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  • committees, and both Presidents supported our refusal to testify on, you know, farm legislation or almost any economic legislation that some committee member would say, "Well , we ought to get the advice of the Council of Economic Advisers." There were so
  • Onassis of New York City do hereby give, donate, and convey to the United States of America all my rights, title, and interest in the tape recording and transcript of the personal interview conducted on January 11, 1974 in New York City and prepared
  • tnereunder (41 CFR 101-10), I, Dorothy J. Nichols , hereinafter referred. to as the donor, hereby give, dOIk'1.t ,:!and. convey to the United States of America for eventual dcpo3it in the proposed Lyr.don Baines Johnson Libra:r-.r, and for administrati
  • - tant things that the United States could do was to send its young people overseas in programs like the Peace Sorps to get to know people in developing countries and to make friends. I'm not talking about making friends between Washington and Lahore
  • people? N: No, I don't. The Department of Agriculture man later came up here, and the last time I talked to him, I think he was going to South America. Sorry I can't remember his name. It's been twenty years or more. B: Was the Stevenson side
  • and Cliff Carter. I started off the way anyone starts off, handling correspondence. F: Writing warm, friendly letters? S: \~arm and friendly letters to politicians all over the United States, with a lot of guidance from both of those individuals. I
  • was dead but before Kennedy's body was removed, and nobody made any attempt to follow him, although he was then president of the United States. He left, actually, just minutes--my recollection is--before the death was announced. reasons. And of course