HISTORICAL MATERIALS in the JOHN F. KENNEDY LIBRARY April 1994 PART 2 (of 5): ARCHIVES AND MANUSCRIPTS 2.1 Papers of John Fitzgerald Kennedy 2.2 Presidential recordings 2.3 List of collections INTRODUCTION This guide lists and describes the holdings of the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library. It provides assistance to research- ers in the proper and productive use of research materials by including information on locating material, using facilities, understanding access restrictions, and citing library holdings. Please direct questions on these and other matters concerning the use of library resources to the reference staff. As in the 1990 edition manuscript collections and oral history interviews are listed in alphabetical sequence. Part I on Conducting Research contains an interlibrary loan policy statement, research grant application forms, and permission request forms. Researchers may printout and photocopy the latter to expedite requesting permission to use certain collections or oral history transcripts. Keep in mind that, except for U.S. government agency records, the holdings of the John F. Kennedy Library are donated histori- cal materials. They are materials that were created by private individuals and were donated to the Kennedy Library under terms and conditions specified by each donor and accepted by the Archivist of the United States. Access to each collection or oral history interview is determined by a formal deed of gift or deposit agreement. The library staff strictly adheres to these governing instruments in administering library holdings. Telephone 617-929-4545, Fax 617-929-4538 2. ARCHIVES AND MANUSCRIPTS The papers of John Fitzgerald Kennedy are being opened for research according to terms specified in the deed of gift executed between the Kennedy family and the Archivist of the United States in 1965. Essentially, the deed provides that all materials can be made available except those that are national security classified, those that concern an individual's strictly personal affairs, or those that may be used to embarrass, injure, or harass any living individual. The library staff identifies and segregates documents that must be closed under the general guidance of an independent advisory committee appointed by the donor. The staff reviews closed documents on request to decide if the original reasons for closure still exist and if individual documents may be opened for research. Working files of individual members of the President's staff are also part of the papers of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and are administered according to the terms of the same deed of gift. They can be located separately in the general list of collections under the staff member's name and are identified as "White House Staff Files. (The Presidential Papers of John F. Kennedy)." The Kennedy Library is the repository of the papers of many other individuals active in public affairs. Most were friends and associates of John or Robert Kennedy or were administration officials. Others had little or no direct connection with the careers of either John or Robert Kennedy, but their papers nevertheless have significant enduring value to an understanding of the context in which the Kennedy administration existed and to a more thorough understanding of mid-20th century America. The library also holds microfilm or paper copies of selected records of 55 United States Government departments and agencies. These are administered according to terms determined by each agency. In several cases, the complexity of the restrictions and the location of restricted and unrestricted documents on the same reel of microfilm render these collections unusable until the originals have been opened for research in the National Archives. Access to collections is subject to terms and conditions imposed by donors. Lacking a formal deed of gift, access is subject to understandings expressed in correspondence or memorandums of agreement, pending the negotiation of a deed. In all cases, national security classified information, wherever it occurs, is governed by current law or executive order. The library does not permit access to collections that have not yet been processed to an acceptable condition by library staff. See Part I on Conducting Reserach, section 1.7, for an explanation of access restrictions. 2.1 THE PAPERS OF JOHN FITZGERALD KENNEDY The papers of John Fitzgerald Kennedy cover the period 1917-65. They total 4,199 linear feet, 49 rolls of microfilm, 127 audio- tapes, and 73 dictabelts. They are subdivided by form or by period of his career, and are further subdivided by sub- collection or file group. This is a brief outline of the collection and its organization. PERSONAL PAPERS, 1917-63. 