376 International Voluntary Services Report [June–November 1959]. 46pp. Major Topics: Foreign aid programs effectiveness; Vietnam; U.S.-Asia relations. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Oliver Popenoe; Stanley Andrews;
Harvey C. Neese; Verle E. Lanier; Ridgway B. Knight. 0422 Interviews with Foreign Leaders [June–July 1957]. 107pp.
Major Topics: Radio; television; President Marshall Tito (Yugoslavia) interview transcript; Soviet-Yugoslavian relations; Nikita Khrushchev interview text and government reaction.
Principal Correspondents: R. V. Mrozinski; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr. 0529 Iran [June 1960]. 6pp. 0535 Israel [November–December 1957]. 13pp.
Major Topics: Agricultural trade agreements; foreign currency fiscal policy. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; William Rowntree; Abba Eban.
0548 Italy [January 1960]. 5pp. 0553 Japan (and Ryukyus) [May 1957–May 1960]. 37pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Japan; Japanese foreign relations; flu epidemic; Ryukyus law and administration.
Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; John E. MacDonald; Erwin N. Griswold; Olcott H. Deming; David M. Bane; Walter S. Robertson.
0590 Kerala Elections [February 1960]. 7pp. Major Topic: Anticommunism efforts.
0597 Korea [August 1953–April 1960]. 62pp. Major Topics: Political activities; U.S. economic aid to Korea; Pusan warehousing;
USIA; U.S.-Korean relations. Principal Correspondents: Neil H. McElroy; Christian A. Herter; Bill White; Robert
Cutler. 0659 Labor [June 1957–October 1959]. 37pp.
Major Topics: Labor unions in developing countries; political power; Afro-Asian Labor Conference; procommunism efforts.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; George C. Lodge; Cord Meyer Jr. 0696 Latin America [June 1957–June 1960]. 105pp.
Major Topics: Fidel Castro’s U.S. visit; OCB; Latin American Student Program; foreign universities; student and teacher foreign exchange; communism; radio broadcasts; USIA; navy band tour of Latin America; Venezuelan student press release; Latin American commodities and military strength.
Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; Joseph I. Coffey; Joseph R. Jacyno; Gordon Gray; Walter S. Lemmon; Richard M. Nixon; Elmer B. Staats; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Charles Brendler; Ralph R. Busick.
0801 Libya [December 1958–September 1960]. 12pp. Major Topic: Wheelus Road. Principal Correspondents: John F. Root; John E. MacDonald; Christian A. Herter;
James H. Smith Jr. 0813 Limited War [July 1957–April 1958]. 14pp.
Major Topics: U.S. military capabilities and strategy; nuclear weapons. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0827 Manpower—Scientific [October 1957]. 4pp. 0831 Memorial for late President Magsaysay [May–August 1957]. 16pp.
Major Topic: Postage stamp.
Frame No.
36
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Arthur E. Summerfield; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Edward P. Lilly.
0847 Militant Liberty [June 1957–July 1958]. 63pp. Major Topics: Cold war planning; Ecuador trip; U.S. ideology; press clippings. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Robert Cutler; S. Everett
Gleason; John C. Broger; Arthur Radford; Christian M. Ravndal. 0910 Military Assistance Program [November 1958–January 1959]. 15pp.
Major Topics: Foreign relations; evaluation of program. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; William H. Draper Jr.; Dwight D.
Eisenhower. 0925 Military Bases Overseas [January–August 1958]. 9pp.
Principal Correspondents: Elmer B. Staats; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Leslie S. Brady.
0934 Military Training—Foreign Nationals [March 1959]. 36pp. Major Topics: OCB; Asian, African, Middle Eastern, and Latin American officers.
0970 Miscellaneous (1) [1955–1956]. 44pp. Major Topics: U.S. Chinese students; Asian community development programs;
Soviet air officers’ U.S. trip; OCB; nuclear weapons; H-bomb tests. Principal Correspondents: T. W. Parker; Paul C. Yu; Elmer B. Staats; Dillon
Anderson; Wayne C. Jackson; Paul F. Foster; Herbert B. Loper.
Reel 17 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 Miscellaneous (2) [May–September 1957]. 37pp. Major Topics: Presidential appointments; anti-Semitism; International Red Cross
Conference; bacteriological and nuclear weapons; USIA. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Robert Cutler; Dwight D.
Eisenhower; Edward P. Lilly; Herbert J. Fleishmann. 0038 Miscellaneous (3) [October 1957]. 31pp.
Major Topics: MSP; Military Assistance Program objectives; USIA articles and press clippings; government public education.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; John B. Hollister; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Abbott Washburn; R. V. Mrozinski; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0069 Miscellaneous (4) [November 1957–March 1958]. 47pp. Major Topics: Government-press relations; government-citizen relations; budget
assessment; ICA Public Administration training; OCB; science and national security.
Principal Correspondents: James L. McConaughy Jr.; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; John H. Hamlin; Elmer B. Staats; Andrew J. Goodpaster; Howard G. Kurtz Jr.
0116 Miscellaneous (5) [April–December 1958]. 48pp. Major Topics: Government public education; Strategic Air Command; World Anti-
Communist Congress for Freedom and Liberation; Pakistan, Thai, Turkish, and Afghan airlines; U.S. invitation to Soviet air chief of staff; list of possible foreign affairs consultant.
Principal Correspondents: Richard Hirsch; Pauline M. Dearborn; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Thomas O Hardin.
0164 Miscellaneous (6) [January–April 1959]. 46pp. Major Topics: U.S. invitation to Dr. Albert Schweitzer; government contract bids. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; C. H. Percy; Karl G. Harr Jr.; E. J. Bloch.
Frame No.
37
0210 Miscellaneous (7) [May–August 1959]. 60pp. Major Topics: Government-citizen relations; Soviet-U.S. relations; congressional
responsibility; OCB appointment. Principal Correspondents: Charles Burton Marshall; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Christian A.
Herter. 0270 Miscellaneous (8) [September–October 1959]. 47pp.
Major Topics: Center for the Study of Coordinated National Policy; government procedure evaluation; NSC policy papers review; science and technology information access.
Principal Correspondents: William Emerson; Frank E. Bothwell; Bromley Smith; N. E. Golovin.
0317 Miscellaneous (9) [November 1959–February 1960]. 51pp. Major Topics: Executive order on restricted data communications; NSC policy papers
review; proposed government studies; morals and international relations; racism. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Bromley Smith; George K. Tanham; Don
Paarlberg; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Kenneth P. Landon; Matthew J. Marks. 0368 Miscellaneous (10) [March–May 1960]. 37pp.
Major Topics: OCB; political-psychological warfare; anticommunism efforts; space programs.
Principal Correspondents: H. Wentworth Eldredge; Gordon Gray; Bromley Smith; Donald S. Bussey; Conde McGinley; T. Keith Glennan.
0405 Miscellaneous (11) [June–November 1960]. 61pp. Major Topics: Asian defense; Asian military officers; Japan; Pacific War College;
information leaks; Foreign Operations Administration loan request; PTP program. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Gordon Gray; A. Balsomi; Lloyd K.
Neidlinger; Walter A. Wood. 0466 Missile Program (1) [October 1957]. 22pp.
Major Topic: Missile development. Principal Correspondent: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0488 Missile Program (2) [1946–1958]. 40pp. Major Topics: Chronology of missile program; nuclear weapons and tests;
disarmament negotiations. 0528 Missile Program (3) [1943–1958]. 101pp.
Major Topics: Chronology of missile program; guided missiles. 0629 Missile Program (4) [November 1957–June 1958]. 41pp.
Major Topics: Military appropriations; Missile Program press clipping; guided missiles; satellite; Soviet-U.S. relations.
Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Elmer B. Staats. 0670 Missile Publicity (1) [January 1958–October 1960]. 40pp.
Major Topics: NEEDLES experiment (communication devices in space); foreign relations; Pacific Missile Range; public information; Soviet missile program.
Principal Correspondents: Richard Hirsch; Joseph I. Coffey; Bromley Smith; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0710 Missile Publicity (2) [August–December 1957]. 43pp. Major Topics: Satellite test and missile test center publicity; press clippings; Soviet
ICBM announcement. Principal Correspondents: Elmer B. Staats; James R. Killian Jr.; Frederick M.
Dearborn Jr.; Murray Snyder. 0753 National Security Policy—Basic [April 1958–January 1960]. 34pp.
Major Topics: Study of policy; nuclear weapons.
Frame No.
38
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; John H. Tobler; Joseph I. Coffey; Gerard C. Smith; Robert Cutler; William Elliott.
0787 Near East (Middle East) (1) [August 1958–February 1960]. 52pp. Major Topics: OCB; Palestinian refugees; U.S. policy toward Middle Eastern
countries; political situation and anticommunism efforts in Iraq; U.S.–United Arab Republic relations; Arab-Israeli relations; Saudi Arabia.
Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Leo A. Hoegh; Roy M. Melbourne.
0839 Near East (Middle East) (2) [July–December 1957]. 47pp. Major Topics: Arab-Israeli relations; economic development and trade; U.S.-Yemen
relations; U.S. aid to Iraq; U.S. policy toward Middle Eastern countries. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Clarence E. Pickett; Bromley
Smith; Wallace S. Whittaker; C. P. Cabell; Robert M. Macy. 0886 Near East—Radio Broadcasting (1) [July–August 1958]. 47pp.
Major Topics: Voice of America; government spending; radio facilities; U.S.–Middle East relations.
Principal Correspondents: George V. Allen; Karl G. Harr Jr.; G. Huntington Damon; James R. Gustin; George P. Adair.
0933 Near East—Radio Broadcasting (2) [January–July 1958]. 67pp. Major Topics: Voice of America; locusts; Arab Unity Highway; U.S. policy toward
Middle Eastern countries. Principal Correspondents: George V. Allen; James R. Gustin; Douglas Dillon;
Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; James H. Smith Jr.
Reel 18 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 NATO [November 1957–August 1959]. 11pp. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Joseph I. Coffey; Oscar Holder.
0012 Nuclear Energy Matters (1) [1955–1957]. 33pp. Major Topics: Nuclear tests; proposed study of nuclear development effects on
humans; nuclear weapons publicity; press clippings. Principal Correspondents: Dillon Anderson; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Murray Snyder.
0045 Nuclear Energy Matters (2) [1958]. 56pp. Major Topics: British comments on U.S. bombs; nuclear air defense; nuclear
weapons transport; nuclear tests; U.S. nuclear policy. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; John H. Morse Jr.
0101 Nuclear Energy Matters (3) [February 1958]. 36pp. Major Topics: U.S nuclear policy; clean weapons; nuclear tests; foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: John H. Morse Jr.; Richard Hirsch; Frederick M. Dearborn
Jr. 0137 Nuclear Energy Matters (4) [February–March 1958]. 47pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons transport; public information; U.S. nuclear policy; clean weapons; foreign relations; reaction to possible Soviet ban on testing.
Principal Correspondents: Sherman Adams; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Abbott Washburn.
0184 Nuclear Energy Matters (5) [April–October 1958]. 53pp. Major Topics: Nuclear tests; nuclear weapons development effects on life; Soviet-
U.S. nuclear relations; Project PLOWSHARE (nonmilitary nuclear explosions); Nevada test site; public information; atomic accident emergency measures.
Frame No.
39
Principal Correspondents: Manning H. Williams; William Y. Elliott; Paul F. Foster; Karl G. Harr Jr.
0237 Nuclear Energy Matters (6) [November 1958–March 1959]. 36pp. Major Topics: Nuclear tests and foreign relations; public information; U.S.-Indian
nuclear relations; Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing display request. Principal Correspondents: Paul F. Foster; Roy M. Melbourne; Richard Hirsch; Murray
Snyder; Neilson C. Debevoise; Joseph I. Coffey; Philip J. Farley; Karl G. Harr Jr. 0273 Nuclear Energy Matters (7) [April–August 1959]. 51pp.
Major Topics: Project PLOWSHARE; U.S. nuclear policy; nuclear tests; Federal Radiation Council; public information.
Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Bromley Smith; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Robert Murphy; Karl G. Harr Jr.
0324 Nuclear Energy Matters (8) [September 1959–March 1960]. 41pp. Major Topics: Underground nuclear tests; Chinese satellite; reaction to On the Beach
(film on nuclear war); radioactive waste in Mexico; Nevada test site. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Edward N. Parker; Richard Hirsch; R. R.
Rubottom Jr.; Bromley Smith. 0365 Olympics [July 1957–June 1959]. 36pp.
Major Topics: IOC removal of Chinese National Olympic Committee (Taiwan); China-Taiwan foreign relations; press clippings.
Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Edwin F. Black; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr. 0401 Overseas Internal Security [June 1957–June 1959]. 37pp.
Major Topics: Review of program; anticommunism efforts. Principal Correspondent: Joseph I. Coffey.
0438 Overseas U.S. Personnel (1) [March–July 1960]. 57pp. Major Topic: Statistics on U.S. citizens in foreign countries.
0495 Overseas U.S. Personnel (2) [May 1957–April 1960]. 44pp. Major Topics: Foreign relations; OCB; overseas training and policies; military
incidents. Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; T. B. Koons; Robert Cutler; Karl G.
Harr Jr.; Joseph I. Coffey. 0539 Passport & Military Personnel Overseas Letters [July–August 1957]. 23pp.
Major Topics: Press clippings; “envoy” citizens (everyone is a U.S. representative). Principal Correspondents: Mansfield D. Sprague; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Frederick
M. Dearborn Jr. 0562 People-to-People (1) [1959–1960]. 82pp.
Major Topics: Foreign relations; PTP activities in European, Middle Eastern, African, and Asian countries; military and civilian personnel; foreign language training; Military Assistance Program; DOD policy.
Principal Correspondents: Charles C. Finucane; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Hugh M. Milton II; Oliver S. Picher; Perkins McGuire; John J. Riordan; James G. Dunton; H. D. Felt; J. L. Holloway Jr.; Lauris Norstad; Frank A. Armstrong Jr.; George F. Schlatter.
0644 People-to-People (2) [September–December 1958]. 58pp. Major Topics: Brochure; foreign relations; PTP activities in European, Middle Eastern,
Asian, and Latin American countries; International Commission of Jurists; Inter-American Committee for the Juridical Defense of Western Democracy.
Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; George V. Allen; Sherman Adams; Allen W. Dulles; Cody Fowler; R. R. Rubottom Jr.
Frame No.
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0702 People-to-People (3) [May–August 1958]. 58pp. Major Topics: Press clippings; foreign relations; proposed study and concept of PTP
program; PTP Foundation; Committee for the Handicapped; Greater Hartford PTP.
Principal Correspondents: John E. Juergensmeyer; Carla Williams; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Melvin J. Maas; Joseph J. Fanelli; Fred McDonald.
0760 People-to-People (4) [January–April 1958]. 35pp. Major Topics: Foreign relations; The Patriot Newspaper PTP program. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Robert Cutler; G. Huntington Damon;
Edwin F. Russell; Alicia Spaulding Paolozzi; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Conger Reynolds.
0795 People-to-People (7) [November–December 1957]. 68pp. Major Topics: A.R.M.S. (American-Russian Military Solidarity) for Friendship
program; Soviet and U.S. military veterans and broadcasts; Soviet military–Communist Party conflict; Institute of International Education; presidential remarks.
Principal Correspondents: Lawrence M. Fornia; George V. Allen; Earle D. Chesney; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Frederic Fox; Leslie S. Brady.
0863 People-to-People (8) [May–October 1957]. 76pp. Major Topics: Brochure; progress report; foreign relations; presidential message to
the American Council on Education; Baylor Proposals (U.S. universities aiding foreign universities) and progress report.
Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Frederic Fox; Elmer B. Staats; Leslie S. Brady; Arthur S. Adams; Bernard M. Shanley; Raymond F. Howes; Paul Geren; W. R. White.
Reel 19 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 People-to-People (7) [August 1958]. 187pp. Major Topics: Program history; foreign relations; PTP Foundation; Committee for the
Handicapped; Greater Hartford PTP; OCB staff. Principal Correspondent: John E. Juergensmeyer.
0188 Philippines [December 1958–September 1960]. 23pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward the Philippines; economic and political status;
Philippines military. Principal Correspondents: John Gordon Mein; Joseph I. Coffey.
0211 Poland (1) [October 1959–September 1960]. 42pp. Major Topics: Richardson trip itinerary; U.S.-Poland relations; Polish Medical Aid
Project; American Research Hospital for Children. Principal Correspondents: John Richardson Jr.; Theodore G. Klumpp; Francis Boyer;
Richard W. Reuter; E. T. Greaves. 0253 Poland (2) [May 1958–October 1959]. 32pp.
Major Topics: Polish Medical Aid Project; U.S.-Poland relations. Principal Correspondents: John Richardson Jr.; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Richard M. Nixon;
Robert Cutler; Manning H. Williams; Joseph I. Coffey. 0285 Poland (3) [September 1957–December 1958]. 47pp.
Major Topics: Emergency Committee for UN Action on Hungary; Hungarian communists; Polish Medical Aid Project; Soviet-Poland relations.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: Angier Biddle Duke; Christopher Emmet; John Richardson Jr.; Aleksander Pache; Theodore G. Klumpp; Robert Cutler; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Francis Boyer.
0332 Poland (4) [August–October 1957]. 47pp. Major Topic: Polish Medical Aid Project. Principal Correspondents: John Richardson Jr.; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Robert
Cutler; Sinclair Weeks; Arthur Larson; Leslie S. Brady. 0379 Psychological Warfare Planning [August 1945–July 1959]. 38pp.
Major Topics: Wartime psychological warfare; military cover and deception. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Theodore C. Streibert; Herbert Hoover
Jr.; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Charles A. Sullivan; Arthur Radford. 0417 Public Law 480 [December 1957–January 1959]. 14pp.
Major Topics: Overseas American schools; U.S. foreign policy. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Roy M. Melbourne; Frederick M.
Dearborn Jr.; Edward P. Lilly. 0431 Security of Strategically Important Industrial Operations [May 1959–June 1960].
18pp. Major Topics: OCB policy; industrial operations list. Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; Russell H. Hughes.
0449 Security Resources [November 1957–January 1958]. 21pp. Major Topics: Security Resources Panel Program; fallout shelters. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; R. V. Mrozinski.
0470 South Asia (1) [March–November 1959]. 52pp. Major Topics: Food grain to India; Indian economic development; Tibetan Revolt;
U.S. policy toward Tibet; press clippings; anticommunism efforts. Principal Correspondents: Frederic P. Bartlett; Ridgway B. Knight; Kenneth P.
Landon; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Joseph I. Coffey; Robert H. Johnson; Edwin F. Black; G. Huntington Damon.
0522 South Asia (2) [June 1957–April 1959]. 40pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Asia; Calcutta cholera epidemic; Soviet bloc
assistance to Asia; U.S.-India economic relations; Indian economic development. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Robert Cutler; Kenneth P. Landon;
Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Clarence B. Randall; C. Douglas Dillon. 0562 South East Asia [May 1957–January 1961]. 116pp.
Major Topics: Edward G. Lansdale trip to South East Asia; South East Asia military civic activities; EDCOR Plan (Economic Development Corps); aid to Burma and Thailand; U.S.-Laos economic relations; Southeast Asia Treaty Organization projects; Laos police program.
Principal Correspondents: Kenneth P. Landon; Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Edward G. Lansdale; James H. Smith Jr.; Robert G. Cleveland; Max W. Bishop; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0678 Soviet Dominated Nations—Eastern Europe [November 1957–January 1960]. 25pp. Major Topics: U.S.-Hungary relations; U.S. policy toward Soviet bloc. Principal Correspondents: C. D. Jackson; Manning H. Williams; Frederick M.
Dearborn Jr. 0703 Soviet & Related Problems (1) [May 1959–September 1960]. 55pp.
Major Topics: Rangoon (Burma) Soviet embassy; Russian aircraft; impressions of Russia; reaction to Nikita Khrushchev’s U.S. visit.
Principal Correspondents: Oren M. Stephens; Karl G. Harr Jr.; William J. Tonesk; Bromley Smith; Joseph I. Coffey; Ralph P. Alex; Clarence B. Randall.
Frame No.
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0758 Soviet & Related Problems (2) [November 1958–October 1959]. 59pp. Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. financial relations; world reaction to Khrushchev-
Eisenhower visits; press clippings on Russia; Richard M. Nixon trip to Russia; Seven-Year Soviet Economic Plan.
Principal Correspondents: Manning H. Williams; Frederic Fox; Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Otto E. Guthe.
0817 Soviet & Related Problems (3) [July 1956–September 1958]. 60pp. Major Topics: Soviet tin dumping; Soviet medical and economic aid programs; Soviet-
U.S. relations; Poznan riots (Poland); International Rescue Committee. Principal Correspondents: Roy M. Melbourne; Robert Amory Jr.; James H. Smith Jr.;
Ray S. Cline; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Francis T. Williamson; Oren M. Stephens; E. Lewis Revey.
0877 Space Council (1) [June–September 1958]. 85pp. Major Topics: National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958; space programs; Soviet-
U.S. cooperation; IGY program; satellite; OCB. Principal Correspondents: Charles E. Johnson; Robert O. Piland; Christian A. Herter;
James R. Killian Jr.; Elmer B. Staats; Richard Hirsch. 0962 Space Council (2) [October–November 1958]. 45pp.
Major Topics: NASA; Citizen-Military Liaison Committee; public information policy; space programs.
Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; Robert O. Piland; T. Keith Glennan; Donald A. Quarles.
Reel 20 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 Space Council (3) [December 1958–January 1959]. 51pp. Major Topics: OCB; space programs; Manned Satellite Program. Principal Correspondents: Roy M. Melbourne; Richard Hirsch; Robert O. Piland;
T. Keith Glennan; Franklyn W. Phillips; Neil H. McElroy. 0052 Space Council (4) [January–February 1959]. 57pp.
Major Topic: National Space Vehicle Program. Principal Correspondent: Franklyn W. Phillips.
0109 Space Council (5) [February–March 1959]. 76pp. Major Topics: Satellite and space vehicle tracking and data acquisition; satellite
centers; national space program; presidential statement. Principal Correspondents: Neil H. McElroy; T. Keith Glennan; Franklyn W. Phillips;
Philip J. Farley. 0185 Space Council (6) [April 1959]. 60pp.
Major Topics: SENTRY Reconnaissance Satellite; outer space operations plan; Soviet space program.
Principal Correspondent: Franklyn W. Phillips. 0245 Space Council (7) [April 1959]. 73pp.
Major Topics: Meteorological Satellite Program; National Space Sciences Program; satellites.
Principal Correspondents: Franklyn W. Phillips; Donald A. Quarles. 0318 Space Council (8) [April 1959]. 66pp.
Major Topics: Satellite communications; UN committee on peaceful uses of outer space; U.S.-UN relations; possible legal problems; space vehicle identification.
Frame No.
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0384 Space Council (9) [April–May 1959]. 69pp. Major Topics: Space programs; UN committee on peaceful uses of outer space;
space science; earth satellite applications; manned space exploration; international cooperation; possible legal problems.
Principal Correspondent: Franklyn W. Phillips. 0453 Space Council (10) [June 1959]. 38pp.
Major Topics: SCOUT space vehicle; National Space Vehicle Program; Citizen-Military Liaison Committee; National Space program.
Principal Correspondents: Franklyn W. Phillips; John F. Floberg. 0491 Space Council (11) [July–August 1959]. 124pp.
Major Topics: Military Department space contracts; National Space Program; NASA projects timeline; Project Mercury (manned satellite program); space research and probes; satellites; National Space Vehicle Program; NASA organization and finance; National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958; military cooperative agreements; effect of Soviet and U.S. space programs on world opinion.
Principal Correspondents: Franklyn W. Phillips; T. Keith Glennan; Wilber M. Brucker. 0615 Space Council (12) [September–October 1959]. 50pp.
Major Topics: National Space Vehicle Program; Vega-Centaur Vehicle Review Group; U.S. policy on outer space.
Principal Correspondents: W. M. Holaday; Homer J. Stewart; Hugh L. Dryden; Franklyn W. Phillips.
0665 Space Council (13) [November 1959]. 118pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy on outer space; Soviet space program; UN committee on
peaceful uses of outer space; World Meteorological Organization; international cooperation; space research and equipment; space science; possible legal problems.
0783 Space Council (14) [December 1959]. 51pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy on outer space; U.S. and Soviet space programs;
government funding; Project Saturn (engine). Principal Correspondent: T. Keith Glennan.
0834 Space Council (15) [January 1960]. 75pp. Major Topics: Soviet outer space propaganda; NASA objectives; government funding;
space vehicle development; space propulsion technology; manned space flight; space science and research; satellites; space flight operations.
0909 Space Council (16) [January–May 1960]. 63pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy on outer space; Soviet space program; government
funding; Pioneer V (space probe); USIA psychological plans; Voice of America; motion pictures.
Principal Correspondents: Franklyn W. Phillips; Abbott Washburn. 0972 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (1) [1956–1957]. 32pp.
Major Topics: Earth Satellite Program; Soviet satellite launch; world opinion on Soviet satellite; space propaganda.
Principal Correspondents: William Y. Elliott; David Z. Beckler; William J. Bohnaker; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; R. V. Mrozinski; Elmer B. Staats.
Frame No.
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Reel 21 OCB Subjects cont.
0001 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (2) [February–June 1958]. 44pp. Major Topics: Soviet moon vehicle; Science for Peace Program; U.S.-Soviet space
race; international cooperation; Chinese satellite; nuclear tests. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Maurice H. Stans; Elmer B.
Staats; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Neil Carothers; George F. Schwarzwalder; Sherman Kent.
