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  • • peralatence was a good example of the way tile pre•• in general baa strained to find a meanf.Dg that la not there. Ou Friday, I abo eaw Steve Roberta of the New York Time•. who i• preparing a retroapectlve article on President Kennedy for the Novem~r lssue
  • in ou- dmlings on the Kennedy Round. These pieces should be most useful as a demonstration of the importance you attach to the negotiations and the political sacrifices you have made to insure their success. I'. I'• I. t :l·• It l • f
  • Vietnam itself. COPY LBJ LIBRARY - 11 - President Kennedy's decision chose none of these possible i alternatives. His decision was that American military personnel should be j I ‘ .f introduced to assist t e South Vietnamese m ilitary forces
  • to the Soviet bloc without attaching 1peclal new conditioue. Su::h action would acc:or1 with President Kennedy's decision in r#iay 1963 on an a!moet identical case (forage ba.rvetters) in which the sarn e argument for quid pro quo conditions waa advanced
  • Asia. McG. B. THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Fri., Feb. 4, 1966, 12:30 MR. PRESIDENT: These pages from a standard book of reference show the general context in which President Kennedy was working on Caribbean matters in October, 1963. m~ rs. McG. B
  • of Bogota started tho n-iovement. (2) 1961 -- under President Kennedy -- the Charter of Punta. d.el E ·s te was negotiated establtshing the Alliance lor Progress. (3) Now we are on the threshhold of establishing the Latin American Common Market. -2
  • sabataace aa wbat i . now plaas to eay. . McG. B. ·'' THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Tuesday, June 22, 1965, 9:15 PM MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject: Senator Robert Kennedy's Statement on Nuclear Proliferation. At Mr. Bundy's request, I prepared
  • responding 13. ,10/10/64 14. l:0/1:4/64 Msg frn Ikeda responding 15. 10/23/64 Msg to Ikeda 16. fimn~y' Msg frn Ikeda responding 17. 12/3/ 64 Msg to Ikeda re his birthday ✓ (tab 1) / re Haramachida ~ Kennedy re of young Ryotaro
  • Kennedy's Address to the Nation of October 22, 1962, concerning Addreast the presence the President of Soviet missiles in Cubao In that said: / "It shall be the policy of this Nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from Cuba against any nation b
  • the development of the weapon; President Truman authorized its first wartime use. And Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and J'ohnson have lived daily with the overwhelming responsibility and knowledge that only the President can authorize the use of this dreadful
  • .") · j The President of the United States, Presiding ACDA William C . Foster, Director AEC Glenn T. Seaborg, Chairman AID David E . Bell, Administrator ATTORNEY GENERAL Robert F . Kennedy CIA Lieut. General Marshall Carter, Deputy Director Chester
  • the news or President Kennedy's death. He was grateful that he had been able to come here and to meet President Johnson in a friendly and intimate manner. Secretary Rusk said that no one knew better than President Kennedy that the nation would live
  • . The Secretary of Commerce ' has the immediate statutory responsibility, but the instinct of Luther Hodg es was often different from that of oth.e rs, and it became ne c ess a ry to appeal individual cases over and over again to President Kennedy. The President
  • position on these matters is the same as the position of President Eisenhower and President Kennedy. First, I agree with President Eisenhower's statement of 1955 that "you can draw no sharp line between tactical use of atomic weapons and strategic use. 11
  • on December 3, 19620 On September 20, 1963j President Kennedy reaffirmed our intention to keep weapons of mass destruction out of orbito Since that time, we· have met with the representatives of the Soviet Union on this problemo We are glad
  • the alleged Secretary McNamara to enter failure to carry out reductions --SECRET - the meet­ of - 4 military spending abroad which had been agreed pointed out that a proposed program o(additional been presented to President Kennedy in the fall his
  • OFF FLORIDA. • CR139P 18 98 VASHINaTON--ADD BRITISHPOLARISC~7) THE P.ENTAGON SAID THE BRITISHSUB WOULD BE BERTHED. FOR ABOUT A. · MONTH At PORT CANAVERAL, FLORIDA,. PART or THE CAPE KENNEDY COfllPLIX. A DEFENSE SPOKISPIAN INDICATED THERESOLUTION
  • Eisenhower and John Kennedy anfyndon J'ohn•on had to re•pond i ft facing _the iuue of Vietnam. " .. ... . - ~·-;-. .. :i~: ;-:. ' ·: :.;;:~"ff~'::: f>:··. I '~···-- · ~- t .., _ .. , """ · !• .. ....... • .r . •~ • f
  • increased I believe it was President Kennedy who momentum to the Alliance has been well welcomed John McCone to this position received and preparations are underway. by saying "welcome · to the bull's-eye"The reaction in Latin America to the indeed
  • the Robert Kennedy a.~pect.a. (Rounj'tree is very apoloietic; the mix-up wu under sta.ndable cozuequence of hi.a being in Cape town at the ti::ne the inq1.riry was ma.de in Pretoria. ) - - The South Africa.n Security people have now a.aked fo-r an .i
  • after all: the ·N ew Hampshire primary . may go , Vietnam has . shaken the Americans and it has brought down in the record books as the wince before the gritting ·· ' Senator Robert Kennedy to the brink of challenging Presi- of the teeth. But if either
  • memo # lOa cable Rostow to President, 2 :20 p .m. ~ t/it/011t11J/P1te ol-S ~ ' '5A S 1p 51Jff\t ~,-h lf1
  • ~--ABo ,rt_ :-:JT::tI~ "G,RE~:n RL:n~r,~ ~~~~"! · ~:!HEN · YOU- -AP.E HERE;·:. _: - - THA~JK,: ,YOU . VERY '. MUCH · FOR. .·YOUR KIND·.·coMMENT$.·-ABOUT·:~ tHE. '.: KENNEDY · ROUND - NEGOTIATIONS. __:· •.- -L AM ._ SURE -_TH£\.:AGREE!1ENT.JI.ILL: ?R-OVF
  • -taking session with Alain Poher, President of the European Parliament {biographic sketch at Tab A), and 12 of his colleagues {list ·a t Tab B). The delegation just visited Chicago, and will go on to Cape Kennedy on the 15th. {The European Parliament
  • of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. President Eisenhower broke new and fertile ground with the Act of Bogota in 1960 -- an act growing from the understanding compassion of one people for another. President Kennedy built on these efforts and gave them increased
  • a major effort to this threat. to domi­ I wonder if this and give me a response to it. /a/ JohnF. .OOMFBlENT~t.t Kennedy I . THE S'ECRETARY OF' ::iE:FENSE WASHl~G1"0N . \,. .y 31, 1963 ~.EMORANDUM FOB. THE PR.ESIDEl~T SUB1ECT: jleador
  • . Shortly after the inauguration of President Kennedy in 1961, the United States Government began to acknowledge publicly the reality of population problems in many parts of the world. This fact alone. ' gave encouragement to greater concentration upon
  • --" , . ,"")_tL---;J,, Thursday, August 10, 1967 -- 6 :15 PM · Mr. President: Senator Moss would like a short session with you for himself, Senator Edward Kennedy, and the 10 Congressmen (list attached) who attended a recent conference with British