Series 48. FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE, 1944-1974
69 boxes
19 sub-series
Office file code: 50 FR
Correspondence, memoranda, reports, newspaper clippings and
related
material pertaining to the relations of the United States with
other
nations and international organizations and movements.
Arranged chronologically, topically and alphabetically.
- Foreign Relations Committee (General),
1944-1974
- Constituent Views--Arkansas, 1959-1962
- Committee Administration, 1964-1974
- Nominations, 1964-1974
- Treaties, 1961-1974
- Sub-committees, Hearings, Studies,
Investigations, 1961-1974
- Special Committee of the President on the
C.I.A., 1961-1974
- A.I.D., 1959-1974
- International Organizations, 1961-1974
- Africa, 1960-1974
- Asia, 1960-1974
- Canada, 1960
- Europe, 1961-1974
- Latin America, 1960-1974
- Middle East, 1961-1974
- U.S.S.R., 1961-1974
- Vietnam--(General Materials), 1966-1975
- Vietnam--Correspondence, 1963-1973
- Vietnam--Cambodian Invasion, 1970
Sub-series 1. Foreign Relations Committee
(General), 1944-1974.
11 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records pertain primarily to treaties, particularly Consular
Treaty with Soviet Union and Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; foreign
aid, especially Mutual Securities Act and Alliance for Progress;
foreign trade, especially wheat sales to Soviet Union;
international organizations, particularly United Nations and
various interparliamentary organizations; defense and
disarmament, particularly Hatfield-McGovern Amendment to Military
Procurement Act; nominations and confirmations, particularly
nominations of Henry Alfred Kissinger as Secretary of State, and
Brooks Hays as Presidential Congressional liaison; Committee
hearings; and international crises, particularly Berlin Wall,
border disputes between India and Pakistan, Arab-Israeli
conflicts and Vietnam War, especially Tonkin Gulf. Some material
pertains to statements relating to Committee administration;
cultural exchange programs; impeachment and/or censure of Richard
Nixon (11.1); and, JWF's prepared trip to Southeast Asia (11.2).
Correspondents include: Conrad Adenauer (1.3), Chester Bliss
Bowles (6.3), McGeorge Bundy (9.1), Tristram Coffin (9.1, 9.2),
Henry Steele Commager (8.4, 10.2), Clarence Douglas Dillon
(11.2), Lewis William Douglas (5.4), Cyrus Stephen Eaton (2.3),
Marriner Stoddard Eccles (3.1), Dwight David Eisenhower (1.1),
Erich Fromm (3.1), Marcus B. George (1.3), Arthur J(oseph)
Goldberg (10.1), Theodore Francis Green (1.3), Ernest Gruening
(5.5), Willard Alvin Hawkins (3.1), Jesse Helms (11.2), F.
Wellford Hobbie (11.2), Bob Hope (9.4), Hubert Horatio Humphrey
(2.1), Henry Alfred Kissinger (11.2), Alfred A. Knopf (10.1),
J.B. Lambert, Jr. (11.1), Melvin R. Laird (9.4), Carl Milton
Marcy (1.1, 1.2, 7.2, 9.2), Bryan J. McCullom (5.4), Walter M.
Pincus (10.3), Webster E. Pullen (11.2), Bernard Robert Rapaport
(10.3), Elliott Lee Richardson (11.2), David Rockefeller (3.1),
Winthrop Rockefeller (3.1), William Pierce Rogers (11.1), Elmo
Burns Roper, Jr. (3.2 5.4), Dean Rusk (10.2), Arthur (Meier)
Schlesinger, Jr. (11.1), Harold Morrow Sherman (7.1), Robert
Sargent Shriver, Jr. (2.3), Frank Smathers, Jr. (7.1), Benjamin
(McLane) Spock (8.4), William Stuart Symington (2.2), Herbert L.
Thomas (2.1), Ruben R. Thomas (9.3), William Royall Tyler (2.3),
Henry Merritt Wriston (5.5), Samuel William Yorty (5.4) and Lloyd
Young (10.1).
Sub-series 2. Constituent Views--
Arkansas, 1959-1962.
