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  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Date > 1968-11-12 (remove)

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  • more serious, it occupied more of the personal time of higher officials of the Executive Branch and the President; so I would not characterize the support by any President as different in quality. I simply think that, as the problems became more
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh November 12, 1968 M: First of all, Mr. Turner, I'd like to fill in your background. According to the information I have, you were born in Dallas, Texas, in 1908, educated at North Texas Agricultural College, got a degree
  • of law school . I was in the National Guard at the time and when the Korean War came along, my unit was activated and I spent some 21 months in the service, all in the state of Washington in an anti-aircraft batallion. When I came out of the Army, I
  • there had to be a Department of Justice, and beginning in 1870, there was. Since that time, the attorney general has, of course, become the chief law enforcement officer of the federal government. B: I was going to say, one thinks of the attorney general
  • to it. B= All right sir. Have you had at any time during your career any direct contact with Mr. Johnson, either as a Congressman or Vice President or President? W: Yes, I have had some, they've been rather infrequent. While Lyndon Johnson
  • , 1968 INTERVIEWEE: NICHOLASKATZENBACH INTERVIEWER: PAIGE E. MULHOLLAN PLACE: Mr. Katzenbach's office at the State Department, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 M: You joined that K: K: for the first time in 1961, I believe; is not correct