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  • discussion (which wilt~ be reported separately) when he charged Vice President wi~ "delicate mission" of thanking President Kennedy for sending Vice President to Senegal. Afterwards I suggested to Prime Minister that as Ambassador it might be easier for me
  • . 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
  • BY QUESTIONPERIODIN WHICHPARTICIPANTS WOULD BE ENCOURAGED ASK QUESTIONSANYSUBJECT. ON WAYTO OR FROMUNIVERSITY,UNDERSECRETARY STOPS BY FOR FIFTEEN MINUTE VISIT TO JOHN F. KENNEDY LYCEE (AID FINANCEDGIRLS HIGH SCHOOL) ANDFIFTEEN MINUTEVISIT OF GRANOMOSQUE OF DAKAR.AT
  • to ar,range for wreath-laying ceremonies at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and at the grave of the late President Kennedy at 1600 hou,rs on Wednesday, March 14. His Excellency will depart from Andrews Air Force Base aboard a United States Air Force
  • viewpoint and have asked the Attorney General to go into some detail in connection with the principles that we would have in this bill. We are very anxious to have Democratic and Republican support. As you know, President Kennedy in the Kennedy-Johnson
  • Top Secret Kennedy from Diem State To VP Johnson cd c~,e,-t" -f-'- 7 p r "1'" Conf. from Chiang Kai-shek RESTRICTION ~54 06/09/61 A 4 p 06/09/61 A 4 p 06/09/61 A ID-~~ 7'J £tateffleRt irs #11 Letter DATE CORRESPONDENTSOR TITLE
  • Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963
  • members would report on current situations . He first called on Secretary Rusk for a summary of developments in Brazil. Secretary Rusk summarized our relations with Goulart, including Goulart 1 s dis cuss ion with President Kennedy, and later, in Rio, his
  • , the- bad political impact abJ:>oad, the -dam•1• to our own tourlttt propam. and effects on the Kennedy R.o und. . ~ All ol thi• will culminate ln reco~•ndatlona next w•ek tor a Pr~aid•ntlal . 0 mesa•a•. In ad.ditlon, lt looke as tf you would be asked
  • 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
  • 10: a. P=asidant Vietna~ I~s anc Anothe:: One is Kennedy, and Laos. has·been ~~a~ in te=ms deepened faction wit~ voices and ti.:e watt::::r tur:1ed whether the statec, "Was this •i:1 diC t~e role the of evils·?" US i~~ersion
  • drop in to see you. I have my own little plane these days, and go most every where in it. What do you think of politics today, and our old friend Lyndon Johnson joining Kennedy? It is my opinion that he made a terrible mistake, that in the end may
  • , and the venue is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. While many youth voting projects have surfaced in the past year, this one promises to be different by "hiring a network of young leaders and employing them in their hometo~." It also promises
  • , and the venue is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. While many youth voting projects have surfaced in the past year, this one promises to be different by "hiring a network of young leaders and employing them in their hometo~." It also promises
  • 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
  • with the members of Congress today. I pointed out that there had been 11 aircraft incidents under President Truman; 33 under President Eisenhower; 7 under President Kennedy; and 11 under President Johnsono I told them not to get panicky about the Pueblo situation
  • , Presiding Speaker of the House of Representatives ATTORNEY GENERJ\.L Robert F . Kennedy CIA John A. McCone, Director DEFENSE Robert S. McNamara, Secretary Cyrus Vance~ Deputy Secretary John McNaughton. Assistant Secretary Eugene Fubini, Deputy Director
  • LIST FOR THE 53 lst NSC MEETING HELD ON TUESDAY, MAY 5, 1964, AT 12:00 NOON IN THE CABINET ROOM OF THE WHITE HOUSE The President of the United States, P residing Speaker of the House of Representatives ATTORNEY GENERAL Robert F . Kennedy CIA John
