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  • cratic politics when Adlai Stevenson was a candidate for president. He came to Washington in 1965 to work at the State Department and then as Special Assistant to LBJ. Markman began this evening's pro­ gram by explaining how hr\'in Wat. on came to write
  • a genuine understanding of the purpose of Khrushchev will come to our President. So long as he listens to Mr. Stevenson, who has proven himself over and over to be an appeaser, if not a sympathize~ with the socialistic cause, we are lost. · Our he~rts a~e
  • of Canada , P.O. Box 6100, Montrea l 3, Qu ebec. Gwen Stevenson Editor 4 in Ch all enge for ch ange, th e impressive streng th s and hunrn n resources ot th e oo r ar- 1cu ar 1e1r eSJre to 1e so lve l he [.r b . I d t ti bl own ro ems arc e1ng rcvei'I C O
  • was previously closely associated with Governor Stevenson for a numper of years. He is married to the former Catherine Gerlach and has a twenty-two month old son, William, IIIo He plans to leave for Manila the early part of July. RAYMOND HARE - Ambassador
  • on Churchill, he was a brilliant man. job. It's no But that was his [Inaudible] caused directly of course from that, too much of that. Now when Eisenhower became president, in the election of 1952, of course as you know, we supported Adlai Stevenson
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Roche -- I -- 2 were all holding hands with Adlai Stevenson, James MacGregor Burns, and I, I guess, and Sam Beer of Harvard perhaps and three or four other people were the sort of Kennedy cadre. I never had the slightest
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -4- with Mrs. Johnson. It was a smallish group. I remember we came over with Adlai Stevenson, who had been at the concert with us. And I remem- ber the President was dancing
  • , Paul Butler, Adlai Stevenson, I think Joe Rauh, and some others--and considered from their point of view what would happen if they joined it, you would get a terrifically divisive force going so far as their leadership in the Congress
  • Hanoi was ready to talk - reported in Eric Sevareid's last intervjew with Adlai Stevenson. ·They were dismayed to find that the U.S. offer of u·ncoMitional negotiations excluded direct talks with the Vietcong: (NLF) as a separate party. And they wer
  • ) 1949-1950 National Chairman, Volunteers for Stevenson-Kefauver Active Duty, USNR, 1941-1945, EuJ,""opean Theater of Operations and Pacific Fleet Editor·, Publisher,· Louisville (Kentucky) Courier Journal I· I ,; (· I' I I • r
  • AND SHOO,LDBE ENCOURAGED IN FUTURE. / GP-4. STEVENSON .lftllA.L ___ 1 ~ __ lJA__ _______ REPRODUCTION FROM THIS COPY IS ,PROHf81TE0UNLESS "UNCLASSIFIED" OUTGOING TELEGRAM D_epa:rtment , INDICATE, □ COLLECT / □ CHARGE TO 1OGN!'tnmtTnL 37 ACTION
  • a reception which is to be given by UN Ambassador Adlai Stevenson in honor of King on December 4, 1964. Montero stated that it bad been decided that among the dignitaries to be present at this reception will be Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Harry 'Wachtel 1s
  • BY ·SOME FIFTY NEWSMEN, QUESTI .ONING ON U.S. POSIT! ON IN REGMW TO KASHMIR-PAKISTAN WAS MOR£ RELENTLESS THAN ANYTHING I HAD PREVI,OUSLY EXPERIENCE:D IN INDIA. I REFUSED TO Ca1MENT ON U.S. POSITION IN REGARD TO KASHMIR ON GROUNDS STEVENSON ·HAD NOT .YET
  • . SENDER,Stanton P., Wash., D.C. SHARFSIN,J •, Harrisburg, Pa• SKLAR,A • •L., Bal.to, Md. SPRAGUE,Irwin H., Wash., D,C. STEVENSON,Andrew, Wash., D .c. STEVER, Guy, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pgh., Pa. TAWES,J. Millard, Annapolis, Md. TERRY, Charles
  • ;: • men( by the _late U.S. RepresentaE~uipment • tional _seci.trity;·,. ·,_foreign policy and; .tive· to the United '·Nations, Adlai R~diological Equipment , , , , ·· Helium Gas ~•t_'E.,.Stevenson, before the Security international peace than is the ~ase
  • ^sador Stevenson has reported th a t tlie ra i s s u b s ta n tia l santiiasnt in tlia United lla tio n s fa vo ring rj:^ so tia tic n . T h is coiild con­ ceivably lead to n s g o tia tin s in it ia t iv e s . 3 . Any escalation— cvsn tlia re p s titio n
  • ; (EnclosureJ MemCon: M e e t i n g of Committee of Principals Concerning Bombs in O r b i t ), pp. 1-5, 7 - 8. Top Secret. -SECRET-- - - 5 - _ O c tober 1 5 . On the next day^ Ambassador Stevenson told the F irst Committee that the United States had
  • accepted, the ambassadorship to Brazil, I went with Adlai Stevenson on his tour of South America in early June. In the middle of that tour I was telephoned by President Kennedy to ask whether I would take the assistant secretaryship, and I begged off
  • send to you under cover of a letter. ! ' i ; He believes that distribution of this memorandum should ., ., i · be kept to a minimum. ~i Sincerely yours, . ~-... . ,j j t!. I ,i : . ! . I 1 . ! Robert A. Stevenson Enclosure: As stated