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  • Contributor > Jones, James R. (remove)

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  • INTERVIEWEE: JAMES R. JONES INTERVIEWER: DOROTHY PIERCE McSWEENEY PLACE: Hay-Adams Hotel, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 2 M: You are presently practicing law in your home town in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and are just up here on a business trip in Washington, D.C
  • , 1972 INTERVIEWEE: JAMES R. JONES INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Jones' home, Tulsa, Oklahoma Tape 1 of 1 F: Just to get this started, let's get specific for a minute. Do you remember the article that Townsend Hoopes did that made
  • hit back personally, and he feels he is running an honest Administration based on merit and judgment. The President: Romney criticizes me for being a political animal, yet while he has severe problems at home he is out running around for political
  • . The general feeling is. to press forward with this program. Douglas Dillon and McGeorge Bundy agreed that South Vietnam should and must do more. Walt Ros tow said South Vi~tnam must improve administration, fight corruption and be more aggressive
  • Douglas Evelyn William Finley Mack G. Fleming Hubert R. Gallagher Robert T. Griffin Walter Hasty Andrew Hickey Gene Howard Phillip S. Hughes Ralph K. Huitt Samuel M. Jones Rod Keiser Bob Kneipp L. Edward Lashman Brig. General J. R. Lawrence Anthony R
  • discrimination of every kind• .We can provide a decent job for every worker and a decent home lI I ! for every family. I ·I I Today, most .Americans are not poor; most young people have ..... ·an opportunity for college education; most mothers
  • had some political solidarity of support back home. G: Do you think that from his meeting with Daley he bought any time from Daley, he kept Daley from jumping ship on Vietnam or at least being nominally supportive? J: I don't know. That would
  • impressed by the fact that the ballots were made up so that the illiterate people had no trouble recognizing the candidates. Antell said that several of the younger U. S. military personnel expressed concern about what the people back home were
  • the colleges and stirring up problems and we are not answering them. He pointed out that Princeton got a resolutiOn just yesterday. The President turned his attention to the troubles at home and said "I'm not going to let the Communists take this government
  • in the Alliance with security from· the same fate. The events in Czechoslovakia have brought home to all of us that NATO is the keystone to security and peace in Europe. It was reassuring to receive your own renewed expression of faith in the Alliance. I want
  • , while rehersing the risks, said such a debate would nevertheless contribute to public understanding at home regarding American policy on Vietnam. Canada, France and Italy expressed a preference for a reactivated Geneva Conference rather than recourse