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  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Date > 1969-02-24 (remove)

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  • , 1969 INTERVIEWEE: FRANK M. WOZENCRAFT INTERVIEWER: T. H. Baker PLACE: Mr. Wozencraft's office, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 B: This is the fifth interview with Frank M. Wozencraft, and the subject matter is the UN
  • the White House or the State Department in conferences such as these; Wozencraft's influence in presenting issues to the State Department officials; the power of treaties in international law; how international law is carried out by custom if not by treaty
  • , 1969 INTERVIEWEE: FRANK M. WOZENCRAFT INTERVIEWER: T. H. Baker PLACE: Mr. Wozencraft's office, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 W: About two weeks after I was sworn in as assistant attorney general in April of 1966, I
  • a 1966 interdepartmental conference on proposed legislation to establish a fishery zone beyond the three-mile territorial seas limit; Bureau of the Budget's role in uniting the positions of various departments; the Department of the Navy, State
  • with which I worked in legislation except the so-called Monday morning meetings with the legislative representatives of the various departments--meetings held by Mr. Larry O'Brien and later by Barefoot Sanders. Mr. Johnson, as you probably know
  • Department of Housing, Education, and Welfare
  • this mean you're going to support Mr. Disney for the United States Senate race instead of the thenincumbent, Senator Elmer Thomas," who was a veteran in the Senate. tilted his cigarette a little big higher, and he said, "Indeed not! And he I told Wesley
  • histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh This is the interview with Mrs. Ruby Martin, the Director of the Office for Civil Rights of the Department of HEW. Mrs. Martin, would you mind starting by summarizing your career up to the point you
  • the South Carolina delegation to go jump in the lake on the Yarmolinsky affair. G: I'm not sure whether the rules of evidence are to be strictly followed in a tape such as this--that is, if you don't have any specific or personal part of the incident