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  • this great day possible. END '\ ,I I . I I • \ j Robert W. Barnett Stat :FE x2170 I POPULATION: POLICY , !. ANDPROGRAJ\.f !: .• .Policy Proqressiori . ;·• .. . J ! 1. The world has seen an almost volcanic eruption of awareness
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 48
  • Folder, "Population Control, 1965 - March, 1966," Files of Robert Komer, NSF, Box 48
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • are bright. Attachment: U.S. Trade with the Republic of Korea. Drafted by: ✓ EA/K - Mr. · Bardach Cl~ared by: Connnerce - Mr. Glick AID/FE/EA - Mr. Alexander E/FTD - Mr. York EA - Mr. Berger SJS-S - Robert L. Bruce, Ext. 4155, ~oum 7237- LIMITED
  • : The only one that really comes to mind would be AMA. Again, I need to point out, even on the Republican side, for example, Bob [Robert A.] Taft on the Hill-Burton construction act--Taft was the guy who got the proviso in that the South get two dollars
  • and financial influence; the American Medical Association's (AMA) opposition to health care legislation that Hill supported; Robert Taft's involvement in the Hill-Burton Act; Hill's relationship with other senators and with LBJ in the 1950s; LBJ's performance
  • of country for about two and a half weeks. I went from Rome back to Washington; as I mentioned earlier, I arrived there the day of the assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas. Then I went back via the Far East, stopped off and saw our embassy
  • Returning to Saigon following the JFK assassination; Robert McNamara’s December 1963 visit to Vietnam; January 1964 Khanh coup and alleged French involvement; what the French might have wished for Vietnam; Christmas 1964 in Dalat; Tran Van Don; Le
  • responding 13. ,10/10/64 14. l:0/1:4/64 Msg frn Ikeda responding 15. 10/23/64 Msg to Ikeda 16. fimn~y' Msg frn Ikeda responding 17. 12/3/ 64 Msg to Ikeda re his birthday ✓ (tab 1) / re Haramachida ~ Kennedy re of young Ryotaro
  • and the peace movement--working either for [Cyrus] Vance, or as general counsel of the army, or for [Robert] McNamara, so I had some experience. I remember telling the President--well, first of all, when I finally got to the President, when I finally started--I
  • by the late President Kennedy, was there any dismay on the part of the black community that "that man" had been named on the Democratic ticket? W: I really wouldn't want to try to reconstruct that. From my own memory, I know the President at that time had
  • and Martin. Then after Mr. Bob Calvert, Robert W. Calvert, who's a contemporary of ~lr. Johnson and former speaker of the [Texas] House, now chief justice of the Supreme Court [of Texas], was elected to the Supreme Court in 1950, we moved down with his
  • viewpoint and have asked the Attorney General to go into some detail in connection with the principles that we would have in this bill. We are very anxious to have Democratic and Republican support. As you know, President Kennedy in the Kennedy-Johnson
  • INTERVIEWEE: WILLIAM CLYDE FRIDAY INTERVIEWER: Janet Kerr-Tener PLACE: Dr. Friday's office, Chapel Hill, North Carolina Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 F: There's an interesting little footnote here, if I have the time sequence correct. Robert Goheen
  • . C. 20036 ✓ CC: MR. ROBERT KOMER RECEIVED FE.Bl61966 CENTRl\L F\LES • I . ..,.,.JiR'!i'f.'IX !UIN • - QBICK WPi vi' I ~ I • ARNOLD, THURMAN ARNO\.0 ABC F"ORTA5 PAUL A. IZ29 FtORTCR WALTO,.. ""'ILTON NORMAN MA.MILTON (1aa1-1ase) V
  • Robert Kennedy is shot in Los Angeles; LBJ discusses gun control with Senator Mike Mansfield; LBJ calls Senators Dirksen & Aiken about agriculture; Lady Bird cancels appointments; Lady Bird works on telegrams for Rose & Ethel Kennedy; LBJ makes
  • take the list after everybody had accepted and go through it; I don't know what caused the change; to my knowledge it was not done during the Kennedy Administration. I think the initial problem came in 1964, when the President had the first presidential
