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  • " • , ' ' • • '. ' , • • ' •; . '.·••.. BEIRNE, Joseph J.rthiu'i~fc;;s;> •. I· 1 . ,· . . ' ~ purposes. are. " •l • -; ~-; ,;t; : \. , '.'., - '.i. ~ ~ •: .EATON,Fredericlc,M.· .,. , ................ t ' . '..:..:;• ' attached. _, ·t ~ sketches· ror::identification • .I
  • . 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • , 1983 By,,,,4~ l \ , NARA,Date 9-1-;9 L- Sunday, Mr. June 30, 1968 -- 3:00 p. m. President: You may wiah to conalder uelng -- or not uslng -- the attached peroration whlch reaches back to Preeldent Kennedy'• statement on the occaalon
  • nation to the UN, is making a private visit to Washington May 8 and 9. He visited Canada privately April 30 - May 8, and will be going to Cape Kennedy from Washington. Mauritius received its independence from Great Britain last March. The country is faced
  • costs, and no pressure on India to make agricul­ tural policy reforms.· We have a matching rationale for 1968 in the Kennedy Round C00FID£241 ft2L C 0 }bf5 i D IIH ! t&dS,,,, - 2 - Grains Agreement which requires the Europeans to provide 2. 3
  • think an elected Communist government would be just as dangerous to our interest and their neighbors ••• " UNCLASSIFIED 7 UNCLASSI FI ED 8 SENATOR EDWARD M. KENNEDY Adopt a more defensive military posture "We should begin immediately to moderate
  • Japane$e exports in steel, textiles and automobiles. Highlights of ·the meeting, which made a deep impression on the Japanese,follow. Trade Measures and Kennedy Round Acceleration Chairman Mills assured the Japanese that the United States would not take
  • OF QUESTIONS' ABOUT SENATOR ) KENNEDY- S DEATH, -INCLUDING OUR VIEW AS TO THE· MOTIVE. HE ASKED SPECIFIC ALLY WKETKER IN ·OUR JUDG~>ENT IT .WAS RE\.ATED ;; TO SENATOR K£.NNEDY ' S VfEWS ON THE. WAR. WE · SAID THAT IT • - •;. WAS NOT AND WAS DONE BY A PALEST I
  • at the time of the Pop• la ■o her• a■klna that yo'll cowd attend the f'llneral of Senator Robert Kennedy •onal repre ■ eatatiY• Warm of Hi ■ Halble••• r•1ard■• Lyndon B. Jobn•on Hi ■ Eminence The Moat Rneread Aqelo Cardinal Vicar General I
  • OF COUNTRIES MR. PALMER WILL VISIT NATION LEADER Cameroon Ahmadou Central African Republic Gen. Chad Francois The Gambia Sir Dawda Kairaba Congo(K) Joseph D. Mobutu ·President Gabon Albert Bongo President Guinea Ahmed Sekou Toure
  • up the effort only when President. Kennedy sent U. S. forces blto Thailand and made lt clear we were ready to-act 1f necessary. Only then dld the Communist n.eg(?tlators finally accept the new Ge11eva Accords of 196Z. It ls worth recalling indeed
  • counts on to produce the great political victory. · ,t\ February 22, 1968 Behind North I(orea's New Belligerence JOSEPH C. KUN to T be answered about question the Pueblo (a territory of only 46,800 square miles with a population of less than incident
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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