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Topic: William Bundy


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In the News (Sun 6 Dec 09)

  
  SUVCW--Commander-in-Chief William E. Bundy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
William Edgar Bundy was the son of William Sanford Bundy who served in Company I, 18th Ohio Volunteer Infantry and later in Company G, 7th Ohio Voluteer Cavalry.
William Edgar Bundy graduated from the Cincinnati Law School and was admitted to the Ohio Bar in 1886.
Commander-in-Chief Bundy retained his duties as Camp Treasurer during his term as Commander-in-Chief showing the membership that there was no such thing as a subordinate office.
suvcw.org /pcinc/webundy.htm   (227 words)

  
 William P. Bundy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
William P. Bundy, who under three presidents was a central figure in Vietnam policy and who ultimately concluded that the war was "a tragedy waiting to happen," died yesterday at his home in Princeton, N.J. He was 83.
Bundy is survived by his wife Mary, and two sons, Michael of Waltham, Mass., and Christopher of New York City; a daughter, Carol Bundy of Cambridge, Mass.; two sisters, Harriet B. Belin of Cambridge, Mass., and Katherine L. Auchincloss of Westwood, Mass.; and three grandchildren.
William Bundy is survived by his wife, Mary, and by two sons and a daughter.
www.mishalov.com /Bundy.html   (2036 words)

  
 Disestablishment   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
To understand fully the origins and the purposes of William Bundy's new book, which is a lengthy assault on the foreign policies of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, it is necessary to recall the strange career of the liberal foreign policy establishment during the cold war.
Bundy is disinclined to give Nixon and Kissinger the benefit of the doubt on such matters, and he consistently chooses the harshest interpretation of their successes and their failures.
For Bundy, Kissinger's "unbalanced" attitude is only further proof that Nixon and Kissinger were not really wedded to detente, that their accommodation of the Soviet Union was only a tactical move aimed at shoring up flagging domestic support for continued American engagement in the world in the midst of the Vietnam debacle.
www.ceip.org /people/kagrep3.htm   (4877 words)

  
 Mark Danner: Members of the Club
Bundy's sons grew accustomed to meeting the colonel at their home, to debating events of the day with the great man across their dinner table.
The Bundys well understood, he tells us, that Vietnam was a colonial war, that South Vietnam had little or no independent existence, that involving American forces in a land war was bound to hold great risks for the United States, that from the very beginning the chances of victory were not high.
Coming from Bundy and his colleagues, the argument carried real weight, and though it did not instantly change policy, it did much to set off a true debate, one that led to a loosening of discussion about nuclear weapons and probably helped produce, a decade later, the important Salt 2 treaty.
globetrotter.berkeley.edu /people/Danner/1999/members.html   (2492 words)

  
 William Kell Bundy
William K. Bundy was born in section No. I Centralia township, Marion County, Illinois, on May 4.
Frederick Bundy was the son of Jonathan Bundy of Tennessee who came to Marion County Illinois, as early as 1825 or 1826, settling near Walnut Hill, where he soon afterward died.
Frederick Bundy was politically a staunch Democrat, and in those days, he had to go over to Salem at election times to record his vote.
www.rootsweb.com /~tnsumner/fabundy.htm   (1211 words)

  
 Bundy
Mary BUNDY was born in 1662/1663 in Rhode Island or Massachusetts.
William d.9 Feb 1721, married 19 Nov 1729 Ann Keaton daughter of Henry Keaton, and Ann married Thomas Symons 7 Mar 1724; 5.
Sarah BUNDY was born on 23 Jan 1685 in Perquimans County, North Carolina.
www.heirsandroots.com /Bundy.htm   (833 words)

  
 Vernon Bundy, Garrison Witness: JFK assassination investigation: Jim Garrison New Orleans investigation of the John F. ...
Bundy, claimed Garrison, was in prison voluntarily, having turned himself in for narcotics treatment on March 4, 1967.
Vernon Bundy was arrested on March 4, 1967, by the New Orleans Police Department, and charged with violating parole.
Bundy's probation was revoked and he was sentenced to a year in prison, a sentence that ended suddenly following his appearance at the Shaw preliminary hearing.
www.jfk-online.com /bundylies.html   (474 words)

