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  • of conversation with Ted Sorensen. Now, also in some of these same discussions I recall Kermit Gordon playing LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ
  • sitting. I think it was an anti-Betancourt move, but we got the Vice President out fast in the middle of the inauguration. PM: But again he cooperated? N: Oh, yes. We told him, "You've got to leave," and he left. take guidance on things like
  • realize at that moment that what he meant was, IIThis is the statement I am going to read when I get off the plane at Andrews Air Force Base." He talked to us two or three times on the way back and was extremely cooperative, told us anything we wanted
  • on the third floor under us here, in the M. E. Building. Bentsen wrote to me and I wrote him a letter outlining how cooperative he had been as far as the space effort was concerned. His opponent took exception to that, told me that I shouldn't have gotten
  • students apparently. Z: Sure. G: What role did CIA play in psychological operations? Z: CIA played a number of roles. cooperative. One, my relations with them were very Although there were those who charged I was a CIA employee LBJ Presidential
  • no trouble getting the White House pool to work for you? S: No, sir. In fact, well, as you know, they have a correspondence section at the White House, and Mr. Hopkins, who's still at the White House, was the single most cooperative, helpful LBJ
  • . live never found a better group of individuals, a better group of people to deal with than those senators. And it didn't make muchdifference whether they were Democrats or Republicans. were all very cooperative. They LBJ Presidential Library http
  • as far as I was concerned. President Kennedy and President ~ohnso~ were always very cooperative with me on legislative matters. M: What about the medicare thing, that one took longer and perhaps is more important than many--did that come out of your
  • not require the county cooperation? T: ,,' Only this year has been the first time. I offered a food stamp bill myself in the Senate this time, with the proviso for free food stamps • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY
  • well. I knew And English seemed to have most to do with it; I think he'd been Kennedy's closest leader in the state and then after the assassination, he was very cooperative with Johnson. And he asked me to be campaign director, which I did. F
  • , or did they try to handle this through local offices or what? L: What they did really is--Mr. Tijerina, as I recall, created a foundation or a special organization. And he had the help and cooperation of a lot of the great citizens of Houston and all
  • Wyoming," And was always very straightforward that way and I appreciated that fact and was always cooperative where I could be. On the other hand, where it was a matter that could have no deep and abiding concern to Wyoming, he was most persuasive as he
  • . A: It probably did. In any case that situation was worsening, and we started finding the State Department was getting a hell of a lot less cooperative. The word was coming back that the coexistence was not the most popular order of the day, and Hubert