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  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Date > 1968-11-04 (remove)

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  • observation that unless one obtains the cooperation of the representatives of other agencies through friendly interest and real personal confidence, and very close mutual information, that there is always the possibility that the lines of coordination begin
  • people. M: Have you generally had the cooperation of the labor unions? R: This time this cooperation has been tremendous. Many of the people that turned out to be buddies had done little or nothing in union activities over the years. The presidents
  • cooperation; IBM; Bell & Howell; Henry Ford; meeting with LBJ; rural programs; American Indians
  • in, say, farm equipment or farm organizations, very often farmer associations of various kinds including commodity groups, farm cooperatives, and such. We attempt to use the entire array of resources available in this country--public, private, academic
  • still have to interpret what they really mean. But they were obviously after concessions revolving around sovereignty and perpetuity. F: Have they shown any greater desire to cooperate because of the threat of a second canal through some other area
  • with the colleges, particularly the land grant colleges, in this kind of thing? W: Yes, all of our work in this area is developed with either direct cooperative relationships with the land-grant colleges in the states which is where the data is related