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  • had it in my geography influenced that. blood~ and to some extent I grew up in a part of Arkansas that was not under the contagion of war~ although there were skirmishes in my county. F: Which county is this? H: It's western Arkansas~ Pope
  • ; Community Relations Service; Roy Wilkins; Pope Paul; Southern Committee on Political Ethics, 1967-1968.
  • DOCUMENT AGAIN..)T RACL,M. AFTER KING HAD AN AUDIENCE WITr POPE PAUL VI ON ~EPT. 13 1964 ThE 1n:G-io CIVIL RIGHT_ L':ADER SAID THE PONTIFF FAD ASSURED Hn1 Ht I.J ALL IT.: FORt:...,. WOULD I...,.,UE A DOCUMENT DEPLORING DL CRI.:L.AT!Ot! TLZ P0PE HAS F]Z
  • in Canada and uriavailable to defense subpoena, is enclosed herewith as Exhibit VI. The key paragraph of the Justice Department's contract-in-exile reads: "It was further determined on September 8th, 1971, that subsistance is paid on condition that you do
  • to cut down the number and take out certain ones like, oh, the Public Accommodations Bill, and Title VI particularly, dealing with withholding of federal funds. It was their opinion, even after the March on Washington, that this was just impossible
  • to go back out there. Well, I had mixed emotions about it, but I was excited about the possibilities. see what could be done. I could I had some reservations about the political situation vis-a-vis Diem. G: What was that all about? P: I had a lot
  • the Vietnamese wanted to accomplish; the Buddhist crisis of 1963; programs involving pigs and fertilizer; progress reports and their depiction of events vs. eye witness accounts; coup in Vietnam; Ed Lansdale; Big [Duong Van] Minh; Diem’s assassination; John Paul
  • . In West Vi rginia it became very , very obvious when Senator Byrd really took off after John Kennedy that he was being spo nsored by Lyndon Johnson . Our only concern at that moment, despite \'le had our own political pr oblems, was Bobby Baker . Kennedy
  • talking to on anyone of the lines. P: Are there any other things that you particular remember about this '48 campaign? T: And Paul Bolton was also there working on speeches, and the campaign manager--oh, his son is here now. P: Do you recall that name
  • . There were exceedingly earnest and frank discussions with [Paul-Henri] Spaak in Belgium. G: What did they say? Did you recall? N: They' discussed the Common Market, basically. actual formal meeting. I was not present at the That was one of the really
  • "iffeY'ent vi E'Vi of the s:uvernrnent process under reasons: Kennedy-Johil~on fot t\'tO a) I was at a substantially higher position and you get a different outlook on life than you get from a worm's-eye view. And secondly, it turned out, I think
  • ------:---:--:----,-----.:----tE PHONE 74084 E T R R' , L A S SECURITY CLASSIFlc;A TION _--le--1--1-1\.W-i...,....:il-L-IIU-l-J...4-1----I-DE • Vi'.c•e Admiral, USN Director, Joint Staff DTG 22191$Z NOV 63 JCS 3675 ..... REPRODUCTION PROHIBITED _ 2219152 NOV63. • - From
  • , with him talking and discussing different bills and other political matters\vi th senators and their aids. I stepped out of the room. During a couple of the telephone calls But the long and short of it was that I loft his office that evening, fascinated
  • ,,"'ith Hr. Truman on this at all, to try to get him to--? VI: No. F: What about W: Well, we had a general conversation with him, but I don't think Pauley had He was the only serious contender to Kennedy. E~~in Pauley as the California leader
  • on to really carry influence. S: Oh yes, yes. Of course, when he became president he was in a different role vis-à-vis the Congress. But it became very clear that his experiencein the Congress played a major part in his whole approach to the job of being
  • : No. But there was a governor, I believe, wasn't it Governor Moore of North Carolina? F: Yes. VI"I: She [the Governor's wife] was 0,1 the train wi th us, but he di dn' t come. and we realized that maybe he didn't want to. But that night we got to Raleigh--the President
  • '., __ n tavn, anu the PreSident, liking Governor Rockefeller, wanted him to b=, and h2.'.'c dinner with him. '\vi th C(~:::~ Roc~efeller. GO\' dinner. and out, and thir.'" ~2 ~3S He had lw.d the conversntion The Governor said he'd be delighted
  • of hours. These are women with a variety of technical expertise and training that talked to him, and cri ti ci zed him, and exchanged vi ews wi th him, and moved him, 1 think, a great deal in just a host of areas. Well, he sat with them for a couple
  • effort against North Vi etnam, I suppose we have to say that something short of what he did do would have been more effective. But I feel that South Vietnam would have been lost to the Free World if he had done any less than he did. I don't think
  • ? C: That's right. B: Had you not served prior to this on the McCone [John A. McCone, former head of CIA] Commission investiga the Hatts riots? C: Yes. B: I know Mr. Clark also made a trip out to Watts after the riots. become associated \vi th
  • in the position eventually of doing what you fellows did vis-à-vis Europe--managing our own industry eventually and taking over . It seemed reasonable, and this was the thesis that I always mentioned to the American community, which I think most of the American
  • Valley Authority vis-à-vis its relationship with and its performance towards Negroes, and I spent three or four weeks down there doing this. F: You have been credited with having obtained high appointments for several Negroes, most particularly
  • for the FBI? S: Oh, I went in about the time of the beginning of World War II and stayed in till the end of the war. I returned to Dallas then to practice law. [vi: Did you join this firm that you're now in at that point? '. LBJ Presidential Library http
  • playing in Laos in the early sixties before the accords were signed? H: The North Vietnamese a) were supporting the Pathet Laos military forces~ and b) they had troops in areas of Northern Laos. The North - Vi etnamese never honored the accords
  • signature to take care of the needs of the widows of former members of the Suprcr,,-e Court. non-textbook H2.y I was impressed \vi th that at the time as sort of a of hm; legislation is passed. F: Did Justice. CL:rl~ see much of Senator Johnson
  • a vi sa to go to the United States and I promi se you that I'll kill the person that assassinated President Kennedy. that I will do it." It was really something. I promise you For two or three weeks, there was nothing I could do except receive
  • Second Assistant Ci vi 1 Divis i on SUBJECT! It is our opinion should neither attempt instigate any inquiries that the Department of Justice to further interrogate Ruby nor by the press: 1. Ruby, in our judgment, cannot make any statements which would