  
 Who Owns The West? Mining Claims in America's West
William E Bundy is one of 92,125 beneficiaries of a 132-year-old federal mining law that gives away precious metals, minerals, and even the title to the land itself for less than $10 an acre.
William E Bundy gained title to an estimated 40 acres of lands previously owned by the public giving William E Bundy more total land holdings (claims and patents) than 19.7% of all other mining interests.
William E Bundy is one of 63,768 beneficiaries of a long-standing federal subsidy called "patenting" that allows mining interests to purchase public land for no more than $5 an acre.
www.ewg.org /mining/owners/overview.php?cust_id=1572170   (401 words)

  
 Digital History
The Bundy brothers are the subject of a biography by Kai Bird, titled The Color of Truth.
According to Harvey Bundy, John Kerry's roommate at Harvard, it was uncle William who finally convinced Kerry in 1966 to volunteer for service in Vietnam.
Senator Joseph McCarthy attacked Bundy in 1953 for having contributed $400 to the legal defense fund for Alger Hiss.
www.digitalhistory.uh.edu /learning_history/vietnam/bundy2.cfm   (466 words)

  
 Review of William Bundy, _A Tangled Web—The Making of Foreign Policy in the Nixon Presidency
Perhaps, as Bundy almost argues, SEATO was a mistake, but if you argue that, you cannot also be a devotee of the domino theory, as Bundy is, even arguing most conscientiously in 1971 that America’s commitment to Vietnam made possible the fall of Sukarno and the end of Indonesia’s confrontation of Malaysia in 1965-1966.
Bundy approaches the Nixon-Kissinger (-Haig, he adds) policy towards Cambodia from the moral high ground of having had the carriage of implementation of the Dean Rusk/Averell Harriman policy of support of Sihanouk and Cambodia’s neutrality through three years of pressure to widen the Vietnam War.
Bundy allocates praise and blame judiciously, perhaps too much so, but this reviewer did find strained his reliance on economic difficulties for an explanation of Soviet policy from 1969-71, in order to provide a stick to beat Nixon and Kissinger with for not understanding the economic substructure (halcyon days!).
www.hartford-hwp.com /archives/45/280.html   (2449 words)

  
 Home > Publications >
In quoting McGeorge Bundy, special assistant for national security to both Kennedy and Johnson from 1961 to 1966, that "Gray is the color of truth," Bird acknowledges the moral and political ambiguities of the complex confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Bird contends that the Bundys' advice on Vietnam and their support of U.S. participation in that conflict was wrong because the American involvement was profoundly flawed.
During the 1959-1960 missile gap debate, "Bundy opted for the comfortable middle-range estimates—which were lower than the air force's number, but still too high." That the gap was in America's favor finally became evident only after satellite photographs rendered their verdict.
www.eppc.org /publications/pubID.175/pub_detail.asp   (1732 words)

  
 Red, White and Blue Blood
His answer, versions of which are threaded throughout the last half of the book, is this: "The Bundys lacked the courage to insist on their doubts and instead consistently chose the easier path of steering the president toward what they thought was a middle course.
During the last 10 years of his life, McGeorge Bundy was a key adviser to scholarly projects on the Cuban missile crisis and the Vietnam War.
The chapter on the missile crisis in McGeorge Bundy's magisterial 1988 book, Danger and Survival, concludes this way: "We must make it our business not to pass this way again." This is unquestionably the most important lesson of that brush with nuclear oblivion.
www.fiu.edu /~fcf/redwhiteblue.html   (803 words)

  
 The Color of Truth
Bundy was also unpersuaded by two memos from Schlesinger, who voiced his blunt opposition to the whole scheme: "I am against it." In the end, vigorous dissents from Schlesinger, Mann, Fulbright and Goodwin did not persuade Bundy to come out against the operation.
Bundy vividly remembered one meeting that summer which seemed to crystallize for him the contradictory logic of having to rely on weapons which ultimately should never be unleashed.
Bundy did not think any of these arguments were illegitimate per se, but after previewing the book prior to its publication he told Carl Kaysen, "Either Marc takes his name off the book or he has to leave the staff." Raskin took his name off the book.
www.businessweek.com /@@AsQQKWYQpm9qXgYA/chapter/bird.htm   (16753 words)

