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  • ~ n's are set ad confirmatio for Tuesday, /' //June 2 at 10:30 aom. before _,,/..,.,. E~st ad, Ervin S and IC 7 G~'. LISTER HILL, ALA., PAT MCN.ltMARA, MICH. WAYNE MORSE, OREG. ,...RALPH YARBOROUGH, TEX. JOSEPH 8. CLARK. PA
  • Executive Director AMERICANS FOR DEMOCRATIC ACTION FORMER NATIONAL CHAIRMEN NATIONAL WILSON WYATT 1947-48 LEONHENDERSON 1948-49 H. HUMPHREY 1949-50 HUBERT FRANCIS BIDDLE 1950-53 M. SCHLESINGER, ARTHUR JR. JAMESE. DOYLE (Co-Chairmen) 1953-55 JOSEPH L
  • . Charles Schultze to Joseph Califano, letter, August 21, 1965. p. 1. 5. "A Department of Transportation and Related Organizational Issues" and "Alternatives to a Department of Transportation". unidentified papers from the files of Arthur Kallen. Bureau
  • ) cc: shock to for clvil Senator Thomas Kuciiel Senator Geor:3:e Murphy Senato Office Building Nashington 25, D. C. yours, Lois I. Joseph all people, rights in J y 2, 19 D r. orri ,I For y r omm of Gover r ..,_~ 2~~~!=-~Pilel:na11. c
  • Administration, located within the Coast Guard, regulates pilotage on the Great Lakes. St. Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation, Joseph H. McCann, of Michigan, Administrator. The corporation is responsible for controlling and operating the St. Lawrence Seaway
  • Highway Administrator Lowell K. Bridwell Federal Railroad Administrator A. Scheffer Lang St. Lawrence Seaway Corp. Administrator Joseph H. McCann Assistant Secretary M. Cecil Mackey Assistant Secretary Donald G. Agger Assistant Secretary John L. Sweeney
  • ques­ tions which have divided us and also those which have helped pull us together. In 1950, in collaboration with Joseph Stalin, the Chinese mounted a major attack on the U.N. forces which were defending South Korea. The ultimate target
  • States at 2829 16th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20009. PRINCIPALU.S. OFFICIALS Ambassador-Fulton Freeman Minister Counselor-Henry Dearborn Counselor for Political Affairs-Wallace Stuart Counselor for Consular Affairs-Joseph Hender­ son Counselor
  • . The U.S. Government was als? very much involved in that situation; tne U.S. does not want to see India go under due to pressure from China; the Late President Kennedy tried very hard to find a just settlement of the Kashmir dispute. In the circumst~ces
  • the development of the weapon; President Truman authorized its first wartime use. And Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy and J'ohnson have lived daily with the overwhelming responsibility and knowledge that only the President can authorize the use of this dreadful
  • impression; if it is allowed to stand it will work at cro_ss-purposes with our declared Kennedy Round objectives 11 of encouraging competition. A c. TPA -- Opposes pr.es sing objections if the lines involved are satisfied. d. TGC -- The General Counsel
  • OFF FLORIDA. • CR139P 18 98 VASHINaTON--ADD BRITISHPOLARISC~7) THE P.ENTAGON SAID THE BRITISHSUB WOULD BE BERTHED. FOR ABOUT A. · MONTH At PORT CANAVERAL, FLORIDA,. PART or THE CAPE KENNEDY COfllPLIX. A DEFENSE SPOKISPIAN INDICATED THERESOLUTION
  • visit to Washington just before Jack Kennedy died. (There is a copy in your files.) I think you will be impressed all over again with the opportunity which we had then to evolve a realistic South Asian military-political policy which would take
  • their military control levers. President Kennedy died just when this seemed to be coming to a successful cone! us ion. A year ago next week with your support and Mac Bundy's we were able again to bring the situation to a head in a way that would have been I think
  • -East hand, but fittingly so because I don't think there's been a more important sub..-····· ._. ... stantive meeting since Kennedy met Khrushchev in Vienna. The flo~ of people and memos citing this as a historic opportunity to settle on a new course
  • to say in January or even February what we seem to be .prepared to say now, we could have largely dealt the Soviets out of the situation in regard to sophisticated weapons . As I pointed out in President Kennedy's office in late April 1963, it is totally
  • . By itself, it 5o The memory of Joh."1 1:·. Kennedy has mucl1 magic in India. is «::.:'letwill bo a. positive force for us. However, it is too often invoked in·Inc.ian ?resida ••t II!ir..ds as a syt1bol of \"!hut might have boen in ter.ns of.' world pea.co
  • of civil disobcdi­ ance wore the b:i.siccause tor such tragedies as • the deaths of Dr. King and Sen. Kennedy. But Franco has just undergone a virtual revolution, yet the highest figure I have heard quoted on the number of deaths rolated lo this upheaval