22 feet, 21 rolls of microfilm. PRE-PRESIDENTIAL PAPERS, 1946-60. 430 feet. PRESIDENTIAL PAPERS, 1961-63. The working files of President Kennedy and his Presidential staff. 3,517 feet, 28 rolls of microfilm, 127 audiotapes, 73 dictabelts. This subcollection includes: President's Office Files (81 ft. 28 rolls of microfilm, 127 audiotapes, and 73 dictabelts), National Security Files (230 ft.), White House Central Files (1,865 ft.), Bureau of the Budget Bill Reports (15 ft.), White House Social Files (491 ft.), Miscellaneous Presidential Files (316 ft.), and the White House Staff Files (519 ft.) of the following individuals: Carmine S. Bellino, 1 ft. McGeorge Bundy, 3 ft. Chester V. Clifton, 1 ft. Dorothy H. Davies, 203 ft. Claude J. Desautels, 18 ft. Ralph A. Dungan, less than 1 ft. Myer Feldman, 14 ft. Sanford Fox, 16 ft. August Heckscher, 20 ft. Christian A. Herter, 16 ft. Frederick L. Holborn, 2 ft. Charles A. Horsky, 9 ft. James M. Landis, 22 ft. Godfrey T. McHugh, 22 ft. Mike Manatos, less than 1 ft. Dean F. Markham, 18 ft. Lawrence F. O'Brien, 13 ft. Kay O'Donnell, less than 1 ft. Kenneth P. O'Donnell, less than 1 ft. George D. O'Gorman, 4 ft. Howard C. Petersen, 22 ft. Timothy J. Reardon, 5 ft. John Romagna, 4 ft. Walt W. Rostow, 1 ft. Pierre Salinger, 71 ft. Janet G. Travell, 4 ft. Stafford L. Warren, 1 ft. Lee C. White, 10 ft. Henry Hall Wilson, 5 ft. Joseph E. Winslow, 6 ft. Harris Wofford, 6 ft. (For the convenience of users of this guide, the White House Staff Files of above listed individuals are described in more detail in the following pages under the name of that individual rather than under "KENNEDY, JOHN FITZGERALD." These files are, however, part of the Presidential Papers of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. They are administered according to the 1965 Kennedy deed). PAPERS OF THE POST-ASSASSINATION PERIOD, 1963-65. 230 feet. 2.2 PRESIDENTIAL RECORDINGS The presidential recordings series of the President's Office Files of John F. Kennedy consists of 127 audiotapes of White House meetings and 73 dictabelt recordings of telephone conversations. Since June, 1983 the Library has periodically opened copies of these meetings and telephone conversations as soon as all required processing and review was completed. At this time the following recordings, transcripts, and logs are available for research. Cuban missile crisis meetings, 1962 When aerial reconnaissance revealed the presence of Soviet nuclear missiles on the island of Cuba, President Kennedy and his national security advisers met with intelligence experts to interpret the photographs and then began discussions on a course of action. The meetings continued for several weeks. Two of the most critical meetings were those of October 16 and October 27, 1962. October 16, 1962. There were two meetings this first day of the missile crisis. In October, 1983 the library opened transcripts of the October 16th meetings accompanied by brief taped excerpts. Portions of the 87 page transcript remain closed be- cause of national security classification restrictions. Only 33 1/2 minutes of these meetings are available in audio form be- cause of difficulty in segregating and reproducing the unclassified sections. (Tape and transcript). October 27, 1962. There were three meetings on October 27, 1962. In October, 1987 the library opened the transcript of the October 27th meetings in which responses to two messages from Premier Nikita Khrushchev were considered along with further discussion of U.S. actions regarding the Soviet missiles in Cuba. This transcript of 4 hours and 40 minutes of recorded conversation was prepared by McGeorge Bundy, Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, and donated to the library as part of Mr. Bundy's personal papers. Portions of the 82 page transcript remain closed because they contain national security classified information. (Transcript only). Civil rights, 1962 In June, 1983 the library opened three White House meetings and seventeen telephone calls, involving about 260 minutes of recording and 145 pages of transcript from the crisis over attempts to register James Meredith as the first black student at the University of Mississippi. Most of the telephone calls are between President Kennedy or Attorney General Robert Kennedy and Ross Barnett, Governor of Mississippi. The recordings include meetings in the White House during the night of the riot at the University. The White House participants communicated throughout the night with the federal marshals in Mississippi through an open telephone