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  • Contributor > Rostow, W. W. (Walt Whitman), 1916-2003 (remove)

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  • - - not even Walt. Francis M. Bator NODIS - EXTREMELY SENSITIVE HARV ARD UNIVERSIT ... JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY SCHOOL OF GOVERNMENT INSTITUTE OF POLITICS LITTAUER CENTER CAMBRIDGE 02138 June 27, 1967. EYES ONLY Dear Francis, In strictest confidence 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
  • - . By d,- , NARA Datei,.1,_, 4 - ,, -2- You may know that the United Nations• Palestine Con­ ciliation Com.'nission (PCC), of which we are a member, made a genuine effort to solve the problem in 1961 after· President Kennedy had opened the way
  • 'Or THEIR GAMBLC: IS THAT THEY NOW HOPE. TO WI ~ . BECAUSE OF WHAT THEY REGARD AS OUR DESPERATE DESIRE FOR PEAC£;·tHE· SoEECHES Or MCCAHTHY, · KENNEDY, GALBRAITH AND OTHERS, ARTICLES IN THE US PR'ESS AND, TV• THE SH I F'T IN NEWSWEEK, 'WALTER -CRO_N.KlTE
  • 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
  • of tough negotlatlng in Geneva followed. talks went lorward. the Nortb Vietnamese mlU.tary sltuatlon. with a large oHens1ve. Yet,even as the tried to change drastically the They gave up the effort only when President. Kennedy sent U. S. forces blto
  • called him to the. microphone also. · Mr. Whitlam, who has paid a crowded and bene­ fl .::ial series .. of calls in Washington, declined to talk about them at a press conference. · Yesterday he saw Sena­ tors Robert Kennedy, Ful­ bright and Mansfield
  • this small program {at most 250,000 tons or $15 million) is not worth the risk of being charged with bad faith under the Kennedy rou.i."1.d food aid and grain agreement. As you recall, all exporters agreed ·'- . . e re n o t o preempt specified shares
  • ·-Jt:.:DGEMEi'1T OF PRESIDEN-1' KENNEDY ·.e.ND : PHESIDENT JO}fNSON. SINCE 'fHEN _,.:.··tHA'f'Ii AGGnESSfON DID SUCCEED. •.. IN VIETNAM,. 1li'ERE WAS A DANGF.;i1 •n-iAT \•.iE \.;QULD, Bt BEC0~1E·lN\iOL\iED ON A·FAR ~iORE D!\NGEROUS SC/~LE' IN A i·i°IDrm
  • separately to Mr. Robert Citron, Smithsonian Institution, Cambridge, Mass.). MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINOTON SEGR:ST Wednesday MEMORANDUM SUBJECT: - July 31, 'INFO1'.MA TION 1968 - 3:30 p.m. FOR THE PRESIDENT Student '.Distu:rbances in Me:x
  • created while on staff at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and The University of Texas at Austin; the State Department; and the White House under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. These materials reflect Rostow's duties
  • miss opportunities. "What was behind the emphasis on the army's special forces in the Kennedy Administration? Any perceived contradiction between the apparent shift of mission for special forces from guerrilla fighters to counterguerrilla operatives?" I
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • •uTHE SECURITY AND FREEDOM OF BERLIN, A COMMITMENT WHICH WAS DEMONSTRATED IN 19481 WHICH · ~AS BEEN REITERATED BY PRESIDENTS EISENHOWER AND KENNEDY AND WHICH ' IS AS ' FIRM AND EXPLICIT TODAY AS rr WAS WHEN IT " WAS MADE· . TH SHOULD BE KNOWN IN BERLIN
  • duties or by 1111:po.iring their concessions in the Kennedy Round, the gains wuld"b~ negligible and , the trade policy consequences ver:, great • .-SJ!l8RET~ . . ,, .' "..... • I ' r8 :S SR ET-, - 416. A tourist tax program could be devised
  • about the reasons for our being in Viet-Nam and our objectives. The Administration's usual answer is that there is no reason for confusion. This is no answer. He cites the Bobby Kennedy statement regarding negotiating with the Viet Cong
  • " will in long run prevail. 11 Senator Edward Kennedy "The entry of Russian troops in Cze c hoslovakia is a retrogression into an age we had all hope d was passed. I will not comment in detail, but these events are an affront to decency and especially
  • , 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
  • was signed by the Pre_sident on June 15, 1968 and was deposited on that same date. ' -2 The basic elements of the Arrangement were negotiated in Geneva during the Kennedy Round of trade negotiations and wer~ an integral part of the agreements reached