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  • Subject > Assassinations (remove)
  • Collection > LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Specific Item Type > Oral history (remove)

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  • of the North and East and to some extent the West. And this is increasingly true of the South with the development of the two-party system. take the Chicago delegation. But you Now the Chicago delegation would seldom coalesce or have a meeting ground
  • bit about how you came to be what you are in life. W: Well, I was lucky enough to get a scholarship at the University of Chicago. F: I've taught there. W: And by working my way through there, I was able to get a degree in law and practice law. F
  • they've been doing with white and black in this country for the longest damned time. Now there are several white reporters on the Times or the Post or the Chicago Tribune or any of these papers who have a competency and have exhimted it, to go and see
  • Katzenbach as attorney general; presidents’ interaction with the State Department; May 1966 trip to Chicago; LBJ’s opinions of the U.S. role in Vietnam; LBJ’s assessment of his own staff; Tonkin Gulf resolution; Lindley Rule and press access to LBJ
  • Tribune, and it looked to us- -we were on a freighter- -it looked to all of us on the freighter as if Mr. Johnson was the only person in the United States who did understand how far behind we were, how hard it was for us to catch up. He was the leader
  • in the coffee shop of the hotel in Fort Worth. F: Texas. W: The Texas Hotel in Fort Worth. What is it, the . . . ? I remember sitting there with John Connally and somebody from his staff, and Doug Kiker, who was then at the Herald Tribune, and Bo Byers, I