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  • , 1964, AT 12:00 NOON IN THE CABINET ROOM OF THE WHITE HOUSE The President of the United States, Presiding Speaker of the House of Representatives AID David Bell, Director ATTORNEY GENERAL Robert F. Kennedy CIA John A. McCone, Director DEFENSE Robert S
  • at­ teJ.-:ding were: Douglas Dillon; David Rockefel!.~~:r ; Father Theodore H2sburgh, President of Not~e Da2e ; Adol~ ~erle; Robert Nathan; George Harrar, PresideD.t of t:ie RG-tkefeller Foundation, and Andrew McClellan and Ernest iee of the AFL/CIO
  • 3/10/64 Mrs. Roberts , For the President's casual reading . .· M c George Bundy's office ' ~ I ..... --~ THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON March 10 , 1964 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT George McGhee delivered your letter to the Chancellor
  • 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
  • over here on September 15. I will have Bro·mley Smith work on the question of a proper office in the Executive Office Building, where Max has lived happily before. MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON - 2 6. You may wish to know that Bob Kennedy has
  • -/~/u MEMORANDUM FOR ... ~A~677~ z~ Authori ' )' -< ~ By THE PRESIDENT 1• ' .L 1 ·· , Da % ~/J',?? Sir Robert Menzies, the Prime Minister of Australia, is making an informal visit in order to establish personal contact with you
  • are bright. Attachment: U.S. Trade with the Republic of Korea. Drafted by: ✓ EA/K - Mr. · Bardach Cl~ared by: Connnerce - Mr. Glick AID/FE/EA - Mr. Alexander E/FTD - Mr. York EA - Mr. Berger SJS-S - Robert L. Bruce, Ext. 4155, ~oum 7237- LIMITED
  • 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
  • the Robert Kennedy a.~pect.a. (Rounj'tree is very apoloietic; the mix-up wu under sta.ndable cozuequence of hi.a being in Cape town at the ti::ne the inq1.riry was ma.de in Pretoria. ) - - The South Africa.n Security people have now a.aked fo-r an .i
  • . On the boner l made ahout.1611"lculture and the Kennedy R owid, I think the damage control baa been fairly good. Charlie Murphy was moat andentandlng and says that ~srlculture will cbeer!Wly make it clear that nothmg has changed. Charle• Balley, who follows
  • 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
  • -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
  • . ~. McG. B. Disapproved Singapore mes sage: Birthday message: ------ v ------- Approved Disapproved ------ by Returned/M:e Roberts 11/ ~ '65 THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON -TOI? SJ!?GRET Friday, August 27, 1965 2:55 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT
  • . Foreign policy is not essentially a matter of rhetoric or protocol or personality, or even style. It was not so with ·President Kennedy and it is not so with President Johnson. The real tests of policy are deeper and more serious. They have been met
  • 2-1, I e was ve y Bey and the in Hanoi way from aft t r\JVvt. ~-,~ia·w -s~- ~ -·--- -25. Q. Senator Robert Kennedy has said we passed up important opportunities to negotiate peace in Viet Nam last winter. What is your comment
  • . Nothing has given me greater support in the past nine months than my knowledge of Pre~ident Kennedy's confidence that I could i. c,~ ~e
  • of Defense Thomas Gates, Secretary of Treasury Robert Anderson, and General Wilton B. Persons. With President-elect Kennedy were the new Secretary of ~tate Dean -Rusk, the new Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara, the new Secretary of Treasury Doug las Dillon
  • sabataace aa wbat i . now plaas to eay. . McG. B. ·'' THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Tuesday, June 22, 1965, 9:15 PM MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject: Senator Robert Kennedy's Statement on Nuclear Proliferation. At Mr. Bundy's request, I prepared
  • 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
  • does -­ in terms of large increases in U. S. foreign aid appropriations. or -- you decide that we must pre-empt a Congressional move to enact a mandatory reevaluation of tbe aid program, like the Kennedy Amendment which was barely defeated last year. Z
  • ~--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
  • , 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
  • 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
  • . 3, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Mrs. Kennedy•a visit to Cambodia Last winter the Cambodian Chief of State. :prince Sihan-ouk, invited Mrs. Kennedy to Phnom Penh to participate in a ceremony naming a street in the Cambodian 6apital
  • . Charles C. Diggs Jr. John G. Do~. Don Edwards Respectfully yours, Leonard Farbstein Theodore R. Kttpferman Robert L. Leggett Samuel N. Friedel Donald_M. Fraser Patsy T. Mink Jacob H. Gilbert Thomas M. Rees . Edith Green Henry s.· Reuss Seymour Halpern
  • well ·and .give ,· . . ' · us the best available leadership for this important part of the Agenc1' s .activities·. I !.- Richard Helms Director cc t The Honorable Dean Rusk The Hon~:rabl~ · Robert S. McNamara --- ----.-.-•- ~"""""'l
  • 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
  • of the effects of United States actions in the Kennedy Round upon all American industries, including the textile industry. No major decisions have been or will be taken by our representatives in Geneva without a decision by the President, following a full review
  • increased I believe it was President Kennedy who momentum to the Alliance has been well welcomed John McCone to this position received and preparations are underway. by saying "welcome · to the bull's-eye"The reaction in Latin America to the indeed
  • 1961 - Dr. Hans A. Bethe · 1962 - Dr. Edward Teller 1963 - Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer 1964 - Vice Admiral Hyman G. Rickover No awards were granted in 1960 and 1965. All of the recipients · received $50,000 except Dr. Fermi and Admiral Rickover, who
  • CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE ~ _ JD_ r i' N '- ~/$/. the President to Sir Robert Menzies 1 page possible classified information letter 26a information ·- ~ 0.- /)./ RESTRICTION J i t . 7 ". ·4 /8/65 A L / mem----­ letter 26c duplicate of 26a 4
  • of this will help much on this particular Hilsman story, but I think we can be sure that the next time he will at least give us a whack at him before he pops off. 4. This raises the more general question of Ted Kennedy's subcommittee, and unless you object, I would
  • . 'tr....;~"---' ... • -•... W.W. Rostow (log 3563) ' \. -1 'I . ; ,. . .-,~· . ·• J ' ' ~t. THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WASHINGTON 3 0 SEP 1966 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Robert Nathan's Views on the Situation in Vietnam I
  • the Committee report•· personally. Sincerely youra, ' Mr. Robert S. Benjamin Chairman, National Citinns• Comtnlaclon on Inter.national ·Cooper•tion United Nations Aeaoclatlon of the U.S.A. _ 345 Eaat 46ih Sts'eot Now York, New York 1001? GC:jf MEMORANDUM J
  • 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
  • -- - ---±1~;;>~ 56a memo 9-1 memo 91a memo -·Rcrstuw to tlie 13residertt S 1 p 0 ~ 1 q-,~ NV p~ "' ~/1, J/ot> N'- 5 (i 3/ 31 /ot> AI/...S i'i f lf, James Ramey and Robert McNamara to the President 2 pp b1t"' . l. J '-lh,, /00 M,J 'i'i- 7