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Treasury and Secretary
His collaboration with Washington, begun when he was the general's aide during the Revolution, was resumed when he entered the first Cabinet as Secretary of the Treasury.
`` If you can conveniently let me have twenty dollars '', he wrote one friend in 1791 when he was Secretary of the Treasury.
he collaborated on a song with William Hartman Woodin, who was Secretary of the Treasury, 1932-33.
Recently Treasury Secretary Dillon and Labor Secretary Goldberg fell into line with Mr. Hodges' appraisal, though there has been some reluctance to do so at the White House.
Any fee so determined shall be entered as a part of such award, and payment thereof shall be made by the Secretary of the Treasury by deducting the amount thereof from the total amount paid pursuant to the award.
Any and all payments required to be made by the Secretary of the Treasury under this title pursuant to any award made by the Commission to the Government of the United States shall be covered into the Treasury to the credit of miscellaneous receipts.
The Commission shall, as soon as possible, and in the order of the making of such awards, certify to the Secretary of the Treasury and to the Secretary of State copies of the awards made in favor of the Government of the United States or of nationals of the United States under this Title.
Subject to the limitations hereinafter provided, the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to pay, as prescribed by Section 8 of this Title, an amount not exceeding the principal of each award, plus accrued interests on such awards as bear interest, certified pursuant to Section 5 of this Title, in accordance with the award.
Such payments, and applications for such payments, shall be made in accordance with such regulations as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe.
in the case of any assignment of an award, or any part thereof, which is made in writing and duly acknowledged and filed, after such award is certified to the Secretary of the Treasury, payment may, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, be made to the assignee, as his interest may appear.
Whenever the Secretary of the Treasury, or the Comptroller General of the United States, as the case may be, shall find that any person is entitled to any such payment, after such payment shall have been received by such person, it shall be an absolute bar to recovery by any other person against the United States, its officers, agents, or employees with respect to such payment.
and ( 2 ) such other special funds as may, in the discretion of the Secretary of the Treasury, be required each to be a claims fund to be known by the name of the foreign government which has entered into a settlement agreement with the Government of the United States as described in subsection ( A ) of Section 4 of this Title.
The Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to cover into -- ( 1 )
The Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed out of the sums covered into any of the funds pursuant to subsection ( B ) of this section, and after making the deduction provided for in Section 7 ( B ) of this Title -- ( 1 )
The Secretary of the Treasury, upon the concurrence of the Secretary of State, is authorized and directed, out of the sum covered into the Yugoslav Claims Fund pursuant to subsection ( B ) of this section, after completing the payments of such funds pursuant to subsection ( C ) of this Section, to make payment of the balance of any sum remaining in such fund to the Government of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia to the extent required under Article 1 ( C ) of the Yugoslav Claims Agreement of 1948.
The Secretary of State shall certify to the Secretary of the Treasury the total cost of adjudication, not borne by the claimants, attributable to the Yugoslav Claims Agreement of 1948.
Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon owns a prize Monet, Femmes dans un Jardin.

Treasury and Douglas
On the Latin American front, the President held talks with Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon before sending him to Uruguay and the Inter-American Economic and Social Council ( which the President himself had originally hoped to attend ).
The talks were named after U. S. Treasury Secretary and former Under Secretary of State, Douglas Dillon, who first proposed the talks.
President Garfield appointed several African-Americans to prominent positions: Frederick Douglas, recorder of deeds in Washington ; Robert Elliot, special agent to the U. S. Treasury ; John M. Langston, Haitian minister ; and Blanche K. Bruce, register to the U. S. Treasury.
His assessment was that Douglas was predisposed towards the Treasury view because its implementation required decisive action and because greater reliance on the market solved what Douglas saw as the problem of interest-group participation in policy-making.
Clarence Douglas Dillon ( born Clarence Douglass Dillon ; August 21, 1909 – January 10, 2003 ) was an American diplomat and politician, who served as U. S. Ambassador to France ( 1953 – 1957 ) and as the 57th Secretary of the Treasury ( 1961 – 1965 ).
In July, the Treasury released £ 350, 000 to allow TAA to order four larger, more modern DC-4s from Douglas in the United States, and Brain appointed Aubrey Koch ( from Qantas ) as Senior Pilot DC4 Skymaster and John Watkins as Chief Technical Officer.
One of the many prominent trustees of the institution since has been C. Douglas Dillon, the United States Secretary of the Treasury under both Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson.
* C. Douglas Dillon 1960-1961-US Treasury Secretary, 1961 – 1965 ; Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
Some political scientists, such as Boston, believe that in the government of David Lange, Minister of Finance Roger Douglas held more power than was proper, and that the Treasury was using its control of government finances to take a supervisory role across the whole administration.
Douglas responded by agreeing to the publication of Treasury ’ s briefing to the incoming government, which appeared under the title Economic Management.
Douglas ’ s identification with Treasury was complete by 1985.
Treasury initiatives adopted by the government that were not signalled before the 1984 election included the introduction of a comprehensive tax on consumption ( GST ), the floating of the dollar ( which Douglas opposed until 1984 ) and the corporatisation of the government ’ s trading activities, announced at the end of 1985.
GMFI was a Douglas initiative and for reasons of urgency he did not inform cabinet colleagues of Treasury advice that the proposals were a fiscal risk.
On March 25, 1964, Secretary of the Treasury C. Douglas Dillon announced that Silver Certificates would no longer be redeemable for silver dollars.
* C. Douglas Dillon, Secretary of the Treasury, Under Secretary of State, Ambassador to France
Domhoff credited Lovett, Harvey Bundy and John McCloy with having a close working relationship ; and credited John F. Kennedy as accepting Lovett's advice to appoint Dean Rusk as Secretary of State, Robert McNamara as Defense Secretary, and C. Douglas Dillon for the Treasury.
In March 1964, Secretary of the Treasury C. Douglas Dillon halted redemption of silver certificates for coined silver dollars ; during the following four years, silver certificates were redeemable in uncoined silver " granules.
After Kennedy and Johnson were elected in November, he successfully lobbied for the appointment of Douglas Dillon as Secretary of the Treasury, and had multiple discussions with Kennedy about other appointments.
Six major candidates were nominated at the convention: Douglas, former Treasury Secretary James Guthrie of Kentucky, Senator Robert M. T. Hunter of Virginia, Senator Joseph Lane of Oregon, former Senator Daniel S. Dickinson of New York, and Senator Andrew Johnson of Tennessee.
In 1969, he was invited by philanthropist John D. Rockefeller 3rd, CFR Chairman John J. McCloy, and former Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon to chair a Commission on Foundations and Private Philanthropy, which became known as the Peterson Commission.
He became known as a Keynesian rebel against the classical economic theory which dominated the Treasury, under the influence of the Melbourne University school of economists led by L. F. Giblin and Douglas Copland.

Treasury and Dillon
In 1961 President John F. Kennedy, a Democrat, appointed Republican, Dillon Treasury Secretary.
Dillon remained Treasury Secretary under President Lyndon B. Johnson until 1965.
In 1962, Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon appealed to the U. S. General Services Administration ( GSA ) to incorporate funds for the design of a new building in its upcoming budget.
Together with art collector and philanthropist Paul Mellon and former Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dillon, Brady formed the Capitol Art Foundation, which accomplished the task.

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