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  • .sting friendly cooperation between our two countries. Dear friends in the United States: Th:lc. is my third official visit to your country., beginning in the Pres:ident Kennedy, fall of the year 1961, when my dear friend., now departed, whom I
  • . JACKSON, Washington SAM J. ERVIN, JR., N-0rth Carolina ERNEST GRUENING, Alaska EDMUNDS. MUSKIE, Maine ABRAHAM RIBICOFF, Connecticut FRED R. HARRIS, Oklahoma ROBERT F. KENNEDY, New York LEE METCALF, Montana JOSEPH M. MONTOYA, New Mexico KARL E. MUNDT
  • AND TO -, : ·~ ·~:: ~: FOLLOW .IT BY ONE TO THE U .s • WOULD APPEAR .TO PLAY DOWN THE . : . :... , ::J : : . .. MEXICAN VISIT. I OF ·coURSE p·o INTED ' OUT Tif AT THE ·_ VISIT TO TH£ ·' _·. . ~:j HAD · BEEN AGREED WITH KENNEDY · AND TH AT THERE NEED
  • Affairs Lt . Gen. Joseph F . Carroll, D i rector, Defense Intelligence Agency Cyrus R. Vance, Secretary of the Army Paul H . Nitze, Secretary of the Navy Eugene M . Zuckert, Secretary of the Air Force JCS General Maxwell D. Taylor , Chairman
  • of recreation is horseback riding. As y;ou know, you met Park when he came to this country in November 1961 shortly after ecizlng power by a mU1tary coup: you met him again when he came to President Kennedy' a £uneral. In the attached menprandum (which you have
  • 10-~o. ,1 l\4arch 31, 1967 HIGHLIGHTS OF THE VICE PRESIDENT'S TRIP TO EUROPE Conversation with Willy Brandt (March 29) Kennedy Round and Food Aid The Vice President: 1£ Kennedy Round fails it will set in motion forces detnanding troop cutbacks
  • E'isenhower told President Kennedy this ls the one lse11e on which he would take after him in public. It ta possible the General•• view has changed since 1961. But we ought to know. c. I believe we have a solemn, secret comm.ltm.ent to Taiwan we would w,e our
  • -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
  • . September 1962: On the eve of Vice Preaident Johnson's visit to Athens, Dimitracopoulos published interviews with Edward Kennedy and Assistant Secretary of State Manning in which non­ committal references to the "Macedonian Question" were made to look like
  • , Joseph Sisco A ssistant S ecretary of State , Lucius D. Battle Pr esident 's Special Assistant for National S ecurity Affairs , Mr. Walt Rostow Executive Secretary, Mr. Bromley Smith White House Press Officer, George Christian Whi te House P res s Offic e
  • " • , ' ' • • '. ' , • • ' •; . '.·••.. BEIRNE, Joseph J.rthiu'i~fc;;s;> •. I· 1 . ,· . . ' ~ purposes. are. " •l • -; ~-; ,;t; : \. , '.'., - '.i. ~ ~ •: .EATON,Fredericlc,M.· .,. , ................ t ' . '..:..:;• ' attached. _, ·t ~ sketches· ror::identification • .I
  • . Mr. Joseph R. McCleskey ·Dir~ctor Korea Operations National Distillers & Chemical Corp. C.P.O. Box 66 Yokohama, Japan 19. Mr. John G. Davidson, President Pacific Wood Products Company 900 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90017 (Phone: t213
  • ·have received. It should also keep under review Turkish trade regulations and practices with a view to increasing the U.S. share of its commercial trade • .Joseph W, Barr / Tuesday, January 24, 1967 -- 7:50 p. m. Mr. President: You wanted to know
  • 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
  • , 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
  • . 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
  • , 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
  • Philip Geyelin, Washington Post, on telephone Joseph Alsop, on telephone Peter Lisagor, Chicago Daily News, on telephone Wednesday, January 31, 1968 Joseph Rogaly, London Financial Times Thursday, February l, 1968 Richard L. Wilson, Cowles publications
  • Benjamin s. Rosenthal Augustus F. Hawkins Edward R. Roybal William F. Ryan Henry Helstoski Joseph E. Karth James H. Scheuer Robert w. Kastenmeier Lester L. ·wolf£ . W.LOnday,October 23, 1967 Mr. Pre1tident: You decided that the Vice President rather
  • 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
  • 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
  • NELSON ROCKEFELLER OR SENATOR ROBERT KENNEDY, WITH EITHER OF WHOM THEY FEEL THEY CAN WORK. j,,_;.J .,,,,,,__ µ l/»- ~1, DTG:0610532 JAN 68 ~CR.ET"" 12/29 / 67 FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM WALT ROSTOW- ~O,.,,, J.j Lacking his secretary, who alone has
  • 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
  • are dotn1 all they can with their own resources. W. W. Ro■ tow ~OHFIDENT%AL .CAMEROON 'l. Ambassador Owono (Oh-WOH-noh) Ambassador Joseph N. Owono, 45, presented.his credentials on December 16, 1965. He is ·also Cameroon's· Ambassador to Canada
  • pleased. Those are the directions in which I wish to go and am determined to go. Please keep in touch. Honorable Joseph S. Clark United States Senate Washington, D. C. - - ---· ··-- . ·I . .. .... . .. .r. - . MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE
  • 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
  • in Atlantic Ernest A. Gross Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt and Mosle Roger Hilsman School of International Affairs, Columbia University Joseph E. Johnson Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Milton Katz Harvard Law School George Kistiakowsky Department
  • 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