4 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records pertain primarily to JWF's constituents' reactions to
various
foreign policy affairs, particularly; foreign aid, especially
Alliance for
Progress, Act for International Development Loan Fund, UNESCO,
and Mutual
Security Act; U.S./Soviet Union relations, especially regarding
U-2
incident, Bay of Pigs invasion, Cuban missile crisis, U.S. trade
relations
with communist countries, primarily Cuba and Yugoslavia, and
expansion of
communism; U.N. affairs, especially U.S. financial involvement,
admittance
of Red China and Outer Mongolia, Indian invasion of Goa and
Katanga province
rebellion. Some material pertains to Spanish suppression of
Jehovah's
Witnesses, U.S. aid to education in Colombia, and Jordan's denial
of visa to
Ralph T. Henley of Church of Christ.
Correspondents include: Joseph C. Barrett (12.2, 13.1), Lawrence
Hedrich Derby (13.2), William P. Engle (12.9), John C. English
(14.6), Mrs.
George Ripley Holcomb (13.4), Walter Hupaylo (12.5), C.L. Justin
(12.6),
Charles J. McGinn (13.6), Dorothy Sorel (12.3), Robert Edward Lee
Wilson III
(15.6).
Sub-series 3. Committee Administration,
1961-1974.
3 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, Admin
Records pertain to working procedures of Senate Foreign Relations
Committee
and its professional staff. Subjects to which material primarily
pertains
include requests for assignment to Committee from senators;
organization of
Committee, particularly sub-committee structure; and role of
Committee,
especially its relationship with Executive branch, State
Department and C.I.A.
Some material pertains to public or executive hearings,
especially those
resulting from war in Vietnam, such as Tonkin Gulf Resolution,
disclosures made
by publication of Pentagon Papers, and Henry Alfred Kissinger's
role in wire
tapping. A few files relate to such diverse topics as Indian
Rupee question,
U.S. mineral exploration in Antarctica and interparliamentary
conferences.
Correspondents include: Frank Forrester Church (17.1), Clark
McAdams Clifford (17.1), Tristram Coffin (16.5, 17.4, 18.1),
William Colby (18.3), Henry Steele Commager (16.4), John Sherman
Cooper (16.5, 18.2), John Dean III (18.3), Thomas Francis
Eagleton (17.4), Milton Stover Eisenhower (17.4), John Kenneth
Galbraith (17.1), Harold Sydney Geneen (18.2), Arthur J(oseph)
Goldberg (16.4), William Averell Harriman (16.3, 18.1), John
Edgar Hoover (16.4), Hubert Horatio Humphrey (17.1, 17.4), Eliot
Janeway (17.4), Lyndon Baines Johnson (16.5), Henry Alfred
Kissinger (17.1, 18.3), Melvin R. Laird (17.4, 18.1), Douglas
MacArthur II(16.3), Eugene Joseph McCarthy (16.3), Robert
Strange McNamara (18.2), Michael Joseph Mansfield (16.3, 17.3),
Karl Augustus Menninger (17.1), Richard Milhouse Nixon (17.1,
18.1), Linus Carl Pauling (16.4), Herbert Claiborne Pell, Jr.
(16.2 18.3), William Pierce Rogers (17.4, 18.1, 18.2, 18.3), Elmo
Burns Roper, Jr. (17.1, 17.4), Dean Rusk (16.3, 16.4, 18.2,
18.3), Richard Brevard Russell (16.3, 16.4), Hugh Dogget Scott
(18.1, 18.2), John Jackson Sparkman (17.1), John Cornelius
Stennis (17.4), James Strom Thurmond (18.2), Elmo Russell
Zumwalt, Jr. (18.3).
1 box.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records pertain to confirmations of ambassadors, ministers, and
high-ranking officials by Foreign Relations Committee,
particularly
nominations of Robert Sargent Shriver, Jr. as ambassador to
France; G.
McMurtie Godley as Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian
and Pacific
Affairs; Walter Annenberg as ambassador to Great Britain; Henry
Alfred
Kissinger as Secretary of State; and, James William Fulbright as
ambassador
to Great Britain.
