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  • ~f nails Kennedy found sluggish and to miniature eoffins for cats ,a,nd 800 pairs of size 8-C balky. It has cut taxes and shoes . - - - - - 1the budget, and has kept the The late Skiles Test, a. strung , in trees around the business · expansion
  • . I hope that your Govemment will take the necessary action to permit a restoration of the earlier situation o Sincerely yours, JOHN F. KENNEDY UNQUOTE Please report time delivery. Note : Relayed : Sec . Mc"'Namara-Defens e, Chai~n J Ce1 ~IA
  • Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963
  • , Kennedy Crockett talked the matter out with Ambassador Doherty and the AID Mission Director. In what amounts to a reversal of the Embassy position, they agreed that Ambassador Doherty should make one more pitch to Busta­ mante to bring him a little further
  • as well as the British and French forces are within the system. The second solution, which emerged out of the acceleration of the ECC, and of the Kennedy Administration's encouragement of this develop­ ment; would be to create an analogous relationship
  • 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
  • Kennedy in Hyannisport, it being a Saturday night. 'There is a sharp difference of recoJlection between Ivfr. Forrestal and General Krulak.{thon in the JCS as their Vicb1am man) as to •.vhether General 'Taylor ever cleared the message. I believe
  • of us, so far as I know, were given ·official information until after the Administration _had made i -ts policy decisions. President Kennedy called the · Congressional' leadership back for a meeting_: at the White House on Monday, . October 22, 1962
  • WASHINGTON Tuesday, September 14, 1965, 5 PM MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT I had lunch today with Bob Kennedy, and it was the best discussion we have had in more than a year. We talked about a number of topics, but mostly about Vietnam, and I must say I
  • • 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
  • MESSAGE ON TRANSPORTATION In April 1962, President comprehensive Executive. message Kennedy concern, the first ever delivered by a Chief on transportation It dealt with a variety and urgent sent to Congress and others of topics •• some
  • . SHAKINGHANDSWITHVP AMOMRS. JOHNSON,PR1ME MINISTERSAID "OURWHOLENATIONWILL PRESERVEVERYDEARMEMORY or YOUA VI s IT IN OUR ~1CARTG. YOUHAVE CONQUtRt:D us WI TH YOUR WARMTH ANDYOURFRtENDLINESS PLEASE8RING TO PRESIDENT KENNEDY•;l::IEST REGARDS FROMPEOPLEOF TURKEY
  • 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
  • H. JENNINGS, W. Pat DULSKI, Thaddeus MAHON, George YOUNG, John BOGGS, Hale FOGARTY, John TF~GUE, Olin THOMPSON, Clark L A IJ1PrlUel . ' •, Wright SPINAIL, Wayne N. KENNEDY, Robert F. BASS, Ross MANSFIELD, Mike HARRIS, Fred JACKSON, Henry p~SC
  • . 1 S GREETINGS, AFTERCONVEYING PRESIDENT KENNEDY VICE PRESIDENT EXPRESSED APPRECIATION FORWARMTH OF WELCOME ACCORDED HIMANDFRIENDLINESS DEMONSTRATED BY LEBANESE WHOOFTENAPPLAUDED ANDCHEERED AT SIGHTOF U.S. FLAG.CHEHAB REPLIEDTHIS WASNOSURPRISETO
  • .> 3.3lh)ll>; L~..l£&.) Then I would brief Lord Home and his party when they are here in February . This was agreed. 8. Reviewed briefly President Kennedy's letter to me of January ! 6 and asked for reaffirmation of DCI responsibilities as outlined
  • Kennedy and v;isit Space Control Center at Houston, Texas. Col. Glenn said he would follow through upon return to USA and forward ASAP a schedule of future launchings so that King could see what date would fit in best with his plans. Incidentally King said
  • to lead his people ahead because he is a man of and fought and emerged and social justice. victorious Just as the Dominican themselves. B. President Kennedy of your campaign to build democratic stability and prosperity people. In fact
  • 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
  • . Johnson, including correspondence between President Johnson and Attorneys General Robert F. Kennedy (Attorney General: 1961-64), Nicholas deB. Katzenbach (Attorney General: 1965-66) and Ramsey Clark (Attorney General: 1967-69); correspondence between White
  • or THEBARASSOCIATION OR A SENATEJUDICIARYCOM"ITTE[~ HE SAID THEBOARD SHOULD HAVE•No CONNECTION VITRMORGENTHAU OR THOSE ABOVEOR BELOW HIM.• ASKEDWHETHER[ HI WASREFERRING TO ATTORNEY GENERAL ROBERTV. KENNEDY, CORNRIPLIED1 "MR.KENNEDY IS MR. MORGINTHAU'S
  • . Y., 5/21/fA. KENNEDY, Mrs. James L., 414 Cortelyon Rd., Brooklyn 18, N. Y., 5/22/64. ATTARD, Spiro, 1654 E. 7th St., Brooklyn 23, N. Y., 5/21/64. GARCIA,Alfred, 119-25 190 St., St. Albans, N. Y., 5/22/64. LANG,Charles T., 1149 Putnam Ave., Brooklyn
  • for international aviation problems was studied by the Bureau in 1963. The Interagency Committee on International Aviation Policy (ICIAP) was established by President Kennedy as a result of that study to ensure that international aviation problems were considered
  • 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