0045 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (3) [July–September 1958]. 34pp. Major Topics: Nuclear tests; Soviet TV relay satellite; peaceful uses of outer space;
Soviet-U.S. space cooperation. Principal Correspondents: Andrew J. Goodpaster; R. V. Mrozinski; Karl H. Weber;
John A. Calhoun; Joseph I. Coffey; James R. Killian Jr.; Christian A. Herter; Maurice H. Stans.
0079 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (4) [October–December 1958]. 26pp. Major Topics: International cooperation; U.S. policy on outer space. Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; Roy M. Melbourne; Karl G. Harr Jr.
0105 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (5) [January–February 1959]. 50pp. Major Topics: Project DISCOVERER (satellite); ARGUS nuclear tests; public
information; OCB. Principal Correspondents: Arno H. Luehman; Philip J. Farley; Murray Snyder; Edward
N. Parker; Joseph I. Coffey; Gerald D. Morgan. 0155 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (6) [May–July 1959]. 40pp.
Major Topics: Monkeys in flight; guided missiles; National Aeronautics and Space Council–OCB relations; space programs; presidential space speech preparation.
Principal Correspondents: W. M. Holaday; Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.; William H. Godel.
0195 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (7) [August 1959]. 66pp. Major Topics: International scientific cooperation proposals; satellite communications;
Project Barnstable (communications). Principal Correspondents: Joseph I. Coffey; David Z. Beckler; W. E. Morrow.
0261 Space, Satellites, Rockets, etc. (8) [September 1959–October 1960]. 29pp. Major Topics: Soviet and U.S. rocket and satellite research; Soviet-U.S. scientific
cooperation; SAMOS launch. Principal Correspondents: Homer E. Newell Jr.; Joseph I. Coffey; Karl G. Harr Jr.;
Gordon Gray. 0290 Spain [December 1957–December 1959]. 9pp.
Major Topics: U.S.-Spain relations; West Africa. Principal Correspondent: R. V. Mrozinski.
0299 Speeches, Seminars, etc. (1) [October–December 1960]. 66pp. Major Topics: OCB and national security policy speech; U.S. Naval War College
history and courses. Principal Correspondents: Bernard L. Austin; Karl G. Harr Jr.; K. L. Davis; Thomas L.
Harrold. 0365 Speeches, Seminars, etc. (2) [March–September 1960]. 55pp.
Major Topics: Invitations; Tenth Pacific Science Congress; national strategy paper; foreign relations.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: Harold J. Coolidge; William W. Quinn; Wilber M. Brucker; K. L. Davis; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Murray D. Lincoln; Jarred V. Crabb; Adrian St. John II; Albert B. Hudes; Hal Hardenbergh; William P. Ennis Jr.; L. L. Lemnitzer.
0420 Speeches, Seminars, etc. (3) [September 1957–April 1960]. 45pp. Major Topics: Project MAN (Army information); National War College invitations. Principal Correspondents: John W. Nason; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Wilber M. Brucker; Frank
R. Barnett; Joseph R. Russ; Hallock Hoffman; James E. Mooney; Harvey Wheeler; Thomas L. Harrold; F. E. Calhoun.
0465 Summit [April 1960]. 12pp. Major Topics: Disarmament; foreign relations. Principal Correspondent: Livingston T. Merchant.
0477 Taiwan & GRC [June 1957–June 1960]. 20pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy and aid to Taiwan; offshore islands. Principal Correspondents: Edwin F. Black; Marion W. Boggs.
0497 Third World Congress Against Atomic & Hydrogen Bombs—Tokyo [July–August 1957]. 8pp.
Principal Correspondents: Fisher Howe; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Neilson C. Debevoise.
0505 Turkey [January 1958–June 1960]. 10pp. Major Topic: U.S. policy toward Turkey. Principal Correspondents: Ridgway B. Knight; Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0515 Underdeveloped Areas (1) [May–August 1959]. 58pp. Major Topics: Food production aid; education and aid to Pakistan and Colombia. Principal Correspondents: Clarence Francis; Max Myers; Don Paarlberg; Karl G. Harr
Jr.; Joseph R. Jacyno; Oliver Popenoe; Vincent P. Rock; Kenneth P. Landon; Joseph I. Coffey; Morris L. Ernst.
0573 Underdeveloped Areas (2) [March 1957–June 1959]. 105pp. Major Topics: Food production aid; Meals for Millions program; Indian recipes;
multipurpose (fortified) food. Principal Correspondents: Vincent P. Rock; Ernest R. Chamberlain; P. S. Deshmukh;
Richard M. Nixon; Conger Reynolds. 0678 Weapons & Technological Field (1) [October 1957–February 1958]. 31pp.
Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. cooperation; nuclear rocket propulsion; nuclear-powered airplane.
Principal Correspondents: Donald A. Quarles; John W. Townsend Jr. 0709 Weapons & Technological Field (2) [December 1957]. 64pp.
Major Topics: Soviet and U.S. solar energy and water desalinization research; Soviet and U.S. deep drilling capabilities; U.S. defense capabilities promotion.
Principal Correspondent: Alan T. Waterman. 0773 Weapons & Technological Field (3) [October–December 1957]. 59pp.
Major Topic: U.S. defense capabilities promotion. Principal Correspondents: Richard Hirsch; William J. Bohnaker; Elmer B. Staats;
Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Manning H. Williams. 0832 West Indies [September 1960]. 6pp. 0838 White House Emergency Plan (WHEP) [May 1957]. 4pp. 0842 World Situation. 7pp.
Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. relations; foreign relations. Principal Correspondent: Dana B. Durand.
0849 Yugoslavia [December 1958–July 1960]. 19pp. Major Topic: U.S. policy toward Yugoslavia.
Frame No.
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Special Assistant Subjects 0868 Agriculture, Department of (1) [November 1953–July 1958]. 49pp.
Major Topic: U.S.-France agricultural surplus and strategic materials barter. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; R. Keith Kane; Henry J. Leir; L. B. Taylor;
Edward R. Gray. 0917 Agriculture, Department of (2) [November 1953–July 1958]. 46pp.
Major Topics: Land use and conservation; agricultural aid; Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act of 1954; U.S.-France agricultural surplus and strategic materials barter.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Henry J. Leir. 0963 AEC (Atomic Energy Commission)—Development of High Yield Thermonuclear
Weapon (1) [1952–1957]. 31pp. Major Topic: Atomic weapons policy and projects. Principal Correspondents: David Z. Beckler; James S. Lay Jr.
Reel 22 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 AEC (Atomic Energy Commission)—Development of High Yield Thermonuclear Weapon (2) [1952–1957]. 25pp.
Major Topic: Political considerations. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0026 Atomic Energy Commission—General (1) [January–May 1953]. 38pp. Major Topics: Nuclear tests; weapons custody; personnel decisions. Principal Correspondents: Lewis L. Strauss; Gordon Dean; Robert Cutler; W. M.
Fechteler; James C. Hagerty. 0064 Atomic Energy Commission—General (2) [June–October 1953]. 23pp.
Major Topics: Presidential speech draft; Soviet and U.S. nuclear weapons development.
Principal Correspondents: Arthur Radford; Sterling Cole; Thomas E. Murray. 0087 Atomic Energy Commission—General (3) [January–September 1954]. 23pp.
Major Topics: Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program; U.S. nuclear weapons development.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Lewis L. Strauss; Donald A. Quarles; Elmer B. Staats.
0110 Atomic Energy Commission—General (4) [1955]. 28pp. Major Topics: Soviet nuclear tests; nuclear weapons development. Principal Correspondents: Dillon Anderson; James S. Lay Jr.; Elmer B. Staats; James
R. Killian Jr.; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Dean Rusk. 0138 Atomic Energy Commission—General (5) [July 1956]. 144pp.
Major Topics: Atomic Energy programs; international cooperation; private atomic energy industry; reactor development; education and training; medical research; AEC personnel and regulations.
0282 Atomic Energy Commission—General (6) [1956–1957]. 38pp. Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. relations; nuclear weapons. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; John H. Morse Jr.; Paul F. Foster; Charles
E. Wilson; Herbert Scoville Jr.; James S. Lay Jr.; Andrew J. Goodpaster. 0320 Atomic Energy Commission—General (7) [1958]. 26pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear material detection; super bomb.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: John A. McCone; J. R. Oppenheimer; Gordon Gray; John H. Morse Jr.
0346 Atomic Energy Commission—General (8) [January–February 1959]. 11pp. 0357 Atomic Energy Commission—General (9) [March 1959]. 52pp.
Major Topics: Radioactive fallout; foreign relations; limited war. Principal Correspondent: John H. Morse Jr.
0409 Atomic Energy Commission—General (10) [April 1959]. 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0412 Atomic Energy Commission—General (11) [April 1959–December 1960]. 32pp. Major Topics: Government-press relations; Belgian Congo uranium; nuclear tests. Principal Correspondents: Jesse C. Johnson; John A. McCone; John H. Morse Jr.;
Alfred D. Starbird. 0444 Baker Panel (ODM Science Advisory Committee) [May 1957–July 1958]. 17pp.
Major Topic: Special intelligence panel. Principal Correspondents: J. Patrick Coyne; Gordon Gray.
0461 Budget Bureau (1) [January 1957–June 1960]. 66pp. Major Topics: General Charles de Gaulle visit; U.S. foreign aid programs; Sino-Soviet
Economic Offensive; U.S. and Soviet budgets; DOD organization and needs. Principal Correspondents: Ralph W. E. Reid; Donald A. Quarles; Robert Cutler.
0527 Budget Bureau (2) [June 1959–December 1960]. 61pp. Major Topic: MATS costs and capabilities. Principal Correspondent: Maurice H. Stans.
0588 Budget—Federal (1) [October 1953–September 1954]. 35pp. Major Topics: National cold war strategy; U.S. and DOD budgets. Principal Correspondents: Elmer B. Staats; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0623 Budget—Federal (2) [1955]. 48pp. Major Topics: U.S. budget; NSC activities coordination; presidential appointments. Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Robert Cutler;
T. B. Koons. 0671 Budget—Federal (3) [February 1956–July 1958]. 37pp.
Major Topics: NSC; budget setting; presidential press conference. Principal Correspondents: Robert H. Johnson; Robert Cutler; Gerard C. Smith;
Lawrence Curtis; Rowland Hughes. 0708 Central Intelligence Agency (1) [August 1955–February 1958]. 33pp.
Major Topics: Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive; Guatemala political situation; CIA charter.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Dillon Anderson; Allen W. Dulles. 0741 Central Intelligence Agency (2) [March 1958–April 1959]. 33pp.
Major Topics: Soviet science developments; public information; world reaction to nuclear use.
Principal Correspondents: Ralph Daigh; Allen W. Dulles; Robert Cutler; Gordon Gray. 0774 Central Intelligence Agency (3) [May 1959–February 1960]. 22pp.
Major Topic: Soviet submarines. Principal Correspondents: Allen W. Dulles; Gordon Gray.
0796 Central Intelligence Agency (4) [March–December 1960]. 48pp. Major Topic: Brazilian communist delegation visits to China and Soviet bloc. Principal Correspondent: Gordon Gray.
0844 Civil Aeronautics Administration [July 1957–September 1959]. 43pp. Major Topics: Aeroflot aircraft; Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938; executive orders.
Frame No.
48
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Malcolm R. Wilkey; Roger W. Jones; James R. Durfee.
0887 Civil and Defense Mobilization, Office of (1) [April 1957–June 1958]. 61pp. Major Topics: Current problems; government reorganization; overseas radio
broadcasting facilities; Mallory transistor. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0948 Civil and Defense Mobilization, Office of (2) [July 1958]. 49pp. Major Topics: Government loans; pipeline companies; petroleum study. Principal Correspondents: Paul Ryan; Gordon Gray; Leo A. Hoegh; Joseph C.
O’Mahoney; Mary Jane Morris; Robert L. Finley.
Reel 23 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 Civil and Defense Mobilization, Office of (3) [August 1958–April 1959]. 34pp. Major Topic: Petroleum study. Principal Correspondents: George Weber; Leo A. Hoegh; Dillon Anderson; Morgan J.
Davis. 0035 Civil and Defense Mobilization, Office of (4) [May 1959–October 1960]. 59pp.
Major Topics: DOD fallout shelter policy; strategic stockpile data; democracy and government.
Principal Correspondents: Leo A. Hoegh; Gordon Gray; C. Ken Weidner. 0094 Code of Conduct Program (Defense) (1) [August 1955]. 50pp.
Major Topics: Prisoners of war; Korean War and historical POWs; POW codes. Principal Correspondent: Charles E. Wilson.
0144 Code of Conduct Program (Defense) (2) [July–November 1955]. 64pp. Major Topics: POW; Korean War and historical POWs; POW code. Principal Correspondent: Charles E. Wilson.
0208 Code of Conduct Program (Defense) (3) [September 1955–January 1956]. 97pp. Major Topics: POW code education and training; Korean and historical POWs; POW
interrogation; POWs and Chinese communism; POWs newspaper stories. Principal Correspondents: Carter L. Burgess; Charles E. Wilson; David W.
Wainhouse; Joseph D. Stecher; David F. Schlothauer; Bernard Weitzer. 0305 Code of Conduct Program (Defense) (4) [August 1955–March 1956]. 163pp.
Major Topics: POW code education and training; Korean POWs; foreign relations; court-martial cases; thank-you notes; Militant Liberty program; press clippings; reactions to Code of Conduct; POW claims; military speeches; Armed Forces Day 1956.
Principal Correspondents: Carter L. Burgess; Reuben B. Robertson Jr.; Livingston T. Merchant; Maxwell D. Taylor; Charles E. Wilson; Whitney Gillilland; John E. Murphy.
0468 Code of Conduct Program (Defense) (5) [April 1956–April 1957]. 65pp. Major Topics: POW code education and training; Code of an American Mother; court-
martial cases; press clippings; public information. Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Carter L. Burgess; Gynther Storaasli.
0533 Commerce, Department of [August 1957–December 1958]. 6pp. Major Topic: Unclassified government information sales. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0539 Commission on Government Security [June–November 1957]. 23pp. Major Topic: Wright Commission report (government security programs). Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; J. Patrick Coyne; Charles A. Haskins.
Frame No.
49
0562 Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government (1) [March–August 1955]. 52pp.
Major Topics: Defense planning; defense procurement policy and process. Principal Correspondents: William T. Golden; Dillon Anderson; Robert Cutler.
0614 Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government (2) [June 1955]. 102pp.
Major Topics: Defense procurement policies; NSC; Joint Chiefs of Staff. 0716 Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government (3) [June
1955]. 77pp. Major Topics: Defense procurement policies; government contracts; inventory control.
0793 Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government (4) [January–February 1956]. 40pp.
Major Topics: CIA; DOD; military and atomic energy intelligence activities; NSA. Principal Correspondents: Dillon Anderson; J. Patrick Coyne.
0833 Committees, Interdepartmental—General [September 1954–March 1957]. 25pp. Major Topics: NSC; foreign economic policy and committees; Agricultural Trade
Development and Assistance Act of 1954. Principal Correspondents: Elmer B. Staats; Robert H. Johnson; Dwight D.
Eisenhower; Robert Murphy. 0858 [Consultants to JCS] [August–December 1953]. 15pp.
Major Topics: Military strength; consultants list. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Arthur Radford; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0873 Council of Economic Advisors [January 1956–April 1957]. 4pp. Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Dillon Anderson.
0877 Council [Committee] for Economic Development (1) [March–May 1960]. 63pp. Major Topics: Labor policy study; Soviet economists’ U.S. visit; Soviet image of U.S.
economy; Soviet-U.S. relations. Principal Correspondents: Stefan H. Robock; Karl Schriftgiesser.
0940 Council [Committee] for Economic Development (2) [March–May 1960]. 44pp. Major Topics: Foreign and national economic information program; budget;
educators’ views of Council for Economic Development publications. Principal Correspondents: Alfred C. Neal; William C. Stolk.
0984 Council on Foreign Economic Policy (1) [January 1957–May 1958]. 23pp. Major Topics: Overseas private investment tax incentive; foreign economic policy. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Robert H. Johnson; Clarence B. Randall;
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Reel 24 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 Council on Foreign Economic Policy (2) [May–June 1958]. 39pp. Major Topics: U.S. African economic policy; African economic survey. Principal Correspondent: Clarence B. Randall.
0040 Covert Acquisition of Strategic Intelligence Information (1) [April–August 1954]. 12pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0052 Covert Acquisition of Strategic Intelligence Information (2) [April–August 1954]. 21pp. [Documents removed by library.]
Frame No.
50
0073 Covert Acquisition of Strategic Intelligence Information (3) [April–August 1954]. 24pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0097 Defense Budget, FY 1961 (1). 32pp. 0129 Defense Budget, FY 1961 (2). 42pp.
Major Topic: Military personnel and equipment costs. 0171 Department of Defense (1) [March 1953–October 1957]. 26pp.
Major Topics: U.S. military program; NSC; military personnel ceilings; German infantry division costs.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Charles E. Wilson. 0197 Department of Defense (2) [November 1957–November 1958]. 50pp.
Major Topics: Military and navy budgets; High Voltage Engineering Corporation; U.S. policy and aid to the Middle East; IGY projects.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas S. Gates; Robert Cutler; Donald A. Quarles; John N. Irwin II; Ralph W. E. Reid.
0247 Department of Defense (3) [November 1958–January 1959]. 31pp. Major Topics: Foreign manpower; DOD aircraft program; forecasts and analysis of
U.S. at war. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Hadyn Williams; Charles A. Haskins.
0278 Department of Defense (4) [February–September 1959]. 43pp. Major Topics: DOD; army reserves; World Congress of Flight; Cold War Advisory
Panel projects; Soviet and U.S. nuclear capabilities. Principal Correspondents: Donald A. Quarles; Ralph A. Palladino; C. H. Bonesteel III;
Joseph I. Coffey; Albert L. Cox Jr.; Robert Dechert; Gordon Gray; George V. Allen; Arleigh Burke.
0321 Department of Defense (5) [October 1959–April 1960]. 32pp. Major Topics: State of the DOD; Ballistic Missile Early Warning System; chemical and
biological weapons. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Thomas S. Gates; James H. Douglas;
Herbert F. York; Robert Kastenmeier; Larry J. Henderson Jr. 0353 Department of Defense (6) [May–November 1960]. 52pp.
Major Topics: Biological and chemical weapons; public information; POLARIS submarines; Ballistic Missile Early Warning System; Industrial Defense Program; tanks.
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Charles A. Haskins; Thomas S. Gates; Perkins McGuire; R. W. Colglazier Jr.
0405 Office of Defense Mobilization [December 1955–March 1958]. 9pp. Major Topic: Federal buildings. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Dillon Anderson; William Y. Elliott.
0414 Disarmament—General (1955–56) (1). 34pp. Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; disarmament policy proposals; foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: William H. Jackson; Dillon Anderson; Ralph E. Flanders;
Theodore C. Streibert; John Foster Dulles. 0448 Disarmament—General (1955–56) (2). 28pp.
Major Topics: U.S. armament control policy; foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: Lewis L. Strauss; T. B. Koons; S. Everett Gleason.
0476 Disarmament—General (1955–56) (3). 35pp. Major Topics: U.S. disarmament policy; Soviet-U.S. arms relations; UN. Principal Correspondents: Harold E. Stassen; T. B. Koons; Dillon Anderson; Robert
Cutler.
Frame No.
51
0511 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1955–56) (1). 60pp. Major Topics: U.S. armament control policy and plan; Soviet arms reduction; nuclear
weapons; Soviet-U.S. arms relations. Principal Correspondents: Charles E. Wilson; Harold E. Stassen; Dwight D.
Eisenhower; Herbert Hoover Jr.; Dillon Anderson. 0571 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1955–56) (2). 100pp.
Major Topics: UN atomic energy control plan; nuclear weapons; arms control and inspection; international cooperation; Soviet arms.
0671 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1955–56) (3). 75pp. Major Topics: Four-Power arms control paper; foreign relations; nuclear weapons;
reaction to possible Soviet arms reduction. 0746 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1955–56) (4). 64pp.
Major Topics: U.S. disarmament policy; Four-Power arms control declaration; Soviet-U.S. arms relations; USSR arms control proposal; foreign relations.
Principal Correspondent: Amos J. Peasles. 0810 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1955–56) (5). 44pp.
Major Topics: U.S. disarmament policy; Soviet-U.S. arms relations; arms inspection. Principal Correspondents: Lewis L. Strauss; Reuben B. Robertson Jr.; Harold E.
Stassen; Dwight D. Eisenhower; John Foster Dulles; Arthur Radford. 0854 Disarmament—General (1957) (1). 20pp.
Major Topics: U.S. nuclear tests policy; Soviet-U.S. arms relations. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0874 Disarmament—General (1957) (2). 37pp. Major Topics: Arms inspection; U.S. disarmament policy. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; John Foster Dulles; Bromley Smith.
0911 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1957) (1). 61pp. Major Topics: U.S. disarmament policy; foreign relations.
0972 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1957) (2). 43pp. Major Topics: UN disarmament agreement; arms inspection zones. Principal Correspondents: Allen W. Dulles; Robert Amory Jr.
Reel 25 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 Disarmament—Basic Papers (1957) (3). 57pp. Major Topic: U.S. disarmament policy. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Allen W. Dulles; Bromley Smith; Lewis L.
Strauss. 0058 Disarmament—General (1958) (1). 24pp.
Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. relations; nuclear testing; UN military forces. Principal Correspondents: Robert E. Matteson; Abbott Washburn; Bromley Smith.
0082 Disarmament—General (1958) (2). 22pp. Major Topics: Foreign relations; U.S. disarmament policy. Principal Correspondent: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.
0104 Disarmament—General (1959) (1). 52pp. Major Topics: Disarmament research; Soviet-U.S. arms relations. Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Charles A. Coolidge; Lewis C. Bohn;
Gordon Gray. 0156 Disarmament—General (1959) (2). 36pp.
Major Topics: Comparison of U.S. and foreign disarmament positions; disarmament research.
Frame No.
52
Principal Correspondents: Marion W. Boggs; A. Sidney Buford III; Charles A. Haskins; Philip J. Halla; Samuel E. Belk; Christian A. Herter; Gordon Gray; John A. McCone.
0192 Disarmament—General (1959) (3). 34pp. Major Topics: Comparison of U.S. and foreign disarmament positions; international
disarmament procedure. 0226 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. I
(1). 68pp. Major Topics: Armament and armed forces inspection system; surprise Soviet attack;
Army U.S. Inspection Organization. 0294 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. I
(2). 69pp. Major Topics: Surprise Soviet attack; Soviet naval capabilities; naval inspections.
0363 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. I (3). 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0366 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. I (4). 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0369 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. I (5). 4pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0373 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. I (6). 15pp.
Major Topic: Electric power and steel industry inspection forces. 0388 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. II
(1). 35pp. Major Topic: Nuclear stockpiles and inspections.
0423 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. II (2). 41pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear inspections; concealed nuclear weapons detection. 0464 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces. (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. II
(3). 34pp. Major Topics: Fissionable material; nuclear inspections.
0498 Disarmament Study Reports by Task Forces (October 1955–January 1956). Vol. III 3pp. [Documents removed by library.]
0501 Elliott, William Y (1) [August–November 1956]. 25pp. Major Topics: NSC expenditures; fiscal policy.
0526 Elliott, William Y (2) [November 1956]. 51pp. Major Topic: Executive-congressional relations.
0577 Elliott, William Y (3) [December 1956–September 1957]. 69pp. Major Topics: NSC programs; executive-congressional relations; government
organization and foreign policy. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Charles A. Haskins; Bromley Smith.
0646 Elliott, William Y (4) [June 1958]. 46pp. Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. relations; international education assistance; limited war;
foreign relations.
Frame No.
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0692 Elliott, William Y (5) [December 1958–February 1959]. 39pp. Major Topics: NSC programs and policy; fiscal policy; Military Assistance Program. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; S. Everett Gleason; William Y. Elliott.
0731 Elliott, William Y (6) [May 1959–October 1960]. 40pp. Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; Foreign Policy Research Institute; nuclear
explosions for conservation use. 0771 Federal Communications Commission Microwave Frequency [July–August 1957].
7pp. Major Topic: Radio waves. Principal Correspondent: Gordon Gray.
0778 Foreign Missions [July 1956]. 4pp. Principal Correspondent: Dillon Anderson.
0782 Helium [June–July 1957]. 6pp. Principal Correspondents: Robert H. Johnson; James S. Lay Jr.
0788 International Cooperation Administration (ICA) [February 1957–August 1960]. 8pp. Major Topics: Radio waves; foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: James W. Riddleberger; Gordon Gray; Robert Cutler.
0796 ICA—International Economic Corps for Peace [December 1957]. 7pp. Major Topic: Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive. Principal Correspondent: James H. Smith Jr.
0803 Justice Department (1) [June–November 1953]. 46pp. Major Topics: Information security; NSC membership of the attorney general. Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; Robert Cutler; J. Patrick Coyne;
Herbert Brownell Jr.; J. Edgar Hoover. 0849 Justice Department (2) [April 1954–January 1958]. 46pp.
Major Topics: Foreign visitors to chambers of commerce; presidential succession law; Freedom of Information Committee; public information.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; William E. Foley; Dwight Havens; Herbert Brownell Jr.; Stephen Lovas; J. Patrick Coyne; J. R. Wiggins.
0895 Labor, Department of [July 1959–March 1960]. 35pp. Major Topics: Foreign trade unions; U.S. foreign labor policy. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; James Mitchell; Christian A. Herter.
0930 [Briefing Papers re. Macmillan Talks] (1) [March 1959]. 46pp. Major Topics: Comparison of U.S. and foreign disarmament positions; nuclear
testing; German reunification.
Reel 26 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 [Briefing Papers re. Macmillan Talks] (2) [March 1959]. 50pp. Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. relations on Germany; USSR–German Democratic
Republic peace treaty; foreign relations; Berlin. 0051 Memos for the Record (1) [August 1958–September 1960]. 22pp.
Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Africa; nuclear development and disarmament. Principal Correspondent: Gordon Gray.
0073 Memos for the Record (2) [January–December 1959]. 53pp. Major Topics: Foreign policy and relations; Soviet-U.S. relations. Principal Correspondent: Gordon Gray.
0126 Memos for the Record (3) [January 1960–January 1961]. 37pp. Major Topics: OCB; U-2 incident; Antarctic programs and funding; Soviet and U.S.
nuclear capabilities.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Andrew J. Goodpaster; Maurice H. Stans; Elmer B. Staats.
0163 Murray (Commissioner of AEC). Correspondence—General and Personal (1) [November 1956–July 1957]. 18pp.
Major Topics: Morality of warfare; nuclear weapons. Principal Correspondents: Lewis L. Strauss; Thomas E. Murray.
0181 Murray (Commissioner of AEC). Correspondence—General and Personal (2) [November 1956–July 1957]. 52pp.
Major Topics: Morality of warfare; nuclear weapons. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Thomas E. Murray.
0233 Murray (Commissioner of AEC). Correspondence—General and Personal (3) [November 1956–July 1957]. 48pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons and disarmament; industrial nuclear power; foreign relations.
Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler. 0281 Mutual Security Program (1) [March 1957]. 31pp. 0312 Mutual Security Program (2) [March 1957]. 45pp.
Major Topics: U.S. foreign economic development aid; MSP. Principal Correspondents: Eric Johnston; Clarence B. Randall; Ralph W. E. Reid.
0357 Mutual Security Program (3) [March 1957]. 47pp. Major Topics: International Development Advisory Board; U.S. foreign economic
development aid; national security policies. Principal Correspondents: John B. Hollister; Robert H. Johnson; Robert Cutler; C. D.
Jackson; Charles A. Haskins; George Weber. 0404 Mutual Security Program (4) [March 1957]. 42pp.
Major Topics: MSP review; U.S. aid to foreign economic development. Principal Correspondents: George Weber; Ralph W. E. Reid.
0446 National Aeronautics and Space Administration [July 1958–March 1959]. 29pp. Major Topics: National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958; National Aeronautics and
Space Council; NASA. Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Gordon Gray; William A. Korns;
T. Keith Glennan; Richard Hirsch; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Robert Cutler. 0475 National Freedom Board (Proposed) [March 1957–April 1958]. 22pp.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Charles A. Haskins; Elmer B. Staats. 0497 National Science Foundation (1) [1953]. 62pp.
Major Topic: Government funding for science research and development. Principal Correspondent: Alan T. Waterman.
0559 National Science Foundation (2) [NSF 6th Annual Report, 1956]. 111pp. Major Topics: Government funding for science research and development; Soviet
science; IGY; science manpower; science conferences; National Science Foundation Fellowship recipients.
Principal Correspondents: Detlev W. Bronk; Alan T. Waterman. 0670 National Science Foundation (3) [1957–1958]. 29pp.
Major Topics: Solar energy; water desalinization; deep drilling; Soviet research. Principal Correspondent: Alan T. Waterman.
0699 National Security Agency [January 1957–July 1959]. 18pp. 0717 National War College [1957–1958]. 101pp.
Major Topics: Curricula; foreign relations; Middle Eastern and African countries; national security policies.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Elmer B. Staats; Albert L. Cox Jr.; E. T. Wooldridge.
0818 NATO Meeting—December 1957 (1). 41pp. Major Topics: U.S.-NATO relations; nuclear weapons; U.S.-UK Declaration of
Common Purpose. Principal Correspondents: William H. Draper Jr.; Robert Cutler; H. Macmillan.
0859 NATO Meeting—December 1957 (2). 63pp. Major Topics: International cooperation on science, weapons development, and
atomic energy; presidential speech on science in national security; foreign relations.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Elwood R. Quesada.
Reel 27 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 NATO Meeting—December 1957 (3). 239pp. Major Topics: Foreign policy and relations; Soviet and U.S. foreign economic aid;
colonialism; foreign private investment; Soviet policies and development; China; Soviet science; military aid; limited war; Suez Canal crisis; anticommunism efforts.
0240 NATO Ministerial Meeting—1958 and 1959. 13pp. Major Topics: Soviet-U.S. relations; NATO-U.S. relations.
0253 Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy—Special Assistant ([Lewis L.] Strauss) [June 1958]. 4pp.
0257 Princeton Study Group (C. D. Jackson)—Foreign Economic Policy [April–August 1954] (1). 35pp.
Major Topics: China; Chinese UN membership; foreign aid and relations. Principal Correspondents: Bromley Smith; Walt W. Rostow; C. D. Jackson.
0292 Princeton Study Group (C. D. Jackson)—Foreign Economic Policy [April–August 1954] (2). 44pp.
Major Topics: Foreign economic aid and policy; anticommunism efforts. 0336 Princeton Study Group (C. D. Jackson)—Foreign Economic Policy [April–August
1954] (3). 40pp. Major Topic: Foreign economic aid and policy.
0376 Quesada, Elwood R.—Special Assistant to the President [June–October 1958]. 63pp.
Major Topics: Airline Equipment Investment Program; aircraft and aerospace industry.
Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Elwood R. Quesada. 0439 Science Advisory Committee (1) [June 1954–March 1955]. 28pp.
Major Topic: Government security clearance. Principal Correspondents: Lee A. DuBridge; Arthur S. Fleming; James R. Killian Jr.
0467 Science Advisory Committee (2) [June 1955–February 1957]. 45pp. Major Topics: National security expenditures; foreign scientists; government
organization; U.S. scientific coordination. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; George Weber; David Z. Beckler; Isidor I.
Rabi; Lee A. DuBridge; James S. Lay Jr.; Nelson A. Rockefeller; Harry S. Truman.
Frame No.
56
0512 Science Advisory Committee (3) [March–October 1957]. 51pp. Major Topics: Missile expenditures; U.S. scientific coordination; weapons
development study. Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Robert Cutler; George Weber; Isidor I.
Rabi. 0563 Science Advisory Committee (4) [November 1957–April 1959]. 55pp.
Major Topics: U.S. scientific coordination; government organization; government security clearance; ICBM; guided missiles.
Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; J. Patrick Coyne; Robert Cutler. 0618 Science Advisory Committee (5) [May–June 1959]. 44pp.
Major Topics: Science and engineering education; ARGUS nuclear tests. 0662 Science and Research—General (1) [March–April 1953]. 46pp.
Major Topics: National science advice; NSC; government and science. Principal Correspondents: Lewis L. Strauss; Ralph L. Clark; Robert Cutler; Hugh D.
Farley; Lee A. DuBridge. 0708 Science and Research—General (2) [May 1953–March 1954]. 50pp.
Major Topics: U.S. scientific coordination; National Science Foundation; Soviet scientific and technological manpower; research and development expenditures; national science advisers.
Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; Joseph M. Dodge; Robert Cutler; Lee A. DuBridge; Van Bush.
0758 Science and Research—General (3) [December 1954–January 1959]. 56pp. Major Topics: Underground nuclear explosions; Science for Peace; outer space;
scientists and engineers development. Principal Correspondents: Karl G. Harr Jr.; Elmer B. Staats; Maurice H. Stans; Abbott
Washburn; Milton S. Eisenhower. 0814 Science and Research—General (4) [February–March 1959]. 3pp.
[Documents removed by library.] 0817 Science and Research—General (5) [February–March 1959]. 40pp.
Major Topics: X-ray radiation of stars; telemetry. 0857 Science and Research—General (6) [March 1959]. 46pp.
Major Topics: Seismology; underground nuclear explosions; ballistic missiles early warning system.
Principal Correspondent: James R. Killian Jr. 0903 Science and Research—General (7) [March–September 1959]. 10pp.
Major Topics: U.S.-USSR cooperative science project; seismology. 0913 Science and Research—General (8) [March 1959]. 46pp.
Major Topic: Seismology. 0959 Science and Research—General (9) [March 1959]. 43pp.
Major Topics: Seismology; nuclear tests.
Reel 28 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 Science and Research—General (10) [March 1959]. 50pp. Major Topics: Numerical techniques; seismology.
0051 Science and Research—General (11) [March 1959]. 34pp. Major Topics: Seismology; nuclear test detection.
0085 Science and Research—General (12) [March 1959]. 53pp. Major Topics: Seismology; deep hole detection.
Frame No.
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0138 Science and Technology, Special Assistant to the President (1) [November 1957–January 1959]. 21pp.
Major Topics: Panel on Seismic Improvement; geophysics. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; James S. Lay Jr.
0159 Science and Technology, Special Assistant to the President (2) [March–May 1959]. 21pp.
Major Topics: High-altitude detection; guided missiles; Federal Council for Science and Technology.
Principal Correspondents: George B. Kistiakowsky; James R. Killian Jr.; John A. McCone; Gordon Gray.
0180 Science and Technology, Special Assistant to the President (3) [May–June 1959]. 26pp.
Major Topics: U.S. disarmament policy; nuclear inspections; public information. Principal Correspondents: Dwight D. Eisenhower; James R. Killlian Jr.
0206 Science and Technology, Special Assistant to the President (4) [July 1959–July 1960]. 35pp.
Major Topics: Seismology; James R. Killian’s remarks on government and science. Principal Correspondent: George B. Kistiakowsky.
0241 Security (1) [October 1953–October 1958]. 40pp. Major Topics: Foreign relations; public information; information security; government
and the press. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Charles J. V.
Murphy; Hugh D. Farley. 0281 Security (2) [October 1953–October 1958]. 33pp.
Major Topics: Classified NSC information; oil pipeline; information security; government and the press.
Principal Correspondents: James S. Lay Jr.; Dillon Anderson; Robert Cutler. 0314 Security (3) [October 1953–October 1958]. 22pp.
Major Topic: Classified security information. Principal Correspondents: Dillon Anderson; Lewis L. Strauss; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0336 Soldier Voting (1) [1952–1955]. 131pp. Major Topics: Voting rights and laws; armed forces voting behavior; states’ voting
procedures. 0467 Soldier Voting (2) [1952–1955]. 68pp.
Major Topics: State absentee voter requirements; voting rights and legislation; Federal Voting Assistance Act of 1955.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; J. F. C. Hyde Jr.; Roger W. Jones. 0535 Soldier Voting (3) [1952–1955]. 53pp.
Major Topics: Voting legislation; state absentee voter requirements; Federal Voting Assistance Act of 1955.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; John B. Murphy; Bernard M. Shanley; Dwight D. Eisenhower.
0588 Soldier Voting (4) [1952–1955]. 54pp. Major Topics: State absentee voter requirements; Federal Voting Assistance Act of
1955; voting rights and legislation. Principal Correspondents: Henry A. Du Flon; Robert Cutler; Franklin D. Roosevelt;
Francis Biddle. 0642 Soldier Voting (5) [1952–1955]. 67pp.
Major Topics: Federal voting Assistance Program; voting rights and legislation; Federal Voting Assistance Act of 1955.
Frame No.
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Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Michael J. Galvin; Gerald D. Morgan; Bernard M. Shanley.
0709 Soldier Voting (6) [1955–1958]. 26pp. Major Topics: United Service Organizations, Inc.; armed services.
0735 Soldier Voting (7) [1955–1958]. 45pp. Major Topics: Federal Voting Assistance Program; absentee voting brochure; voting
exhibit at Brussels Fair; Federal Voting Assistance Act of 1955. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Stephen S. Jackson; James W. Platt;
James S. Plaut. 0780 Speeches—Official, Dillon Anderson (1) [1955–1956]. 28pp.
Major Topics: National security policy; NSC. 0808 Speeches—Official, Dillon Anderson (2) [1955–1956]. 80pp.
Major Topics: Naval War College; curricula; war planning systems study. Principal Correspondent: T. W. Hogan.
0888 Speeches—Official, Dillon Anderson (3) [1955–1956]. 76pp. Major Topics: National security policy; NSC; OCB; Army War College.
Reel 29 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 Speeches—Official, Dillon Anderson (4) [1955–1956]. 69pp. Major Topics: NSC; National War College courses. Principal Correspondents: Jack H. Griffith; Dillon Anderson.
0070 Staff Memos [February–October 1960]. 51pp. Major Topics: Foreign policy and relations; military budget; Eisenhower speeches on
UN-African relations and outer space; OCB activities; Power Positions Project. Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; Ridgway B. Knight; A. Sidney Buford
III. 0121 State Cables [December 1959–August 1960]. 66pp.
Major Topics: Iranian elections; U.S. aid to Ethiopia; U.S.-Canadian relations; foreign policy and relations; U-2 flight; Soviet embassy in Burma; U.S. embassy in Greece; presidential goodwill trip.
Principal Correspondents: Christian A. Herter; Philip J. Halla; Livingston T. Merchant; William J. Tonesk; Ellis O. Briggs; Gordon Gray; John A. Calhoun.
0187 State Department (1) [January 1956–September 1957]. 52pp. Major Topics: Overseas military personnel; Soviets in the Middle East; effect of Suez
Canal and Soviet-Hungary crises on foreign public opinion. Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; James P. Warburg; Bromley Smith.
0239 State Department (2) [January 1958–July 1959]. 44pp. Major Topics: Possible joint U.S.-UK military planning; John Foster Dulles Library of
Diplomatic History; public information; foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: Robert H. Thayer; Christian A. Herter; Gordon Gray;
William O. Douglas; Peter Riedel; Robert Cutler. 0283 State Department (3) [August 1959–April 1960]. 38pp.
Major Topics: Panama Canal; NSC policy papers; U.S. military magazine article. Principal Correspondents: Christian A. Herter; Livingston T. Merchant; Robert Gray;
Gordon Gray; Gerard C. Smith. 0321 State Department (4) [April–November 1960]. 32pp.
Major Topics: U.S. Disarmament Administration; U.S. summit purposes.
Frame No.
59
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Philip J. Halla; Livingston T. Merchant; Christian A. Herter.
0353 Stockpile [October 1954–January 1956]. 38pp. Major Topics: Minerals policy; stockpile objectives. Principal Correspondent: N. F. Twining.
0391 Strategic Air Command [September 1957–April 1958]. 10pp. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0401 Suez Canal [August 1956]. 72pp. Major Topics: U.S. forces in Europe; Mexican oil production; petroleum traffic;
possible sanctions effect on Egyptian economy; U.S. military response to Suez Canal situation; Suez Canal traffic and capacity.
Principal Correspondents: Dillon Anderson; Gordon W. Reed; Gordon Gray. 0473 Summerfield Project. 4pp. 0477 Telecommunications (1) [February 1958–March 1959]. 48pp.
Major Topics: Radio and television frequencies; radio spectrum allocation study. Principal Correspondents: Leo A. Hoegh; Dwight D. Eisenhower; Gordon Gray;
James R. Killian Jr.; W. R. G. Baker. 0525 Telecommunications (2) [February 1958–March 1959]. 29pp.
Major Topics: Telecommunications Committee; radio spectrum allocation study. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Leo A. Hoegh; James D. Secrest; D. R. Hill.
0554 Telecommunications (3) [February 1958–March 1959]. 65pp. Major Topics: Special Advisory Committee on Telecommunication; military radio
frequencies; radio spectrum allocation study; radio and television frequencies. Principal Correspondents: Leo A. Hoegh; C. P. Milne; Roger W. Jones; Gordon Gray.
0619 Telecommunications (4) [February 1958–March 1959]. 62pp. Major Topics: Radio spectrum allocation study; radio and television frequencies;
National Telecommunications Board. Principal Correspondents: Roger W. Jones; Leo A. Hoegh; Dwight D. Eisenhower;
Gordon Gray; Maurice H. Stans. 0681 Thorium [May–June 1958]. 12pp.
Major Topics: Indian thorium contract; stockpile criteria. Principal Correspondents: Robert H. Johnson; Paul H. Cullen; Don Paarlberg.
0693 Toledo Port (1) [October–December 1958]. 151pp. Major Topics: Port services; transportation systems; freight rates; foreign trade.
0844 Toledo Port (2) [October–December 1958]. 26pp. Major Topics: Supersonic missiles; shipyards.
0870 Toledo Port (3) [October–December 1958]. 34pp. Major Topics: Navy shipyards; St. Lawrence Seaway. Principal Correspondents: D. W. Oberlin; W. W. Knight Jr.; C. O. Triebel.
0904 Trieste [October 1953–November 1954]. 24pp. Major Topics: U.S. military forces deployment; foreign relations. Principal Correspondent: Robert Cutler.
0928 Treasury Department [February 1958–July 1960]. 22pp. Principal Correspondents: John P. Weitzel; Gordon Gray; Fred. C. Scribner;
S. Everett Gleason. 0950 Trips (1) [July 1954]. 46pp.
Major Topics: Overseas military personnel and facilities; European defense capabilities; NATO.
Frame No.
60
Reel 30 Special Assistant Subjects cont.
0001 Trips (2). [August 1956–September 1958]. 46pp. Major Topics: Nuclear test visits; thank-you notes; aircraft carrier trip. Principal Correspondents: John A. McCone; Robert Cutler; Thomas S. Power; J. H.
Doolittle; C.H. Duerfeldt; T. B. Koons; Charles S. Thomas. 0047 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) (1) [February–May 1956]. 87pp.
Major Topics: Vladimir Lenin; Joseph Stalin; Soviet political history; cult of the individual.
Principal Correspondent: Allen W. Dulles. 0134 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) (2) [1956]. 10pp.
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; Frederick Tilney Jr. 0144 Project VELA (detection of nuclear detonations) [September–October 1960]. 4pp.
Principal Correspondents: Charles A. Haskins; A. W. Betts. 0148 Vice President (1) [January 1954–April 1957]. 28pp.
Major Topics: U.S. African policy recommendations; Richard M. Nixon’s impressions of Asian countries.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; Richard M. Nixon. 0176 Vice President (2) [May 1957–May 1958]. 39pp.
Major Topics: U.S. defense efforts overseas; French-African relations; U.S. African policy recommendations.
Principal Correspondents: Robert Cutler; John B. Hollister. 0215 War-Gaming [January 1958–December 1959]. 12pp. 0227 Weapons, Lethal and Non-Lethal—Developments in and Possible Use of [March
1960]. 6pp. 0233 White House Staff Meetings [December 1958–March 1960]. 14pp.
Major Topics: POLARIS missile test; fourth branch of government proposal. Principal Correspondents: Gordon Gray; S. Everett Gleason.
0247 Yemen [August–September 1957]. 11pp. Principal Correspondent: Wallace S. Whittaker.
0258 Basic National Security Policy [October 1955–November 1958]. 69pp. Major Topics: National security policy analysis; U.S. foreign aid and relations; Soviet-
U.S. nuclear and scientific comparisons; U.S. military strategy. Principal Correspondents: George Weber; Karl G. Harr Jr.; Ralph W. E. Reid; Alfred
V. Boerner; William Y. Elliott; F. W. Farrell; Roy M. Melbourne; John H. Morse Jr.; Robert Amory Jr.; Robert E. Matteson.
0327 Limited War in the Nuclear Age [August 1957–October 1958]. 9pp. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; J. P. Clurond; John H. Morse
Jr. 0336 Mutual Security Program [December 1957]. 8pp.
Major Topic: Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive. Principal Correspondent: James H. Smith Jr.
0344 NATO [November–December 1957]. 48pp. Major Topics: U.S.-NATO relations; nuclear weapons; NATO atomic stockpile; guided
missiles; satellites. Principal Correspondents: Frederick M. Dearborn Jr.; Bromley Smith; Ralph W. E.
Reid. 0392 Nuclear Testing [July–October 1958]. 24pp.
Major Topics: Western defense policy; limited war; nuclear tests.
Frame No.
61
Principal Correspondents: C. O. Triebel; Jack H. Morse Jr.; A. W. Buzzard; Gordon Gray.
0416 OCB Progress Reports [April–December 1956]. 11pp. Major Topics: Ceylon; Middle Eastern countries; U.S. foreign relations. Principal Correspondent: Elmer B. Staats.
0427 Scientific and Technical Cooperation (1) [November 1957]. 25pp. Major Topic: NATO Scientific Cooperation Group.
0452 Scientific and Technical Cooperation (2) [November 1957]. 11pp. 0463 Scientific and Technical Cooperation (3) [November–December 1957]. 11pp.
Major Topic: NATO scientific cooperation. Principal Correspondents: Stefan T. Possony; Tracy S. Voorhees.
0474 Security Resources Panel [December 1957]. 17pp. Major Topics: Limited military operations; army, navy, and air force forces; nuclear
weapons. 0491 Surprise Attack [July–September 1958]. 77pp.
Major Topics: Nuclear weapons; guided missiles; attack safeguards; weapons inspection; ICBM; Soviet-U.S. relations.
Principal Correspondents: John E. Hull; John Foster Dulles; James R. Killian Jr.; Philip J. Farley; Donald A. Quarles.
0568 UN Permanent Peace Force [July 1958]. 3pp. 0571 U.S. Policy toward the USSR [October 1957–June 1958]. 19pp.
Principal Correspondents: Ray S. Cline; Bromley Smith; Robert E. Matteson. 0590 U.S. Policy toward Yemen [June–August 1957]. 6pp.
Principal Correspondents: Wallace S. Whittaker; Fraser Wilkins. 0596 Berlin (1) [April–May 1959]. 64pp.
Major Topics: Military and nonmilitary response to Soviet blockade; foreign relations. Principal Correspondents: Douglas Dillon; Gordon Gray.
0660 Berlin (2) [February–April 1959]. 68pp. Major Topics: U.S. policy toward Berlin; German reunification; U.S.-UK relations;
foreign relations; military and nonmilitary response to Soviet blockade; pacific counter-blockade.
Principal Correspondents: Philip J. Halla; James S. Lay Jr.; Christian A. Herter. 0728 Berlin (3) [1959]. 33pp.
Major Topics: German reunification; foreign relations. 0761 Khrushchev Talks, 1959. 6pp.
Major Topic: Dwight D. Eisenhower–Nikita Khrushchev talks.
63
PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENTS INDEX
The following index is a guide to the major correspondents in this microform publication. The first number after each entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which a particular file folder containing correspondence by the person begins. Hence, 17: 0886 refers to the folder that begins at Frame 0886 of Reel 17. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents, arranged in the order in which they appear on the film.
Adair, George P.
17: 0886 Adams, Arthur S.
18: 0863 Adams, Sherman
18: 0137, 0644 Aldrin, Ed
15: 0212 Alex, Ralph P.
19: 0703 Alexander, Henry C.
15: 0460 Allen, George V.
15: 0733; 16: 0099; 17: 0886, 0933; 18: 0644, 0795; 24: 0278
Amory, Robert, Jr. 19: 0817; 24: 0972; 30: 0258
Anderson, Dillon 16: 0970; 18: 0012; 22: 0110, 0708;
23: 0001, 0562, 0793, 0873; 24: 0405, 0414, 0476, 0511; 25: 0778; 28: 0281, 0314; 29: 0001, 0401
Anderson, R. B. 12: 0262
Andrews, Stanley 16: 0376
Armstrong, Frank A., Jr. 18: 0562
Austin, Bernard L. 21: 0299
Baker, W. R. G. 29: 0477
Balsomi, A. 17: 0405
Bane, David M. 16: 0553
Barnett, Frank R. 21: 0420
Bartlett, Frederic P. 19: 0470
Beckler, David Z. 8: 0596; 20: 0972; 21: 0195, 0963;
27: 0467 Belk, Samuel E.
25: 0156 Betts, A. W.
30: 0144 Biddle, Francis
28: 0588 Bishop, Max W.
15: 0803; 19: 0562 Black, Edwin F.
18: 0365; 19: 0470; 21: 0477 Blatt, Joseph D.
7: 0880 Bloch, E. J.
17: 0164 Boerner, Alfred V.
30: 0258 Boeschenstein, Harold
15: 0460
64
Boggs, Marion W. 9: 0176; 21: 0477; 25: 0156
Bohn, Lewis C. 25: 0104
Bohnaker, William J. 20: 0972; 21: 0773
Bonesteel, C. H., III 12: 0459; 24: 0278
Bothwell, Frank E. 17: 0270
Boyer, Francis 19: 0211, 0285
Bradford, Sexton 14: 0785
Bradley, Omar N. 12: 0232, 0262
Brady, Leslie S. 12: 0805; 14: 0438; 15: 0081; 16: 0925;
18: 0795, 0863; 19: 0332 Brendler, Charles
16: 0696 Brennan, William M.
15: 0551 Brent, Joseph L.
15: 0803 Briggs, Ellis O.
29: 0121 Broger, John C.
16: 0847 Bronk, Detlev W.
26: 0559 Brownell, Herbert, Jr.
25: 0803, 0849 Brucker, Wilber M.
20: 0491; 21: 0365, 0420 Brundage, Percival
9: 0514; 11: 0354 Buford, A. Sidney, III
25: 0156; 29: 0070 Burgess, Carter L.
23: 0208, 0305, 0468 Burke, Arleigh
8: 0758; 24: 0278 Burke, J. Vincent, Jr.
16: 0099 Bush, Van
27: 0708 Busick, Ralph R.