line. (Tapes and transcripts). Civil rights, 1963 In July, 1984 the library opened the remaining civil rights material from the presidential recordings. These 16 White House meetings and 15 telephone calls (564 minutes of recordings) include discussions of the situation in Birmingham, Alabama, the march on Washington, and civil rights legislation which became the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In these recordings, President Kennedy meets with or calls civil rights leaders, including Martin Luther King, church officials, local officials and businessmen, representatives, senators, and governors of various southern states. (Tapes, content logs, and transcripts of telephone calls). Winning Senate support for the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, 1963 In October, 1988 the library opened tape recordings and transcripts of approximately 40 minutes of White House telephone conversations between President Kennedy and members of Congress, the Cabinet and the White House staff, and former President Harry S. Truman. These conversations took place in July and August 1963 when President Kennedy was trying to win Senate ratification of the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. (Tapes and transcripts). Tax cut proposals of 1962, 1963 In June, 1983 the library opened 13 White House meetings and 3 telephone conversations between President Kennedy, his economic advisers, and business and congressional leaders on his proposals for a tax cut. These include 450 minutes of re- cordings and 295 pages of transcript. Many of the conversations and meetings are with Representative Wilbur Mills, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. (Tapes and transcripts). Kennedy-Shriver conversation on the Peace Corps, April 2, 1963 In August, 1983 the library opened this brief telephone call between President Kennedy and Sargent Shriver, the head of the Peace Corps, concerning keeping the Central Intelligence Agency out of the Peace Corps. The recording is 2 minutes long and the transcript is 3 pages. (Tape and transcript). Railroad work rules dispute, 1963 In November, 1985 the library opened recordings on the railroad work rules dispute and potential strike of July 1963. These 10 meetings and 4 telephone conversations (254 minutes of recordings) include conversations with railroad union and management representatives, congressmen, White House staff members and Cabinet officials. (Tapes, content logs, and transcripts of telephone calls). An order form for the above tapes, logs, and transcripts is in Part I on Conducting Research, section 1.13. A complete list of Presidential recordings is available in the main research room or through interlibrary loan. 2.3 LIST OF COLLECTIONS Archives and manuscript collections are listed alphabetically as follows: þ COLLECTION TITLE, date of birth - date of death [if known] Collection type [Papers, Records, etc.], date range, (bulk date range). Profession or occupation. Specific title(s) held or activities (dates). Description of materials. Size of collection in cubic feet [1 foot equals roughly 2,000 pages] or number of rolls of microfilm. National Union Catalog of Manuscript Collections (NUCMC) number or National Archives record group number (RG) [where applicable]. Cross references to other collections or oral history interviews in the Kennedy Library. A star (þ) preceding an entry indicates that a collection is open to research in whole or in part. Closed portions of collections are indicated in individual finding aids. Collec- tions that require the donor's permission or other special restrictions are so marked. Other collections are currently unavailable for research. þ ALFSEN, FRITZ (Adolf Marconini), 1899-? Papers, 1961-63 [fragment]. Trade consultant, Department of Commerce. Copies of personal correspondence with the Kennedy family and members of the White House staff. 1 roll of microfilm. 78-315. þ AFL-CIO Records, 1955-68. Press releases and records relating to legislation, relations with the federal government, and international affairs. 5 feet, 9 rolls of microfilm. 78-316. AMORY, ROBERT, 1915- Papers, 1808-1980, (bulk 1930-80). Lawyer, educator, government official. Professor of law and accounting, Harvard University (1946-52); member, National Security Council Planning Board (1953-61); Deputy Director, Cen- tral Intelligence Agency (1952-62); Chief, International Division, Bureau of the Budget (1962-65). Personal, family, financial papers, writings, lectures, speeches, briefings, correspondence, political files, appointment books, BOB papers, CIA papers, subject files, and academic papers. 