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Elliott Speaks on Foreign Policy Formation; Recent U.S. Policy Consistent, Writes Bundy

William Yandell Elliott, Williams Professor of History, will discuss the question, "How Can We Have Effective Coordination for Foreign Policy Under the Constitution of the United States?" at a public meeting sponsored by the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. The forum will be held at 45 E. 65th Street, New York City, at 8 p.m. tonight.

Elliot argued last Friday that either the U.N. should assist the U.S. more in the Korean war or we should stop supplying five-sixths of the forces there, at the Associated Harvard Clubs convention in Chicago. He also advocated bombing China.

McGeorge Bundy, associate professor of Government elect, is completing a book, "Dean Acheson and American Foreign Policy," which employs Acheson's statements, report, and testimony, in an effort to dispute the claim that the U.S. has no foreign policy.

Bundy takes Acheson's utterances and argues that the U.S. have followed a consistent foreign policy by concentrating on certain objectives since the Yalta agreement was formulated. The book also states that the U.S. has maintained its strong moral position and grown to full diplomatic stature since the end of World War II.

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