16: 0696
Bussey, Donald S. 17: 0368
Buzzard, A. W. 30: 0392
Cabell, C. P. 17: 0839
Calhoun, F. E. 21: 0420
Calhoun, John A. 21: 0045; 29: 0121
Campbell, John C. 12: 0644
Carothers, Neil 21: 0001
Chamberlain, Ernest R. 21: 0573
Chávez, Ignacio 15: 0780
Chesney, Earle D. 18: 0795
Clark, Ralph L. 27: 0662
Cleveland, Robert G. 19: 0562
Cline, Ray S. 19: 0817; 30: 0571
Clurond, J. P. 30: 0327
Coerr, Wymberley 14: 0905
Coffey, Joseph I. 14: 0559, 0604, 0646; 15: 0145, 0460,
0482, 0564, 0675, 0733, 0780, 0965; 16: 0001, 0037, 0099, 0251, 0311, 0376, 0696; 17: 0164, 0317, 0670, 0753, 0787; 18: 0001, 0237, 0273, 0324, 0401, 0495, 0644; 19: 0188, 0253, 0379, 0417, 0470, 0522, 0562, 0703, 0758; 21: 0045, 0079, 0105, 0155, 0195, 0261, 0515; 24: 0278
Cole, Sterling 7: 0707, 0809; 8: 0339; 22: 0064
Colgalzier, R. W., Jr. 24: 0353
Comanduras, Peter D. 16: 0099
Conniff, William J. 14: 0559
65
Conolly, R. L. 12: 0805
Coolidge, Charles A. 25: 0104
Coolidge, Harold J. 21: 0365
Cottrell, Sterling J. 15: 0780, 0803
Cox, Albert L., Jr. 24: 0278; 26: 0717
Coyne, J. Patrick 9: 0155; 15: 0392; 22: 0444; 23: 0539,
0793; 25: 0803, 0849; 27: 0563 Crabb, Jarred V.
21: 0365 Cullen, Paul H.
29: 0681 Curtis, Lawrence
22: 0671 Cutler, Robert
2: 0351; 7: 0571, 0809, 0880; 8: 0186, 0339; 9: 0293, 0329; 11: 0501; 14: 0905; 15: 0333, 0870; 16: 0597, 0813, 0831, 0847; 17: 0001, 0038, 0753; 18: 0495, 0760; 19: 0253, 0285, 0332, 0522; 21: 0868, 0917; 22: 0001, 0026, 0087, 0282, 0461, 0623, 0671, 0708, 0741; 23: 0533, 0539, 0562, 0858, 0984; 24: 0171, 0197, 0476, 0854, 0874; 25: 0001, 0577, 0788, 0803, 0849; 26: 0181, 0233, 0357, 0446, 0475, 0818, 0859; 27: 0467, 0512, 0563, 0662, 0708; 28: 0138, 0241, 0281, 0467, 0535, 0588, 0642, 0735; 29: 0187, 0239, 0391, 0904; 30: 0001, 0148, 0176
Daigh, Ralph 22: 0741
Damon, G. Huntington 16: 0037; 17: 0886; 18: 0760; 19: 0470
Davis, K. L. 21: 0299, 0365
Davis, Morgan J. 23: 0001
Davis, Richard H. 15: 0482
Dean, Gordon 7: 0707, 0778, 0809; 22: 0026
Deane, John R. 12: 0644
Dearborn, Frederick M., Jr. 14: 0438, 0501, 0785, 0825, 0863;
15: 0043, 0212, 0279, 0333, 0392, 0564, 0631, 0803, 0870, 0925; 16: 0001, 0187, 0251, 0282, 0311, 0422, 0535, 0553, 0831, 0847, 0925; 17: 0001, 0038, 0069, 0466, 0629, 0670, 0710, 0839, 0933; 18: 0001, 0045, 0101, 0137, 0365, 0539, 0760, 0795, 0863; 19: 0332, 0417, 0449, 0522, 0562, 0678, 0817; 20: 0972; 21: 0001, 0497, 0505, 0773; 25: 0082; 30: 0327, 0344
Dearborn, Pauline M. 17: 0116
Debevoise, Neilson C. 16: 0282; 18: 0237; 21: 0497
Dechert, Robert 15: 0980; 24: 0278
Deming, Olcott H. 15: 0803; 16: 0553
Deshmukh, P. S. 21: 0573
Dillon, Douglas 9: 0687; 15: 0279; 17: 0933; 19: 0522;
30: 0596 Dillon, Thomas P.
16: 0162 Dodd, Thomas J.
16: 0187 Dodge, Joseph M.
12: 0001; 27: 0708 Doherty, John F.
9: 0155 Doolittle, J. H.
30: 0001 Douglas, James H.
9: 0687; 11: 0888; 24: 0321 Douglas, Jim
13: 0424 Douglas, William O.
29: 0239 Draper, William H., Jr.
16: 0910; 26: 0818 Dryden, Hugh L.
20: 0615
66
DuBridge, Lee A. 27: 0439, 0467, 0662, 0708
Duerfeldt, C. H. 30: 0001
Du Flon, Henry A. 28: 0588
Duke, Angier Biddle 16: 0187; 19: 0285
Dulles, Allen W. 10: 0080; 11: 0379, 0432, 0472, 0501,
0516, 0540, 0569, 0663, 0697, 0734, 0842, 0888; 15: 0980; 18: 0644; 22: 0708, 0741, 0774; 24: 0972; 25: 0001; 30: 0047
Dulles, John Foster 10: 0094; 24: 0414, 0810, 0874;
30: 0491 Dunton, James G.
18: 0562 Durand, Dana B.
21: 0842 Durfee, James R.
22: 0844 Eban, Abba
16: 0535 Edwards, T. I.
15: 0212 Eisenhower, Dwight D.
7: 0638, 0841; 9: 0124, 0155, 0293; 10: 0785; 11: 0540, 0569; 14: 0646; 15: 0081, 0392, 0925; 16: 0910; 17: 0001, 0038; 18: 0273, 0495, 0539, 0562; 19: 0962; 22: 0110, 0588, 0623, 0887; 23: 0833, 0858, 0984; 24: 0511, 0810; 25: 0803; 26: 0446; 27: 0563, 0708; 28: 0180, 0241, 0314, 0535; 29: 0477, 0619
Eisenhower, Milton S. 27: 0758
Eldredge, H. Wentworth 17: 0368
Elliott, William Y. 14: 0501; 15: 0043, 0081, 0212, 0460,
0547; 17: 0753; 18: 0184; 20: 0972; 24: 0405; 25: 0692; 30: 0258
Elsey, George M. 14: 0905
Emerson, William 17: 0270
Emmet, Christopher 16: 0187; 19: 0285
Ennis, William P., Jr. 21: 0365
Ernst, Morris L. 21: 0515
Erskine, G. B. 14: 0646
Ewing, G. A. 15: 0279
Fanelli, Joseph J. 18: 0702
Farley, Hugh D. 27: 0662; 28: 0241
Farley, Philip J. 18: 0237; 20: 0109; 21: 0105; 30: 0491
Farrell, F. W. 30: 0258
Fechteler, W. M. 7: 0739; 22: 0026
Felt, H. D. 18: 0562
Finley, Robert L. 22: 0948
Finucane, Charles C. 18: 0562
Flanders, Ralph E. 24: 0414
Fleishmann, Herbert J. 17: 0001
Fleming, Arthur S. 8: 0186; 10: 0719; 27: 0439
Floberg, John F. 20: 0453
Foley, William E. 25: 0849
Fornia, Lawrence M. 18: 0795
Foster, Paul F. 15: 0212; 16: 0970; 18: 0184, 0237;
22: 0282 Fowler, Cody
18: 0644 Fox, Frederic
14: 0438; 15: 0733; 18: 0795, 0863; 19: 0758
Francis, Clarence 21: 0515
Franke, W. B. 14: 0646
67
Galbreath, C. Edward 14: 0825
Gallup, George 14: 0438
Galvin, Michael J. 28: 0642
Gates, Thomas S. 7: 0411, 0638; 8: 0836; 11: 0842;
13: 0424; 24: 0197, 0321, 0353 Geren, Paul
18: 0863 Gillilland, Whitney
23: 0305 Gladney, D. W.
16: 0001 Gleason, S. Everett
7: 0458; 16: 0847; 24: 0448; 25: 0692; 29: 0928; 30: 0233
Glennan, T. Keith 17: 0368; 19: 0962; 20: 0001, 0109,
0491, 0783; 26: 0446 Godel, William H.
21: 0155 Golden, William T.
23: 0562 Golovin, N. E.
17: 0270 Golwynne, Henry A.
15: 0001 Goodpaster, Andrew J.
10: 0862; 12: 0805; 14: 0646; 17: 0069; 21: 0045; 22: 0282; 26: 0126
Gray, Edward R. 21: 0868
Gray, Gordon 7: 0411, 0598; 8: 0758; 9: 0514;
10: 0001; 11: 0516, 0734, 0842, 0888; 13: 0424; 14: 0604; 15: 0482; 16: 0696; 17: 0368, 0405; 21: 0261; 22: 0320, 0444, 0741, 0774, 0796, 0844, 0887, 0948; 23: 0035; 24: 0247, 0278, 0321, 0353, 0405; 25: 0104, 0156, 0692, 0771, 0788, 0895; 26: 0051, 0073, 0126, 0446; 28: 0159; 29: 0121, 0239, 0283, 0321, 0401, 0477, 0525, 0554, 0619, 0928; 30: 0134, 0233, 0392, 0596
Gray, Robert 29: 0283
Greaves, E. T. 19: 0211
Griffith, Jack H. 29: 0001
Griswold, Erwin N. 16: 0553
Gustin, James R. 17: 0886, 0933
Guthe, Otto E. 19: 0758
Hagerty, James C. 22: 0026
Halla, Philip J. 8: 0724; 25: 0156; 29: 0121, 0321;
30: 0660 Hamlin, John H.
17: 0069 Hardenbergh, Hal
21: 0365 Hardin, Thomas O.
17: 0116 Harr, Karl G., Jr.
14: 0438, 0559, 0604, 0646, 0785, 0905; 15: 0043, 0081, 0141, 0145, 0482, 0564, 0733, 0780; 16: 0001, 0099, 0659, 0696, 0910; 17: 0116, 0164, 0210, 0317, 0405, 0753, 0787, 0886; 18: 0184, 0237, 0273, 0365, 0495, 0562, 0702, 0760; 19: 0253, 0285, 0470, 0562, 0703, 0758; 21: 0001, 0079, 0155, 0261, 0299, 0365, 0420, 0515; 27: 0758; 30: 0258
Harris, Oren 14: 0785
Harrold, Thomas L. 21: 0299, 0420
Haskins, Charles A. 13: 0424; 23: 0468, 0539; 24: 0247,
0353; 25: 0104, 0156, 0577; 26: 0357, 0446, 0475, 0717; 27: 0376, 0512; 29: 0070; 30: 0144
Havens, Dwight 25: 0849
Hawley, Claude E. 16: 0037
Hedges, John L. 15: 0279
Henderson, Larry J., Jr. 13: 0200; 24: 0321
68
Heppner, Richard P. 15: 0637
Herter, Christian A. 7: 0638, 0411; 11: 0501, 0842;
14: 0501, 0863; 15: 0212, 0482, 0733; 16: 0597, 0801; 17: 0210; 19: 0877; 21: 0045; 25: 0156, 0895; 29: 0121, 0239, 0283, 0321; 30: 0660
Hill, D. R. 29: 0525
Hirsch, Richard 14: 0785; 15: 0965; 17: 0116, 0670;
18: 0101, 0237, 0324; 19: 0877; 20: 0001; 21: 0773; 26: 0446
Hirschtritt, Moses 15: 0279
Hoegh, Leo A. 14: 0501; 16: 0099; 17: 0787; 22: 0948;
23: 0001, 0035; 29: 0477, 0525, 0554, 0619
Hoffman, Hallock 21: 0420
Hogan, T. W. 28: 0808
Holaday, W. M. 20: 0615; 21: 0155
Holder, Oscar 15: 0965; 18: 0001
Hollister, John B. 17: 0038; 26: 0357; 30: 0176
Holloway, J. L., Jr. 18: 0562
Hoover, Calvin B. 12: 0644
Hoover, Herbert, Jr. 19: 0379; 24: 0511
Hoover, J. Edgar 8: 0802; 9: 0124, 0155; 25: 0803
Howe, Fisher 21: 0497
Howe, Walter 14: 0905
Howes, Raymond F. 18: 0863
Hudes, Albert B. 21: 0365
Hughes, Rowland 22: 0671
Hughes, Russell H. 19: 0431
Hull, John E. 11: 0663, 0718, 0734, 0806, 0888;
30: 0491 Humphrey, George M.
12: 0001 Hyde, J. F. C., Jr.
16: 0099; 28: 0467 Irwin, John N., II
24: 0197 Jackson, C. D.
9: 0293; 16: 0099, 0187; 19: 0678; 26: 0357; 27: 0257
Jackson, Stephen S. 28: 0735
Jackson, Wayne C. 16: 0970
Jackson, William H. 15: 0001; 24: 0414
Jacyno, Joseph R. 16: 0696; 21: 0515
Johnson, Charles E. 16: 0187; 19: 0877
Johnson, Harold K. 12: 0805
Johnson, J. M. 10: 0030
Johnson, Jesse C. 14: 0438; 22: 0412
Johnson, Robert H. 15: 0460, 0870; 19: 0470; 22: 0671;
23: 0833, 0984; 25: 0782; 26: 0357; 29: 0681
Johnston, Eric 26: 0312
Johnston, Kilbourne 12: 0805
Jones, Owen T. 16: 0013
Jones, Roger W. 22: 0844; 28: 0467; 29: 0554, 0619
Juergensmeyer, John E. 18: 0702; 19: 0001
Kalijarvi, Thorsten V. 15: 0001
Kane, R. Keith 21: 0868
Kastenmeier, Robert 24: 0321
69
Kendall, David W. 16: 0099
Kennan, George F. 12: 0459
Kent, Sherman 21: 0001
Keyes, Roger M. 7: 0739
Killian, James R., Jr. 11: 0320; 14: 0222; 17: 0710; 19: 0877;
21: 0045; 22: 0110; 27: 0439, 0857; 28: 0159, 0180; 29: 0477; 30: 0491
Kirkpatrick, Lynn B. 11: 0472
Kistiakowsky, George B. 13: 0424; 14: 0167; 28: 0159, 0206
Kitchen, Jeffrey C. 15: 0212
Klumpp, Theodore G. 19: 0285, 0211
Knight, Ridgway B. 15: 0327; 16: 0376; 19: 0470; 21: 0505;
29: 0070 Knight, W. W., Jr.
29: 0870 Komer, Bob
15: 0637 Koons, T. B.
18: 0495; 22: 0623; 24: 0448, 0476; 30: 0001
Korns, William A. 26: 0446
Krebs, Max V. 15: 0279
Kurtz, Howard G., Jr. 17: 0069
Kyes, Roger M. 12: 0232
Lambie, James M., Jr. 15: 0001
Landon, Kenneth P. 14: 0825; 17: 0317; 19: 0470, 0522,
0562; 21: 0515 Lanier, Verle E.
16: 0376 Lansdale, Edward G.
11: 0888; 19: 0562 Larson, Arthur
19: 0332
Lawson, G. W., Jr. 12: 0096
Lay, James S., Jr. 7: 0489, 0571, 0598, 0707, 0739, 0778,
0906; 11: 0320, 0354, 0379, 0472, 0516, 0623, 0842; 12: 0402; 13: 0137, 0625; 14: 0222; 21: 0963; 22: 0110, 0282, 0623; 23: 0873; 25: 0782; 27: 0467; 28: 0138, 0281; 30: 0660
Leir, Henry J. 21: 0868, 0917
Lemmon, Walter S. 16: 0696
Lemnitzer, L. L. 9: 0483; 12: 0805; 21: 0365
Ligon, Elvin S. 12: 0644
Lilly, Edward P. 14: 0712; 16: 0831; 17: 0001; 19: 0417
Lincoln, G. A. 12: 0459
Lincoln, Murray D. 21: 0365
Lindsay, David A. 16: 0099
Lodge, George C. 16: 0659
Loomis, Henry 16: 0282
Loper, Herbert B. 7: 0598; 16: 0970
Lovas, Stephen 25: 0849
Luehman, Arno H. 21: 0105
Maas, Melvin J. 18: 0702
MacDonald, John E. 14: 0825; 16: 0553, 0801
Macmillan, H. 26: 0818
Macy, Robert M. 11: 0320; 17: 0839
Marcy, Oliver M. 15: 0327
Marks, Matthew J. 17: 0317
Marshall, Charles Burton 17: 0210
70
Matteson, Robert E. 25: 0058; 30: 0258, 0571
Maury, John M., Jr. 12: 0459
May, Mark A 15: 0482
McConaughy, James L., Jr. 17: 0069
McCone, John A. 22: 0320, 0412; 25: 0156; 28: 0159;
30: 0001 McCormack, James, Jr.
12: 0644 McDonald, Fred
18: 0702 McElroy, Neil H.
16: 0597; 20: 0001, 0109 McGinley, Conde
17: 0368 McGlauflin, Arthur M.
15: 0001 McGuire, Perkins
9: 0514, 0605; 18: 0562; 24: 0353 Mein, John Gordon
14: 0876; 19: 0188 Melbourne, Roy M.
15: 0482, 0564; 16: 0251; 17: 0787; 18: 0237; 19: 0417, 0817; 20: 0001; 21: 0079; 30: 0258
Merchant, Livingston T. 8: 0758; 21: 0465; 23: 0305; 29: 0121,
0283, 0321 Merriam, Robert E.
16: 0037, 0099 Meyer, Cord, Jr.
8: 0836; 16: 0659 Milne, C. P.
29: 0554 Milton, Hugh M., II
18: 0562 Mitchell, James
25: 0895 Mooney, James E.
21: 0420 Morgan, Gerald D.
21: 0105; 28: 0642 Morris, Mary Jane
22: 0948 Morrow, W. E.
21: 0195
Morse, John H., Jr. 18: 0045, 0101; 22: 0282, 0320, 0357,
0412; 30: 0258, 0327, 0392 Mosely, Philip E.
12: 0644 Mrozinski, R. V.
15: 0081, 0333, 0392; 16: 0187, 0422; 17: 0038; 19: 0449; 20: 0972; 21: 0045, 0290
Muller, Walter 14: 0905
Murphy, Charles J. V. 28: 0241
Murphy, John B. 28: 0535
Murphy, John E. 23: 0305
Murphy, Robert 9: 0124; 18: 0273; 23: 0833
Murray, Thomas E. 7: 0841; 22: 0064; 26: 0163, 0181
Myers, Max 21: 0515
Nason, John W. 21: 0420
Neal, Alfred C. 23: 0940
Neese, Harvey C. 16: 0376
Neidlinger, Lloyd K. 17: 0405
Neilsen, Waldemar 16: 0330
Newell, Homer E., Jr. 21: 0261
Nixon, Richard M. 16: 0696; 19: 0253; 21: 0573; 30: 0148
Norstad, Lauris 18: 0562
Oberlin, D. W. 29: 0870
Old, Bruce S. 13: 0200
O’Mahoney, Joseph C. 22: 0948
Oppenheimer, J. R. 22: 0320
Paarlberg, Don 17: 0317; 21: 0515; 29: 0681
71
Pache, Aleksander 19: 0285
Palladino, Ralph A. 24: 0278
Paolozzi, Alicia Spaulding 18: 0760
Parker, Edward N. 18: 0324; 21: 0105
Parker, T. W. 16: 0970
Parrott, T. A. 14: 0604
Paul, Willard 10: 0709, 0719
Peasles, Amos J. 24: 0746
Penfield, James K. 12: 0644
Percy, C. H. 17: 0164
Persons, Wilton B. 9: 0293
Peterson, Val 10: 0785
Phillips, Franklyn W. 20: 0001, 0052, 0109, 0185, 0245,
0384, 0453, 0491, 0615, 0909 Phillips, Robert J.
16: 0330 Picher, Oliver S.
18: 0562 Pickett, Clarence E.
17: 0839 Piland, Robert O.
19: 0877, 0962; 20: 0001 Platt, James W.
28: 0735 Plaut, James S.
28: 0735 Poling, Daniel A.
16: 0187 Popenoe, Oliver
16: 0376; 21: 0515 Possony, Stefan T.
30: 0463 Power, Thomas S.
30: 0001 Quarles, Donald A.
9: 0567; 10: 0469; 11: 0540, 0607; 13: 0625; 14: 0646; 19: 0962;
20: 0245; 21: 0678; 22: 0087, 0461; 24: 0197, 0278; 30: 0491
Quesada, Elwood R. 26: 0859; 27: 0376
Quinn, William W. 21: 0365
Rabi, Isidor I. 27: 0467, 0512
Radford, Arthur 11: 0569; 16: 0847; 19: 0379; 22: 0064;
23: 0858; 24: 0810 Randall, Clarence B.
14: 0438, 0825; 15: 0001, 0043; 19: 0522, 0703; 23: 0984; 24: 0001; 26: 0312
Raton, Frederick M. 13: 0424
Ravndal, Christian M. 16: 0847
Reardon, Paul C. 15: 0279
Reed, Gordon W. 29: 0401
Reid, Ralph W. E. 14: 0438; 22: 0461; 24: 0197; 26: 0312,
0404; 30: 0258, 0344 Reinhardt, G. F.
12: 0805 Reuter, Richard W.
19: 0211 Revey, E. Lewis
19: 0817 Reynolds, Conger
18: 0760; 21: 0573 Richardson, Betty D.
14: 0905 Richardson, John, Jr.
16: 0099, 0187; 19: 0211, 0253, 0285, 0332
Riddleberger, James W. 25: 0788
Riedel, Peter 29: 0239
Riordan, John J. 18: 0562
Rivkin, Arnold 14: 0438
Robertson, Reuben B., Jr. 11: 0501, 0516; 14: 0203, 0646;
23: 0305; 24: 0810
72
Robertson, Walter S. 16: 0553
Robock, Stefan H. 23: 0877
Rock, Vincent P. 21: 0515, 0573
Rockefeller, Nelson A. 13: 0200; 15: 0001; 16: 0282; 18: 0012;
19: 0379; 27: 0467 Roosevelt, Franklin D.
28: 0588 Roosevelt, Kermit
16: 0187 Root, John F.
14: 0438; 16: 0801 Rostow, Walt W.
27: 0257 Roundtree, William M.
15: 0564 Rowntree, William
16: 0535 Rubottom, R. R., Jr.
18: 0324, 0644 Rusk, Dean
22: 0110 Russ, Joseph R.
21: 0420 Russell, Edwin F.
18: 0760 Ryan, Paul
22: 0948 Samford, John
11: 0540 Schlatter, George F.
18: 0562 Schlothauer, David F.
23: 0208 Schriftgiesser, Karl
23: 0877 Schwarzwalder, George F.
14: 0646; 21: 0001 Scoville, Herbert, Jr.
22: 0282 Scribner, Fred. C.
29: 0928 Sears, H. E.
12: 0459 Secrest, James D.
29: 0525
Shanley, Bernard M. 18: 0863; 28: 0535, 0642
Shea, Robert F. 14: 0905
Sheldon, Huntington D. 11: 0472
Sheppard, William J. 14: 0604
Smith, Bromley 8: 0802; 10: 0469; 14: 0438, 0604,
0876; 15: 0564, 0965; 16: 0013, 0099, 0311, 0696; 17: 0270, 0317, 0368, 0670, 0839; 18: 0273, 0324; 19: 0431, 0703; 24: 0874; 25: 0001, 0058, 0577; 27: 0257; 29: 0187; 30: 0344, 0571
Smith, Gerard C. 17: 0753; 22: 0671; 29: 0283
Smith, James H., Jr. 14: 0825; 15: 0870; 16: 0801; 17: 0933;
19: 0562, 0817; 25: 0796; 30: 0336 Smith, R. P.
12: 0459 Smith, Walter B.
7: 0489, 0571, 0739 Smyth, Harry D.
7: 0739 Snapp, Roy B.
8: 0206 Snyder, Murray
17: 0710; 18: 0012, 0237; 21: 0105 Sprague, Mansfield D.
15: 0043, 0925; 16: 0330; 18: 0539 Sprague, R. C.
14: 0222 Staats, Elmer B.
10: 0874; 14: 0438, 0646; 15: 0212, 0392, 0925; 16: 0187, 0251, 0311, 0696, 0925, 0970; 17: 0069, 0629, 0710; 18: 0863; 19: 0877; 20: 0972; 21: 0001, 0773; 22: 0087, 0110, 0588; 23: 0833; 26: 0126, 0475, 0717; 27: 0758; 30: 0416
Stans, Maurice H. 9: 0626; 21: 0001, 0045; 22: 0527;
26: 0126; 27: 0758; 29: 0619 Starbird, Alfred D.
22: 0412 Stassen, Harold E.
24: 0476, 0511, 0810
73
Stecher, Joseph D. 23: 0208
Stephens, Oren M. 19: 0703, 0817
Stewart, Homer J. 20: 0615
St. George, Katharine 16: 0187
Stimpson, Harry F., Jr. 15: 0279
St. John, Adrian, II 21: 0365
Stolk, William C. 23: 0940
Storaasli, Gynther 23: 0468
Strauss, Lewis L. 7: 0489, 0707, 0778, 0809; 8: 0186;
9: 0605; 22: 0026, 0087; 24: 0448, 0810; 25: 0001; 26: 0163; 27: 0662; 28: 0314
Streibert, Theodore C. 19: 0379; 24: 0414
Sullivan, Charles A. 19: 0379
Summerfield, Arthur E. 16: 0831
Symington, William Stuart 14: 0501
Talbott, Harold E. 12: 0262
Tanham, George K. 17: 0317
Taylor, L. B. 21: 0868
Taylor, Maxwell D. 7: 0906; 10: 0469; 14: 0203; 23: 0305
Thayer, Robert H. 15: 0145; 29: 0239
Thomas, Charles S. 30: 0001
Tilney, Frederick, Jr. 30: 0134
Tobler, John H. 15: 0631; 17: 0753
Tonesk, William J. 19: 0703; 29: 0121
Toney, G. R. 14: 0646
Townsend, John W., Jr. 21: 0678
Triebel, C. O. 29: 0870; 30: 0392
Truman, Harry S. 27: 0467
Twining, N. F. 11: 0379, 0432; 13: 0625; 29: 0353
Tyl, Noel J. 15: 0279
Voorhees, Tracy S. 30: 0463
Vranken, Jos 15: 0279
Wainhouse, David W. 23: 0208
Warburg, James P. 29: 0187
Warner, John S. 15: 0980
Washburn, Abbott 15: 0141, 0733; 16: 0037; 17: 0038;
18: 0137; 20: 0909; 25: 0058; 27: 0758
Waterman, Alan T. 14: 0646; 21: 0709; 26: 0497, 0559,
0670 Weber, George
23: 0001; 26: 0357, 0404; 27: 0467, 0512; 30: 0258
Weber, Karl H. 21: 0045
Weeks, Sinclair 19: 0332
Weidner, C. Ken 23: 0035
Weitzel, John P. 29: 0928
Weitzer, Bernard 23: 0208
Wheeler, Harvey 21: 0420
White, Bill 16: 0597
White, Paul 15: 0780
White, Thomas D. 8: 0186
White, W. R. 18: 0863
74
Whittaker, Wallace S. 17: 0839; 30: 0247, 0590
Widhalm, Rudolf 15: 0279
Wiggins, J. R. 25: 0849
Wilcox, Francis O. 15: 0564
Wiley, Alexander 14: 0712
Wilkey, Malcolm R. 22: 0844
Wilkins, Fraser 30: 0590
Williams, Carla 18: 0702
Williams, Hadyn 24: 0247
Williams, Manning H. 15: 0564; 18: 0184; 19: 0253, 0678,
0758; 21: 0773 Williamson, Francis T.
