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  • the election . And several months before we knew that President Johnson had made the decision not to run again I then went back to the University. In the meantime Mr . Eisenhower had retired and the new President was Dr . Lincoln Gordon, a former assistant
  • him around to the various senators who would be involved in his confirmation. We got that lined up so it went through without any trouble. F: Now, yours and President Johnson's relationships were always cooperative and harmonious I gather--as much
  • suppresses his own feelings and convictions. Knowland to do. That was difficult for Now, Knowland wanted to be cooperative, it wasn't anything about it. Lyndon Johnson and Everett Dirksen wanted to hold onto their own personal convictions
  • twenty years of government service which began in 1948 after completing your law degree and an association with a New York City law firm. From 1948 to 1955 you were associated with the Economic Cooperation Administration, and your last position
  • would be much more touchy, much more sensitive. I: Very touchy. It was on that trip that we first began discussing the possible cooperation with the peaceful uses of nuclear explosives. M: Is that a possibility--nuclear sharing for peaceful uses? I