Word: rusk
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...nation, members of the Kennedy clan gathered. Pat Kennedy Lawford flew in from California; Ted Kennedy came by military jet from Boston, bringing with him Dr. William T. Foley, a Manhattan vascular specialist. From Washington came Eunice Kennedy Shriver, on the same plane that brought Secretary of State Dean Rusk to Palm Beach en route to the Bermuda conference. Ted Kennedy. Jean Smith and Ann Gargan spelled one another in a round-the-clock vigil near Room 355. where Joe Kennedy lay. Across the hall, doctors kept their own vigil. On the door to the doctors' room...
...after his stroke, Joe Kennedy showed "improvement." according to his doctors. He was still unable to use his vocal cords, still being fed intravenously and sleeping under sedation most of the time. That afternoon, the military jet carrying Rusk. Ambassador to Britain David Bruce, AECommissioner Glenn Seaborg and other members of the Bermuda conference team arrived in Palm Beach. They left from the airport for the Capton Paul residence (TIME, Dec. 15). where the President was staying. Waiting for them, Jack Kennedy received a telephone call from the hospital. It was his brother Ted. Their father, Ted reported, had awakened...
...admirable''; the U.S., he added, "needs you more" there than in the Senate. Further, said Kennedy, Stevenson would play "an expanding role" in determining U.S. foreign policy-meaning that Adlai might have more leeway in what he says, though Kennedy and Secretary of State Dean Rusk will still be in control...
...cautiously optimistic. An aircraft carrier sailed from Okinawa bringing the first U.S. helicopters to enable Diem to spot his elusive Red enemies, and aid, mostly military, to Saigon in 1962 will reach $400 million, nearly double this year's. At the same time, Secretary of State Dean Rusk appealed to the U.S.'s allies to share in the anti-Communist struggle in Southeast Asia. To illustrate the nature of that struggle, the State Department issued a 35,000-word White Paper, documenting in detail Red intervention in South Viet Nam-and illuminating the methods and motivations...
...against the National Security Council's becoming either so institutionalized as to engage in "the overproduction of routine papers," or so informal as to disintegrate into "official bull sessions." But after his committee had held some 50 hearings to take testimony from authorities including Secretary of State Dean Rusk, General Maxwell Taylor and New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, Jackson was convinced that no basic reorganization of the nation's policy machinery is really necessary. "More often than not," he emphasized, "poor decisions are traceable not to machinery but to people-to their inexperience, their failure to comprehend...