19: 0817
Wilson, Charles E. 2: 0351; 7: 0809; 8: 0339; 9: 0514;
12: 0262; 22: 0282; 23: 0094, 0144, 0208, 0305; 24: 0171, 0511
Wilson, James R., Jr. 14: 0559, 0604
Wilson, John C. 16: 0099
Wood, C. Tyler 12: 0459
Wood, Walter A. 17: 0405
Wooldridge, E. T. 26: 0717
Wylie, Philip 16: 0282
Yeagley, J. Walter 9: 0124, 0176; 15: 0392
York, Herbert F. 24: 0321
Yu, Paul C. 16: 0970
75
SUBJECT INDEX
The following index is a guide to the major topics in this microform publication. The first number after an entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which a particular file folder containing information on the subject begins. Hence, 18: 0795 directs the researcher to the folder that begins at Frame 0795 of Reel 18. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents, arranged in the order in which they appear on the film.
Accidents and accident prevention
atomic accident emergency measures 18: 0184
Afghanistan aircraft and aerospace industry 17: 0116 status reports 1: 0877
AFL-CIO speech by Philip Delaney 16: 0187
Africa anticommunism efforts 2: 0230, 0684,
0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
economic strength 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852; 6: 0639
France relations 30: 0176 general 14: 0438; 21: 0290; 26: 0717 internal security 10: 0874 international assistance 2: 0117, 0478;
3: 0074, 0637, 0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0129, 0362, 0500, 0869; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739, 0852; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425; 13: 0528, 0594
military strength 2: 0577, 0963; 6: 0639 National Security Council policy 3: 0637;
4: 0065 opinion and attitude surveys 24: 0001 People-to-People program 18: 0562
status reports 1: 0277, 0298, 0359, 0588, 0681, 0705, 0726, 0753, 0779, 0805, 0832
U.S. aid 2: 0117, 0878; 3: 0074, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0362, 0637, 0869; 5: 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425; 13: 0528, 0594
U.S. economic policy 24: 0001 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0639; 13: 0001,
0046, 0165, 0200; 26: 0051; 30: 0148, 0176
U.S. personnel 11: 0128 see also Algeria see also Belgian Congo see also Congo see also Ethiopia see also Libya see also Somalia
Africa Project 14: 0438
Afro-Asian Labor Conference 16: 0659
Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act of 1954
21: 0917; 23: 0833 Agriculture
foreign countries 2: 0878 surplus 21: 0868, 0917 trade agreements 16: 0535 U.S. aid to Asia 14: 0405
76
Agriculture cont. USSR 13: 0743, 0868; 14: 0001, 0108 see also Agricultural Trade
Development and Assistance Act of 1954
see also Agriculture, U.S. Department of see also Food and food industry
Agriculture, U.S. Department of 21: 0868, 0917
Aircraft and aerospace industry Afghanistan 17: 0116 general 14: 0501; 27: 0376 nuclear power 21: 0678 Pakistan 17: 0116 pictures 8: 0448 Thailand 17: 0116 traffic control 16: 0001 Turkey 17: 0116 USSR 8: 0327; 19: 0703 see also Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion
Program see also Airline Equipment Investment
Program see also Antiaircraft program see also Civil aviation
Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program 7: 0707; 8: 0477; 14: 0278; 22: 0087
Air defense general 2: 0016, 0351; 3: 0249, 0527;
4: 0756; 5: 0250, 0400; 6: 0067, 0915; 7: 0919; 8: 0634, 0662
nuclear weapons 18: 0045 Air Defense Command
8: 0001 Air Force, NATO
2: 0577, 0878, 0963; 3: 0306, 0637, 0838; 4: 0012, 0362; 7: 0331
Air Force, U.S. general 9: 0626; 30: 0474 military strength 2: 0016, 0351; 3: 0249,
0527, 0610; 4: 0129, 0756; 5: 0250, 0400; 6: 0067; 7: 0331; 8: 0001, 0278; 9: 0483
overseas military personnel 13: 0625 Airline Equipment Investment Program
military aircraft 27: 0376 Algeria
France relations 6: 0772; 15: 0965 American Legion
14: 0559, 0604
American Research Hospital for Children 19: 0211
American-Russian Military Solidarity for Friendship (A.R.M.S.) program
18: 0795 Antarctic Projects, U.S.
civil service appointments and promotions 14: 0646
Antarctica board proposal 14: 0712 federal agency appropriations and
expenditures 26: 0126 presidential communications and
messages 14: 0785 science stations 14: 0646, 0785;
26: 0126 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0828 U.S. land claims 14: 0785
Antiaircraft program 8: 0278
Anticommunism efforts Africa 2: 0230, 0684, 0842; 3: 0074,
0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Asia 2: 0230, 0684, 0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Europe 2: 0230, 0684, 0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Iraq 17: 0787 Latin America 2: 0230, 0684, 0842;
3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Middle East 2: 0230, 0684, 0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Anti-Semitism 17: 0001
Antisubmarine warfare 2: 0351; 3: 0249, 0527; 5: 0250; 6: 0067
Antitrust law commercial law 9: 0939 foreign trade 9: 0968 status reports 1: 0705, 0832, 0855,
0877, 0917, 0938, 0959 Arab-Israeli relations
6: 0639; 10: 0366; 17: 0787, 0839 Arab Unity Highway
17: 0933
77
ARGUS nuclear tests 21: 0105; 27: 0618
Arkansas Little Rock school desegregation
5: 0618 Armaments
status reports 1: 0184, 0212, 0239, 0277, 0298, 0329, 0359, 0377, 0397, 0416, 0436, 0455, 0478, 0502, 0547, 0568, 0588, 0610, 0632, 0705, 0726, 0779, 0917, 0938
Armed forces, foreign general 5: 0250 NATO 2: 0963; 7: 0264 USSR 18: 0795 see also Air Force, NATO see also Navy, foreign
Armed forces, U.S. in Asia 5: 0250 defense budgets and appropriations
14: 0905 defense contracts and procurement
2: 0351 Europe 5: 0250; 29: 0401 general 24: 0171; 28: 0709; 29: 0904 Korean War 2: 0016, 0351 in the Middle East 5: 0250 military assistance 14: 0894 military strength 16: 0813 NATO commitment 10: 0141 press clippings 29: 0283 Southeast Asia 13: 0462 space program cooperation 20: 0491 speeches and addresses 23: 0305 Suez Canal 29: 0401 troop inspection 25: 0226 voting behavior 28: 0336 see also Aircraft and aerospace industry see also Air Force, U.S. see also Armed services reserves see also Army, U.S. see also Coast Guard, U.S. see also Courts-martial and courts of
inquiry see also Marine Corps, U.S. see also Military Program see also Military strength see also Navy, U.S.
Armed Forces Day 23: 0305
Armed services reserves 3: 0527; 4: 0756; 5: 0250; 6: 0067;
14: 0501; 24: 0278 Arms control and disarmament
foreign countries 25: 0156, 0192, 0930 general 5: 0168; 6: 0957; 7: 0841;
13: 0200; 21: 0465; 24: 0571, 0671, 0746, 0810, 0874, 0972; 25: 0192, 0226, 0294, 0363, 0366, 0369, 0373, 0388, 0464, 0498; 26: 0051, 0233; 29: 0321; 30: 0491
negotiations 17: 0488 nuclear weapons 25: 0423 Project VELA (detection of nuclear
detonations) 30: 0144 research 25: 0104, 0156 UN 24: 0972 U.S. Disarmament Administration
29: 0321 U.S. policy 7: 0411; 15: 0333; 24: 0414,
0448, 0476, 0511, 0746, 0810, 0874, 0911; 25: 0001, 0082, 0156, 0192, 0930; 28: 0180
USSR 7: 0411; 18: 0137; 24: 0511, 0571, 0671, 0746
Army, foreign NATO 2: 0577, 0878; 3: 0306, 0610,
0637, 0838; 4: 0012, 0362; 7: 0331 Philippines 19: 0188 Southeast Asia 19: 0562 see also Army, U.S.
Army, U.S. airlifts 14: 0501 general 2: 0016, 0351; 3: 0249, 0527,
0610; 4: 0129, 0756; 5: 0250, 0400; 6: 0067; 7: 0331; 8: 0278; 9: 0369; 30: 0474
government relations 21: 0365, 0420 government spending 14: 0501 military strength 9: 0483 overseas military personnel 13: 0625 Project Man 21: 0420
Army Antiaircraft Command military aircraft 8: 0001
Army U.S. Inspection Organization 25: 0226
Army War College 28: 0888
78
Arrest Friedemann, William, and Edwin Sweet
8: 0802 Asia
agriculture 14: 0405 anticommunism efforts 2: 0230, 0684,
0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
armed forces, U.S. 5: 0250 community development programs
16: 0970 decline of U.S. prestige 9: 0843, 0902 Eastern Europe assistance 19: 0522 economic development 14: 0825 economic strength 2: 0478; 3: 0783;
4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852; 10: 0080
foreign military forces 5: 0250 general 19: 0470, 0522, 0562 Herter, Christian A.—impressions
15: 0780 internal security 10: 0874 international assistance 2: 0478;
3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852
military aid 3: 0637; 13: 0625 military officials 17: 0405 military strength 2: 0577, 0963 National Security Council policy 3: 0637;
4: 0065 Nixon, Richard M.—travel report
30: 0148 political strength 10: 0080 PTP program 18: 0562, 0644 regional defense 17: 0405 status reports 1: 0037, 0082, 0159,
0184, 0212, 0239, 0329, 0359, 0632, 0657, 0681, 0753, 0805, 0877, 0897, 0917, 0938, 0959
U.S. aid 2: 0117, 0878; 3: 0074, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0362, 0637, 0869; 5: 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0144, 0319, 0425, 0773; 13: 0001, 0528, 0594; 14: 0405; 15: 0780
U.S. foreign policy 6: 0530; 12: 0569; 13: 0001, 0046, 0137, 0165, 0200; 19: 0522
U.S. government employees 11: 0128 U.S. military personnel 11: 0128 U.S. military strategy 6: 0530
U.S. relations 15: 0803; 16: 0376 U.S. trade 14: 0825 U.S. trip by Christian A. Herter, James
P. Richards, and Frederick M. Dearborn 15: 0803
see also Afghanistan see also Burma see also Cambodia see also China see also Hong Kong see also India see also Indonesia see also Japan see also Korea see also Laos see also Pakistan see also Philippines see also South Asia see also Southeast Asia see also South Korea see also Sri Lanka see also Taiwan see also Thailand see also Tibet see also Vietnam
Asian Economic Development Fund 5: 0424
Atomic accident emergency measures 18: 0184
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) federal agency appropriations and
expenditures 7: 0809 general 22: 0026, 0064, 0087, 0110,
0138, 0282, 0320, 0346, 0357, 0409, 0412; 26: 0163, 0181, 0233
NSC relations 9: 0329 nuclear weapons 7: 0739 personnel 22: 0138
Atomic Energy Program general 3: 0001; 4: 0214; 22: 0138 government spending 2: 0577; 7: 0331
Atoms for Peace program 5: 0852; 13: 0200
Attack, surprise general 3: 0958; 30: 0491 USSR 25: 0226, 0294
Australia economic development 6: 0587;
14: 0876 foreign relations 14: 0876
79
military development 6: 0587; 14: 0876 political development 14: 0876 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0587
Austria economic development 6: 0747;
14: 0894 general 14: 0894 military development 6: 0747; 14: 0894 political development 14: 0894 status reports 1: 0455, 0523, 0568,
0588, 0610 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0747
Automobiles 11: 0001
Baker Panel (Office of Defense Mobilization Science Advisory Committee)
22: 0444 Ballistic Missile Early Warning System
24: 0321, 0353; 27: 0857 Baylor Proposals
educational exchanges 18: 0863 Belgian Congo
uranium 22: 0412 Belgium
economic strength 9: 0687 international assistance 9: 0687
Berlin, Germany 9: 0369; 16: 0001; 26: 0001; 30: 0596,
0660, 0728 Brazil
communist delegation visit to China and Soviet bloc 22: 0796
Budget Bureau 22: 0461, 0527
Budget of the U.S. defense budget and appropriations
24: 0097, 0129 federal agency appropriations and
expenditures 17: 0069; 22: 0671; 23: 0940
general 2: 0809; 12: 0046, 0262, 0510; 13: 0088, 0200; 22: 0461, 0588, 0623
national defense 12: 0001, 0020 Burma
international assistance 19: 0562 USSR embassy 19: 0703; 29: 0121
Business and industry foreign security 6: 0888 general 19: 0431 international assistance 11: 0001 nuclear power 22: 0138 overseas personnel 11: 0001 pipelines 22: 0948 USSR 13: 0868; 14: 0108 see also Petroleum and petroleum
industry see also Steel industry see also Sugar industry and products
Cambodia U.S. defense 9: 0369
Canada decline of U.S. prestige 9: 0843, 0902 Hyde Park agreement 6: 0828 U.S. relations 6: 0828; 7: 0809; 8: 0138,
0477; 29: 0121 Castro, Fidel
foreign relations 16: 0696 general 8: 0758 regime 8: 0836; 9: 0001 religion and religious institutions 9: 0088 visit to Washington, D.C. 8: 0724
Censorship, Office of 10: 0577
Center for the Study of Coordinated National Policy
17: 0270 Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
director 11: 0320, 0540 DOD-CIA relations 11: 0842 general 22: 0708, 0741, 0774, 0796;
23: 0793 government information 9: 0176;
11: 0472 intelligence services 11: 0354 wartime preparedness 11: 0379, 0453,
0569 Ceylon
see Sri Lanka Chambers of commerce
foreign visitors 25: 0849 Chemical and biological warfare
general 17: 0001 military weapons 6: 0067; 13: 0743,
0868; 14: 0001, 0108; 24: 0321, 0353
80
Chile earthquakes 14: 0905
China, People’s Republic of Australia relations 14: 0876 Brazilian communist delegation visit
22: 0796 communism 23: 0208 Cuba relations 8: 0802, 0836; 9: 0001,
0088 economic development 10: 0366;
15: 0780 foreign opinion of the U.S. 15: 0780 foreign policy 13: 0790 general 10: 0299; 27: 0001, 0257 military strength 10: 0080; 13: 0743,
0915; 14: 0001 New Zealand relations 14: 0876 politics 10: 0080 POWs 23: 0208 public health 15: 0780 satellites 18: 0324; 21: 0001 Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive
5: 0001, 0424, 0739; 10: 0874; 22: 0461, 0708; 25: 0796; 30: 0336
status reports 1: 0037, 0058, 0082, 0107, 0159, 0184, 0257, 0277, 0298, 0319, 0329, 0359, 0377, 0397, 0416, 0436, 0478, 0502, 0523, 0547, 0568, 0588, 0632, 0657, 0681, 0705, 0726, 0753, 0779, 0805, 0832, 0855, 0877
student in the U.S. 16: 0970 Taiwan relations 18: 0365 Tibet 19: 0470 UN relations 14: 0825; 27: 0257 U.S. foreign policy 10: 0366; 12: 0707,
0805, 0956 U.S. relations 10: 0299; 14: 0825
Cities U.S. 8: 0001 USSR 8: 0001
Citizen-Military Liaison Committee 19: 0962; 20: 0453
Citizens, U.S. in foreign countries 18: 0438 foreign evacuation policy 6: 0915
Civil Aeronautics Administration 22: 0844
Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 22: 0844
Civil and Defense Mobilization, Office of 22: 0887, 0948; 23: 0001, 0035
Civil aviation airlifts 14: 0501
Civil Defense Program 2: 0184, 0653; 3: 0035, 0400, 0911;
4: 0266, 0642; 5: 0168, 0552, 0914; 7: 0377; 12: 0319
see also Civilian evacuation Civilian evacuation
status reports 1: 0037, 0058, 0082, 0107, 0133
Coast Guard, U.S. general 6: 0426 status reports 1: 0455, 0523, 0547,
0568, 0588, 0610, 0632 Code of an American Mother
23: 0468 Code of Conduct Program
23: 0094, 0144, 0208, 0305, 0468 Cold war
Advisory Panel projects 24: 0278 history 13: 0200 military strategy 6: 0067; 12: 0890;
14: 0559, 0604; 16: 0847; 22: 0588 U.S. foreign policy 12: 0890
Colombia education 21: 0515 international assistance 21: 0515
Colonialism general 10: 0332, 0366; 12: 0569;
27: 0001 military presence 16: 0282
Commerce, U.S. Department of 9: 0176; 23: 0533
Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government
23: 0562, 0614, 0716, 0793 Committee for the Handicapped
18: 0702; 19: 0001 Communications
general 2: 0653; 3: 0035, 0400, 0855, 0911; 4: 0214, 0588; 7: 0919; 10: 0513, 0645; 14: 0222; 29: 0121, 0554, 0619
overseas 14: 0278 radio 15: 0482
Communism Australia 14: 0876 Cuba 8: 0758, 0836; 9: 0001
81
Eastern Europe 2: 0809; 3: 0164, 0486 general 2: 0809; 13: 0200, 0952;
14: 0001; 15: 0803; 16: 0696 Hungary 19: 0285 labor movements 8: 0836 Latin America 13: 0118, 0790 McCarthyism 9: 0843 Middle East 13: 0790 New Zealand 14: 0876 POWs 23: 0208 propaganda 9: 0793, 0939, 0968;
10: 0874; 16: 0162, 0659 Southeast Asia 9: 0793 status reports 1: 0455, 0726 USSR 15: 0980
Communist Party front organizations 3: 0104, 0958
Community development programs Asia 16: 0970
Conferences Afro-Asian Labor Conference 16: 0659 Inter-American Conference, Tenth
6: 0828 Pacific Science Congress, Tenth
21: 0365 science 26: 0559 see also First Latin American Youth
Congress see also Interdepartmental Intelligence
Conference see also Ninth International Conference
of American States see also Third World Congress Against
Atomic & Hydrogen Bombs—Tokyo see also World Anticommunism
Congress for Freedom and Liberation
see also World Congress of Flight see also World Meteorological
Organization Congo
14: 0438 Congress, U.S.
8: 0186; 17: 0210 Congressional committees
Joint Congressional Committee on Atomic Energy 8: 0418
Congressional-executive relations 25: 0526, 0577
Conservation program 10: 0030
Consultants civilian 17: 0116; 23: 0858
Continuity of government 10: 0513, 0645
Council [Committee] for Economic Development
23: 0877, 0940 Council of Economic Advisors
23: 0873 Courts-martial and courts of inquiry
23: 0305, 0468 Cuba
Castro, Fidel 8: 0724, 0758, 0836; 9: 0001
China relations 8: 0802, 0836; 9: 0001, 0088
communism 8: 0758, 0836; 9: 0001 Eastern Europe relations 8: 0802, 0836;
9: 0001, 0088 economic policy toward the U.S.
8: 0836; 9: 0001 education 8: 0836; 9: 0001 federal boards, committees, and
commissions 8: 0758 general 15: 0141 invasions of Latin American countries
8: 0836; 9: 0001 justice system 8: 0836; 9: 0001 labor unions 9: 0001 La Cabaña incident (torture of Cuban
prisoners) 8: 0836 military strength 8: 0836; 9: 0001 petroleum and petroleum industry
8: 0802 politics 8: 0724, 0836; 9: 0001 religion and religious institutions 9: 0088 resignations 8: 0836 sugar industry and products 8: 0802 U.S. foreign policy 7: 0194; 8: 0758,
0802 U.S. relations 8: 0724, 0758, 0802;
9: 0088; 16: 0696 U.S. sanctions 8: 0802, 0836
Cultural Presentations Program 15: 0145
Customs administration, U.S. 3: 0104
82
Cyprus economic strength 6: 0772 military strength 6: 0772 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0772; 15: 0327
Czechoslovakia 16: 0187
Deep drilling U.S. 21: 0709 USSR 21: 0709
Defense, Department of (DOD) assistant secretary 11: 0516 budget 22: 0588 CIA relations 11: 0697 fallout shelter policy 23: 0035 general 9: 0118, 0121; 22: 0461;
23: 0793; 24: 0171, 0197, 0247, 0278, 0321, 0353
military aircraft 24: 0247 nuclear weapons 7: 0739 policy 18: 0562 secretary 11: 0888
Defense budgets and appropriations airlifts 14: 0501 armed services, foreign 14: 0905 armed services, U.S. 9: 0753; 12: 0262;
17: 0629; 24: 0197; 29: 0070 general 22: 0588; 24: 0097, 0129 see also Defense, Department of see also Defense contracts and
procurement see also Defense expenditures see also Navy budgets and
appropriations Defense contracts and procurement
armed services, U.S. 2: 0351 policy 23: 0562, 0614, 0716
Defense expenditures foreign countries 2: 0117; 3: 0074, 0783;
5: 0424, 0739 general 2: 0016, 0351, 0653, 0809;
3: 0035, 0249, 0527, 0637; 4: 0500, 0756; 6: 0067; 8: 0138, 0662
Defense mobilization 6: 0888
Defense Mobilization, Office of 24: 0405
Defense production foreign 3: 0637, 0783; 4: 0065
Defense Production Act 9: 0939
Development Loan Fund 5: 0424, 0852; 6: 0203
Diplomatic History 29: 0239
Diplomatic immunity 11: 0001
Diseases and disorders cholera 19: 0522 dysentery 16: 0001 influenza 16: 0553 malaria 16: 0037 polio 16: 0187
Dominican Republic assassination plot of Venezuelan
president 9: 0088 U.S. foreign policy 7: 0194; 8: 0802
Draper report 6: 0203
Dulles, John Foster Library of Diplomatic History 29: 0239 speech 10: 0094
Early warning system 8: 0001, 0138; 11: 0734; 14: 0278
Earthquakes Chile 14: 0905
Eastern Europe agricultural surpluses 15: 0001 assistance to Asia 19: 0522 Australia relations 14: 0876 Brazilian communist delegation visit
22: 0796 communism 2: 0809; 3: 0164, 0486 Cuba relations 8: 0802, 0836; 9: 0001,
0088 Egypt relations 5: 0001 foreign policy 6: 0445 foreign trade 15: 0001 general 4: 0500; 10: 0080; 19: 0678 medical aid 16: 0099 military strength 2: 0809; 3: 0164, 0486;
7: 0377; 13: 0743, 0790, 0915; 14: 0001
New Zealand relations 14: 0876 resources 12: 0539 status reports 1: 0239, 0277, 0298,
0523, 0657; 2: 0001 Syria relations 5: 0001 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0445; 7: 0077;
15: 0392; 19: 0678
83
Economic development Asia 14: 0825 Asian Economic Development Fund
5: 0424 Australia 14: 0876 Austria 14: 0894 China, People’s Republic of 10: 0366;
15: 0780 Council for Economic Development
23: 0877, 0940 Economic Development Corps Plan
19: 0562 foreign 2: 0117, 0478, 0878; 3: 0194,
0783; 4: 0129; 5: 0001 foreign information program 23: 0940 general 16: 0013 India 19: 0470, 0522 international cooperation 10: 0094 Middle East 17: 0839 national information program 23: 0940 New Zealand 14: 0876 Philippines 19: 0188 private investment in foreign countries
3: 0306 sanctions on Egypt 29: 0401 Thailand 9: 0793 U.S. aid 26: 0312, 0357, 0404 USSR 19: 0758 see also Economic policy see also Economic strength
Economic Development Corps (EDCOR) Plan
19: 0562 Economic policy
6: 0445 see also Emergency Financial Act of
1956 Economic research
Africa 14: 0438 Economic strength
Africa 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852; 6: 0639; 24: 0001
Asia 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852
Australia 6: 0587 Austria 6: 0747 Belgium 9: 0687 Cyprus 6: 0772 Europe 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500;
5: 0001, 0852
Finland 6: 0772 foreign 12: 0707, 0927 France 6: 0772 Greece 6: 0772 Hong Kong 6: 0587 Iceland 6: 0747 Iran 6: 0639 Italy 9: 0687 Japan 9: 0687 Latin America 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129,
0500; 5: 0001, 0852 Libya 6: 0639 Middle East 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129,
0500; 5: 0001, 0852; 6: 0639 Netherlands 9: 0687 New Zealand 6: 0587 Philippines 6: 0587 Portugal 9: 0687 Scandinavia 6: 0747 South Asia 6: 0587 Spain 6: 0772 Switzerland 6: 0747 Turkey 6: 0639 U.S. 1: 0436, 0681, 0917, 0959, 0979;
4: 0588; 5: 0130; 10: 0299, 0366; 12: 0707, 0739, 0927; 13: 0046, 0088
USSR 10: 0299, 0366; 13: 0690, 0826; 14: 0001, 0068
USSR image of U.S. 23: 0877 Yugoslavia 6: 0772
Ecuador government trip 16: 0847
Education Council for Economic Development
publications 23: 0940 engineering 27: 0618 foreign systems 15: 0212 foreign universities 14: 0438; 16: 0696 nuclear tests and testing 22: 0138 science 5: 0250; 27: 0618 training of foreigners 15: 0212 see also Latin American Student
Program Educational exchanges
Baylor Proposals 18: 0863 Chinese students 16: 0970 fingerprinting 15: 0392 general 9: 0939; 15: 0145, 0392;
16: 0330, 0696
84
Educational exchanges cont. Latin American Student Program
16: 0696 Egypt
sanctions 29: 0401 Eisenhower, Dwight D.
appointments 17: 0001; 22: 0623 goodwill trip 29: 0121 information security 17: 0317 Khrushchev, Nikita—meetings 19: 0758;
30: 0761 Midwinter’s Day greetings 14: 0646 presidential communications and
messages 14: 0785; 18: 0795, 0863; 20: 0109; 21: 0155; 22: 0064, 0671; 26: 0859; 29: 0070
press transcript 14: 0559 Electric power
25: 0373 Elliott, William Y.
