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  • 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
  • Kennedy. 3. Planting flowers and shrubs in the small triangles and squares carved out by thoroughfares. 4. Initiating neighborhood competitions on beautification. 5. Utilizing a volunteer committee of landscape architects to draw up plans for use
  • 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
  • , Harrison A. BREWSTER,Daniel B. KENNEDY,Edward M. BASS, Ross CANNON, Howard W. COTTON,Norris DOMINICK,Peter HARTKE,Vance LAUSCHE,Frank J. McGEE, Gale W. MCRTON,Thruston B. NEUBERGER, Maurine B. PEARSON,James B. u. s. Congress GJ:AIMO,Robert N. HARRIS, Oren
  • --" , . ,"")_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
  • the Use of Nuclear Weapons^ 19 61-196 7 (Disarmament Document Series, Ref 516). ■CUtTFIDENTIAir i^tlPTnnTTTTTiTi I. SUMJIARY AND ANALYSIS OF PRINCIPAL DEVELOPMENTS The U.S. Arms Control and Disarmanient Agency (ACDA) , established under the Kennedy
  • 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
  • OF STAFF WASHINGTON, D.C. 20301 CM-2965-68 3 February 1968 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Senator Kennedy's Views on South Vietnam 1. My views on the proposals set forth by Senator Kennedy during his appearance on "Face the Nation" are expressed
  • at .the Kennedy. Expressway and Addison Street.at 9:30 a.m. and is to consist of about_ 200 cars. The plan calls for the motorcade to.proceed to the city. hall in· the downtown Loop area and then to·· the residence of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of-Chicago
  • , Jr., in Chicago, and later the "removal of the Negro entre• Shriver asked him to become a di­ preneur from the marketplace where rector of the Busine ·smcn's Commit• American citizens arc accustomed tee for Kennedy-Johnson. "We wen· to bargaining
  • '.REY/NODIS/PENNSYL\'A8IA 'It '1 ,I Monday, October 9, 1967, 1:45 P. M. MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Herter Record of Elaenbower-Kennedy Diecuaaion of Laos on. January 19. 1961 Secretary Ruak baa been aent a copy of the attached Secret
  • things are looking up in Morocco (except the economy). But Hassan thinks LBJ doesn't love him like Kennedy so we're concocting a letter for John to take back (he grasps that meeting LBJ unlikely}. G. Ball is all upset about Algeria, since Ben Bella's
  • Zeit Tag Zeit an durch 1 .> 'fl durch ~t'~ Be~lin~Zehlend~rf Z.U UEBERM ·ITTELN HABE ICH AUFRICHTIG BEGRUESST STOP ICH SEHE IN DIESEM IHREM AUFTRAG DEN .ERNSTEN WILLEN DES HERRN PRAESIDENTEN KENNEDY IM INTERESSER DER ERHALTUNG DES FRIEDENS
  • in a separate memorandum. l then told Bundy that I was highly dis•atis!ied over the fact that President Johnson did not get direct intellige:n ee briefings trom mo ae was the custom with Pt-esident Kennedy and had b .e en the Eisenhower custom in the prior
  • r. Hoa9a of BeplPJriiH'IB(91r---­ Wutalai&oa. D. C .. jl/az ' ti. h (CCD:'es. to Mr. 0' en 's of'f1ce before being forwarded to Central Pilea.) §x PA~ I Kennedy t J -~ March 24• 1964 Dear C•puuaa: 11\11 lt aaon1 the first ln1141dy
  • President What i ~ean by this Kennedy was assinate on tlte work of tae natien under tlle trade~ passing ing it t11at had befallen tlte cCivil on the bases Rig~ts of color I am America'. and grea1:-iful Bill to you and noi veto or creed. Jew
  • preservation. The remaining members of the Council are: K. STEVENS of Pennsylvania, Chairman L. KENNEDY of Texas HALPRI:-l of California LAWRENCE MRs. ERNESTIvEs of Illinois RussELL W. Famu.y of Minnesota DR. RicHARD DAUOBEllTYof Washington CHRISTOPHER T11NNARD
  • program. Since that time we have been developing this in detail. In the meantime, with the Kennedy Round behind us and the prospect for five years of periodic tarif~ reduction and with the increasing pressure of protectionism on the home front which could
  • increased them from 15,000 to 30,000 in March of 1963. • In M~rch, President Kennedy sent Elsworth Bunker to the Middle East to try to arrange a cessation of Saudi supplies for the Royalists in return for a withdrawal of UAR troops. This arrangement
  • to supply this much PL 48o grain.) Matching Arrangements: We would put our emphasis on the matching formula worked out during the Kennedy Round for the International Grains Agreement. It was always our purpose to get the matching principle established
  • program. Since that time we have been developing this in detail. In the meantime, with the Kennedy Round behind us and the prospect for five years of periodic tarif~ reduction and with the increasing pressure of protectionism on the home front which could
  • to move in if the situation gets h ot. The President: I spent some of this morning with Senator Ted Kennedy discus sing bis trip to Vietnam and the report he plans to submit. There are tWo points he made: . 1. He is distressed about the degree