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  1. Thefull text of my transcription is availablefrom the KennedyLibrary, Tapes of the meetings of the Executive Committee of the National Security Council (the "Ex- Comm") of October 27, 1962, just before the resolution of the Cuban missile crisis, were transcribed by McGeorge Bundy and were edited and annotated by James G. Blight, who gratefully ...

  2. 1 de sept. de 2009 · McGeorge Bundy, a lifelong Republican, had spurned Nixon in 1960 to support Kennedy. The candidate was pleased to have his endorsement, said Bundy, "although reinforcement in Massachusetts was hardly his most urgent need."5 In the weeks following Kennedy’s razor-thin victory, ...

  3. An online, searchable database of The Public Papers of the Presidents, an ongoing federal government publication containing most Presidential statements, speeches, and news conference remarks. Discover tools for navigating resources and information at the JFK Library and other institutions, compiled by JFK Library archivists.

  4. 1961-1963 1963-1969 20th century Ford Foundation Intellectuals John F. (John Fitzgerald) Kennedy Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines) Johnson McGeorge Bundy New York New York (State) Political consultants Politics and government Presidents Staff Strikes and lockouts Teachers United States Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975.

  5. McGeorge Bundy. After the conclusion of the Hawaii meeting, on November 21, National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy wrote the first draft of what was to be NSAM-273. There are no indications that Kennedy saw the draft before his assassination on November 22. NSAM-273.

  6. 16 de jun. de 1983 · The Bishops and the Bomb. McGeorge Bundy. June 16, 1983 issue. Reviewed: The Challenge of Peace: God's Promise and Our Response, The Pastoral Letter of the US Bishops on War and Peace. National Catholic News Service. 32 pp., $3.50 (paper) Report of the President's Commission on Strategic Forces. (The Scowcroft Commission).

  7. Spring 1989 Published on March 1, 1989. Download Article. "A nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought." The words are Ronald Reagan's. While McGeorge Bundy, like many others, finds Reagan's thinking about nuclear weapons muddy and his administration's public presentation of nuclear reality disgraceful, this particular sentence is ...