15: 0547; 25: 0501, 0526, 0577, 0646, 0692, 0731
Ellis Island 15: 0551
Embassy, U.S. Greece 29: 0121
Emergency Financial Act of 1956 10: 0719
Employee development foreign 11: 0001
Energy research and development atomic energy 1: 0805 exploration and drilling 26: 0670;
28: 0085 Espionage
Martin-Mitchell defection case 11: 0888 Ethiopia
general 15: 0631 U.S. aid 29: 0121
Europe anticommunism efforts 2: 0230, 0684,
0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
decline of U.S. prestige 9: 0843, 0902 defense 12: 0096, 0144; 29: 0950 economic strength 2: 0478; 3: 0783;
4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852; 12: 0569
internal security 10: 0874
international assistance 2: 0478; 3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852
military aid 3: 0637; 13: 0625 military strength 2: 0117, 0577, 0878,
0963 National Security Council policy 3: 0637;
4: 0065 opinion towards USSR 9: 0843 PTP program 18: 0562, 0644 Soviet bloc 22: 0796 status reports 1: 0726, 0753, 0779,
0805, 0832, 0959 U.S. aid 2: 0117, 0878; 3: 0074, 0911;
4: 0001, 0065, 0362, 0637, 0869; 5: 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0096, 0144, 0319, 0425, 0773, 0956; 13: 0528, 0594
U.S. forces 29: 0401 U.S. foreign policy 10: 0366; 13: 0046,
0165; 15: 0637 U.S. personnel 11: 0128 U.S. relations 12: 0739; 15: 0333 see also Belgium see also Cyprus see also Czechoslovakia see also Finland see also France see also Germany see also Greece see also Hungary see also Iceland see also Italy see also Netherlands see also Poland see also Portugal see also Scandinavia see also Spain see also Switzerland see also United Kingdom see also Yugoslavia
Exhibitions and trade fairs 15: 0675, 0733
Facilities Assistance Program 4: 0869
Federal agency appropriations and expenditures
Antarctica science stations 26: 0126 Ellis Island International Institute
15: 0551
85
general 4: 0710; 10: 0259; 11: 0806 research and development 22: 0948
Federal boards, committees, and commissions
cold war 14: 0604 Committee on World Economic
Practices 15: 0460 Cuba 8: 0758 Ellis Island, International Institute on
15: 0551 military strategy 14: 0604 National Security policy 14: 0604
Federal Communications Commission Microwave Frequency
25: 0771 Federal Council for Science and Technology
28: 0159 Federal departments and agencies
Central Intelligence Agency 9: 0176; 11: 0320, 0354, 0379, 0453, 0472, 0540, 0569, 0842; 22: 0708, 0741, 0774, 0796; 23: 0793
Justice Department 9: 0176; 25: 0803, 0849
National Aeronautics and Space Administration 6: 0001; 9: 0176; 19: 0962; 20: 0491, 0834; 26: 0446
State Department 9: 0176; 11: 0001; 29: 0187, 0239, 0283, 0321
Treasury Department 9: 0176; 29: 0928 U.S. Department of Commerce 9: 0176;
23: 0533 U.S. Information Agency 3: 0074, 0400,
0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369; 7: 0055; 9: 0176, 0793; 11: 0001; 16: 0597, 0696; 17: 0001, 0038; 20: 0909
Federal facilities 24: 0405
Federal Radiation Council 18: 0273
Federal-state relations 4: 0266
Federal Voting Assistance Act of 1955 28: 0467, 0535, 0588, 0642, 0735
Federal Voting Assistance Program 28: 0642, 0735
Finland economic strength 6: 0772 general 16: 0251 military strength 6: 0772 status reports 1: 0547, 0568, 0588,
0610, 0632, 0657 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0772
First Latin American Youth Congress 8: 0836
Fiscal policy foreign currency 15: 0870, 0925;
16: 0535 general 25: 0501, 0692
Food and food industry 21: 0573
Foreign economic policy foreign opinion of the U.S. 9: 0843, 0902 general 2: 0323, 0842; 6: 0445, 0530;
13: 0200; 14: 0559; 15: 0001; 23: 0833, 0984; 24: 0001; 27: 0292, 0336
Princeton Study Group (C. D. Jackson) 27: 0257, 0292, 0336
Foreign Economic Policy, Council on 23: 0984; 24: 0001
Foreign Intelligence Activities, President’s Board of Consultants on
11: 0320, 0354, 0379, 0432, 0453, 0472, 0501, 0516, 0540, 0569, 0607, 0623, 0645, 0663, 0697, 0718, 0734, 0762, 0806, 0842, 0888
Foreign Intelligence Program 2: 0280, 0684, 0746; 3: 0074, 0451,
0958; 5: 0618; 7: 0377; 11: 0762 Foreign labor conditions
Afro-Asian Labor Conference 16: 0659 Foreign languages
personnel training 11: 0001 training 15: 0551; 18: 0562
Foreign Military Facilities Assistance Program
4: 0362 Foreign Operations Administration
3: 0783; 17: 0405 Foreign opinion of the U.S.
anti-American sentiment 8: 0758 China 15: 0780 Cuba 8: 0758 economic policy 9: 0843, 0902 general 9: 0843; 15: 0637; 16: 0282
86
Foreign opinion of the U.S. cont. opinion and attitude surveys 8: 0758 space program 20: 0491 Suez Canal 29: 0187 U.S. personnel 11: 0001 USSR-Hungary crisis 29: 0187
Foreign policy, U.S. Africa 6: 0639; 13: 0001, 0046, 0165,
0200; 14: 0438; 24: 0001; 26: 0051; 30: 0148, 0176
Antarctica 6: 0828 Asia 6: 0530; 12: 0569; 13: 0001, 0046,
0137, 0165, 0200; 19: 0522 Australia 6: 0587 Austria 6: 0747 Berlin, Germany 30: 0660 China 10: 0366; 12: 0707, 0805, 0956 classified information 9: 0124, 0155,
0176, 0753 Cuba 7: 0194; 8: 0758, 0802, 0836 Cyprus 6: 0772; 15: 0327 defectors from communist countries
6: 0445 dependence on Middle East oil 6: 0772 Dominican Republic 7: 0194; 8: 0802 Eastern Europe 6: 0445; 7: 0077;
15: 0392; 19: 0678 Europe 10: 0366; 13: 0046, 0165;
15: 0637 Finland 6: 0772 France 6: 0772; 12: 0569 general 10: 0173, 0332; 13: 0200;
19: 0417; 25: 0577; 26: 0073; 27: 0001; 29: 0070, 0121
Germany 10: 0366; 12: 0569, 0805, 0956; 13: 0137, 0200
Greece 6: 0772 Hong Kong 6: 0587; 16: 0162 Hungary 16: 0187 Iceland 6: 0747; 16: 0251 Indonesia 6: 0530; 16: 0311 Iran 6: 0639 Japan 6: 0530; 16: 0553 Korea 12: 0805 labor 25: 0895 Latin America 6: 0828; 13: 0001, 0046,
0165 Libya 6: 0639
Middle East 6: 0639; 12: 0608; 13: 0001, 0046, 0165, 0200; 17: 0787, 0839, 0933; 24: 0197
military strategy 6: 0530 national defense 12: 0773 NATO 10: 0141 New Zealand 6: 0587 after 1960 summit with Nikita
Khrushchev 6: 0445; 7: 0149 Palestine 15: 0564 Philippines 6: 0587; 19: 0188 Poland 6: 0445 public opinion, foreign 12: 0852 public relations 15: 0081 refugees 15: 0564 Scandinavia 6: 0747 Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive
15: 0043, 0460 South Asia 6: 0587 Southeast Asia 6: 0530; 13: 0462 Spain 6: 0772 status reports 1: 0257 Switzerland 6: 0747 Taiwan 6: 0530; 9: 0329; 10: 0366;
21: 0477 Tibet 19: 0470 trade 7: 0077; 10: 0332, 0366 Turkey 6: 0639; 21: 0505 USSR 7: 0077; 12: 0707; 15: 0637;
30: 0571 West Indies 6: 0828 Yemen 30: 0590 Yugoslavia 6: 0772; 15: 0564; 21: 0849 see also Foreign economic policy see also Foreign Policy Association see also Foreign Policy Research
Institution Foreign Policy Association
10: 0366 Foreign Policy Research Institute
25: 0731 Foreign relations
Africa 2: 0323, 0842; 3: 0194; 30: 0176 Africa Project 14: 0438 Algeria 6: 0772; 15: 0965 anticommunism efforts 2: 0230, 0684,
0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369; 12: 0425; 16: 0590; 18: 0401; 19: 0470; 27: 0001, 0292
87
arms control and disarmament 18: 0137; 24: 0671, 0746
Asia 2: 0323, 0842; 3: 0194; 15: 0803; 16: 0376
assassination 9: 0088 Australia 14: 0876 balance of power, USSR 9: 0205 Berlin, Germany 9: 0369 bombs 18: 0045 Burma 19: 0703 Cambodia 9: 0369 Canada 6: 0828; 7: 0809; 8: 0138, 0477;
29: 0121 Chiefs of United States Diplomatic
Missions 11: 0806, 0842 China 8: 0802, 0836; 9: 0001, 0088;
10: 0299; 14: 0825, 0876; 19: 0470 Cuba 8: 0724, 0758, 0802, 0836;
9: 0001, 0088; 16: 0696 Cultural Presentations Program
15: 0145 Eastern Europe 8: 0802, 0836; 9: 0001,
0088; 12: 0956; 14: 0876 educational exchange 9: 0939;
16: 0330, 0696 Eisenhower, Dwight D.—goodwill trip
29: 0121 Europe 2: 0323, 0842; 3: 0194;
12: 0569, 0739, 0956; 14: 0863; 15: 0333
foreign opinion of U.S. 8: 0758; 9: 0843, 0902; 11: 0001; 15: 0637, 0780; 16: 0282; 20: 0491; 29: 0187
foreign trade 12: 0539; 15: 0001 Germany 14: 0825; 15: 0637; 26: 0001 Harvard Glee Club foreign tour 15: 0279 Herter, Christian A.—trip to Asia
15: 0780 Hong Kong 6: 0587 Hungary 19: 0678 Hyde Park agreement 6: 0828 Iceland 16: 0251 India 14: 0825; 18: 0237; 19: 0522 international cooperation in cultural
activities 16: 0330 Iran 9: 0425 Khrushchev, Nikita 15: 0081; 19: 0703 Korea 16: 0597 Korea, Republic of 9: 0425 Laos 9: 0369, 19: 0562
Latin America 2: 0323, 0842; 3: 0194; 8: 0802
Middle East 2: 0323, 0842; 3: 0194; 10: 0366; 17: 0886
Militant Liberty 16: 0847 morals 17: 0317 NATO 10: 0094, 0299; 26: 0818;
27: 0240; 30: 0344 New Zealand 14: 0876 nuclear testing and test sites 18: 0237 nuclear weapons 7: 0545 Poland 19: 0211, 0253, 0285 pro-U.S. 9: 0252 psychological warfare 13: 0200 sanctions on Egypt 29: 0401 science and technology 9: 0236 Spain 21: 0290 Taiwan 9: 0425; 14: 0825; 18: 0365 Trade Fair Program 15: 0675, 0733 UK 6: 0587; 7: 0545; 18: 0045;
26: 0818; 30: 0660 UN 5: 0424; 20: 0318 United Arab Republic 17: 0787 U.S. joint military planning with UK
29: 0239 Vietnam 9: 0369 visitors to the U.S., foreign 17: 0116,
0164; 25: 0849 Yemen 17: 0839 Yugoslavia 16: 0422 see also American-Russian Military
Solidarity for Friendship program see also Cultural presentations see also under France see also under Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics Foreign Service
2: 0746; 3: 0451 Foreign trade
Asia 14: 0825 France 21: 0868, 0917 general 6: 0339; 12: 0539; 15: 0001;
29: 0693 Middle East 17: 0839 Pacific blockade 30: 0660 U.S. policy 9: 0939 USSR 7: 0077; 13: 0743, 0868;
14: 0001, 0108
88
France Africa relations 30: 0176 Algeria relations 6: 0772; 15: 0965 de Gaulle, Charles—U.S. visit 22: 0461 economic strength 6: 0772 foreign relations 4: 0266, 0687, 0756;
6: 0369; 9: 0843, 0902; 10: 0094; 11: 0001, 0128; 12: 0402, 0425, 0707; 13: 0462; 14: 0068, 0203, 0438, 0501, 0559, 0712, 0785; 15: 0081, 0279, 0965; 16: 0013, 0910; 17: 0368, 0670; 18: 0101, 0137, 0495, 0539, 0562, 0644, 0702, 0760, 0863; 19: 0001; 21: 0365, 0465, 0842, 0868, 0917; 22: 0357, 0461; 23: 0305; 24: 0414, 0448, 0671, 0746, 0911; 25: 0082, 0646, 0778, 0788; 26: 0001, 0073, 0233, 0717, 0859; 27: 0001, 0257; 28: 0241; 29: 0070, 0121, 0239, 0904, 0950; 30: 0001, 0258, 0416, 0596, 0660, 0728
military strength 6: 0772 Navarre Plan 2: 0963 U.S. aid 14: 0203 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0772; 12: 0569 U.S. relations 21: 0868, 0917
Freedom Academy 15: 0980
Freedom of Information Committee 25: 0849
Freedom of the press 8: 0836; 9: 0001
Freight rates 29: 0693
Geophysics 28: 0138
Germany Berlin 9: 0369; 16: 0001; 26: 0001;
30: 0596, 0660, 0728 dysentery 16: 0001 Europe relations 10: 0299 general 15: 0637 India economic relations 14: 0825 military 24: 0171 reunification 25: 0930; 30: 0660, 0728 status reports 1: 0359, 0377, 0568,
0588, 0610, 0632, 0657, 0681, 0705, 0726, 0753; 2: 0001
U.S. foreign policy 10: 0366; 12: 0569, 0805, 0956; 13: 0137, 0200; 30: 0660
USSR peace treaty 26: 0001 Government and business
aircraft and aerospace industry 14: 0501 Government and science
advisers 27: 0662, 0708 federal funding for research and
development 26: 0497, 0559 general 27: 0662 Killian, James R.—remarks 28: 0206 national defense 26: 0859
Government and the press general 17: 0069; 22: 0412; 28: 0241,
0281 Operation Alert 10: 0709 Press Service 6: 0369
Government-citizen relations general 2: 0184, 0653; 3: 0035, 0400,
0911; 4: 0266; 6: 0957; 8: 0206, 0373; 10: 0259; 17: 0069, 0210
USSR 13: 0826; 14: 0001 Government contracts and procurement
general 17: 0164; 23: 0716 offshore 3: 0637; 4: 0065, 0362, 0869
Government employees Department of State, overseas 11: 0001 general 8: 0569, 0611; 18: 0562;
22: 0026; 30: 0233 ICA overseas 11: 0001 overseas 10: 0940; 11: 0001, 0128,
0267; 18: 0438, 0495 training, overseas 18: 0495 USIA, overseas 11: 0001
Government information 9: 0124, 0155, 0176; 17: 0038, 0116
Government organization 14: 0167; 17: 0270; 22: 0887; 25: 0577;
27: 0467, 0563; 30: 0233 Government research
nuclear effect on humans 18: 0012 proposed studies 17: 0317
Government Security, Commission on 23: 0539
Government spending aircraft and aerospace industry 12: 0262 armed services, U.S. 12: 0262 Atomic Energy Program 2: 0577 education 14: 0167
89
federal funding for research and development 26: 0497, 0559
general 2: 0184, 0478, 0684, 0746, 0809, 0878; 3: 0104, 0306, 0400, 0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0129, 0266, 0362, 0500, 0642, 0710, 0869; 5: 0250, 0424, 0739, 0852, 0914; 6: 0203; 7: 0331, 0880; 8: 0001, 0138; 9: 0205, 0329, 0514, 0687, 0939; 10: 0874; 11: 0320; 12: 0198, 0232; 17: 0886; 20: 0783, 0834, 0909
international assistance 12: 0198, 0232 MATS 9: 0626 Military Defense Assistance programs
3: 0637; 4: 0065 MSP 5: 0001, 0424, 0739; 6: 0203;
12: 0096, 0144, 0232 national defense 27: 0467 research and development 14: 0167;
27: 0708 witnesses 9: 0753 see also Defense budgets and
appropriations see also Federal agency appropriations
and expenditures Government supplies and property
2: 0184, 0653; 3: 0001, 0855, 0911; 4: 0214, 0266, 0588, 0642; 5: 0130, 0552, 0914; 10: 0030, 0513, 0645, 0785; 21: 0477; 23: 0716
Greece economic strength 6: 0772 general 16: 0013 military strength 6: 0772 status reports 1: 0897 U.S. embassy 29: 0121 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0772
Ground Observer Corps 2: 0016, 0351; 8: 0001
Guatemala political strength 22: 0708
Harbors and ports 29: 0693, 0844, 0870
Helium 25: 0782
High Energy Aircraft Fuels 14: 0278
High Voltage Engineering Corporation 24: 0197
Hong Kong economic strength 6: 0587 military strength 6: 0587 status reports 1: 0455, 0568, 0632,
0832, 0855, 0877 UK relations 6: 0587 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0587; 16: 0162
Hospitals American Research Hospital for
Children 19: 0211 Hungary
delegation to UN 16: 0187 Revolution of 1956 5: 0168 U.S. foreign policy 16: 0187 U.S. relations 19: 0678
Iceland economic strength 6: 0747 military strength 6: 0747 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0747; 16: 0251 USSR relations 16: 0251
Immigration and Nationality Act amendments 15: 0392
Immigration policy general 2: 0280, 0746; 3: 0104, 0958;
4: 0710; 5: 0215, 0659; 6: 0001 USSR 6: 0445
India cholera 19: 0522 economic development 19: 0470, 0522 food and food industry 21: 0573 German economic relations 14: 0825 Kerala elections 16: 0590 radioactive materials 29: 0681 U.S. relations 18: 0237; 19: 0522
Indochina see Southeast Asia
Indonesia status reports 1: 0547, 0610, 0632,
0855; 2: 0001 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0530; 16: 0311
Industrial Defense Program 24: 0353
Information Center Service 5: 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Information security general 2: 0280, 0746; 3: 0104, 0451,
0958; 4: 0317, 0710; 5: 0215, 0659; 6: 0001; 7: 0880; 17: 0405; 25: 0803; 28: 0241, 0281
nuclear weapons 7: 0513
90
Information security cont. policy 9: 0124, 0155, 0176, 0753 sale of unclassified government
information 23: 0533 science and technology 17: 0270
Institute of International Education 18: 0795
Intelligence, classified 7: 0841, 0880
Intelligence services COMINT-ELINT 11: 0697, 0734, 0762 duplication 11: 0842, 0888 foreign 11: 0354, 0663 general 10: 0080; 11: 0453, 0569, 0718,
0762; 13: 0459; 14: 0222; 22: 0444, 0708, 0741, 0774, 0796; 24: 0040, 0052, 0073
interagency cooperation 11: 0320, 0432, 0472, 0540, 0607, 0623
international cooperation 10: 0094 military 23: 0793 nuclear power 23: 0793 presidential approval 11: 0379, 0432,
0472, 0501, 0540 Project MAN (army information)
21: 0420 satellites 13: 0424 Special Committee on Technical
Surveillance Countermeasures 7: 0077
USSR program 11: 0516 see also Central Intelligence Agency see also Foreign Intelligence Program see also Information security see also Intelligence, classified
Inter-American Committee for the Juridical Defense of Western Democracy
18: 0644 Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile Program
8: 0596; 9: 0205; 27: 0563; 30: 0491 Inter-Continental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs)
USSR 17: 0710 Interdepartmental Intelligence Conference
charter 7: 0077 Internal security
Africa 10: 0874 Asia 10: 0874
classified information 9: 0124, 0155, 0176, 0753
Europe 10: 0874 federal facilities 2: 0280, 0746; 3: 0104,
0958; 5: 0215, 0659, 0914; 8: 0206 general 2: 0280; 3: 0451; 4: 0317, 0710;
5: 0215, 0659; 6: 0001; 7: 0077, 0880; 11: 0888; 17: 0069; 28: 0241, 0281, 0314
government information 9: 0124; 28: 0281, 0314
harbors and ports 2: 0280, 0746; 3: 0104; 5: 0659; 6: 0001, 0426; 8: 0138
Jackson committee report (assessing U.S. progress in national security and defense) 9: 0252
Latin America 10: 0874 Middle East 10: 0874 national emergency measures 10: 0577 science 17: 0069 status reports 1: 0705, 0753, 0779,
0805, 0832, 0877, 0897, 0917, 0938, 0979; 2: 0001
St. Lawrence Seaway 29: 0870 Wright Commission report (government
security programs) 23: 0539 see also Information security see also Intelligence services see also Internal Security Program
Internal Security Program 2: 0280, 0746; 3: 0104, 0451, 0958;
4: 0317, 0710; 5: 0215, 0659; 6: 0001; 7: 0377
International assistance Africa 2: 0117, 0478; 3: 0074, 0637,
0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0129, 0362, 0500, 0869; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739, 0852; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425; 13: 0528, 0594
agricultural commodities 21: 0917 agriculture 14: 0405 Asia 2: 0117, 0478; 3: 0074, 0637,
0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0129, 0362, 0500, 0869; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739, 0852; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0144, 0319, 0425, 0773; 13: 0001, 0528, 0594, 0625; 14: 0405; 15: 0780; 19: 0562
Belgium 9: 0687
91
Chile 14: 0905 Colombia 21: 0515 defense commitments 12: 0773 Eastern Europe 5: 0001; 19: 0522 economic 5: 0852; 16: 0597; 19: 0817 economic development, foreign
26: 0312, 0357, 0404 education 25: 0646 educational exchanges 18: 0863 Ethiopia 29: 0121 Europe 2: 0117, 0478; 3: 0074, 0637,
0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0129, 0362, 0500, 0869; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739, 0852; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0096, 0144, 0319, 0425, 0773, 0956; 13: 0528, 0594, 0625
food and food industry 19: 0470; 21: 0515, 0573
France 14: 0203 general 2: 0878; 10: 0332, 0366;
11: 0001; 12: 0046; 16: 0376; 22: 0461; 27: 0257, 0292, 0336; 30: 0258
Great White Fleet 16: 0099 India 19: 0470 Iraq 17: 0839 Italy 9: 0687 Japan 9: 0687 Korea 16: 0597 Latin America 2: 0117, 0478; 3: 0074,
0637, 0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0129, 0362, 0500, 0869; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739, 0852; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425; 13: 0528, 0594, 0625
Meals for Millions program 21: 0573 medical aid to Eastern Europe 16: 0099 Middle East 2: 0117, 0478; 3: 0074,
0637, 0783, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0129, 0362, 0500, 0869; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739, 0852; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425, 0773; 13: 0528, 0594, 0625; 24: 0197
military assistance 1: 0726, 0753, 0779, 0832; 2: 0878; 13: 0625; 14: 0894; 27: 0001
Netherlands 9: 0687 Pakistan 21: 0515 Point Four Program 2: 0117
Polish Medical Aid Project 19: 0211, 0253, 0285, 0332
Portugal 9: 0687 religion and religious institutions
14: 0905 Taiwan 21: 0477 Thailand 9: 0793 UK 14: 0203 U.S. economic aid 27: 0001 USSR 19: 0817; 27: 0001 voluntary aid organizations 16: 0037 see also Project Hope
International Commission of Jurists 18: 0644
International Cooperation Administration (ICA)
Africa 10: 0874 Asia 10: 0874 Europe 10: 0874 general 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001;
10: 0874; 14: 0405, 0438; 25: 0788, 0796
Latin America 10: 0874 Middle East 10: 0874 overseas personnel 11: 0001 Public Administration training 17: 0069
International cooperation in cultural activities
Cultural Presentations Program 15: 0733
general 10: 0094; 15: 0145, 0212; 16: 0330
religion and religious institutions 15: 0733
USSR 15: 0733 International cooperation in law enforcement
arms control and disarmament 24: 0571 International cooperation in science and technology
general 9: 0236; 10: 0094; 14: 0167; 30: 0427, 0452
military weapons 26: 0859 NATO 30: 0463 nuclear power 10: 0185; 22: 0138;
26: 0859 proposals 21: 0195 research and development 26: 0859 Science for Peace 21: 0001; 27: 0758
92
International cooperation in science and technology cont.
