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  • don't need to do more than sort of place it as part of the backdrop, because this stuff was going up all the time in draft form, but this was typical of President Johnson's period as of President Kennedy's before it--that a great deal of the most
  • in getting the poverty legislation through the Congress. number of points. The fact of the matter is a great number of administration people worked on the Hill. testified. This was evident in a Many of them went up and The attorney general, Robert
  • some countries the Kennedy Round, call countries, measures this increased efforts; end. in on the world The DAC Ministerial in Washington follow-up will case, an important problem. for July for somewhat more credible Action In DAC
  • for your generous understanding o! my decision. I shall always be proud to have bee:n n member o-f the White House Staff under two such loaders as Preeident Kennedy and yourself. The achieve­ ments of the last five yea~s are great by any st~ndard
  • Thuraday, SOCIETY A"f ARD CElUtMONY January ln the Cabinet lloom, 9, 1969 the White Hou•e Mr. Robert M. ll•inlDaer Pre•ident of th. Society (Mlala1 company execatiYe) Mr. Henry W. Bal1ooyen Ho110,ary Pre•ldent of th• Soelety American and Forelan
  • a pretty coherent picture. November 1963. You saw Bhutto twice while he was here for President Kennedy 1 s funeral, the second time to ::-eceive a note from Ayub. You told him you were " a friend of Pakistan and would try to continue to be one if Pakistan
  • of the Californias, a tri-anti t y body exi sting betwee n Ca lifornia , Baja Ca lifornia and Baja Cali fornia Sur, of which Lieutenant Governor Robert H. Finch i s chairman. Hy every warm wi sh goes to the work o f your Commission. Sincere ly, R.OL'ii\LD REAGAt
  • the Secretary of State, the U. S. Ambassador to the Congo (Robert McBride), the Acting Secretary of Defense, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Director of Central Intelllgenc·e . · z. Ambassador 'McBride recommended the C-130•s after the m.ost sober
  • under the direction of President Kennedy and yourself, first in the formulation of the Alliance for Progress, then as United States Ambassador to Brazil, and now in my present post. During these years, cooperation among the governments and peoples
  • '-40. C ANCELLED PEA E.O. t >t,. l ;,t'~ StC. i .3 AND itRCHiVIST'S MEMO Or r-d>\A. 16. 1S83. . February 21, 1967 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: Presidential Telephone Calls to CIA Since Inauguration (Compiled from CIA and .Mrs. Roberts
  • on cities; enemy massing north of DMZ; major attacks in SVN; Hanoi refuses to talk with GVN. Consider resumption Washington. of bombing on selective or total basis, south or north of 20 degrees. Attacks in excess battalion size. of ROBERT - TOP SECRET
  • 'f 1' ~) v~ Omar George Kisti.akowsky Black - -- Brac'!.ley_~-- John Cowles Arthur Dean ----- Arthur Larson Morris Leibman Robert Lovett - 7 Roswell Gilpatric Paul G. Hoffman --- John J. Mc Cloy I -------- Teodoro Moscoso l•Me:e Pcdcins
  • reference to wa.ntlng to talk to Axnbaseado:r J,o nes before replylng to-you refers to hls deslre to review the memorandum o.f' unde:r­ standlng whlch Walt pl'"epar.ed. Points 4, 6 and 7 are deslgned to provide a.dditlonal reassurance. Robert Komer
  • . And the atmosphere is very unhealthy. During this period, Robert Ingersoll has been appointed Ambassadorto Japan and will be going out next week. Whenit becameclear that, oh, last suR1T1er, almost a year ago, that we probably should change ambassadors in Japan, our
  • :· . '• • ;~·-·-~ < ·' . _· : I ) ~ • I ' ~ . ' .. ;. . : :: •; : ', •, ·, · ·, • .· •· ,I ;IOP/0 ~ Robert A, Baue~ •: ' i. I L, .. •• • : / • / -,iv, V I , ,'' , , ·,\ .: ·;_:_.. ;_ ~--·;.._.··:{_~ ·., 1:!~~r~um .:Cffftn~nJ
  • INFO sso 00,NSCE 00,MM 01,i026 R DRAFTEDBY• AFCM JAMCKESSON ~PPROVEDBY1 AfCM JAMCKESSON AF PAL.MERlDRAFT) DOD/ISA COL KENNEDY(SU8Sl AFE MEAGHERISUBSI S/5 GL.KELL.Y OP 1~02072 DEC 67 ZFF4 FM SECSTATE WASHDC TO AMEMBASSY KAMPALAIMMEDIATE0262
  • '. in .. the motion pictures • • • " 1 Robert/q
  • Person and because the Secret Service did not notify the White House or the Vice President of the arrest, neither President Kennedy, the White House staff nor Mr. Johnson had any knowledge of the 1959 incident nor any reason to suspect its existence. When
  • Robert Kennedy was appointed as Attorney General he appointed Dave Hackett, who had been his college roommate-G: An Olympic hockey player? S: Right--to look into problems of juvenile delinquency. As first parts of that effort, Dave came to the Bureau
  • meant Kennedy. When he talked about his conversation with Dean, you knew it was Rusk. When he talked about anybody in any position at all, he used nicknames and first names, and I think he had the chief justice of the Supreme Court that came out
  • was maneuvered precisely, I do not know. G: Did you ever hear that Senator [Robert] Kerr also wanted the whip position? K: No. No, and I would rather doubt it. I think that if Kerr had wanted something, it \vould have been the leadership. he would have
  • House and himself on important matters affecting Soviet-American relations. He said that during President Kennedy's administration such informal chapnel existed in the presence of the then Attorney General. He quickly added that because of Senator
  • Folder, "MAP ‐ Korea/Iran ‐ December 1963 ‐ March 1966," Files of Robert Komer, NSF, Box 42
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 42
  • 2 11/8/65 A 15 memo "Interest Rate for Military Sales ... " C 2 10/22/65 A 19 cable Bonn 353 s 8/5/65 A 20 cable Deptel 310 to Bonn s 7/31/65 A 2 Collection Title National Security File, Files of Robert W. Komer (1963-66
  • = in midthen ::i southern approved Dong Xoai battle on . .,.. A low-key announcement of the expanded mission was made, after some preparation, by the State Depart.'Ilent spokesman, Robert McCloskey, in Washington. The resulting clamor led the White House
  • Secretary of the Treasury Robert B. Anderson to Cairo as his special personal representative on May JO. Following discussion with Anderson, President Nasser informed Johnson of the United Arab Republic's determination to defend itself against any aggression
  • • 7• MRS GERALD W• HAGENSON I EM I !GAVE BIR TH To A BABY BOY ON 9 FEB RUARY 1968 AND WILL RETU RN CONUS AS SOON AS PERMITTED To TRAVEL• B• OF THE FOUR DEPENDENTS OF PERS TAD TO PUEBLO FROM NAVSECGRUACT KAMJSEYA MRS ROBERT J o CHICCA ISGTI ARRIVED