Correspondents include: Tristram Coffin (19.3), Fagan Dickson
(19.4),
Thomas Francis Eagleton (19.4), Cyrus Stephen Eaton (19.1, 19.2,
19.3),
Marriner Stoddard Eccles (19.4), John Kenneth Galbraith (19.1,
19.3), Vernon
J. Giss (19.2, 19.4), Eliot Janeway (19.4), Walter Johnson
(19.1), Charles
Haywood Murphy, Jr. (19.2), Herbert Claiborne Pell, Jr. (19.3),
Raymond
Henry Rebsamen (19.3), George Miller Reynolds (19.3), Dean Rusk
(19.1),
Achilles N. Sakell (19.2), Robert Sargent Shriver, Jr. (19.1).
4 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, Treaties
Material primarily pertains to the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty,
Consular
Treaty with U.S.S.R., Outer Space Convention, Human Rights
Conventions,
Non-Proliferation Treaty and other treaties submitted for
consideration to
Foreign Relations Committee. Some material pertains to
negotiations for new
Panama Canal treaty, return of Okinawa to Japan, international
wheat
agreements, Formosa and Mutual Defense Treaty and Foreign
Relations
Committee's jurisdiction over treaties made with American
Indians.
Correspondents include: William C. Baggs (20.2), Bernard Mannes
Baruch
(20.4), Dale Leon Bumpers (20.2), Dwight David Eisenhower (20.3),
Arthur
J(oseph) Goldberg (22.3), Nicholas DeBelleville Katzenbach
(22.1), Michael
Joseph Mansfield (20.4), Richard Milhouse Nixon (23.3), Andrew
Russell "Drew"
Pearson (22.1, 22.2), Charles Harting Percy (22.2), William
Proxmire (23.1),
Dean Rusk (22.1, 22.5).
Sub-series 6. Sub-committees: Hearings,
Studies, Investigations, 1959-1974.
5 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records pertaining to findings of studies, hearings, and
investigations
of various consultative, oversight and ad hoc sub-committees of
Foreign
Relations Committee. Subjects include: U.S. security agreements
and
commitments abroad; militarism; biological and chemical warfare,
especially
dumping of foreign gases and use of Pine Bluff, Arkansas Arsenal
as
stockpile for biological warfare material; international
organizations and
disarmament, particularly anti-ballistic missile system and
nuclear
non-proliferation; cultural exchange with other countries and
U.S.
Information Agency; East/West trade and its effect on foreign
policy;
Biafra, particularly concern and aid for starvation victims;
economic aspect
of energy crisis, particularly its effect on Arkansas truck
operators and
farmers; foreign service, particularly nominations, appointments
and
criticisms of ambassadors, delegates to U.N. General Assembly,
and foreign
service officers, and, regulations governing activities of U.S.
government
employees abroad; role of multinational corporations and their
relationship
to U.S. foreign policy, especially International Telephone and
Telegraph's
activities in Chile and foreign policy implications of offshore
developments
by major U.S. oil companies; non-diplomatic representatives and
abuses of
private lobbying for foreign interests; Peace Corps; Pentagon
Papers; U.S.
assistance for population control in foreign countries; American
prisoners
of war in North Vietnam, particularly Son Tay raid and
constituent response
to plight of POW's, especially Lt. James Teague of Harrisburg,
Arkansas; North Korean capture of U.S.S. Pueblo, especially
letter to JWF from
Arkansas member of captured crew; and, Congressional approval of
commitment
of U.S. troops abroad, especially as regards Tonkin Golf
incidents.
Correspondents include: Francis Vernon Willey Barnby (25.3),
Dewey
Follette Bartlett (25.2), Edward William Brooke (25.1), Clifford
Philip
Case (24.4), Frank Forrester Church (26.5), Tristram Coffin
(24.1, .5; 25.1, 26.4, 27.3), William Henry Draper, Jr. (27.3),
Jack Jonas Dreyfus, Jr.
(24.4), Frederick Gary Dutton (25.1), Vincent Walker Foster
(25.3),
Christian Archibald Herter (26.2), Hubert Horatio Humphrey (25.3,
26.2),
Lyndon Baines Johnson (25.3, 26.2), Melvin R. Laird (24.3, 24.5),
Ulysses
Andrew Lovell (25.1), Richard Dean McCarthy (24.2), John Jay
McCloy (25.1),
Robert Strange McNamara (28.3), William Frederick Martin (25.5),
Owen
Calhoun "Cul" Pearce (24.5), James O. Powell (27.4, 27.5), Wilton
Robert
Stephens (25.5), William Stuart Symington (24.1, 28.2), James Guy
Tucker,
Jr. (27.3), Jerome B. Weisner (24.3), Otto Henry Zinke (25.5).
