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  • £l 5 J?.. m. _ EST f'. Kennedy International Airport, from the dirport. at the United from the at John r. Nations llnited Headquarters. Nations. Kt:!1111edy International Airport. Px•ime Minister Wilson and his party will depart from New
  • 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
  • BE • ~VOIDED, AND BELIEVE IT IMPORTANT WE STAY WITHIN.SPIRIT OF '.KENNEDY-BETANCOURT COMMUNIQUE CALLING FOR PRIOR EXCHANGE , . :lNFORMA.T.ION (NOT JUST NOTIFICATION) ON CHANGES AFFECTING,, ', •. ·:j :VENEZUELA.· THEREFOR CONCUR VISIT ASSISTANT SECRETARIES
  • with it, and although he probably approved the broad general outlines of what Dulles was doing, he was not taking a very direct, certainly was a great contrast with what I'll personal interest in it. This relate later of my experience with President Kennedy
  • of the Kennedy Administration in early 1961, the Special Group (which changed its name to the "303 Committeerr in June 1964 in accordance with NSAM 303) meetings were transferred to the White House under the chairmanship of the President's Special · Assistant
  • -esidential candidates, the subject covered tn a separate memorandum. l tben told Bundy that I wae hiahly dl•aatiafied over the fact that resident ,Johnson did not get direct lntellt1ence briefings from me •• waa tlae ustom with President Kennedy and had beera
  • rts to resolve the situation in Southeast Asia began in Vienna with Pr esident Kennedy. A se riou s effort is being made to find a solution and ReF SECRET/SENSITIVE , . . .. • I t ~ 9fi:C1HE'i'/SENSITIVE -3­ Secretary Rusk {continued
  • " 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
  • USSED WITH ·PRESIDENT KENNEDY LAST A?RIL. FURTHER TO REDUCE THI S ALREADY 'CURTAi.LED AMOUNT INCREASES POSSIBIL ITY.POL ITI CAL- MILITARY SITUATION HERE CANNOT BE . CLARIFIED AS OUR INTER ESTS REQUIRE IT TO BE. FOUR RUSB~E 472 S E 0 R E T"' . IF WE CAN
  • of arousing life; they are now acting out fear and despair," of treat­ iri real homes and real ing "hope as the four-letter streets the splintered fanta- Ted l(ennedy Stops Parade SEN. Ted Kennedy (D· Mass.) made an unex­ pected appearance at the Purim
  • and keep to a bare minimum personal meetings between the two, such meetings have been observed. On November 20, 1963, King met personally with Levison at the International Hotel, Kennedy International Airport, New York City. The site was a room registered
  • in November. I person~~ worked for Preoident Johnson during the last c~mpaign, organizing motorcades, sti,ffing the Kennedy-Johnson Headquarters (which my husband a nd I opened o.nd mainta.ined, due to the lack of nemocr· tic Organization in our area) and I
  • . - 3 - appointed by President Kennedy the same day the enabling Act was signed into law. The Director is also the chief U.S. negotiator in the field of arms control, and much of the time he or the Deputy Director is away at Geneva or New York
  • , 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
  • Japane$e exports in steel, textiles and automobiles. Highlights of ·the meeting, which made a deep impression on the Japanese,follow. Trade Measures and Kennedy Round Acceleration Chairman Mills assured the Japanese that the United States would not take
  • , and the Corrnnon Ma_r ket in particular; - our pleasure that it is making good progress (recent settlement of the agricultural issue) and our hope that it will now go to tackle the Kennedy Round urgently and seriouslyo 2. Advantages. This occasion, which could
  • for a long­ awaited meeting to discuss the concept of a definitive Presidential communications message that would be just as important in the communications field as President Kennedy's 1962 transportation message proved to be for the future of US
  • the Khartoum­ Sudan road which President Kennedy promised to examine, would have their feasibility established this year. This does not now appear likely. If it does prove to be the case, there will be a shortage of loan funds for Africa this year. (The road
  • if he could break President Kennedy on Berlin. I do not see the Soviets in an ultimatum mood on either Viet Nam or the Middle East at the moment. There is always, of course , the chance. But if the chance exists it is _J)ecause the Soviet Government
  • e ~Jc~ N A r ~ L I!NE s ; i GA U N CL A~ IE" 6 :STATE :3S327 H I S MA;J ESTY KI NG :CON$T.6iNTINE ' OF THE . !HELLENES C/ O U QSo 6HIE~ OF PRO ~ OOOL . AMER i c ~N A I RL -t NBSp -;GATE : #6 J OMN F o "KENNEDY A lRPORT NEW '(ORK FO ~ L OW I'NG
  • inforr.nation from llichael Forrestal . in r.aid-September (I myself v,as away from mid-.August to mid• September), the message was clearGd by phone v1ith President Kennedy in Hyam1isport1 it boing a Saturday night. 'There is a sharp
  • . A brilliant new President of the United States addressed himself to his fellow citizens of this hemisphere, and with unmatched vision, John Fitzgerald Kennedy called for "a vast cooperative effort unparalleled in magnitude and nobility of purpose, to satisfy