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  • liked everything that Mr. Mannheimer had. Someplace in my correspondence there is a letter from Goering to Seyss-Inquart to me. Where it has disappeared to today, I don't know, but I'm sure, as you see how disorganized we are, we will find it. In 1941
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  • See all online interviews with Jane Engelhard
  • involved, as I see it, to do all these things. B: At that time whom did you deal with in the administration? Did you talk in those years, beginning in 1961, directly with the attorney general, Robert Kennedy? H: No, we were dealing more with John Doar
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  • See all online interviews with Aaron E. Henry
  • . For example, it would seem to me to be fairly easy to see just another southern senator, particularly in regard to racial matters. W: I think beyond racial matters I had occasion particularly to watch his performance with respect to legislation, which
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  • See all online interviews with Walter Washington & Bennetta Washington
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh This is an interview with Mr. Harold Barefoot Sanders Jr. in the West Wing of the White House. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mr. Sanders, very briefly run down the account of your life and how you came to be where you
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  • See all online interviews with Harold Barefoot Sanders
  • to be the recipient of legislation by both the House and the Senate, giving him his salary for life when he retires? And I said, "Yes, that would be nice." He stated, "The boss"--meaning Mr. Hoover--"wants you to handle it. I suggest that you see somebody like Lyndon
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  • See all online interviews with Cartha D. (Deke) DeLoach
  • with Martin Luther King, Jr. FBI role vs. Secret Service role; FBI jurisdiction in cases; FBI involvement in civil rights cases, especially the murder of three civil rights workers in Mississippi and Viola Liuzzo murder.
  • in the short time that he had been governor, to see him very differently than when I had been a student. He had called me in once before. This is again digression, but he'd called me in the previous fall because he was greatly devoted to the University of Texas
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  • See all online interviews with Horace Busby
  • NSC structure. I was the deputy member of the planning board, so I had three years of seeing how intelligence linked up with policy and how the Eisenhower Administration formulated National Security Policy. unimpressed. I was rather I thought
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  • See all online interviews with Robert Komer
  • Bobby,"--which among other things included a judgeship fight-G: This was the Morrissey--? O: No, this was New York and this was the feeling that he didn't support Frank O'Connor enthusiastically. G: I see. O: "There's a general feeling," I
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  • See all online interviews with Lawrence F. O'Brien
  • and Cesar Chavez's support for RFK; McCarthy's young supporters; RFK as attorney general and surveillance of Martin Luther King, Jr.; RFK's personality; RFK's response to McCarthy's criticisms; public interest in, and perception of, the Kennedys
  • Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Reedy -- XVII -- 2 R: Okay. G: You stopped on the way to see Truman in Kansas City, if that helps. R: That's right
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  • See all online interviews with George E. Reedy
  • up the things to get her to help me with my elocution and public [speaking]. Well, Uncle Sam [Ealy Johnson, Jr.], now, so many people don't give him credit for what he really did for his family, but now let me tell you, he was in there working
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  • See all online interviews with Ava Johnson Cox
  • for health, whom I had known for some period of time but had not seen in twenty years, asking if I could come to Washington to see him, which I did. He asked me to chair a committee of consultants on medical research for the Senate Appropriations Committee
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  • See all online interviews with Boisfeuillet Jones
  • a cryptic remark that President Kennedy was going to see that Yarborough didn't act this foolishly and that they were going to do something about it, but I wasn't privy to what they did. I know that Thomas knew about it too and was rather upset about
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  • See all online interviews with Jack Valenti
  • [Creighton Williams] Abrams [Jr.]? D: No, I didn't know him. General Abrams was in the 4th Armored Division, but I had fought at Bastogne with the people that were surrounded there. There was a combat command, the 10th Armored with the 101st Airborne
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  • See all online interviews with William R. Desobry
  • : http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 3, 1969 F: This interview is number three with Harold Barefoot Sanders, Jr. in his office in Dallas on November 3, 1969. The interviewer is still Joe B. Frantz. Barefoot, let's talk a little bit
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  • See all online interviews with Harold Barefoot Sanders
  • , or they have an opening on the commission and the chairman of the commission has some idea of what he wants in the way of a replacement for the vacancy. And that means coordinating with John Macy and his bunch and seeing that the recommendation that goes
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  • See all online interviews with E. Ernest Goldstein
  • that required further action to which he had a commitment. It was interesting to see how this manifested itself in the White House. The President became awfully concerned about the depth of involvement of just about everybody with the legislative program
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  • See all online interviews with Lawrence F. O'Brien
  • could see them; contact with the press and efforts to publicize legislative progress; disagreement between Robert McNamara and General Earle Wheeler over the effectiveness of bombing in Vietnam; cabinet meeting updates on Vietnam; LBJ's reaction
  • ] Colbert, I guess he was a captain at the time, U.S. Navy, had already been there for about a year. I replaced an army colonel, later general, DeWitt Armstrong. When Colbert left, he in turn was replaced by another army colonel. G: I see. What was a normal
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  • See all online interviews with Robert N. Ginsburgh
  • naturally to him. I could see nothing wrong in it. He wasn't alone in that regard in the world of politics by a long shot. G: The White House did not resent his efforts to--? O: No. If there was any resentment I never heard it, and I have a feeling
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  • See all online interviews with Lawrence F. O'Brien
  • discharge motion; the public accommodations provision of the bill; the effect of violent civil-rights related events on the likelihood of enacting legislation; JFK's regard for Martin Luther King, Jr. (MLK) and the FBI's effort to destroy MLK's reputation; J
  • with Wilbur Mills, this dialogue, would be interrupted by my travels. In any event, the President was adamant. He couldn't see why I couldn't handle both aspects. I had no alternative but to try to do just that. We put together a little group. One
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  • See all online interviews with Lawrence F. O'Brien
  • and that was the chairmanship of the Senate Campaign Committee. Russell Long had the ability to do significant fund-raising. Russell Long and Hubert obviously shared a keen desire to have a large majority of Democrats. While Russell Long and Paul Douglas would not see eye
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  • See all online interviews with Lawrence F. O'Brien
  • Garden. Vinson had left the Rose Garden clearly having in mind, "I'm absolutely open to try to work something out and I want to." And the staff fellow felt this was his ball game and he didn't want to see it closed out this way. It became an ego trip
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  • See all online interviews with Lawrence F. O'Brien