35 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. BALL, GEORGE W(ildman), 1909- Papers, 1961-63. Lawyer, government official. Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs (1961); Under Secretary of State (1961-66). Subject files, transcripts of telephone conversations. 7 feet. þ BARRIERE, JOHN E(rnest), 1919- Papers, 1960 [fragment]. Member, President-elect Kennedy's Task Force on Housing and Urban Affairs (1960). Miscellaneous transition papers and carbon copies of the task force report. Less than 1 foot. BARTLETT, CHARLES See Weintal, Edward and Oral History Interviews. þ BATT, WILLIAM L(oren), 1916- Papers, 1949-66. Government official. Special Assistant to the Secretary of Labor (1949-53); member, Task Force on Area Redevelopment (1960); Administrator, Area Redevelopment Administration (1961- 65). Personal correspondence, memorandums, reports, hearings, bills, newsclippings, and scrapbooks. 7 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. þ BAYLEY, EDWIN R(ichard), 1918- Papers, 1961-63. Director of Public Information, Peace Corps (1961); Special Assistant in the office of the White House Press Secretary (1961); Director, Information Staff, Agency for International Development (1961-63). Photocopies of correspondence, memoran- dums, speech files relating to the White House press office, the Peace Corps, AID, and Wisconsin political affairs. [Originals deposited in the Wisconsin State Historical Society]. 1 foot. 78-317. See also Oral History Interviews. BEATY, ORREN, 1919- Papers, 1960-61. Government official. Assistant to the Secretary of the Interior (1961-67). Copies of correspondence, memorandums, notes, and reports. 1 roll of microfilm. Permission Required. 78-318. See also Oral History Interviews. þ BEER, SAMUEL H(utchison), 1911- Papers, 1955-62. Educator. Massachusetts chairman (1955-57), national chairman (1959-62), Americans for Democratic Action. ADA records: correspondence, reports, administrative file, name files, chapter files. 2 feet. þ BEHRMAN, JACK N(ewton), 1922- Papers, 1960-90. Economics educator and researcher. Assistant Secretary of Commerce for International Affairs (1961-62). Correspondence, memorandums, reports, and studies relating to international trade, the balance of payments, and his service in the Commerce Department. 22 feet. 78-319. BELK, SAMUEL E(llison), 1920- Papers, 1959-66. Government official. Member, National Security Council staff (1959-65); staff member, Bureau of International Affairs, Department of State (1965-66). Chronological file, name file, subject file; includes materials on the White House Conference on International Cooperation and a proposed National Academy of Foreign Affairs. 5 feet. þ BELL, DAVID E(lliott), 1919- Papers, 1947-80. Economist, educator, government official. Administrative Assistant to President Truman (1949-53); Director, Bureau of the Budget (1961-62); Administrator, Agency for International Development (1963-66); vice president, executive vice president, Ford Foundation (1966-81). Correspondence, memorandums, reports, background material, speeches, writings; includes material on the Truman/MacArthur relationship. 25 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. þ BELLINO, CARMINE S(alvatore), 1905-90 White House Staff Files. 1961-63. (The Presidential Papers of John F. Kennedy). Accountant, investigator. Special consultant to President Ken- nedy (1961-63). Materials relating to investigations of Peace Corps activities and to stockpiling of materials for national emergency. 1 foot. þ BENNETT, JAMES V(an Benschoten), 1894-1978 Papers, 1920-67. Government official, penologist. Director, Bureau of Prisons, Department of Justice (1937-64). Materials relating to his career, the bureau, and many prison or crime related issues including gun control, sentencing, and post World War II German prisons. 12 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. þ BERNHARD, BERL I., 1929- Papers, 1958-72, (bulk 1958-63). Lawyer. General Attorney, Staff Director, Executive Staff Director, Commission on Civil Rights (1958-63); campaign aide to Senator Edmund S. Muskie (1971-72). Memorandums, correspon- dence, and speech files relating to his government and political work, to the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, to the District of Columbia Board of Higher Education, and to the John F. Kennedy Library oral history program. 10 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. BILLINGS, (Kirk LeMoyne) "LEM," 1915?-81 Papers, 1937-39. Kennedy friend and associate. Letters from John F. Kennedy. Less than 1 foot. See also Oral History Interviews. BIRKHEAD, KENNETH M(ilton), 1914- Papers, 1944-76. Assistant to the Secretary of Agriculture for Congressional liaison (1961-66). Correspondence, memoranda, reports, newsclippings. 