  
 Bundyology - Other Bundys
Therefore McGeorge Bundy played a major role in the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Cuban missile crisis, the escalation of the Vietnam War and the intervention in the revolution in the Dominican Republic.
Bundy was appointed the sole distributor for Selmer Paris instruments in the United States and opened a manufacturing plant in Elkhart, Indiana.
Bundy is a local hobby ornithologist who keeps on saying that birds don't attack people and that bird species don't coordinate their actions.
www.bundyology.com /bundy.html   (834 words)

  
 [No title]
The notes were handwritten by McGeorge Bundy for his personal use and were not an official record of the meeting.
William Bundy also took notes at the meeting and used them several years later to prepare a 5-page summary of the discussion, which is cited in several footnotes below.
According to William Bundy, Raborn provided the following CIA estimate of Viet Cong strength: 64,500 hardcore professional soldiers, of which 47,000 were in combat units; another 80,000 to 100,000 guerrillas, militia, and part-time forces; and 30,000 administrative personnel.
www.presidency.ucsb.edu /vietnam/showdoc.php?docid=164   (912 words)

  
 www.markdanner.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Bundy's refusal to "confess" seems to have been profoundly galling, and his appearance left Bird "perplexed and curious to know how such an intelligent man had become so intimately associated with such a national disaster." Bird clearly intends "The Color of Truth" to provide an answer.
If they pushed forward anyway, they were spurred on not mainly by their ignorance (as young Bird and other antiwar protesters had assumed) but by the political risks of turning back.
Meeting Harvey and Katherine Bundy at a Washington luncheon in 1931, the childless Stimson "fell in love with" Harvey and his "peppery wife," and at 43 Harvey Bundy, having never spent a day in the Government's employ, became Assistant Secretary of State; he would remain close to Stimson for the rest of the colonel's life.
www.markdanner.com /nyt/040499_members_of_the_club_print.htm   (834 words)

  
 Commentary Magazine - A Tangled Web by William P. Bundy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
...Bundy puts forth a very strong case that Nixon handled the domestic political side of the war terribly, in effect amputating his own legs by antagonizing public and congressional opinion with secrets that never remained secret for long and unnecessary deceptions that were unraveled with speed and regularity...
...Bundy argues, for instance, that Nixon, a "true believer," was hobbled by "a predominantly ideological view of Communist nations and movements...
...Bundy's confusion about Soviet behavior is compounded by a refusal to reflect on the way in which the cold war, a decade and a half after Nixon left office, actually came to an end-a subject hardly without relevance for an understanding of Nixon's efforts to forge a rapprochement with the USSR...
www.commentarymagazine.com /Summaries/V106I1P62-1.htm   (2095 words)

  
 My Bundy Ancestors
Jonathan Bundy, son of Benjamin Bundy and Ruth Jennings, born 1755 in Pasquotank County, North Carolina, died August 16, 1819 in Jefferson County, Illinois.
William Kell Bundy was born section No. 1, Centralia Township, Marion County, Illinois, on May 4, 1827 and was the son of Frederick and Mary (Wilson) Bundy.
Bundy was a veteran of World War I and served with the Army in the Signal Corps.
members.tripod.com /~n2myroots/bundy1.htm   (2271 words)

  
 Bundy & Company - Businesses for Sale | Business Brokers | Mergers | Acquisitions | Valuations
Bundy & Company, established in 1989, is the leading firm in western and central Virginia and central North Carolina specializing in professional advisory services in business brokerage, mergers, acquisitions, business valuations, and corporate finance.
Bundy & Company has eight full time advisors with over 40 years combined business brokerage experience, several professional designations (MandAMI, CMA, CBI), and a broad business network across a 3-4 state region.
Bill established Bundy and Company, LLC in 1989 and has become known as a leader in the business brokerage industry.
www.bundyandcompany.com /about.htm   (859 words)