  • , Everett McKinley, Senate ALBERT, Carl, Congress RUSSELL, Richard B., Senate SYMINGTON, Stuart, Senate ERVIN, Sam J ., Jr., Senate BYRD, Robert Senate INOUYE, Daniel K., Senate Secretary of Defense MANSFIELD, Mike, Senate McCORMACK,John FCRD, Gerald R
  • that Sargent Shriver would head the OEO? H: I think so. G: It was more or less assumed by all of you that [he would]? H: I think so. G: Do you recall any input by the Attorney General, Robert Kennedy? H: Not that I was aware of. I'm not certain about
  • . Rostow FROM: Robert M. Sayre SUBJECT: Possible Additional for Castro. ~1 17, 1967 DECLASSIFIED Jl-1.1ihe11H?.:) t=.0. 11652 SEC. GfJ\\ and '(D)1 . ~y~ .,;.-f British , NABS, Date )/ ':~ f- ])j Credit Guarantee we have reliable reports HMGis
  • after the assassination of Kennedy. M: Yes, that's on the first tape, right. F: Right. And I discussed it with him several times later, two or three times, in the presence of the heads of the other civil rights organizations. They were all backing
  • Vietnam; Farmer’s resignation; Literacy Plan; Adam C. Powell; Farmer’s proposal regarding literacy; White House Conference on Civil Rights; assassination of MLK; liberal party ticket candidate; Farmer blasted Shriver in 1966 at CORE convention; Robert
  • put the so-called "jury trial" amendment on the voting rights part of the bill. not the big thing. We fought that, but for me the jury trial amendment was It was part three that was the big thing. And of course John Kennedy was with us on part three
  • a terrible commentary. P: Anyhow, on the way back, I was flown to Honolulu to participate in one of [Robert] McNamara's big flying circuses. G: Of 1962? P: 1962, yes. This was August, I think. And I was asked to give a brief presentation of what we
  • things kind of came together and had different meaning as a resul t of reading it. I thi nk it was a very important contri- buti,on. G: Did you ever talk to President Kennedy about the poverty program, or what should be done? LBJ Presidential Library
  • they do not. Eisenhower never--now, I say to the Supreme Court. F: Yes. W: I don't know, he might have to individuals on the Court, but not to me. Eisenhower never, never-- F: Not to Chief Justice Warren. W: No. President Kennedy did ask me my
  • opened the Senate Abe Multer, Arthur Jacobs, Sam Zuckerman -- of Jewish Day magazine Ed Clark, Homer Thornberry, Walter Gerry Mann (Austin) -- re: Kennedy trip to Texas Lunch for Charlie Brown -- East Room, Mayflower George Moffett D. B. Hardeman -- re
  • . .The unsupported inference. _which mos·t· have drawn· is that the meeting with the Conference indicates a forthcoming White House· indication of s·upp~rt for a \ • Department of Housing.and Community Development, such ~ •as. Presi~ent ·Kennedy was· considering
  • about that story of him promoting a trip to Laredo one I didn't. I had too many other irons in the fire. live seen his samples and everything a lot of times, yes. night by selling socks? R: No, I don't. G: I think it's in [Robert] Carols book
  • recall one instance where Lyndon Johnson did not personally read every sentence of every letter. And I think that someone like Juanita Roberts, who knows about this aspect of the presidential office in even greater detail, would corroborate
  • : You've got a problem. Back under Kennedy, you plugged for a cut in taxes to stimulate the economy. Now then you are starting to plug for a tax increase to slow down the economy. A: Right. F: In both cases you are delayed because of the political
  • ; Pierre Renfret; rumors of recession, 1966-1967; Ford strike, 1967; Ackley's resignation and subsequent ambassadorship to Italy; transition to Nixon Administration; Robert McNamara; balance of payments problem; Charles de Gaulle
  • drinking. I think he had one slim scotch in the evening. He was on a diet, and he had Lady Bird on the diet with him. I remember Juanita Roberts being at the house planning all of the diets. I remember that very much. That was a little later