3 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. BLACK, DAVID S(tatler), 1928- Papers, 1961-69. Lawyer, government official. General Counsel, Bureau of Public Roads, Interior Department (1961-63); Vice Chairman, Federal Power Commission (1963-66); Administrator, Bonneville Power Administration (1966-67); Under Secretary of the Interior (1967- 69). Alphabetical subject file, speeches, legislation files. 33 feet. þ BOGGS, ELIZABETH (Monroe), 1913- Papers, 1962-65. Civic worker. Member, President's Panel on Mental Retardation (1961-62). Materials relating to the work of the panel. Less than 1 foot. þ BOUTIN, BERNARD L(ouis), 1923- Papers, 1958-66. Businessman, government official. Mayor of Laconia, NH (1955- 59); Kennedy campaign worker (1960); Deputy Administrator, Administrator, General Services Administration (1961-64); Deputy Director, Office of Economic Opportunity (1965-68). Correspon- dence, memorandums, appointment books, schedules, and speech files relating to New Hampshire politics, the 1960 Presidential campaign, GSA, and OEO. 10 feet, 38 rolls of microfilm. 78- 320. [Microfilm also deposited in the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library]. See also Oral History Interviews. BRADSHAW, JAMES S(tanford), 1921- Papers, 1959-72. Press officer, educator. Press adviser to the Secretary General, Organization of American States (1961-62); Deputy Public Affairs Adviser, Bureau of Latin America, Agency for International Development (1962-65); Reports and Food for Peace Officer, AID, Chile (1965-67); professor, School of Journalism, Central Michigan University (1969-78). Publications, memorandums, press releases, and pamphlets issued by the Organization of American States, the Agency for International Development, and others; includes draft manuscript on United States-Latin American economic relations and the Alliance for Progress. 2 feet. BREYER, STEPHEN G(erald), 1938- Papers, 1966-80. Lawyer, educator. Special Assistant to the Assistant Attorney General, Department of Justice (1965-67); assistant professor of law, Harvard University (1967-70); Special Counsel (1974-75), Chief Counsel (1979-81), Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate. Most material is from his work on the Senate Judiciary Committee chaired by Senator Edward M. Kennedy. 22 feet. BRODER, DAVID S(alzer), 1929- Papers, 1939-80. Journalist. Author, The Party's Over (1972) and The Changing of the Guard (1980). Correspondence, writings, speeches, clip- pings, personal papers. 55 feet. Permission Required. þ BROWNLOW, LOUIS, 1879-1963 Papers, 1902-63. Journalist, public administrator. Author, The President and the Presidency (1949), A Passion for Politics (1955), A Passion for Anonymity (1958), and Anatomy of the Anecdote (1960). Papers relating to government reorganization during the Roosevelt administration, the District of Columbia, the Public Administration Clearing House; manuscripts of books, articles, lectures; personal and family papers. 40 feet. 78-321. BRUBECK, WILLIAM. See Kennedy, John Fitzgerald. National Security Files þ BRUNO, (Gerald J.) "JERRY", 1926- Papers, 1958-71, [bulk 1960-68]. Political advance man. Material concerning John F. Kennedy's and Robert F. Kennedy's trips; includes invitations, planning materials, photographs, newsclippings, funeral arrangements for Robert F. Kennedy; manuscript of The Advance Man (1971). 7 feet. þ BUNDY, McGEORGE, 1919- Papers, 1963-65, 1987. Government official. Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (1961-66). Papers relating to the John F. Kennedy Library and to the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, and transcriptions of Presidential recordings on the Cuban missile crisis. Less than 1 foot. See also Kennedy, John Fitzgerald. National Security Files and Oral History Interviews. þ BUNDY, McGEORGE, 1919- White House Staff Files, 1961-63. (The Presidential Papers of John F. Kennedy). Government official. Special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (1961-66). Correspondence with the Department of State concerning visas and immigration cases. 3 feet. See also Kennedy, John Fitzgerald. National Security Files and Oral History Interviews. BURKE, JAMES A(nthony), 1910-83 Papers, 1959-78. Representative from Massachusetts (1959-79). Congressional files for the 86th through the 95th Congress. 208 feet. þ BUSH, GERALD W(illiam), 1937- Papers, 1961-65. Management consultant. Director of Training for the Far East (1962-64), Special Assistant to the Director (1964-65), Peace Corps. Research materials for his doctoral dissertation, The Peace Corps: A Study in Open Organization (1968); includes memorandums, reports, notes, speeches, records of the Director's staff meetings, records of decisions, and weekly reports to the President. 