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  • of President Kennedy? P: Not as a presidential appointee, as a so-called administrative appointee of Fowler Hamilton, the new administrator of AID. M: Then you were in this agency then during the course of the Kennedy Presidency, and have remained
  • the day . I do believe that it was at a National Security Council meeting early in May of 1961 when I briefed President Kennedy and other senior people in the government, including the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the service secretaries, and other
  • particularly th e President' s feelings abou t Senator Kennedy's latest moves. " l:47p l:50 p Mrs l:48p Hug ' Presiden l:52p 2:30 p Georg . Johnso n h Sidey an d To m Johnso n ou t whil e t talkin g t o Mrs . Johnso n back i n a t l:50 p e Reed y joined F
  • Sabin. Co-chm n fo r Johnson ; A l McNamara, Co - Chmn. fo r Johnso n REMARKS Th e polic e estimate d th e crow d t o be 75,00 0 Mr. Georg e Gallagher (advanc e ma n ) said tha t th e crow d was 3 x th e siz e of President Kennedy' s i n 196 2 and 2 x
  • This document was scanned and described as part of a digital exhibit about the days following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy on November 22, 1963. All of our records are not yet digitized. The exhibit documents presented here
  • time to question you on them. I thought Senator Stennis handled himself very we1l yesterday. Did anyone talk with him before he went on the air? General Wheeler: General Brown talked with Senator Stennis. The President: A senator (Senator Ted Kennedy
  • Club in Detroit on Monday. Rusk said he "is going to remind them that 1967 was a helluva year for international agreements and he is going to point out the progress in the Kennedy Round, the Latin solidarity, the Asian Development Bank beginning
  • some military disaster - that'll be it. They'd rather negotiate with Kennedy, McCarthy or Humphrey. General Taylor: I 1 d go back to the 20th right now. The President: Let 1 s set predicate - we can't pop it all at once. Secretary Clifford: The bombing
  • / Gabonese Ambassador) The President then returned to the Treaty Room where he visited with the Gabonese Ambassador. H e tol d the Gabonese Ambassador that there were various trips in store such as the one to Cape Kennedy and the desalina zation trip. He said
  • got int o bed. Secretary xi- V Fowle r £&*J I bedroom*-***^ BM (pl) MW(pl) jfc^J — —— Oct NNMC 21 1965 Thursday Senator Edwar d Kennedy BM William Gaud , Deput y Administrator o f AID Senator / John -O . Pastor e Secy McNamara
  • w/ Mrs . Jean Kennedy Smit h las t wee k an d his decisio n not t o have a W H dinner G Reedy Jack McGeo Valenti re the Presidents utterances on Viet Nam Bundy McGeorge Bund y ushers checked ofc funds calls To the Departmen t of Health
  • a residenc e — joined tri p Sec y an d and Mrs . McNam ara, an d Senato r Marvin Watson and Mrs Mrs.. Rober t Kennedy. v Departed McNamara's enroute to th e Whit e Hous House e Abe Fortas April 30 , 196 5 White House To th e East Garde n t o sto p i n
  • will be decided at the polls in November ? 1 believe it is this: Will America, having forged so far ahead under President Kennedy and President Johns on toward a more just and compassion­ ate society, now turn back? Will we continue on the upwa rd, hopeful road
  • Kennedy, when he created the Commission on the Status of Women, envisioned our participating as full partners. Because of t his President's determination women will no longer be the forgotten sex in labor, in business or in Government. And, I know you
  • Lady Bird's clothing and shopping for shoes; call to Jacqueline Kennedy, who has a little girl with chicken pox; call to Nellie Connally and Lady Bird's concern for politics in Texas; call to Mary Lasker about art; dinner with A.W. Moursund, Babe
  • Lady Bird's trip to New York for clothes fitting; lunch with Billie and Wendy; Tax Bill passed and signing ceremony; LBJ's speech and praise for Sen. Byrd; LBJ & Lady Bird to Mrs. Kennedy's house to present 4 signing pens; presentation of tray
  • Kennedy. I t ' s b e e n one y e a r , one m o n t h a n d two d a y s s i n c e P r e s i d e n t K e n n e d y ' s v i r g i n a p p e a l to ge t i t p a s s e d - a n d I ' d h a t e to put h o u r to h o u r a l l of the c a l l s , the t a l k s
  • LBJ and Lady Bird attend Red Mass at St. Matthews Cathedral with Luci, and Pat Nugent; Lady Bird reflects on bronze plaque in church about President Kennedy; Johnsons go to Jack Valenti's for coffee; lunch back at the White Housie; LBJ takes a nap
  • of P r e s id e n t John F i t z g e r a l d Kennedy d u r in g th e f u n e r a l ma s s . P r e c e d in g t h e i r rem o v a l t o A r lin g to n where t h e y a w a ited th e jo y o u s day o f Re s u r r e c t i o n . " Somehow th e pronouns
  • Senator Edward Kennedy's plane crash; Lady Bird calls Rose Kennedy, Birch Bayhs and Mrs. Edward Kennedy; telephone conversation with Lynda Johnson about security problem on her flight; office work; Lady Bird reads; walk around White House