  • , as a courtesy to Mrs. Kennedy kept--stayed on at The Elms, as you know, for several days, and Johnson inevitably relied on his State Department liaison person whom he knew, Lee Stull, in my absence. Lee I had placed in the--we had a little office on the seventh
  • and the Limited Test Ban Treaty; informing LBJ of the coup against Diem in Vietnam; Vice-President LBJ’s lack of inclusion in NSC events; problems between JFK’s and LBJ’s staffs; LBJ’s loyalty to Kennedy; LBJ’s distaste for protocol; events surrounding Walter
  • : Oh, yes. M: Irreconcilable ones that just couldn't be compromised? T: Yes, we had several issues of that kind. For instance, the Kennedy round, when the deadline on June 30 of 1967 of the Kennedy round came along. We were up all night long
  • informational; explaining Vietnam policy across the country; Interagency Committee structure; Balance of Payments Committee; Kennedy Round; Relations with the Budget Bureau and the Council of Economic Advisors; LBJ’s relationship with businessmen; Sidney
  • quite good. There had been a conscious decision with Kennedy to try to work with him and not try to exert great pressures on him and to encourage him rather than to leverage LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • about the one where Kefauver and Kennedy-G: Oh, I was there. F: And Adlai was, for a second time. G: I'm sorry, I will go back. You see, these years! All right. Yes, I was at the convention. F: As a delegate? G: No, Walter asked me to come
  • with some conclusions which many of us share. I think you will find it worth reading. With my warmest regards, Chester Enclosure: Excerpt from Vital Issues, December 196 5 . Mr. Robert W. Komer, The White House, Washington, D. Ca Bowles AsiaAn
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 13
  • Folder, "Bowles 11/3/63-1965 [2 of 4]," Files of Robert W. Komer, NSF, Box 13
  • Files of Robert Komer
  • /64 A 084 letter Edwin 0. Reischauer to Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. S 3 1/16/64 A RWK[omer] to MnGB[undY, 0'1'.~ 1-
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 34
  • Folder, "Japan - January 1964-March 1966 [1 of 2]," Files of Robert Komer, NSF, Box 34
  • Files of Robert W. Komer
  • The White House Washington, D. C. cc: Mrs. F. Fullerwood Vice President Lyndon Johnson ACP:ms I 38 Bayview Drive St . Augu s tine , Florida September 27 , 1963 Mr . John F . Kennedy President of the United States The White House ashington , n. c. Dear
  • , throup Senator Do111lu, my beat wi ■ he ■ to tho ■ e attendin1 the rally of the American Committee for Italian Mi1ration. Pre ■ idnt Kennedy tran ■ mitted to Coa1r••• leai■ lation to reYlae and modernise our immiaration lawa. There i■ no con■ i■ tency
  • See all scanned items from NSF Files of Robert Komer Box 23
  • Folder, "INDIA - December 1963-1964 [2 of 4]," Files of Robert W. Komer, NSF, Box 23
  • Files of Robert Komer
  • \ JZ~ ..:5Tc20 FG/SJ­ u ' x I ;::-c-//- ;2..1 / l/L>/¢-..:3 May 11, 1966 Tbs I (c:vb s1.:.11';~zj:;-..r) Ernest c. iw.skauskas, Esquire Robert J.~Sta.nf'ord, Esquire 910 Seventeenth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. This is in response to your
  • . Johnson, including correspondence between President Johnson and Attorneys General Robert F. Kennedy (Attorney General: 1961-64), Nicholas deB. Katzenbach (Attorney General: 1965-66) and Ramsey Clark (Attorney General: 1967-69); correspondence between White
  • E'isenhower told President Kennedy this ls the one lse11e on which he would take after him in public. It ta possible the General•• view has changed since 1961. But we ought to know. c. I believe we have a solemn, secret comm.ltm.ent to Taiwan we would w,e our
  • on the telephone trying to straighten her out on the NEWSWEEK story concerning an alleged desire for a meeting with Brezhnev, followed by a visit by Chalmers Roberts my office on the same subject. • discussion Frank Reynolds dropped in for a general