  • NSC MEETING MAY 15, 1964, AT 12:00 NOON IN THE CA.BINET ROOM OF THE WHITE HOUSE The President of the United States, Presiding Speaker of the House of Representatives AID David Bell, Director ATTORNEY GENERAL Robert F . Kennedy CIA John A. McCone
  • . The Kennedy statement at Fort Bragg referring to th e U.S. G over nment's position at the time of the Geneva Conference. 2 . The Taylor Report, 196 1 -- that part which discussed what might be necessary if current moves did not work in Vietnam . 3. The Geneva
  • realised then. that poa·i tive action was long ,ove.r- dtta,. :action had: to be ca.k•n" Mom•ntum b elvil s-lshta l~om aceele.~ated tbat pojnt 011 under the le.adersh!p of tbe Kennedy- Jolut•on adm!m•~on .an4. 'by the :rietng Udo of Nes•o· ~nmtl­
  • •uTHE SECURITY AND FREEDOM OF BERLIN, A COMMITMENT WHICH WAS DEMONSTRATED IN 19481 WHICH · ~AS BEEN REITERATED BY PRESIDENTS EISENHOWER AND KENNEDY AND WHICH ' IS AS ' FIRM AND EXPLICIT TODAY AS rr WAS WHEN IT " WAS MADE· . TH SHOULD BE KNOWN IN BERLIN
  • not special tasks that were performed only for our great, beloved President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, and the present President, Lyndon Johnson. MORE Page 3 But they are the laws and they are the programs that give new hope to millions of people
  • of her best friends to the Inaugural Ball and the Inauguration and he had raised a LOT of money for the Democratic Party, and worked hard for Kennedy and really put his shoulder to the wheel and when he got to Washington he COULDNOT GET ANY TICKETS
  • is rcy-third official visit to your country, beginning in the r all of the year 1961, when my dear friend, now departed, Pres:ident Kennedy, whom I will never forget, invited me to America. On each visit I came from a di.ff erent Korea; that. much has
  • THE ASSASSINATION OJ' PR.ESmENT JOIDI I'• KENNEDY Puauam to tbe uatlaorlty ,reated ID me u Prealclem of die UDlted Sta.tea, l hereby appolm a CommlaaloD to ucertaln, eYaluate and report upon die fa.eta relattn1 to the aa•u•lnatloD of the late Prealdent Jolm I
  • understanding is that you do not want to make a formal written report. Amen to this. But I do think you would want to hit the highlights (and only these) orally with Kennedy and Rusk. Hence the attached. Press relations are not my business (though I've done
  • . Japan accepted full membership in the Or­ ganization for Economic Cooperation and De­ velopment in early 1964. Japan has partici­ pated in the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade since 1955 and is expected to participate actively in the Kennedy Round
  • . Kennedy - Thinks this is the right approach but wants to make sure we have studied Jim Landis' report on transportation to President Kennedy. He thinks there are some reservations in that report that should be taken into consideration. Metcalf
  • . Government'• In readi- lta Kennedy Rowad cut• and it• offer to take other trad•It would be mo•t he&rte11in1 lf a aati•factory aolutlon could be found thro111Ja.cooperatt.- international for• that the Japaae•e Go.ermneat will exert lta maximum toward
  • 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
  • Hoover, Chairman Clarence J. Brown Herbert Brownell, Jr. James A. Farley Homer Ferguson Arthurs. Flemming Chet Holifield Solomon c. Hollister Joseph P. Kennedy John L. McClellan Sidney A. Mitchell Robert G. Storey MEMBERS, SUBCOMMITTEE ON RESEARCH
  • RESTRICTION 2 pp. { ~ ~ C / · / 5 -''7~ Alk:TctF?~=>V ffl:CffiO 74 cabI~ ,, CAP67080 re foreign affairs-S 2 pp • ~ . 3 PP .Lh-tl--+\4 ~ ..\a -# 7 8J tJSF>~ 1- -i_ t.f 01 PrL~.. Ro5 [duplicate of #4, Files of Walt Rostow, ' "Sen. Robert Kennedy's
  • 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
  • FOR THE PRESIDENT Re: Your Representative at the Runnymede Ceremony As you know better than I, the British will be dedicating a memorial to President Kennedy at Runnymede on May 14. The ceremony is underthe organization of the Kennedy Memorial Trust, which has