Sub-series 7. Special Committee of the
President, on the C.I.A., 1967.
1 folder.
Office file code: 50 FR, Spec Comm
Material primarily pertains to President's Committee to review
relationships between Central Intelligence Agency and private,
overseas
American voluntary organizations, especially U.S. National
Student
Association. Other material relates to inquiries received by
Foreign
Relations staff member concerning Mexican participants in
Interparliamentary Conferences.
Correspondents include: Raymond Henry Rebsamen (28.4), and Dean
Rusk
(28.4).
3 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, For. Aid
Records pertain primarily to U.S. foreign aid programs;
especially annual appropriations debate, criticism of foreign
aid, and proposed reforms of foreign aid programs.
Correspondents include: George David Aiken (31.4), Chester Bliss
Bowles (29.3, .4; 30.2), William H. Drever, Jr. (31.5), Paul Gray
Hoffman (29.1), Pat M. Holt (29.4), Hubert Horatio Humphrey
(29.1), John Norvill Jones (31.4), Carl Milton Marcy (30.4),
Daniel Parker (31.5), Morris H. Rubin (31.4), Dean Rusk (30.1),
Joseph Sacks (29.2), Wilton Robert Stephens (31.2), Adlai Ewing
Stevenson (29.2).
Sub-series 9. International
Organizations, 1961-1974.
2 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR 2, Int. Org. 47, 47-a
Records primarily pertain to U.S. participation in international
organizations, particularly North Atlantic Treaty Alliance;
Atlantic Union;
World Court; International Monetary Fund; Organization of
American States;
and United Nations, especially U.S. nomination of delegates to
U.N., U.S.
financial and legal obligations, and admission of Red China to
U.N. Some
material pertains to foreign aid programs, role of International
Telephone
and Telegraph in Chilean politics, U.S. Information Agency,
especially
funding of U.S.I.A. and domestic use of U.S.I.A. films; and
public reaction
to JWF's criticisms of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty.
Correspondents include: Joe C. Barrett (32.2), Benjamin F. Butler
(32.2), Cyrus Stephen Eaton (33.3, .5), Anice Tatum Henry (32.4),
David
Lambert (33.4), William H. McLean (33.4), Diane (Mrs. Yehudi)
Menuhin
(33.3), John P. Powelson (32.2), James N. Rosenberg (32.2), Pedro
A. Sanjuan
(33.2), Frank Shakespeare (33.4), Christian Kirshman Streit
(32.1, 33.1),
Dr. M.S. Sugarman (33.3).
1 box.
Office file code: 50 FR, 8 Africa
Records primarily pertain to major African crises, particularly
Congo
crisis and crisis in Rhodesia; and, U.S. and United Nations
policies in
Africa. Some material pertains to Nigerian civil war, drought in
West
Africa, educational projects in North Africa, and apartheid in
South
Africa.
Correspondents include: Dana Brown (34.1), John Albert Fogelman
(34.1), F. Wellford Hobbie, (34.3), Huey G. Huhn (34.2), Carl
Milton Marcy
(34.1, 34.2), Robert E. Lee Masters (34.1), David Allen Nixon
(34.3), Asa
Philip Randolph (34.1), Moise Tshombe (34.1), Artemus Ford Wolf
(34.3).
2 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, Asia
Records primarily pertain to U.S. policy in Far East, especially
U.S.
relations with Communist China and expanding U.S. role in
Vietnam. Some
records pertain to economic aid and development in India,
U.S.-Korean
relations, U.S. Japanese relations, "neutralization" of Southeast
Asia,
"Jung War" of 1967, Iranian oil policies, and refugee problems in
Bangladesh.
Correspondents include: Jamaluddi Abubaker (36.4),
Chester Bliss Bowles (35.1, .2; 36.3), Tristram Coffin (36.5),
Henry Steele Commager (36.5), Cyrus Stephen Eaton (36.3),
Armand Hammer (36.6), John Norvill Jones (35.5), Mostafa Kamel
(35.2), James G. Lowenstein (35.3), Carl Milton Marcy (35.2,
35.5), Hans Joachim Morganthau (35.2), Fred Warner Neal (35.1),
Gaylord Anton Nelson (35.1), David Gulick Nes (35.5), John
Newhouse (35.1), Andreas George Papandreou (35.5), Charles
Taylor (35.3), Allen Seuss Whiting (36.5), Keith Young (35.1).
