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  • of tough negotlatlng in Geneva followed. talks went lorward. the Nortb Vietnamese mlU.tary sltuatlon. with a large oHens1ve. Yet,even as the tried to change drastically the They gave up the effort only when President. Kennedy sent U. S. forces blto
  • called him to the. microphone also. · Mr. Whitlam, who has paid a crowded and bene­ fl .::ial series .. of calls in Washington, declined to talk about them at a press conference. · Yesterday he saw Sena­ tors Robert Kennedy, Ful­ bright and Mansfield
  • this small program {at most 250,000 tons or $15 million) is not worth the risk of being charged with bad faith under the Kennedy rou.i."1.d food aid and grain agreement. As you recall, all exporters agreed ·'- . . e re n o t o preempt specified shares
  • ·-Jt:.:DGEMEi'1T OF PRESIDEN-1' KENNEDY ·.e.ND : PHESIDENT JO}fNSON. SINCE 'fHEN _,.:.··tHA'f'Ii AGGnESSfON DID SUCCEED. •.. IN VIETNAM,. 1li'ERE WAS A DANGF.;i1 •n-iAT \•.iE \.;QULD, Bt BEC0~1E·lN\iOL\iED ON A·FAR ~iORE D!\NGEROUS SC/~LE' IN A i·i°IDrm
  • separately to Mr. Robert Citron, Smithsonian Institution, Cambridge, Mass.). MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINOTON SEGR:ST Wednesday MEMORANDUM SUBJECT: - July 31, 'INFO1'.MA TION 1968 - 3:30 p.m. FOR THE PRESIDENT Student '.Distu:rbances in Me:x
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • : .. ·":.->·>":~:.:.~, . . . '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
  • 10-~o. ,1 l\4arch 31, 1967 HIGHLIGHTS OF THE VICE PRESIDENT'S TRIP TO EUROPE Conversation with Willy Brandt (March 29) Kennedy Round and Food Aid The Vice President: 1£ Kennedy Round fails it will set in motion forces detnanding troop cutbacks
  • quick reaction to Senator Edward M. Kennedy's speech. I understand you have seen Ambassador Bunker's views and those of the Embassy Statf and I have tried not to duplicate. OETf,RMINEO TO IE 4N ADMINISTRATIVE MARKING ~OT NAT'L SECURITY INFORMATION; f. 0
  • Ball and Dean Rusk -- all Kennedy men -- and that the fact of the matter was that Tom Mann 'had been in favor of a slightly slower and cooler expression of support. I also told Pierre that there had not been a question of recognition, a point which he
  • • peralatence was a good example of the way tile pre•• in general baa strained to find a meanf.Dg that la not there. Ou Friday, I abo eaw Steve Roberta of the New York Time•. who i• preparing a retroapectlve article on President Kennedy for the Novem~r lssue
  • . The Secretary of Commerce ' has the immediate statutory responsibility, but the instinct of Luther Hodg es was often different from that of oth.e rs, and it became ne c ess a ry to appeal individual cases over and over again to President Kennedy. The President
  • duties or by 1111:po.iring their concessions in the Kennedy Round, the gains wuld"b~ negligible and , the trade policy consequences ver:, great • .-SJ!l8RET~ . . ,, .' "..... • I ' r8 :S SR ET-, - 416. A tourist tax program could be devised
  • 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
  • , 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
  • . In connection with iietnam, Maurer made the assessment that President Johnson is not alone responsible for the existing state of affairs and that, in fact, the mistake can be traced back to President Kennedy--and President Johnson inherited the problem. Maurer
  • need some quick action from the white community, if we're to hold our own agai:-ist the militants." -- Such action was taken after two other tragedies: ~he civil rights bill was passed in the wake of President Kennedy's death, and the voting rights bill