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  • kind of pushed into it? P: Well, I'm from kind of a political family. My grandfather, S. L. Gorin, was-F: VIas that G-O-R-I-N? P: G-O-R-I-N--was a state senator back in the 1910-1918 period, somewhere in that area, here in Kentucky under Governor
  • to the Christian C hur ch, a sn:iall, white , modest structure. tion, a great many of whom filed C.•U t Lyn~on Not more than forty in the congrega­ called by the ir first name as we and shook hands afterwards. Then we drove by Truman Fawcett• s hous e, catc
  • of the Co:rnlnission members. He pointed out Governor Kerner 1 s experience and the good record on civil rights, and said that Mayor Lindsay is a man who is close to the people in the ghettos and has a general understanding of the whole picture. On Roy Wilkins
  • resistance was met both within the military and outside? R: One of the major decisions in the summer of 1965, at the time the decision was made to commit U. S. units to Vietnam, was the decision of whether to mobilize Some part of the reserves. And here
  • much space in the cemetery. There was And the acceleration in the utilization of that space which took place in tne 1960's, some of it owing to the burial of President Kennedy there, but most of it just occurring because of the increase in the death