  • in President Kennedy's Administration was the fact that he, Kemal, had been allowed to have an entirely private 10-minute audience with President Kennedy. Kemal also said that he has Nasser's authority to have a similar private interview now if you invite him
  • Lady Bird meets with Chief Usher, J.B. West, at the White House; in the afternoon, Lady Bird returns to the White House and discusses housekeeping details with Jacqueline Kennedy; Mrs. Kennedy's request for Caroline's school at White House
  • , and also personal friends of mine. Henry Brooks, who had been the former district attorney of Travis County supported me and did all he could for me. PB: I understand that a man of our age who is now in Corpus Christi, named Vann Kennedy, was also one
  • Return home from Florida; Visit to and meeting with Mrs. Kennedy about Society for the Preservation of the White House and its members; Mrs. Kennedy agrees to be public member; Fine Arts Committee; gift of four JFK minted coins; office work; John
  • each o f the two c h ild re n , and one which I said I h o p ed--I thought perhaps she m ig h t lik e --to send on i MEMORANDUM THE W H I T E HOUSE WASHINGTON F r id a y , F e b r u a r y 28, 1964 Page 4 to M r s . R o s e Kennedy, I said goodbye
  • --□--~---! Let us carry and programs vote. ......... forward of John Fitzgerald not because of our sorrow but because they all Kennedy-- or sympathy are right.re --·· memory, t I n his the plans ill ll'IIIC t:ttttr I especially members of my own
  • in individual cases, he really has no shortage of access to responsible officials. This is an old battle with Joe. He had one round with President Kennedy and of course had an unending contest with President Eisenhower. He plans to raise this question again
  • the President-in either case, whether President Kennedy or President Johnson, had occasion to deal directly with you in your official capacity? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories
  • your wedding. II They were living· at the Kennedy-Warren. [A D. C. apartment house] So they asked us to make up a list of whom we wanted. Philip had been here a year and a half, and the list got so big that the wedding had to be moved from
  • entertained President Kennedy the day after he was assassinated. He {'Kennedy] was coming from Dallas to Austin for a dinner, then LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID
  • of the Farmers Home Administration under President Kennedy's Administration . M: Could you compare roughly the Agriculture Department's operations and goals in the days of the Resettlement Administration with the goals of the Farmers Home Administration
  • 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
  • to that, during the Johnson Administration, you were an assistant to the Secretary of Treasury from about 1963 on. Is that right? D: From the beginning of the Kennedy M: From '61 until you-- D: Until I came back here. M: Did you have any occasion prior
  • 1963, though he had come to Washington since then at the time of the funeral ceremony for President Kennedy. I The President said to Mr. Wilson that things seemed to be going a little better in Cyprus, and Mr. Wilson agreed though he commented
  • would like nothing better, and we are prepared to react inunediately ~ to such an eventuality o· Approve _____________________ Disapprove_____________________ Discussion: I I j. .. The late President Kennedy and I on various occasions following
  • , as a kind of close outSider, to discern any difference between the Department of the Interior under Mr. Udall, under the Administrations of Mr. Kennedy and then later under Mr. Johnson. H: Have you noticed any changes one way or another? Well, as I've
  • on the President's making his statement. M: Would you consider this the current recognition of a world population problem? L: Well, it was the first time of course a President had ever given it that kind of recognition. President Kennedy was so much more cautious
  • that kind of moral support here at home base. I do have the impression that during the time I was in Mexico, he followed events in that country and in Latin America in general rather closely. F: You were the Ambassador when President and Mrs. Kennedy came
  • was COITu'llissioner when this I It was during his term that I was named deputy ccmrnissio ner,. with the understan ding that the post would be in the career service-- a post I : j ~ held through Mr. Kennedy's Administ ration and well into Mr. Johnson'~. i I I
  • : .. ·":.->·>":~:.:.~, . . . '4 . '.:4. · [' ' ' • _, ' ,. • 1- ~. • ' I • ' • ' ' . ) : " ;· . i:1N INDIA ·?RESIDENT ·. KENNEDY WAS LOOKED .UPON ·· ~ s.PECIAL :·FRI.END . ;..·,· . ~1 ·· · .. WHO WAS . AUTHOR OF ' INDIAN ~ RESOLUTIOt-f I'N CONGRESS~ · WHO HAD
  • , to our children, to our forebears and our posterity, to prevent such an holocaust. Eut the proliferation of nuclear weapons immensely increases the chances that the world might stumble into catastrophe . President Kennedy saw this clearly. He said
  • their husbands make the pitch for votes. The "family type" of campaign now under way is a natural out­ growth of the 1960 Kennedy campaign. The late President'• brother, and sisters and mother constantly spoke in his behalf. • .iacl