  
 Amazon.com: The Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy: Brothers in Arms: Books: Kai Bird   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Both McGeorge Bundy, a national security advisor, and William Bundy, a senior official at the Pentagon and State Department, were liberal anti-Communists trying to balance American interests in Southeast Asia between what they considered the dangerous extremes of both Left and Right.
McGeorge Bundy is quoted as saying it's gray, but there is nothing gray about this crisply written, carefully researched dual biography of brothers, who during the Vietnam era were regarded as fascists by the protesters and wild-eyed liberals by the right wing.
The Bundy brothers were at the center of most if not all the policy and military decisions concerning Vietnam made during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations - McGeorge as Special Assistant to the President on National Security Affairs to both presidents and William working under McNamara, (Defense) and then Dean Rusk, (State).
www.amazon.com /Color-Truth-McGeorge-William-Brothers/dp/0684809702   (2402 words)

  
 Bundy Genealogy
Marjorie Bundy Lungren (Granddaughter of Thomas) stated that Thomas had a brother John in Kansas, and that she had a letter from an Eli Bundy.
He was married to Sarah A. (Butcher), and in that census he lists that his parents were born in Tennessee, but in the 1880 Marcy Twp., Boone Co., Iowa Census records, it states that Thomas' father was born in Pennsylvania, and that his mother was born in Tennessee.
William was born on 24 January 1873 in Boone Co., Iowa, the son of Joshua Stumbo and Margaret Shafer.
members.tripod.com /~Randy_T/bundy.html   (2080 words)

  
 The Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy-Brothers in Arms
Yet Mac Bundy, as Bird reminds us, "was a prime architect of the Vietnam War." And over their careers as intellectual bureaucrats, the moral compass of each Bundy was revealed to lack key points, especially when it came to using weapons of mass destruction in Asia.
According to Bird, the Bundys did not fear those protesters demanding an end to the war and a US withdrawal from Vietnam-a demand shared by members of the Bundy families and many of their closest associates in the academy.
Harvey Bundy, who was intimately involved in the Truman Administration's discussions about the Japanese surrender, Russia's entry into the war, and the use of the atomic bomb, wrote a memo to his son that became the basis of the Harper's article.
www.bostonreview.net /BR24.1/jones.html   (1357 words)

  
 Clare
Jane married William Bogue, whose family is probably from the Auchencraw area in Scotland.
Timothy married[1] on 7 Jun 1685 in Perquimans County Mary BUNDY, daughter of William BUNDY and Elizabeth ALLEN.
She is named as the daughter of William Bundy, who received land in her name in Perquimans County in 1663/4.
www.heirsandroots.com /clare.htm   (1322 words)

  
 William Bundy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
William Putnam "Bill" Bundy (September 24, 1917 – October 6, 2000) was a member of the CIA and foreign affairs advisor to Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson.
His father, Harvey Hollister Bundy, was a diplomat who helped implement the Marshall Plan.
His brother, McGeorge Bundy, was also an integral part of the both the Kennedy and Johnson administrations.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/William_Bundy   (388 words)

  
 William F. Bundy directs FleetBoston support services
Bundy grew up in Baltimore and enlisted in the Navy out of high school.
Bundy earned a masters degree with distinction in national security and strategic studies, the equivalent of a civilian MBA, at the U.S. Naval War College, then took the helm at the Naval Officer Candidate School in Newport, RI.
Bundy was recently appointed to the BDPA board of directors where he’s responsible for liaison and promotion.
www.diversitycareers.com /articles/pro/decjan03/mng_bundy.htm   (1144 words)

  
 The Bundy Bloodline   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The Bundy family was an old American family that was part of the Eastern establishment, but with only a few exceptions like Congressman Solomon Bundy in the early 19th century, the family has only come into the public’s eye during the twentieth century.
WILLIAM P. William P. Bundy started out his career in 1947 working for Covington and Burling which is a firm that represents many of the Illuminati in Washington, D.C. Covington and Burling appears to have been a conduit for the Illuminati to create a left-wing political movement in the US.
HARRY W. Harry W. Bundy was a Mason, a Satanist and the chief adept (9°) of the Colorado part of the SRICF.
www.whale.to /b/sp/bundy.html   (6164 words)

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