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  • -- 21 Mrs. Kilgore, as women are wont to do, I don't think will .ever forgiv e Preside nt . Johnson. She felt that, through Walter Jenkins or whoever Joe had talked with in the White House--maybe the Presid ent-­ there was the understanding Joe was going
  • , did you work more directly for President Johnson? W: Yes. G: Tell me about that. W: I worked for a short time for Jack Valenti, and I worked for Bill Moyers. Walter Jenkins and Mildred Stegall were--I sat at the same desk as I did when I
  • rrlth l-!r. Willis, who was a gre:>.t believer in general aid and in rrGive the : -· . money . to the local schools and don't tell ther:! what to do \·ri th it, u to · persuade hi.i:i that it would be wise public policy to giYe special funds
  • of parochial aid of various sorts. Again, I doubt that there's much I can add to that. I think that Mr. Johnson· was capable of building on the foundations that had been 1. ~id, and I think, and this is certainly to his great credit, that he saw