1 folder.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records pertain to Canadian-American agreements concerning sale
of
Canadian uranium to U.S., and U.S.-Canadian flood control
agreements.
Correspondents lnclude: Wayne N(orviel) Aspinwall.
1 box.
Office file code: 50 FR, Eur
Records pertain primarily to U.S. diplomatic, economic, and
military
relations with European countries, particularly France, Greece,
Eastern
Europe, and West Germany, especially concerning Berlin and NATO.
Some records
pertain to floods in Florence, Radio Free Europe, Atlantic Union
concept, and
violence in Northern Ireland.
Correspondents include: Henry Steele Commager (37,2), Cyrus
Stephen Eaton (37.3, 37.4), Gene Farmer (37.2), Oscar Fendler
(37.1), Hugh Greene (37.4), Edward Moore Kennedy (37.4), James G.
Lowenstein (37.2, 37.3), Michael Joseph Mansfield (37.2), Carl
Milton Marcy (37.2), Melina Mercouri (37.2), Francis Pickens
Miller (37.1), Fred Warner Neal (37.2), Charles Harting Percy
(37.4), James Barrett Reston (37.1), James Schwartz (37.2),
Stuart William Symington (37.1), Henry J. Tosca (37.4)
2 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records primarily pertain to U.S. relations with Latin America,
especially Cuba, Dominican Republic, Panama, and Peru; and,
internal
conditions of various Latin American countries, especially Chile,
Brazil,
Haiti, Colombia, and Venezuela. Some records pertain to Alliance
for
Progress, Organization of American States, role of multinational
corporations in Latin American politics, and the "soccer" war
between El
Salvador and Honduras.
Correspondents include: Cyrus Stephen Eaton (39.2, 39.3),
Marriner
Stoddard Eccles (39.2), Barry Morris Goldwater (38.1), Fred R.
Harris
(39.3), R.D. Heinl, Jr. (38.6), Pat M. Holt (38.4, .5, .6; 39.1,
.2, .3),
Jacob Merrill Kaplan (38.1), Carl Milton Marcy (38.5), George
Crews McGhee
(38.1), Wayne Lyman Morse (38.1), Teodoro Moscoso (38.2, 38.4),
Luis
Munoz-Marin (38.3), Peter R. Nehemkis, Jr. (38.2), James O.
Powell (39.1),
Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller (39.2), Arthur Meier Schlesinger, Jr.
(38.4,
38.6), Norman Matton Thomas (38.6), Francis R. Valeo (39.3),
Charles Morrow
Wilson (38.6).
2 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, Mid East
Records primarily pertain to U.S. relations with countries of
Middle
East, particularly Israel, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Syria, Jordan and
Lebanon;
and, Arab-Israeli wars of 1967 and 1973. Some records pertain to
Iranian
petroleum policies, oil embargo, U.S. petroleum policies in Mid
East,
economic and political developments in India and Pakistan, and
political
repression in Turkey.
Correspondents include: James G. Abourezk (40.5), Howard Henry
Baker,
Jr. (40.1), Luclus D. Battle (40.1), Chester Bliss Bowles (40.1),
Tristram
Coffin (40.4), Fagan Dickson (40.2, .3, .4; 41.1, .2), Erich Fromm
(40.3,
41.1), Jacob Koppel Javits (40.1), Mostafa Kamel (40.1, 41.2),
Harry
Frederick Kern (40.1, 41.3), Henry Alfred Kissinger (41.2), Carl
Milton
Marcy (40.1), John J. McCullen (41.2), Hisham M. Nazar (40.5),
David
Gulick Nes (40.4), Abraham A. Ribicoff (40.2), Gerald Lyman
Kenneth Smith
(41.2), Jackson Thomas Stephens (41.1), Barbara Wertheim Tuchman
(40.3),
Ardeskir Zahedi (40.5).
1 box.