4 feet. þ BYRNE, JOHN E(dward), 1925- Papers, 1958-63 [fragment]. Press secretary to the Governor of Maine (1958-60). Copies of papers concerning his work in the 1960 Presidential campaign and President Kennedy's November 1963 trip to Texas. Less than 1 foot. 78-322. þ CABOT, JOHN MOORS, 1901-81 Papers, 1929-78. Diplomat. Ambassador to Pakistan (1952-53); Ambassador to Colombia (1957-59); Ambassador to Brazil (1959-61); Ambassador to Poland (1962-65). Copies of diplomatic papers concerning Latin America, Europe, general political and diplomatic materials, and diaries. 22 rolls of microfilm. [Originals deposited in the Edwin Ginn Library, Fletcher School, Tufts University, Medford, MA]. See also Oral History Interviews. þ CARVER, JOHN A(lfred), 1918- Papers, 1961-63. Lawyer. Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Public Lands Management (1961-64). Copies of public remarks and addresses. Less than 1 foot. 78-323. See also Oral History Interviews. CHASE, GORDON, 1933-80 Papers, 1960-66. Member, National Security Council staff (1962-66). Chrono- logical file of correspondence and memorandums; personal file. 2 feet. þ CHAYES, ABRAM, 1922- Papers, 1961-72. Lawyer. Legal adviser, Department of State (1961-64); campaign adviser (1968, 1972). Correspondence, memorandums, diary; material relating to the Task Force on Foreign Economic Policy (1964), to Robert F. Kennedy's 1968, and George McGovern's 1972 Presidential campaigns. 4 feet, 5 rolls of microfilm. See also Oral History Interviews. CHRISTIE, ALEXANDER KNOX Papers, 1940-83 Labor figure, legislative consultant. Correspondence, memorandums, newsclippings, and publications on labor, World War II, President Kennedy's assassination, and the Middle East. 2 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. CLEVELAND, (James) HARLAN, 1918- Papers, 1961-69. Government official. Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs (1961-65); Ambassador to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (1965-69). Correspondence, memorandums, working files, and other personal and official papers. 39 feet. See also Oral History Interviews. CLIFFORD, CLARK (McAdams), 1906- Papers, 1957-61. Lawyer. Kennedy family attorney; Presidential adviser. Personal files and papers relating to the 1960 Presidential transition, to his investigation of the authorship of Profiles in Courage, and to legal matters. 1 foot, 3 rolls of microfilm. Permission Required. 78-324. þ CLIFTON, CHESTER V(ictor), 1913-91 White House Staff Files, 1961-63. (The Presidential Papers of John F. Kennedy). General, U.S. Army. Military Aide to the President (1961-63). Correspondence and memorandums relating to President Kennedy's foreign trips. 1 foot. See also Kennedy, John Fitzgerald. National Security Files. þ COLEMAN, BARBARA J., 1935?- Papers, 1959-68. Journalist. White House press aide (1961-62); aide in Robert Kennedy's Presidential campaign (1968). Miscellaneous political papers. Less than 1 foot. See also Oral History Interviews. þ COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY BUREAU OF APPLIED SOCIAL RESEARCH Records, 1963. Research materials consisting of transcripts of interviews with network news personnel used in the preparation of Ruth Leeds Love's dissertation Television and the Death of a President (1969). 2 feet. 78-325. CONGRESSIONAL LIAISON OFFICE See Kennedy, John Fitzgerald. Congressional Liaison Office. þ CORMIER, FRANK, 1927- Papers, 1967-70. Co-author (with William Eaton), Reuther (1970). Research materials: notes, tapes, and transcripts of interviews with labor and public officials including Walter Reuther, Victor Reuther, George Meany, Arthur Goldberg, and others. Less than 1 foot. Permission Required to Quote. 78-326. CORSON, JOHN (Jay), 1905-90 Papers, 1927-78 Management consultant, Presidential adviser. Case files, writings, and speeches relating to the Presidency and to public administration. 10 feet. CROCKETT, WILLIAM J., 1914- Papers, 1961-92. Management consultant, government official. Assistant Secretary of State for Administration (1961-63), Deputy Under Secretary of State for Administration (1963-67). Files relating to his service in the State Department; articles, seminar materials, and correspondence relating to management problems; correspon- dence, memorandums, reports concerning personal business. 93 feet. 78-327. See also Oral History Interviews. DAANE, (James) DEWEY, 1918- Papers, 1960-63. Government official. Deputy United S