Memorandum of Conversation with Secretary of State Dean Acheson; Walter White, Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People; and Others
Images (2)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
183391478
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 2DEPARTMENT OF STATE
53 s/. 507/ ap
Memorandum of Conversation
698
TENANT
DATE:
and ARCHIVES "NATIONAL RECORDS AND A
2/9/50
SUBJECT:
&
SERVICE*
Interview with Walter white, Secretary of National Association
for the Advancement of Colored People, on Aid to India and Other
Matters.
PARTICIPANTS:
Mr. Walter white, Secretary, National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People
The Secretary
Nr. Mathews - SOA
Mr. Mackay - MID
COPIES TO:
s/s, NFA, E, EUR, UNA, ARA, DRN, CIA
Embassy New Delhi
1-1493
Mr. White told me that he had been discussing with Walter and Victor Reuther
and with Fowler McCormick and Henry Ford a plan whereby the members of the United
Automobile forkers engaged in the manufacture of farm implements would contribute
one day's production to India. Management would match labor's contribution. The
purpose of this plan was to give tangible evidence to India that the American
public was interested in its problems and wished to assist in their solution.
Mr. White said that he had discussed this idea with Mrs. Reid of the New York
Herald Tribune and that he was sure that he could obtain adequate publicity at the
appropriate time.
I said that the plan seemed excellent and that it would be highly effective
in convincing the Indian people that we had a real interest in them. I commented
that our feeling was that any agricultural implements which were sent to India
should be of a simple type as there were not enough people trained to handle
large and complicated machines. When asked whether it was contemplated that
the UAT nembers would contribute a day's wages to be matched by an equal contri-
bution from management, lir. white replied that his idea had been that the
contribution would be taken from the equipment produced on the day selected.
Mr. Mathews commented that this might result in varied types of equipment being
contributed, many of which might not be suited to Indian conditions. He went
on
to say that the Department had recently been told by informed observers that the
greatest contribution to Indian agriculture would be the provision of a large
number of six-inch moldboard plows which would enable a pair of bullocks to plow
a greatly increased acreage each working day. Mr. White expressed his appreciation
of
DECLASSIFIED
ity F.O. 10501
Relations
belongs_to
belongs_to