Office file code: 50 FR, Russia
Records pertain primarily to U.S. relations with Soviet Union,
especially regarding trade, diplomacy, "cold war," and Soviet
debt to U.S.;
and, U.S. concern with Soviet treatment of Jews, particularly
relating to
right of emigration. Some materials pertain to sports exchanges,
scientific
cooperation, arms control, and internal economic conditions.
Correspondents include: William Brock (42.3), McGeorge Bundy
(42.2),
Tristram Coffin (42.1, .2), Anatoliv Fedorovich Dobryin (42.3),
Cyrus
Stephen Eaton (42.1), Marriner Stoddard Eccles (42.5), John
Kenneth
Galbraith (42.1), Katherine Graham (42.3), Charles Haywood
Murphy, Jr.
(42.1), Fred Warner Neal (42.1, .2, .3), Jack Pickens (42.1),
Abraham A.
Ribicoff (42.1), Dean Rusk (42.3), Sydney H. Scheuer (42.3),
Arthur Meier
Schlesinger, Jr. (42.1), John Scott (42.1), Llewellyn E.
Thompson, Jr.
(42.1), Robert Edward Lee Wilson III (42.1).
Sub-series 17. Vietnam--(General Materials),
1965-1974.
4 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, Viet Nam
Records pertain to miscellaneous materials concerning Vietnam
War,
particularly articles, position papers, speeches, correspondence
and
transcripts of Foreign Relations Committee hearings and
interviews. Most
material relates to Committee investigations of Vietnam War and
peace
efforts. Some files pertain to administration policies on
Vietnam.
Correspondents include: Frank Forrester Church (46.1), Tristram
Coffin
(45.1), Thomas Francis Eagleton (45.3), Cyrus Stephen Eaton
(46.1),
Marriner Stoddard Eccles (43.1, 44.3), Rupert Vance Hartke
(43.1), Harold
Everett Hughes (46.2), Jacob Koppel Javits (44.2), Warren Grant
Magnuson
(45.3), Carl Milton Marcy (45.1, 46.1, 46.2), George Stanley
McGovern
(46.2), Edmund Sixtus Muskie (46.2), Andrew Russell (Drew)
Pearson (43.2),
Mathew Bunker Ridgeway (43.1), Stuart William Symington (44.4,
45.2), Strom
Thurmond (45.3), William Childs Westmoreland (45.2).
Sub-series 18. Vietnam--Correspondence,
1966-1974.
19 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR, Vietnam
Records primarily pertain to Vietnam War, especially Committee
efforts
to investigate American policy relating to Vietnam; and public
reaction to
JWF's position on War.
Correspondents include: Harry Scott Ashmore (47.1, 51.1, 54.1,
59.1),
William Calhoun Baggs (47.2, 51.2), Chester Bliss Bowles (59.3),
Tristram
Coffin, Ernest Cecil Deane (56.4, 59.5), Cyrus Stephen Eaton,
Oscar Fendler
(48.1, 54.5), Jerome David Frank (48.1), Erich Fromm (51.5,
54.5), Felix
Greene (48.2), Louis Joseph Halle (56.6), Rupert Vance Hartke
(48.3, 52.1,
62.4), John Norvill Jones (48.1), John F. Kerry (62.5), Henry
Alfred
Kissinger (56.7), Alfred A. Knopf (62.5), Charles Haywood
Murphy, Jr.
(49.2, 55.1), Fred Warner Neal (55.2), Gaylord Anton Nelson
(53.1, 65.4), Kenneth P. O'Donnell (61.1), James O. Powell
(57.2), Herbert R. Rainwater (63.3), Arthur Meier Schlesinger,
Jr. (50.1, 52.3, 61.4, 65.5), Prince Norodom Sihanouk (63.3),
Benjamin McLane Spock (50.1, 50.2), Wilton Robert Stephens (50.2,
61.4, 63.3, 65.5), Barbara Wertheim Tuchman (50.3), Stephen M.
Young (55.5, 57.5).
Sub-series 19. Vietnam--Cambodian
Invasion, 1970.
4 boxes.
Office file code: 50 FR
Records pertain to JWF's constituents' responses to 1970
Cambodian invasion.
Correspondents include: James B. Breazeale (69.3), Thomas
J. Prendergast (66.3).
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