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  • -- At this time who would you consider the leaders of the liberal-labor group? S: Mrs. R. D. Randolph of Houston, who later became national committeewoman, was one of them; and Kathleen Voigt of San Antonio; LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • in New Orleans. Leberte owns or works at the Scott Street Produce Market where John McFerren of Somerville alleged­ ly overheard a man speaking on the telephone say, on or about the day of the assassination: •shoot him on ·the balccmy, shoot him anywhere
  • & speeches; LBJ works hard with little rest; Johnsons to Democratic fundraiser that night; Lynda Robb relays news that Martin Luther King has been shot & died; LBJ calls Coretta Scott King & makes televised speech; evening plans cancelled & Hawaii trip
  • of that pit." He said "That's fair enough," and he never did and I never hired any of his. But we had congenial arrangements. off and on. In fact, our relations were When he was in Scott and White hospital, he called me over there and I sat there with him
  • six and a half years there and I learned everybody's name and where they were from and where they worked, and one time-- F: That's the postmaster here in the House . M: Yes . Mr . [Finis E .] Scott was the postmaster, from Tennessee
  • paper, in the Post. F: They had this folk opera out there. P: Yes. And two of the most prominent people in connection with it were born in Texarkana. F: I was going to say this Scott Joplin came out of there. P: He was born there. And this black
  • civil rights vote. precisely the details. I've forgotten But it was, I remember, Hugh Scott [of Pennsyl vania that] brought it up. The idea was to embarrass the new Democratic leadership. Johnson was instrumental in quickly and efficiently moving