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  • Robewt F. Kennedy CIA John A. McCone .. Director r, ,1 t ~ DEFENSE .. Robe~t ; S. MeNamua; secretary 'I I JCS Gene,J 'al Maxwell D. Taylor, USA;- Chairman OEP Edward A. Mc.Dermott, Director· .STAT.E Dean Rusk, Sec.-otuy George Bau. Und:er
  • over here on September 15. I will have Bro·mley Smith work on the question of a proper office in the Executive Office Building, where Max has lived happily before. MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON - 2 6. You may wish to know that Bob Kennedy has
  • of Senator Kennedy. You may wiah to •end a reply along the line• of Tab B. W. W. Ro•tow Attachments Tab A - Lotter to the Pre•ldent Diaz Ordaz. from Mexican Tab B - &111••t•d letter Pre•idential in reply. Pre•ident (TIA■ SUTIOI) LS 10. 2762 T3/R
  • in President Kennedy's Administration was the fact that he, Kemal, had been allowed to have an entirely private 10-minute audience with President Kennedy. Kemal also said that he has Nasser's authority to have a similar private interview now if you invite him
  • in individual cases, he really has no shortage of access to responsible officials. This is an old battle with Joe. He had one round with President Kennedy and of course had an unending contest with President Eisenhower. He plans to raise this question again
  • million improvement in our trade position. We could ask for immediate consultations to lay out the alternatives open to us . -d.,,__.:.,_ For example, the Europeans could agree to ·suspend part o f ~ border taxes, accelerate Kennedy Round cuts, lower
  • would like nothing better, and we are prepared to react inunediately ~ to such an eventuality o· Approve _____________________ Disapprove_____________________ Discussion: I I j. .. The late President Kennedy and I on various occasions following
  • : .. ·":.->·>":~:.:.~, . . . '4 . '.:4. · [' ' ' • _, ' ,. • 1- ~. • ' I • ' • ' ' . ) : " ;· . i:1N INDIA ·?RESIDENT ·. KENNEDY WAS LOOKED .UPON ·· ~ s.PECIAL :·FRI.END . ;..·,· . ~1 ·· · .. WHO WAS . AUTHOR OF ' INDIAN ~ RESOLUTIOt-f I'N CONGRESS~ · WHO HAD
  • . On the boner l made ahout.1611"lculture and the Kennedy R owid, I think the damage control baa been fairly good. Charlie Murphy was moat andentandlng and says that ~srlculture will cbeer!Wly make it clear that nothmg has changed. Charle• Balley, who follows
  • . Foreign policy is not essentially a matter of rhetoric or protocol or personality, or even style. It was not so with ·President Kennedy and it is not so with President Johnson. The real tests of policy are deeper and more serious. They have been met
  • . 3, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Mrs. Kennedy•a visit to Cambodia Last winter the Cambodian Chief of State. :prince Sihan-ouk, invited Mrs. Kennedy to Phnom Penh to participate in a ceremony naming a street in the Cambodian 6apital
  • quick reaction to Senator Edward M. Kennedy's speech. I understand you have seen Ambassador Bunker's views and those of the Embassy Statf and I have tried not to duplicate. OETf,RMINEO TO IE 4N ADMINISTRATIVE MARKING ~OT NAT'L SECURITY INFORMATION; f. 0
  • the of to and professors only of Kennedy• ihat Thousand the Days has in and ' 1 this I: h ~ end~~mants ~r All for a large of more part all of scientific than ~ollective propa~anda security, cone~~~ ot the ~~Df~~$[o-al the then. disco11ec
  • the of to and professors only of Kennedy• ihat Thousand the Days in and ' 1 this All for a large of more part all of scientific than ~ollective propa~anda security, cone~~~ ot the ~~Df~~$[o-al the Ford ~ffictals then. foundJt\6n, duci~s
  • Ball and Dean Rusk -- all Kennedy men -- and that the fact of the matter was that Tom Mann 'had been in favor of a slightly slower and cooler expression of support. I also told Pierre that there had not been a question of recognition, a point which he
  • of the effects of United States actions in the Kennedy Round upon all American industries, including the textile industry. No major decisions have been or will be taken by our representatives in Geneva without a decision by the President, following a full review
  • . Nothing has given me greater support in the past nine months than my knowledge of Pre~ident Kennedy's confidence that I could i. c,~ ~e
  • does -­ in terms of large increases in U. S. foreign aid appropriations. or -- you decide that we must pre-empt a Congressional move to enact a mandatory reevaluation of tbe aid program, like the Kennedy Amendment which was barely defeated last year. Z
  • the Malaysians, while attempting to maintain some contact with the Indonesians. The Prime Minister might wish to · scuss the U.S. commitment under the ANZ US Treaty. A copy of the pape which summarizes the under standing between President Kennedy and e Prime
  • • 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
  • 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
  • . 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • --" , . ,"")_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
  • ednesday, March Z2, 1967 7:50 a. m. Mr. President: Herewith a summary of Sec. Rusk's back­ groWlder of last evenlng. I think the State Dept should take on Sen. Kennedy's crltlclsm today, pointing out that hls hypothesis was given a thorough test