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  • that the specific claim that she sought service is not made. You may improve upon this. Another thought, if you would worry about an effort for literal documertation this story can be attributed to either me or former Attorney General Robert Kennedy
  • Folder, "INDIA - December 1963-1964 [3 of 4]," Files of Robert W. Komer, NSF, Box 23
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 23
  • 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
  • , Philip R., HEW ;;··/ WATSON, James L. CHAPMAN,Oscar, ,·DAY, Price, Baltimore Sun CONANT, James B. . MAC ARTHUR, Douglas MESTA, Perle EIJ,ISON, Ralph AKERS, Robert W. DJll,JEY.,Thomas E. HOFFMAN.,. Paul CHANCELLffi, John, US Information Aeency RICE, Emmett
  • 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
  • been advised. MILITANTOFFICEROF STUDENTNONVIOLENT COORDINATING C011MITTEE SPEAKSIN CHICAGO,ILLINOIS Robert Brown, a 19-year-old Negro, Acting Director of the Chicago, Illinois, Branch of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, a militant black
  • 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
  • assassination -- to reassure a nervous world that "the gove nment in Washington lives", and to acquaint millions abroad with the new leader of America and the free world. Minutes after the bullets struck John Kennedy, USIA threw all its resources into this task
  • and favorably known to much of the nation's business community, panic selling truck the New York Stock Exchanges within minutes of President Kennedy's death. They were closed before great narm could be done. By Monday's reopening Johnson's deft touch had
  • , Administrator Rutherford Poats, Assistant Administrator, Bureau for F a r East; ATTORNEY GENERAL Robert F . Kennedy BUREAU OF THE BUDGET Kermit Gordon, Director CIA John A. McCone, Director William Colby DEFENSE Ro1::iert S. McNamara, Secretary John McNaughton
  • . The present members of the Commission are: Representative Armistead I. Selden, Jr., Alabama (term expires May 15, 1967). Representative Robert L. F. Sikes, Florida (term expires May 15, 1967). Representative William S. Mailliard, California (term expires May
  • as well as the British and French forces are within the system. The second solution, which emerged out of the acceleration of the ECC, and of the Kennedy Administration's encouragement of this develop­ ment; would be to create an analogous relationship
  • Folder, "Bowles 11/3/63-1965 [4 of 4]," Files of Robert W. Komer, NSF, Box 13
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 13
  • quite well. Mr. Robert Komer, The White House, Washington, D. C. DECLASSIFIED E.O. 13526,Sec.3.5 MAY2 1 1964By ;J NLJ 11.. 7 ~ (#119) NARA,Date '. ;2 f .-lL SEORE'f --8-f!Cfll:T -22. In your letter you say "We here have seen nothing firm about
  • , Senior Staff'_.Member, National Security Council Robert Komer, Senior Staff' Member, National Security Council Christopher A. Norred, Jr., Officer in Charge, EA/K COPIES TO: White House • 2 FE - 2 EA - 4 (3cc) Amembassy Seoul• 2 Amembassy ·rokyo - 2
  • encouraged this development and said that senior Department officials hoped to compare notes again on Gulf matters when British Minister of State Roberts came to Washington in mid-May. The British decision to give notice of termination of their specific
  • Biographical information; National Park System; Robert C. Horn; National Capital Planning Commission; Preservation Commission; Grand Teton National Park; recreation; 1968 Land & Water Conservation Fund Act; Yellowstone National Park; tradition
  • fundamental changes have come about, not only in the makeup of the National Park System, but also in some of the policies and guidelines. F: Before we get on to your career as Director, you are on the board of the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts
  • 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
  • Opportunity. The fourth Task Force, on conferences and ublications, Commissioner William Graham. Kendrick, is under the supervision of Working on this Task .Force are Robert Gale, of the Peace Corps, Miss Katherine Ellickson, George 0. Butler. and Ofield
  • ~--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
  • /show/loh/oh -7- very much interested in that problem a long time and had worked with Will Alexander in Georgia on the various race relations programs, but then he'd been switched over to the Public Power Division and [Robert C.] Bob Weaver took his
  • PARTICIPANTS: The P resident The Vice P res ident S ecretary of State, D e an Rusk S ecretary of Defense , Robert S . M cNama ra Sec retary of Treasury, H e nry H . F owler Chairman , Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Earle G . Whee ler Di r ector, Central Int e
  • Lady Bird, LBJ and staff are up late because of the Farm Bill; Lady Bird does office work; LBJ, Lady Bird and Lynda Johnson attend funeral for General Douglas MacArthur; Lady Bird exchanges brief remarks with Robert Kennedy; Lady Bird describes
  • find it helpful to talk in theoretical terms about deficit financing, etc. (This, by the way, is different from Kennedy's approach in his Yale speech which aroused fears in the business community.) But you don't regard a -2- $100 billion budget
  • . Among the other possible successors are Minister of Trade and Industry Robert Lightbourne, a brilliant speaker and politician: Minister without Portfolio Hugh Shearer, Bustamante's personal favorite, who supervises the JLP-affiliated trade union and has
  • , 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
  • ; Lady Bird meets LBJ at hangar; park meeting continues at the LBJ Birthplace; to LBJ Ranch house; Johnsons, Lynda & Chuck Robb and the Krims drive the Lewis place; Robert Kennedy announces run for President; "Guess Who's Coming for Dinner?" movie shown
  • Kennedy walked into his office, the first time after John Kennedy 1 s death. It was Lyndon that suggested that we see Guess Who's Corning to Dinner, and we all went out to the hangar which is completed now, for showing movies, . and very nice, except
  • LBJ & Lady Bird read newspapers; to St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York City, for Robert Kennedy funeral; the Johnsons pay respects to the Kennedy family; lunch on plane back to Washington; Lady Bird reads newspapers and takes nap; mourners killed
  • . 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
  • . And the whole process began again at the beginning of President Kennedy's Administration. And the mills have ground exceedingly long and maybe too fine--I don't know. But the whole thing has been a tremendous LBJ Presidential Library http
  • R. F'IELDSj who st}ll. ted to the m.eeting 9 :axM.Ht.g other things~ th~.. t :a l .1 NS~P m~mbers and white people shnuld keep their guns in order to protect themselves . On October 31; lf167'J Capt.aim ROBERT RAM.SEY» Vice Squad~ IH.llsborougb
  • 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
  • to be on the are being scrutinized by than Attorney General Robert Kennedy, a former antagonist, who almost got into a fistfight together out what it's Joe MoOarthy's end of an investi~ation. His multi-corporate no less Senator staff with Oohn a few years ago
  • ,to the Prealdent JACJr/pw/Jul 29 65 Identical Memo to: Lee White John Con nor Robert Weaver Gardner Ackley Donald Hornig r:_oJW~ ·/J-0 )1.! 1 ~ ...'s'' MEMORANDUM FOR LEE
  • ), as checked by IC JACK F..AY RID:F;NHOUR, were negative w;tth respec.t to an arrest of VIDNJEVICH since _las-t reported.· Concerning the arrest of VIDNJEVICH, October 31, 1966, at Kennedy High ·School, previo~ly :t"epqrted, records of the Chicago Police
  • . 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
  • . 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
  • 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