space programs 19: 0877; 20: 0384, 0665; 21: 0001, 0045, 0079
USSR 27: 0903 U.S.-USSR cooperation 21: 0261
International Development Advisory Board
26: 0357 International Geophysical Year (IGY)
correspondence 6: 0828 general 14: 0785; 15: 0212; 19: 0877;
24: 0197; 26: 0559 International Health Programs
16: 0037, 0099 International Institute on Ellis Island
15: 0551 International Olympic Committee
removal of Chinese National Olympic Committee 18: 0365
International Red Cross 14: 0905; 17: 0001
International Rescue Committee 19: 0817
International Voluntary Services Report 16: 0376
Iran economic strength 6: 0639 elections 29: 0121 general 16: 0529 military strength 6: 0639 status reports 1: 0107, 0133, 0478,
0502, 0657, 0681, 0705, 0726, 0897, 0917
U.S. defense 9: 0425 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0639
Iraq anticommunism efforts 17: 0787 politics 17: 0787 U.S. aid 17: 0839
Israel 16: 0535
Italy economic strength 9: 0687 general 16: 0548 international assistance 9: 0687 status reports 1: 0319, 0359, 0523,
0681, 0705
Japan economic strength 9: 0687 foreign relations 16: 0553 general 17: 0405 Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing
display 18: 0237 influenza 16: 0553 international assistance 9: 0687 military strength 4: 0012 Ryukyus law 16: 0553 status reports 1: 0107, 0133, 0159,
0239, 0257, 0277, 0298, 0319, 0329, 0377, 0632, 0657, 0938, 0959, 0979
U.S. foreign policy 6: 0530; 16: 0553 Jews and Judaism
see Anti-Semitism Joint Chiefs of Staff
23: 0614 Justice Department
general 9: 0176; 25: 0803, 0849 Khrushchev, Nikita
15: 0081; 16: 0422; 19: 0703, 0758; 30: 0761
Korea, Republic of (South Korea) military strength 4: 0012 politics 16: 0597 Pusan warehouse 16: 0597 status reports 1: 0257, 0298, 0319,
0329, 0359, 0377, 0397, 0478, 0502, 0547, 0568, 0588, 0610, 0632, 0657, 0705, 0726, 0753, 0779, 0805, 0832, 0855, 0877, 0897, 0938, 0959
U.S. aid 16: 0597 U.S. defense 9: 0425 U.S. foreign policy 12: 0805 U.S. relations 16: 0597
Korean War cease-fire 13: 0001 general 2: 0842 POWs 23: 0094, 0144, 0305, 0208
Labor, Department of 25: 0895
Labor policy 23: 0877
Labor unions developing countries 16: 0659 political power 16: 0659
93
Land use and conservation 21: 0917
Laos police 19: 0562 U.S. defense 9: 0369 U.S. relations 19: 0562
Latin America anticommunism efforts 2: 0230, 0684,
0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
communism 13: 0118, 0790 Cuban invasions 8: 0836; 9: 0001 decline of U.S. prestige 9: 0843, 0902 economic strength 2: 0478; 3: 0783;
4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852 general 16: 0696 internal security 10: 0874 international assistance 2: 0478;
3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852
military aid 3: 0637; 13: 0625 military strength 2: 0577, 0963; 16: 0696 National Security Council policy 3: 0637;
4: 0065 natural resources 16: 0696 PTP program 18: 0644 status reports 1: 0277, 0298, 0329,
0416, 0436, 0523, 0547, 0568, 0588, 0632, 0657, 0681, 0705, 0753, 0779, 0805
U.S. aid 2: 0117, 0878; 3: 0074, 0911; 4: 0001, 0065, 0362, 0637, 0869; 5: 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425; 13: 0528, 0594
U.S. foreign policy 6: 0828; 13: 0001, 0046, 0165
U.S. Navy band tour 16: 0696 USSR relations 8: 0802 see also Brazil see also Chile see also Colombia see also Dominican Republic see also Ecuador see also Guatemala see also Mexico see also Venezuela
Latin American Student Program 16: 0696
Lenin, Vladimir 30: 0047
Libya economic strength 6: 0639 military strength 6: 0639 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0639 Wheelus Road 16: 0801
Little Rock, Arkansas school desegregation 5: 0618
Malaria Eradication Program 16: 0037
Manned Satellite Program 20: 0001
Manned space exploration 20: 0384, 0834
Manpower mobilization status reports 1: 0959, 0979
Marine Corps, U.S. 2: 0351; 3: 0249, 0527, 0610; 6: 0067;
9: 0483 Maritime policy
9: 0514, 0567, 0605 McCarthyism
9: 0843 Meals for Millions program
21: 0573 Media development
5: 0618, 0955; 6: 0369 Merchant Marines, U.S.
general 9: 0514, 0567 mobilization 9: 0567 policy 9: 0605
Metals and metal industries general 2: 0184; 3: 0001 tin and tin industry 19: 0817 uranium 14: 0438; 22: 0412
Meteorological Satellite Program 20: 0245
Mexico petroleum and petroleum industry
29: 0401 radioactive waste 18: 0324
Middle East anticommunism efforts 2: 0230, 0684,
0842; 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369
Arab-Israeli relations 6: 0639; 10: 0366; 17: 0787, 0839
communism 13: 0790 decline of U.S. prestige 9: 0843, 0902 economic development 17: 0839
94
Middle East cont. economic strength 2: 0478; 3: 0783;
4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852; 6: 0639
foreign trade 17: 0839 general 5: 0001; 26: 0717; 30: 0416 history 10: 0299 internal security 10: 0874 international assistance 2: 0478;
3: 0783; 4: 0129, 0500; 5: 0001, 0852
military aid 3: 0637; 13: 0625 military strength 2: 0577, 0963; 6: 0639 National Security Council policy 3: 0637;
4: 0065 petroleum and petroleum industry
1: 0082, 0107, 0212, 0478; 6: 0772 PTP program 18: 0562, 0644 radio 17: 0933 status reports 1: 0058, 0239 Suez Canal 29: 0187 U.S. aid 2: 0117, 0878; 3: 0074, 0911;
4: 0001, 0065, 0362, 0637, 0869; 5: 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 12: 0046, 0319, 0425, 0773; 13: 0528, 0594; 24: 0197
U.S. foreign policy 6: 0639; 12: 0608; 13: 0001, 0046, 0165, 0200; 17: 0787, 0839, 0933; 24: 0197
U.S. personnel 11: 0128 U.S. relations 10: 0366; 17: 0886 USSR relations 29: 0187 see also Cyprus see also Egypt see also Iran see also Iraq see also Israel see also Palestine see also Saudi Arabia see also Syria see also Turkey see also Yemen
Militant Liberty program 23: 0305
Military aircraft Aeroflot 22: 0844 Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program
7: 0707; 8: 0477; 14: 0278; 22: 0087 airlift capabilities 9: 0425, 0605, 0626 antiaircraft program 8: 0278
crew ratio 9: 0626 general 3: 0527 performance 8: 0339
Military Air Transport Service (MATS) general 9: 0626 government spending 14: 0501;
22: 0527 Military assistance
general 2: 0878 local areas 5: 0400 status reports 1: 0726, 0753, 0779,
0832 Military Assistance Program
Draper report 6: 0203 general 3: 0306; 4: 0012, 0362, 0869;
5: 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 9: 0687; 13: 0504, 0625; 16: 0910; 18: 0562; 25: 0692
Military Assistance Training Program 4: 0362, 0869
objectives 17: 0038 Overseas Internal Security Program
10: 0874 personnel 4: 0869
Military bases, posts, and reservations general 2: 0016; 3: 0249, 0527; 4: 0756;
5: 0250; 6: 0067; 7: 0899, 0902, 0906
overseas 6: 0957; 7: 0919; 16: 0925; 29: 0950
Military Defense Assistance Program (MDAP)
general 3: 0637 government spending 3: 0637; 4: 0065
Military development Australia 14: 0876 Austria 14: 0894 New Zealand 14: 0876
Military discipline 18: 0495
Military education Army War College 28: 0888 curricula 26: 0717; 28: 0808; 29: 0001
Military intelligence Project MAN 21: 0420
Military officers Africa 16: 0934 Asia 16: 0934 Latin America 16: 0934 Middle East 16: 0934
95
Military operations limited war 30: 0474
Military personnel ceilings 24: 0171 foreign 11: 0128; 17: 0405 general 2: 0016, 0351; 3: 0249, 0527;
4: 0756; 6: 0067; 8: 0001; 9: 0626; 14: 0278; 18: 0562
government spending 24: 0129 impact on local economy overseas
11: 0001, 0128 medical rejections 9: 0739 opinion and attitude surveys 9: 0739 overseas 10: 0940; 11: 0001, 0267;
13: 0594; 18: 0539; 29: 0187, 0950 POWs 23: 0208 training of, foreign 15: 0145 USSR 16: 0970 veterans 18: 0795 see also Military discipline see also Military education see also Military training
Military Program general 2: 0351; 3: 0249, 0527, 0610,
0637; 4: 0756; 6: 0067; 12: 0459 radio frequencies 29: 0554 research and development 3: 0610;
14: 0167 sales and purchases 4: 0869 space research and development
5: 0723 see also Military assistance see also Military Assistance Program see also Military bases, posts, and
reservations see also Military Defense Assistance
Program see also Military development see also Military intelligence see also Military officers see also Military operations see also Military personnel see also Military strategy see also Military strength see also Military supplies and
equipment see also Military weapons
Military rules and regulations Code of an American Mother 23: 0468
Military strategy cold war 6: 0067; 12: 0890; 14: 0559;
16: 0847; 22: 0588 general 6: 0445; 10: 0332, 0366;
16: 0813; 19: 0379; 30: 0258 policy toward Asia 6: 0530 U.S.-UK relations 29: 0239 war-gaming 30: 0215 wartime preparedness 10: 0001
Military strength Africa 2: 0577; 6: 0639 Asia 2: 0577 Australia 6: 0587 Austria 6: 0747 China 10: 0080; 13: 0743, 0915;
14: 0001 Cyprus 6: 0772 Eastern Europe 2: 0809; 3: 0164, 0486;
7: 0377; 13: 0743, 0790, 0915; 14: 0001
Europe 2: 0577 Finland 6: 0772 foreign 3: 0306, 0637, 0838; 4: 0012,
0129, 0362, 0756, 0869; 5: 0250, 0424, 0739; 6: 0067; 7: 0331; 9: 0687; 12: 0356; 13: 0200; 15: 0637; 24: 0247
France 6: 0772 Greece 6: 0772 Hong Kong 6: 0587 Iceland 6: 0747 Iran 6: 0639 Latin America 2: 0577 Libya 6: 0639 Middle East 2: 0577; 6: 0639 New Zealand 6: 0587 Philippines 6: 0587 Scandinavia 6: 0747 South Asia 6: 0587 Spain 6: 0772 Switzerland 6: 0747 Thailand 9: 0793 Turkey 6: 0639 U.S. 2: 0963; 5: 0400; 8: 0514; 9: 0369,
0425, 0483; 12: 0262, 0459, 0679, 0805, 0927; 13: 0200; 14: 0278; 23: 0858
96
Military strength cont. USSR 8: 0001, 0463; 10: 0080;
13: 0690, 0826; 14: 0001, 0068, 0278
Yugoslavia 6: 0772 Military supplies and equipment
general 2: 0016, 0093, 0117, 0351, 0614; 3: 0249, 0527, 0637; 4: 0129, 0362, 0756, 0869; 5: 0250, 0739; 6: 0067, 0957; 7: 0331, 0919; 8: 0001, 0278, 0373, 0463, 0477, 0514, 0538; 24: 0353
government spending 24: 0129 Hyde Park agreement 6: 0828
Military training foreign officers 16: 0934
Military veterans USSR 18: 0795
Military weapons flight interceptors 8: 0278, 0373 foreign relations 18: 0045 general 27: 0512; 30: 0227 rockets 21: 0261 USSR 21: 0261
Mineral resources general 2: 0184; 3: 0001 policy 29: 0353
Mines, military 5: 0250
Missile defense 5: 0250, 0400
Missile Program development 17: 0466 general 17: 0466, 0488, 0528, 0629 government spending 27: 0512 press clipping 17: 0629 publicity 17: 0670, 0710
Missiles and rockets general 2: 0016, 0351; 3: 0486, 0527,
0610; 6: 0067, 0915; 7: 0919; 8: 0001, 0477, 0634, 0662; 9: 0205; 13: 0743, 0868; 14: 0108, 0278; 17: 0528, 0629; 21: 0155; 27: 0563; 28: 0159; 29: 0844; 30: 0344, 0491
POLARIS missile test 30: 0233 test publicity 17: 0710 USSR 9: 0205; 17: 0670
Mobilization Program 2: 0614; 3: 0001, 0362, 0855; 4: 0214,
0588; 5: 0130, 0552; 6: 0339; 7: 0377; 23: 0858
Money supply foreign currency 15: 0870, 0925
Motion pictures 5: 0955; 14: 0785; 18: 0324; 20: 0909
Motion Picture Service 6: 0369
Mutual Defense Assistance Program 4: 0065; 12: 0232
Mutual Security Act 11: 0806, 0842
Mutual Security Agency 2: 0230, 0684
Mutual Security Program (MSP) effect on U.S. economy 5: 0739 foreign politics 5: 0424 general 2: 0117, 0478, 0577, 0878,
0963; 3: 0306, 0783; 4: 0001, 0129; 5: 0001, 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 7: 0331; 12: 0319; 17: 0038; 26: 0281, 0312, 0357, 0404; 30: 0336
government spending 5: 0001, 0424, 0739; 6: 0203; 12: 0096, 0144, 0232
objectives 4: 0500 Mutual Weapons Development Program
3: 0637; 4: 0065, 0362, 0869 National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958
19: 0877; 20: 0491; 26: 0446 National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
general 6: 0001; 9: 0176; 19: 0962; 20: 0491; 26: 0446
government spending 20: 0491 objectives 20: 0834
National Aeronautics and Space Council 19: 0877, 0962; 20: 0001, 0052, 0109,
0185, 0245, 0318, 0384, 0453, 0491, 0615, 0665, 0783, 0834, 0909; 21: 0155; 26: 0446
National Damage Assessment Center 5: 0130
97
National defense Code of Conduct Program 23: 0094,
0144, 0208, 0305, 0468 current problems 22: 0887 foreign industrial operations 6: 0888 general 4: 0756; 5: 0001, 0400; 6: 0888;
7: 0331, 0377; 8: 0001, 0128, 0138, 0186, 0206, 0268, 0278, 0320, 0327, 0339, 0363, 0367, 0373, 0418, 0448, 0511, 0514, 0569, 0596, 0611, 0625, 0634, 0662, 0700; 14: 0278; 15: 0460; 21: 0709, 0773
government spending 12: 0001, 0020; 27: 0467
Jackson committee report (assessing U.S. progress in national security and defense) 9: 0252
national security policy, analysis of 12: 0402, 0425, 0459, 0510, 0539, 0569, 0608, 0644, 0679, 0707, 0739, 0805, 0852, 0890; 13: 0046, 0137, 0165, 0200
opinion and attitude surveys 8: 0373 overseas 11: 0128; 30: 0176 overseas industry 19: 0431 petroleum and petroleum industry
7: 0149 policy 6: 0445, 0530, 0587, 0639, 0747,
0772, 0828, 0915, 0957; 7: 0001, 0055, 0077; 12: 0356; 13: 0137; 26: 0357, 0717; 28: 0780, 0888; 30: 0258, 0392
Project Solarium 1: 0455, 0478, 0502, 0523, 0547
recommendations 8: 0001, 0373, 0418, 0463, 0477, 0538; 14: 0222, 0278
science 26: 0859 speeches and addresses 21: 0299 status reports 1: 0001, 0277, 0319,
0329, 0359, 0377, 0397, 0416, 0436, 0478, 0502, 0523, 0547, 0568, 0588, 0610, 0632, 0681, 0705, 0726, 0753, 0779, 0959
strategy paper 21: 0365 USSR 12: 0001 vulnerabilities 14: 0222, 0278 see also Air defense see also Customs administration see also Internal security
see also Missile defense see also National security policy see also Wartime preparedness
National Freedom Board (Proposed) 26: 0475
Nationalism foreign 9: 0843
National Petroleum Program 1: 0018, 0058, 0082, 0107, 0277, 0298,
0319, 0329, 0359, 0377, 0397, 0416, 0568, 0657; 9: 0329
National resources 12: 0539
National Science Foundation fellowship recipients 26: 0559 general 26: 0497, 0670; 27: 0708
National Security Agency (NSA) director 11: 0842 general 11: 0888; 23: 0793; 26: 0699
National Security Council (NSC) AEC relations 9: 0329 Africa 3: 0637; 4: 0065 Asia 3: 0637; 4: 0065 attorney general membership 25: 0803 CIA policy 7: 0055 civil service appointments and
promotions 9: 0329; 14: 0559 Europe 3: 0637; 4: 0065 federal agency appropriations and
expenditures 1: 0212, 0257, 0277, 0298, 0319, 0329, 0657; 25: 0501
foreign countries 12: 0356 general 4: 0362; 7: 0119, 0149, 0194,
0225, 0264, 0303; 8: 0138, 0477; 22: 0623, 0671; 23: 0614, 0833; 24: 0171; 25: 0577, 0692; 27: 0662; 28: 0780, 0888; 29: 0001
government information 28: 0281 Latin America 3: 0637; 4: 0065 Middle East 3: 0637; 4: 0065 Planning Board 9: 0176 policy 1: 0037, 0082, 0133, 0159, 0184,
0212, 0239, 0257, 0277, 0298, 0319, 0329, 0588, 0610, 0897, 0917; 3: 0637; 4: 0065; 7: 0001; 17: 0270, 0317; 25: 0692; 29: 0283
98
National Security Council (NSC) cont. status reports 1: 0037, 0082, 0133,
0159, 0184, 0212, 0239, 0257, 0277, 0298, 0319, 0329, 0588, 0610, 0897, 0917
wartime preparedness 12: 0356 National security policy
analysis of 12: 0001, 0020, 0046, 0096, 0144, 0198, 0232, 0262, 0319, 0356, 0402, 0425, 0459, 0510, 0539, 0569, 0608, 0644, 0679, 0707, 0739, 0805, 0852, 0890; 13: 0046, 0137, 0165, 0200
Center for the Study of Coordinated National Policy 17: 0270
federal boards, committees, and commissions 14: 0604
general 6: 0445; 17: 0753; 30: 0258 National Shelter Policy
6: 0339 National Space Vehicle Program
20: 0052, 0453, 0491, 0615 National Telecommunications Board
29: 0619 National War College
curricula 29: 0001 general 26: 0717
Naval vessels aircraft carrier 30: 0001
Naval War College general 21: 0420; 28: 0808 curricula 21: 0299 history 21: 0299
Navarre Plan 2: 0963
Navy, foreign NATO 2: 0577, 0878, 0963; 3: 0306,
0637, 0838; 4: 0012, 0362 USSR 25: 0294 see also Navy, U.S.
Navy, U.S. band tour of Latin America 16: 0696 general 2: 0016, 0351; 3: 0249, 0527,
0610; 4: 0129, 0756; 5: 0250, 0400; 6: 0067; 7: 0331; 8: 0278; 30: 0474
military strength 9: 0483 overseas military personnel 13: 0625 troop inspections 25: 0294 see also Naval vessels
see also Navy budgets and appropriations
see also Navy yards and naval stations Navy budgets and appropriations
24: 0197 Navy yards and naval stations
29: 0870 Nehru, Suhrawardy
16: 0422 Netherlands
economic strength 9: 0687 international assistance 9: 0687
New Zealand China relations 14: 0876 Eastern Europe relations 14: 0876 economic development 14: 0876 economic strength 6: 0587 military development 14: 0876 military strength 6: 0587 political development 14: 0876 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0587
Ninth International Conference of American States
6: 0828 Nixon, Richard M.
