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  • . let you know in the morning." 14y son had associated with his children. So the next morning he said, "Sherry and I'd like to go." called Rex up, and he said, "That's fine." I That's the way that he went down in the latter part of 1961. Within two
  • -- III -- 17 who has a big furniture store now, who was later president of the Texas Furniture Dealers Association . I think he lived at Killeen, somewhere in that neighborhood . There was one other big project and that was the Inks Dam Project
  • had a great deal of influence with her husband and her association with me in my Department was a very powerful influence on how we stood with the President, how we stood with the Administration, that our programs were important, so
  • Johnson saying something about General LeMay. C: Well, it actually dates back to an earlier time than the presidency; it goes back to when he was the vice president. G: That's fine. C: I had been associated with the Vice President about four or five
  • . [inaudible] When did you become involved, let's say, in politics to the point where it led to being associated with people like LBJ? A: It started really with Dr. Everett Givens back in about the 1940s, the early 1940s. Dr. Givens was a very personal
  • -standing acquaintance with a number of the generals with whom he had associated right after World War II and he had married a Vietnamese-French girl, a very charming, intelligent girl incidentally, who greatly improved his own effectiveness because she
  • for his associates to deal with. Never mind the historians of the future, who are going to get it all screwed up, I'm convinced. F: Psychologists will have their field day. S: They will have a field day. of State. But I loved being with the Secretary
  • could and that turned out to be a woman called Susan Riley, R-I-L-E-Y, who was past president of the American Association of University Women, which is a pretty well-known and high-ranking American women's organization and at the time I think she
  • finally ended up with Kirby Keahey in Washington and our Washington office becoming a part of this. F: How do you spell Keahey? W: K-e-a-h-e-y. He's one of our associate partners. nearness to the National Park Because of his people, closeness
  • did that entail exactly? M: Task Force was a headquarters composed of about, oh, forty people, most of them communicators in a regular staff with a commander, a deputy commander--the one, two, three, four kind of people, and their associated
  • be friendly and be a part of everybody else whereas others, they'd be just pretty darn aloof. I mean, they were a different breed or just so much above. BW: He was with AP [Associated Press], wasn't he? TW: I think he was. G: Was there any difference
  • is he doing? L: Apparently he's doing fine. whether he's working or not. I don't think he's working; I don't know But it's called AFIO, Association of Former Intelligence Officers, and we meet about every quarter. It's CIA, FBI, military, NSA