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  • Collection > LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
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  • Contributor > Wozencraft, Frank M. (remove)

7 results

  • being available, so it is a quite serious problem. At that particular time--it was August of 1967, a couple of weeks after the Detroit riots--I was in Honolulu at the time. I had just finished speaking to the American Bar Association convention
  • Association's review of legal problems of the landlord-tenant relationship, building codes, housing codes, and the like; lack of action within HUD and Department of Health, Education, and Welfare following the conference report; the value of working in groups
  • in the interrelation of the federal government with the state and local governments on the one hand and with private enterprises on the other. Both of these problems necessarily evolve from our federal system and our free enterprise system. Since we have no intention
  • the relationships between the federal government, state and local governments, and private enterprise; the changing role of states and the federal government in interstate compacts; federal participation in interstate compacts; air and water
  • to be straightened out. The only question was where the collective enterprise would go. The reason that they had not been put together earlier was a difference in emphasis and in support on behalf of these two organizations. The narcotics people had considerable
  • , Justice Black is not a chief justice; he's one of the associate justices. It's just as fascinating. I've been rather interested in the recent controversy on Justice [Abe] Fortas' appointment. So few people have realized that an associate justice has
  • ; and another associate counsel who is really rather separate. B: I think the point is that most of them, I believe, are lawyers. W: They are lawyers, and each has a very different role, depending upon the particular matters that are coming up, but also upon
  • thought that that was better left to the state, as long as we protected what we considered the basic federal interest, which was not to use federal appropriations, federal offices, or association with federal programs for any political purposes. So we set
  • ; comparing executive agreements, treaties, and executive orders; the influence of OLC's and the attorney general's issued opinions; the attorney's general's rules for issuing opinions; opinions involving Federal National Mortgage Association obligations