30: 0148, 0176 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
air force 2: 0577, 0878; 3: 0306, 0637, 0838; 4: 0012, 0362; 7: 0331
armed forces 2: 0963; 7: 0264 army 2: 0577, 0878; 3: 0306, 0610,
0637, 0838; 4: 0012, 0362; 7: 0331 defense 10: 0141; 13: 0200 Dulles, John Foster—speech 10: 0094 general 2: 0117, 0323, 0478, 0842,
0878; 3: 0306; 4: 0869; 5: 0424, 0739; 7: 0919; 10: 0094, 0141; 13: 0200; 18: 0001; 26: 0859; 29: 0950; 30: 0344
international cooperation in science and technology 10: 0185
navy 2: 0577, 0878; 3: 0306, 0637, 0838; 4: 0012, 0362
nuclear weapons 30: 0344 scientific cooperation 30: 0427, 0463 status reports 1: 0681 treaties and conventions 12: 0262 U.S. force commitments 10: 0141 U.S. foreign policy 10: 0141
99
U.S. relations 10: 0299; 26: 0818; 27: 0240; 30: 0344
USSR 27: 0001 Nuclear energy
aircraft and aerospace industry 21: 0678 effect on humans 18: 0012 general 4: 0756; 5: 0250; 7: 0458, 0489,
0707, 0739, 0778, 0809; 8: 0339; 9: 0329; 18: 0012, 0045, 0101, 0137, 0184, 0237, 0273, 0324
industrial energy use 26: 0233 medical research 22: 0138 On the Beach (film on nuclear war)
18: 0324 peaceful uses 6: 0957; 14: 0863;
27: 0253 private industry 22: 0138 Project PLOWSHARE 18: 0184, 0273 reactor development 3: 0001; 4: 0214;
7: 0809; 22: 0138 rocket propulsion 21: 0678 status reports 1: 0159, 0184, 0632,
0657, 0726, 0753, 0779, 0805, 0938, 0959, 0979
UK 6: 0957 UN plan 24: 0571 USSR 6: 0957; 8: 0001, 0418 see also Atomic accident emergency
measures see also Atomic Energy Commission see also Atomic Energy Program see also Atoms for Peace Program see also Nuclear explosives and
explosions see also Nuclear power see also Nuclear research see also Nuclear testing and test sites see also Nuclear weapons
Nuclear explosives and explosions general 25: 0731; 27: 0758, 0857 Project VELA (detection of nuclear
detonations) 30: 0144 Nuclear inspections
22: 0320; 25: 0423, 0464; 28: 0180 Nuclear research
4: 0214; 7: 0707, 0778; 10: 0185; 19: 0449; 25: 0464
Nuclear testing and test sites ARGUS nuclear tests 21: 0105;
27: 0618
foreign relations 18: 0237 general 10: 0233, 0259, 0299, 0332,
0366, 0461, 0466, 0469; 15: 0965; 17: 0488; 18: 0012, 0045, 0101, 0184, 0273, 0324; 21: 0001, 0045, 0963; 22: 0026, 0412; 25: 0058, 0930; 27: 0959; 28: 0051, 0159; 30: 0001, 0392
H-bomb tests 16: 0970 neutral countries 10: 0332, 0366 Nevada 7: 0458, 0707, 0778; 18: 0184,
0324 policy 24: 0854 USSR 18: 0137; 22: 0110
Nuclear weapons air defense 18: 0045 arms control and disarmament 25: 0423 clean weapons 18: 0101, 0137 general 2: 0280; 3: 0164, 0249, 0486;
5: 0215, 0659; 6: 0001, 0957; 7: 0411, 0458, 0489, 0739, 0778, 0841, 0880; 8: 0418, 0463, 0634, 0662; 10: 0001, 0366, 0469; 12: 0927; 13: 0690, 0743, 0868; 14: 0001, 0108, 0222, 0278; 15: 0333; 16: 0813, 0970; 17: 0001, 0488, 0753; 21: 0709, 0773, 0963; 22: 0026, 0064, 0282, 0320; 24: 0278, 0414, 0511, 0571, 0671; 25: 0388, 0731; 26: 0126, 0163, 0181, 0233, 0818; 30: 0344, 0474, 0491
Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombing display 18: 0237
India 18: 0237 information security 7: 0513 NATO 30: 0344 opinion and attitude surveys 10: 0259 policy 7: 0513, 0571, 0598, 0638, 0660;
10: 0185; 18: 0045, 0101, 0137, 0273; 22: 0087
politics 22: 0001 presidential approval 7: 0513, 0545,
0555, 0559, 0565, 0571, 0598, 0620, 0638, 0660, 0692
presidential powers 7: 0598 public information 10: 0233, 0259, 0469;
18: 0012 radioactive fallout 22: 0357 radioactive waste 18: 0324
100
Nuclear weapons cont. research and development 8: 0206;
18: 0184; 22: 0110; 26: 0051 study on human effects 10: 0233 submarines 10: 0185 transport 18: 0045, 0137 U.S. 8: 0596; 18: 0184; 30: 0258 U.S.-UK relations 7: 0545 USSR 8: 0596, 0634, 0662; 10: 0469;
18: 0184; 22: 0064; 24: 0278; 26: 0126; 30: 0258
U.S.-USSR cooperation 21: 0678 Olympics
18: 0365 Operation Alert
general 10: 0513, 0577, 0607, 0629, 0645, 0709, 0719, 0785, 0862
press guidelines 10: 0709 public information 10: 0299 testing 10: 0719, 0862
Operations Coordinating Board (OCB) Antarctica 14: 0712 civil service appointments and
promotions 17: 0210 general 3: 0164, 0486, 0958; 4: 0317,
0710; 7: 0001; 9: 0753; 14: 0438, 0501, 0876; 15: 0145, 0212, 0333, 0564, 0780, 0870, 0925, 0980; 16: 0013, 0311, 0696, 0934, 0970; 17: 0069, 0368, 0787; 18: 0495; 19: 0877; 20: 0001; 21: 0105; 26: 0126; 28: 0888; 29: 0070; 30: 0416
government employees 19: 0001 National Aeronautics and Space Council
relations 21: 0155 policy 19: 0431 psychological warfare 15: 0081 speeches and addresses 21: 0299
Opinion and attitude surveys Africa 24: 0001 military personnel 9: 0739 national defense knowledge 8: 0373
Organization of American States 8: 0836; 9: 0001
Overseas American schools 19: 0417
Overseas Internal Security Program (OISP)
general 10: 0874; 13: 0504, 0528; 18: 0401
Military Assistance Program relations 18: 0365
Pacific Missile Range 17: 0670
Pacific War College 17: 0405
Pakistan aircraft and aerospace industry 17: 0116 education 21: 0515 international assistance 21: 0515
Palestine refugees 15: 0564; 17: 0787 U.S. foreign policy 15: 0564
Panama Canal 29: 0283
Passports and visas 3: 0104, 0958; 5: 0659; 8: 0802;
18: 0539 People-to-People (PTP) Foundation
18: 0702; 19: 0001 People-to-People (PTP) Program
Africa 18: 0562 Asia 18: 0562, 0644 Committee for the Handicapped
18: 0702; 19: 0001 Europe 18: 0562, 0644 general 15: 0212; 17: 0405; 18: 0702,
0760, 0795, 0863 Greater Hartford 18: 0702; 19: 0001 history 19: 0001 Latin America 18: 0644 Middle East 18: 0562, 0644 presidential communications and
messages 18: 0795 proposed studies 18: 0702 The Patriot Newspaper 18: 0760
Pests and pest control locusts 17: 0933
Petroleum and petroleum industry Cuba 8: 0802 general 7: 0149; 22: 0948; 23: 0001;
29: 0401 Middle East 1: 0107 pipelines 10: 0874; 22: 0948
101
status reports 1: 0018, 0107, 0377 U.S. dependence on Middle East oil
6: 0772 Philippines
armed services 19: 0188 economic development 19: 0188 economic strength 6: 0587 general 19: 0188 military strength 6: 0587 political development 19: 0188 President Magsaysay memorial
16: 0831 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0587; 19: 0188
Pipelines petroleum and petroleum industry
28: 0281 Poland
general 19: 0211 Polish Medical Aid Project 19: 0211,
0253, 0285, 0332 Poznan riots 19: 0817 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0445 U.S. relations 19: 0211, 0253 USSR relations 19: 0285
Polio 16: 0187
Polish Medical Aid Project 19: 0211, 0253, 0285, 0332
Political development Australia 14: 0876 Austria 14: 0894 Guatemala 22: 0708 New Zealand 14: 0876 Philippines 19: 0188
Politics China 10: 0080 democracy 23: 0035 Iraq 17: 0787 Poznan riots (Poland) 19: 0817 Southeast Asia 13: 0118 Thailand 9: 0793 U.S. 16: 0847 USSR 10: 0080; 13: 0200, 0690, 0826;
14: 0001, 0068; 18: 0795; 30: 0047 Population size
cities 8: 0001 Portugal
economic strength 9: 0687 international assistance 9: 0687
Postage stamps and meters 16: 0831
Power Positions Project 29: 0070
Presidential appointments 16: 0970; 17: 0001, 0116; 22: 0623
Presidential powers nuclear weapons 7: 0598
Press clippings general 15: 0279; 16: 0037, 0187, 0847;
17: 0710; 18: 0012, 0365, 0539, 0702; 19: 0470; 23: 0305, 0468
POWs 23: 0208 USIA 17: 0038 USSR 19: 0758
Prisoners of war (POWs) China 23: 0208 claims 23: 0305 code of conduct 23: 0094, 0144, 0208,
0305, 0468 communism 23: 0208 general 2: 0684; 23: 0094, 0144 interrogation 23: 0208 Korean War 23: 0208 press clippings 23: 0208 public opinion on the Code of Conduct
23: 0305 see also Code of an American Mother
Private investment, foreign encouragement of 2: 0878; 5: 0001,
0739; 27: 0001 tax incentives 23: 0984
Project Hope (floating hospital training center)
16: 0037, 0099; 17: 0405 Project Solarium
1: 0455, 0478, 0502, 0523, 0547; 12: 0402, 0425, 0459, 0510, 0539, 0569, 0608, 0644, 0679, 0707, 0739, 0773, 0805, 0852, 0890, 0927, 0956; 13: 0001, 0046, 0088, 0118, 0137, 0165
Project VELA (detection of nuclear detonations)
30: 0144 Propaganda
general 4: 0687 pro-U.S. 12: 0852, 0927, 0956; 13: 0001 space programs 20: 0834, 0972 see also Communism
102
Property damage and loss Chile 14: 0905 earthquakes 14: 0905
Psychological warfare anticommunism efforts 3: 0911; 4: 0687;
5: 0955; 12: 0425; 16: 0590; 18: 0401; 19: 0470; 27: 0001, 0292
general 2: 0230, 0684, 0842; 3: 0074, 0400; 4: 0266; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369; 7: 0055; 13: 0200; 15: 0081; 17: 0368; 19: 0379
Southeast Asia 9: 0793 status reports 1: 0319, 0329, 0359,
0397, 0416, 0436, 0455, 0478, 0523, 0805, 0832, 0855, 0959, 0979
Thailand 9: 0793, 0902 USIA 20: 0909 USSR 15: 0081
PTP program see People-to-People (PTP) Program
Public health general 3: 0855, 0911 U.S.-USSR cooperation 15: 0212
Public information general 15: 0081; 17: 0670; 18: 0137,
0184, 0237, 0273; 19: 0962; 21: 0105; 22: 0741; 23: 0468; 24: 0353; 25: 0849; 28: 0180, 0241; 29: 0239
Middle East foreign policy 6: 0639 missiles 17: 0710 nuclear weapons 10: 0233, 0259, 0469 Operation Alert 10: 0719 pamphlets 10: 0299, 0332, 0366 satellites 13: 0424; 17: 0710
Public opinion, foreign Khrushchev-Eisenhower visits 19: 0758 nuclear power 22: 0741
Public opinion, U.S. foreign policy 16: 0330 general 12: 0539, 0739, 0852; 15: 0081 POW Code of Conduct 23: 0305 USSR satellite 20: 0972 world opinion of U.S. 9: 0902
Quesada, Elwood R. 27: 0376
Racial discrimination 5: 0618; 16: 0282; 17: 0317
Radar 8: 0001, 0278; 13: 0743, 0868;
14: 0001, 0108 Radio
facilities 17: 0886 foreign 9: 0843; 15: 0482 frequencies 25: 0771, 0788; 29: 0477,
0554, 0619 general 16: 0422, 0696 jamming 15: 0482 Mallory transistor 22: 0887 Middle East 17: 0886, 0933 military frequencies 29: 0554 overseas 22: 0887 policy 15: 0482 spectrum allocation study 29: 0477,
0525, 0554, 0619 status reports 1: 0058, 0082, 0107,
0133, 0159, 0184, 0212, 0239, 0277, 0319, 0329, 0359, 0377, 0397, 0478, 0523, 0568, 0588, 0610, 0681, 0726, 0855, 0959
U.S. broadcast 18: 0795 USSR 15: 0482; 18: 0795
Radioactive materials thorium 29: 0681
Red Cross see International Red Cross
Refugees general 2: 0684; 16: 0162, 0187 government spending 15: 0564 Hungary 15: 0392 Palestine 17: 0787 policy 15: 0564 repatriation and integration 15: 0564 Soviet bloc 15: 0564 status reports 1: 0455, 0523
Research and development government spending 27: 0708 nuclear weapons 10: 0259 science 27: 0662, 0708, 0758, 0814,
0817, 0857, 0903, 0913, 0959; 28: 0001, 0051, 0085, 0159
Rubber 1: 0726, 0753, 0779, 0877, 0897, 0938,
0959, 0979; 2: 0001 Sanctions
Cuba 8: 0802, 0836
103
Satellites China 18: 0324; 21: 0001 communications 20: 0318; 21: 0195 Earth Satellite Program 20: 0384, 0972 general 17: 0629; 19: 0877; 20: 0109,
0245, 0491, 0834; 21: 0079, 0155, 0261; 30: 0344
Project DISCOVERER 21: 0105 Project Mercury (manned satellite
program) 20: 0491 public information 13: 0424 SAMOS launch 21: 0261 SENTRY reconnaissance 20: 0185 test publicity 17: 0710 USSR 20: 0972; 21: 0045, 0261
Saudi Arabia 17: 0787
Scandinavia economic strength 6: 0747 military strength 6: 0747 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0747
Science Advisory Committee 27: 0439, 0467, 0512, 0563, 0618
Science and technology astronomy 27: 0817 Baker Panel (ODM Science Advisory
Committee) 22: 0444 conferences 26: 0559 education 5: 0250; 27: 0618 federal funding for research and
development 26: 0497, 0559 general 5: 0618; 14: 0167; 16: 0827;
27: 0467, 0512, 0563, 0662; 28: 0138, 0159, 0180, 0206
information security 17: 0270 numerical techniques 28: 0001 Pacific Science Congress, Tenth
21: 0365 solar energy 21: 0709; 26: 0670 telemetry 27: 0817 U.S. 30: 0258 U.S. invitation to Dr. Albert Schweitzer
17: 0164 USSR 3: 0486; 13: 0868; 14: 0108;
22: 0741; 26: 0559, 0670; 27: 0001, 0708; 30: 0258
U.S.-USSR cooperation 21: 0261 water desalinization 21: 0709; 26: 0670 see also Energy research and
development
see also Research and development see also Science and research see also Science for Peace see also Scientists and technicians
Science for Peace 21: 0001; 27: 0758
Scientists and technicians general 26: 0559; 27: 0467 scientist and engineer development
27: 0758 Security clearances
7: 0077, 0880; 27: 0439, 0563 Security Resources Panel Program
19: 0449 Seismology
general 27: 0857, 0903, 0913, 0959; 28: 0001, 0051, 0085, 0206
Panel on Seismic Improvement 28: 0138
Ships and shipping foreign 9: 0567 general 9: 0514, 0567, 0605; 29: 0844
Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive general 5: 0001, 0424, 0739; 6: 0203;
10: 0874; 22: 0461, 0708; 25: 0796; 30: 0336
U.S. foreign policy 15: 0043, 0460 Society and culture
Thailand 9: 0793 training of foreigners 15: 0212 training of U.S. citizens 15: 0551
Somalia 14: 0438
South Asia economic strength 6: 0587 military strength 6: 0587 status reports 1: 0478, 0547, 0588 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0587
Southeast Asia general 2: 0842 Lansdale trip 19: 0562 military civic activities 19: 0562 military intervention 13: 0462 Navarre Plan 2: 0963 politics 13: 0118 status reports 1: 0478, 0502, 0523 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0530; 13: 0462
South East Asia Treaty Organization 19: 0562
104
South Korea see Korea, Republic of
Soviet Union see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Space programs data acquisition 20: 0109 foreign opinion of the U.S. 20: 0491 general 17: 0368; 19: 0877, 0962;
20: 0001, 0109, 0185, 0245, 0318, 0384, 0453, 0491, 0665, 0783, 0834; 21: 0155; 27: 0758; 29: 0070
legal issues 20: 0318, 0384, 0665 military cooperation 20: 0491 monkeys in flight 21: 0155 NEEDLES experiment (communication
devices in space) 17: 0670 peaceful uses 21: 0045 Pioneer V (space probe) 20: 0909 policy 20: 0615, 0665, 0783, 0909;
21: 0079 presidential communications and
messages 21: 0155 Project Barnstable (communications)
21: 0195 Project DISCOVERER (satellite)
21: 0105 Project Mercury (manned satellite
program) 20: 0491 Project Saturn (engine) 20: 0783 propaganda, U.S. 20: 0972 propaganda, USSR 20: 0834 SAMOS launch 21: 0261 satellites 20: 0109 SCOUT space vehicle 20: 0453 spacecraft 20: 0109, 0834 UN 20: 0318, 0384, 0665 U.S. 21: 0001 USSR 20: 0185, 0491, 0665, 0783,
0909; 21: 0001 U.S.-USSR cooperation 19: 0877;
21: 0045 Vega-Centaur Vehicle Review Group
20: 0615 see also National Aeronautics and
Space Administration see also National Aeronautics and
Space Council Spain
economic strength 6: 0772 military strength 6: 0772
status reports 1: 0277, 0298, 0726, 0753
U.S. foreign policy 6: 0772 U.S. relations 21: 0290
Special Advisory Committee on Telecommunication
29: 0554 Special Committee on Technical Surveillance Countermeasures
7: 0077 Speeches and addresses
Anderson, Dillon 28: 0780, 0808, 0888; 29: 0001
Army War College 28: 0888 Dulles, John Foster—to NATO 10: 0094 Eisenhower, Dwight D. 14: 0785;
18: 0795, 0863; 20: 0109; 21: 0155; 22: 0064, 0671; 26: 0859; 29: 0070
military 21: 0420 national defense 21: 0365 National War College 29: 0001 Naval War College 28: 0808, 0888
Sri Lanka 30: 0416
Stalin, Joseph death 1: 0133 general 9: 0753; 30: 0047
State Department, U.S. 9: 0176; 11: 0001; 29: 0187, 0239,
0283, 0321 Steel industry
25: 0373 St. Lawrence Seaway
29: 0870 Stockpiling program
2: 0093, 0184, 0614; 3: 0001, 0362, 0400, 0855, 0911; 4: 0214, 0588, 0642; 5: 0130, 0168, 0552, 0914; 6: 0339; 7: 0377; 9: 0939; 23: 0035; 29: 0353, 0681
Strategic Air Command 6: 0067; 7: 0919; 8: 0418; 17: 0116;
29: 0391 Submarines
antisubmarine warfare 2: 0351; 3: 0249, 0527; 5: 0250; 6: 0067
nuclear weapons 10: 0185 POLARIS 24: 0353 USSR 22: 0774
105
Subversive activities government prosecution 2: 0280, 0746;
3: 0104, 0451, 0958; 4: 0317, 0710; 5: 0215, 0659
Suez Canal crisis 4: 0756; 5: 0168; 10: 0299;
14: 0203; 27: 0001; 29: 0187, 0401 U.S. military response 29: 0401
Sugar industry and products Cuba 8: 0802
Summerfield Project 29: 0473
Survival research and planning 2: 0093; 3: 0035, 0362, 0400, 0855,
0911; 4: 0214, 0642; 5: 0130, 0168, 0552, 0914; 6: 0339, 0915; 8: 0206, 0278, 0373, 0418; 10: 0719
Switzerland economic strength 6: 0747 military strength 6: 0747 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0747
Taiwan China relations 18: 0365 general 10: 0299 removal of Chinese National Olympic
Committee 18: 0365 status reports 1: 0058, 0082, 0107,
0319, 0359, 0632, 0726, 0753, 0779, 0805, 0832, 0855
U.S. aid 21: 0477 U.S. defense 9: 0425 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0530; 9: 0329;
10: 0366; 21: 0477 U.S. relations 14: 0825
Telecommunications 5: 0130, 0552; 29: 0477, 0525 see also Special Advisory Committee on
Telecommunication Television
frequencies 29: 0477, 0554, 0619 general 5: 0955; 6: 0369; 16: 0422 USSR satellite 21: 0045
Thailand aircraft and aerospace industry 17: 0116 economic development 9: 0793 international assistance 19: 0562 military strength 9: 0793 politics 9: 0793 society and culture 9: 0793
status reports 1: 0478, 0502 U.S. aid 9: 0793
Third World Congress Against Atomic & Hydrogen Bombs—Tokyo
21: 0497 Thorium
29: 0681 Tibet
U.S. foreign policy 19: 0470 Tibetan Revolt
19: 0470 Tito, Josip Broz
16:0422 Toledo Port, Ohio
29: 0693, 0844, 0870 Trade Fair Program
15: 0675, 0733 Trade unions
foreign trade 25: 0895 Transportation and transportation equipment
aircraft and aerospace industry 27: 0376 automobiles 11: 0001 general 5: 0130; 29: 0693 St. Lawrence Seaway 29: 0870
Treasury Department 9: 0176; 29: 0928
Trieste 29: 0904
Turkey aircraft and aerospace industry 17: 0116 economic strength 6: 0639 military strength 6: 0639 status reports 1: 0855, 0897, 0917 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0639; 21: 0505
U-2 flight 26: 0126; 29: 0121
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
agriculture 13: 0743, 0868; 14: 0001, 0108
aircraft 8: 0327; 19: 0703 armed forces 18: 0795 arms control and disarmament 7: 0411;
18: 0137; 24: 0511, 0571, 0671, 0746
A.R.M.S. for Friendship Program 18: 0795
Asia relations 13: 0952; 14: 0001 balance of power, U.S. 3: 0194
106
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) cont.
blockade 30: 0596, 0660 Bogomolov, Alexander 9: 0753 budget 13: 0200; 22: 0461 communism 15: 0980; 18: 0795 cult of the individual 30: 0047 deep drilling 21: 0709 economic aid program 19: 0817 economic policy 13: 0826; 14: 0001,
0108 economic strength 10: 0299, 0366;
13: 0690, 0826; 14: 0001, 0068 economists’ U.S. visit 23: 0877 embassy in Burma 19: 0703; 29: 0121 Europe relations 13: 0952; 14: 0001 foreign economic aid 27: 0001 foreign policy 6: 0445, 0772; 13: 0690,
0790, 0826, 0952; 14: 0001; 27: 0001
foreign relations 4: 0266, 0687; 5: 0168; 9: 0753; 13: 0826
foreign trade 13: 0743, 0868; 14: 0001, 0108
general 3: 0194; 6: 0067; 13: 0915; 14: 0161, 0164; 30: 0047, 0134
German peace treaty 26: 0001 government-citizen relations 13: 0826;
14: 0001 government hierarchy 9: 0753 Hungary 29: 0187 ICBM 17: 0710 Iceland relations 16: 0251 image of U.S. economy 23: 0877 industry 13: 0868; 14: 0108 intelligence services 11: 0516 Khrushchev, Nikita 16: 0422; 19: 0703 Latin America relations 8: 0802;
13: 0952; 14: 0001 Lenin, Vladimir 30: 0047 medical aid program 19: 0817 Middle East relations 13: 0952;
14: 0001; 29: 0187 military strength 8: 0001, 0463;
10: 0080; 12: 0679; 13: 0690, 0826; 14: 0001, 0068, 0278
military weapons 21: 0261 missiles 9: 0205; 17: 0670 moon vehicle 21: 0001
national defense, U.S. 12: 0001 NATO 27: 0001 navy 25: 0294 Nixon, Richard M.—trip 19: 0758 nuclear power 6: 0957; 8: 0001, 0418 nuclear testing and test sites 22: 0110 nuclear weapons 8: 0634, 0662;
10: 0469; 21: 0678; 22: 0064; 24: 0278; 26: 0126
opinion of noncommunist states 13: 0790, 0952; 14: 0001
peace offensive 9: 0753 Poland relations 19: 0285 politics 10: 0080; 13: 0200, 0690, 0826;
14: 0001, 0068; 18: 0795; 30: 0047 propaganda 20: 0834 psychological warfare 15: 0081 public health 15: 0212 radio 18: 0795 radio jamming 15: 0482 Rangoon embassy (Burma) 19: 0703;
29: 0121 satellites 20: 0972; 21: 0261 science and technology 3: 0486;
13: 0868; 14: 0108; 22: 0741; 26: 0559, 0670; 27: 0001, 0708
Seven-Year Economic Plan 19: 0758 Sino-Soviet Economic Offensive
5: 0001, 0424, 0739; 10: 0874; 22: 0461, 0708; 25: 0796; 30: 0336
solar energy 21: 0709 space programs 20: 0185, 0665, 0783,
0909; 21: 0001 status reports 1: 0001, 0018, 0037,
0058, 0082, 0107, 0133, 0159, 0184, 0212, 0239, 0257, 0298, 0319, 0329, 0359, 0377, 0455, 0502, 0523, 0610, 0632
submarines 22: 0774 television satellite 21: 0045 tin and tin industry 19: 0817 U.S. arms relations 24: 0476, 0511,
0746, 0810, 0854; 25: 0104 U.S. foreign policy 12: 0707; 15: 0637;
30: 0571 U.S. perception of USSR threat
12: 0569, 0644, 0707, 0890; 13: 0046, 0200, 0663; 19: 0703
107
U.S. relations 5: 0618; 9: 0252; 12: 0459, 0608, 0644, 0679, 0739, 0805, 0890; 13: 0200, 0462; 14: 0222; 15: 0333; 17: 0210, 0629; 18: 0184; 19: 0758, 0817, 0877; 21: 0001, 0045, 0261, 0678, 0842; 22: 0282; 23: 0877; 25: 0058, 0646; 26: 0073; 27: 0240, 0903; 29: 0321; 30: 0258, 0491
U.S. relations regarding Germany 26: 0001
veterans 18: 0795 water desalinization 21: 0709 Yugoslavia relations 6: 0772; 16: 0422 see also Attack, surprise
United Arab Republic U.S. relations 17: 0787 see also Egypt see also Syria
United Kingdom (UK) Hong Kong relations 6: 0587 joint military planning with the U.S.
29: 0239 nuclear power 6: 0957 U.S. aid 14: 0203 U.S. nuclear weapons 7: 0545 U.S. relations 18: 0045; 26: 0818;
30: 0660 United Nations (UN)
Africa 29: 0070 arms control and disarmament 24: 0972 China relations 14: 0825; 27: 0257 general 2: 0478; 5: 0001; 14: 0438;
24: 0476 Hungary 16: 0187; 19: 0285 nuclear energy control 24: 0571 peaceful uses of space 20: 0318, 0384,
0665 peacekeeping forces 25: 0058; 30: 0568 U.S. relations 5: 0424; 20: 0318
United Service Organizations, Inc. 28: 0709
USIA International Press 5: 0618, 0955
U.S. Information Agency (USIA) general 3: 0074, 0400, 0911; 4: 0266,
0687; 5: 0168, 0618, 0955; 6: 0369; 7: 0055; 9: 0176, 0793; 16: 0597, 0696; 17: 0001
overseas personnel 11: 0001
press clippings 17: 0038 psychological warfare 20: 0909
USSR see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
U.S. statutes Agricultural Trade Development and
Assistance Act of 1954 21: 0917; 23: 0833
Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 22: 0844 Defense Production Act 9: 0939 Emergency Financial Act of 1956
10: 0719 Federal Voting Assistance Act of 1955
28: 0467, 0535, 0642, 0735 Immigration and Nationality Act
15: 0392 National Aeronautics and Space Act of
1958 19: 0877; 20: 0491; 26: 0466 Venezuela
Dominican Republic assassination plot of president 9: 0088
politics 16: 0696 Vietnam
general 16: 0376 U.S. defense 9: 0369
Voice of America radio 9: 0252; 15: 0482; 17: 0886, 0933;
20: 0909 USSR 15: 0482
Volunteer Freedom Corps 1: 0107, 0133, 0159, 0184, 0257;
9: 0293 Voting
absentee 28: 0735 Brussels Fair 28: 0735 general 28: 0467, 0535, 0588, 0642,
0735 Iran 29: 0121 press 28: 0735 rights and legislation 28: 0336, 0467,
0535, 0588, 0642 state absentee voter requirements
28: 0467, 0535, 0588 states’ procedure 28: 0336 by U.S. armed forces 28: 0336, 0467,
0535, 0588, 0642, 0709, 0735 see also Federal Voting Assistance Act
of 1955
108
Wars and military conflicts limited war 16: 0813; 22: 0357;
25: 0646; 27: 0001; 30: 0327, 0392 military strategy 28: 0808 morality of 26: 0163, 0181 On the Beach (film on nuclear war)
18: 0324 projections and forecasts 24: 0247 status reports 1: 0917, 0938, 0959
Wartime preparedness continuity of government 10: 0513, 0645 economic policy 10: 0719 economic strength 10: 0513, 0645 food and housing supply 10: 0513, 0645 general 2: 0184, 0653; 3: 0001, 0035,
0362, 0400, 0527, 0855, 0911; 4: 0214, 0266, 0588, 0642, 0756; 5: 0130, 0168, 0250, 0400, 0552, 0914; 6: 0067, 0339, 0915; 8: 0001, 0138, 0206, 0278, 0418, 0538, 0634, 0662; 9: 0514, 0605, 0626; 10: 0001, 0030, 0513, 0645, 0785; 11: 0379, 0453, 0569; 12: 0319, 0459; 13: 0663; 14: 0222, 0501; 23: 0562; 30: 0491
government relocation 8: 0206 health services 10: 0513, 0645, 0785 presidential succession law 25: 0849 traffic 10: 0030 transportation and transportation
equipment 10: 0030, 0513, 0645, 0785
White House Emergency Plan 10: 0862; 21: 0838
see also Early warning system see also Survival research and planning
Western European Union status reports 2: 0001
West Indies general 21: 0832 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0828
Wholesale prices 2: 0093
World Anti-Communist Congress for Freedom and Liberation
17: 0116 World Congress of Flight
24: 0278 World Meteorological Organization
20: 0665 Yemen
general 30: 0247 U.S. foreign policy 30: 0590 U.S. relations 17: 0839
Yugoslavia economic strength 6: 0772 general 10: 0332 military strength 6: 0772 refugees 15: 0564 status reports 1: 0657 Tito, Josip Broz—interview transcript
16: 0422 U.S. foreign policy 6: 0772; 15: 0564;
21: 0849 USSR relations 16: 0422
Related UPA Collections
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Part 2: Presidential Trips and ConferencesPart 3: Departments and Agencies
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President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Office Files, 1953–1961Part 1: Eisenhower Administration Series
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UPA Collections from LexisNexis™www.lexisnexis.com/academic