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  • chairman of a committee makes. It's the way the government ought to work but it's a bad way to work the government. So we were in the Personnel Subcommittee, which was under the chairmanship of Congressman Bill Hess of Ohio. Eightieth Congress--Republican
  • of y e a r s , and Bin Hess, William Hess, of C i n c i n n a t i , Ohio. We were the f i v e members. During t h a t t r i p we were the f i r s t c i v i l i a n s to go i n t o Bremen. We went t h e r e and t h e Navy had taken Bremen, but we went
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh HESS -- I -- 3 F:Who was his secretary? W: Malcolm Bardwell. And he has stayed
  • and Don Cook and I' m wondering i f t h e y d id not go on t h i s leg o f th e t r i p . 11 ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org More on LBJ Library oral
  • : Was this an aerial photograph mosaic? A: Well, no, it was a U.S. Army map basically. G: Oh, okay. A: Oh, yes. So these were drawn in, not photographed? It was a U.S. Army map, but there was a guy called Don Blasik [?] who, realizing that this had the intense
  • into South Vietnam; Viet Cong espionage and secret police; the testimony of defector Colonel Tran Van Dac; Don Oberdorfer's book, Tet!; the American public's loss of trust in the U.S. government; the authority of the people gathering order-of-battle data
  • is violative of the federal anti-trust statutes. Comptroller~ That's an example of what they do. t~ith regard to the particular action that happened it was a merger of two rai lroads in the (rortheas t--I don I t recall the precise names of the railroads
  • assistant to Don Cook on the SEC, and had worked with Senator Johnson on some of the preparedness hearings along with Don Cook and in that remarkable exercise in which the chairman of the SEC would come over and help the Senator from Texas on his
  • things he was talking about. It took me back to a similar situation I had gone through over at Nuremburg years before with Rudolph Hess. that. We really had experts in on When we got Hess back over there, everyone of the lawyers, even the British ones
  • York--and also I'm practically sure he was Republican, but that never made any difference to Lyndon--and [Edward] Hébert of Louisiana and Bill Hess and Warren Magnuson, Maggie, who was on Naval Affairs until he went to the Senate in--when was it? Did he