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  • the assassination, but can not go much farther because some his sources have begun to ask for ·the kind of money or.protection that he is unable to provide. 1, Charlie Stein, a petty racketeer connected with organized crime, contacted James Earl Ray in Loe Angeles
  • a polygraph examination [ and an extensive interview by the Los Angeles, California, Police Depart­ \ ment, Miss Serrano admitted that her story was a complete fabrication. An employee of the San Gabriel Valley Gun Club, Duarte, California, where Sirhan
  • of the things in my background that was interesting to the Attorney General was my having participated in the McCone :Commission report and having followed such matters in Los Angeles thereafter. B: Then, what happened that weekend \vhen the Newark riot broke
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh August 19, 1970 F: This is an interview with Mr. John A. McCone in his office in Los Angeles, California, on August 19, 1970. The interviewer is Joe B. Frantz. Mr. McCone, you have served both the Republicans
  • of business, then, over and even W: Above everything else. F: Did you go to Los Angeles? W: Yes, sir. F: What was your feeling of the climate when you arrived there? above~~? I'm not talking about the weather, lim talking about the political climate
  • , I fel t that it might be useful if I got back to Los Angeles and did. as the riots came ~4der As soon control, we began talking about the need for S.J2e sort of a high level cor:unission on the character of the Royal Commission to look
  • a little wiot:her YORK• DETROIT• out here. something. showdown or citize.n all LOS if or might Jmd I t.h-e :main reaso11 that more casua_l atmosphere '',/ta.y. At."'.1.d I hope it's NEW counsel it that we were ganging up on you
  • SUBJECT: M. Vinson, Jr. Assistant Attorney General Criminal Division Assassination of President John F. Kennedy On Thursday, September 21, 1967, at 11:15 ao m., two of the attorneys representing Clay Lo Shaw, who has been indicted in New Orleans
  • southern accent in the North that a black That would sometimes keep people from getting jobs. This came out in other things. hearings in Los Angeles. We did a few major public I remember talking to one of the indus- tries there about what kind of voice
  • in America. So there was an effort on the part of people, wherever Khrushchev went, to explain to him the virtues of democracy versus communism. He did not lack for those kinds of lectures on his trip. I think at the same dinner the Mayor of Los Angeles
  • in Los Angeles in 1960? D: No, sir. I went out there, but I know very little about what took place there; I don't believe I could shed much light on that. F: Were you prepared for his, one, being offered the vice presidential nomination, and, two
  • . And eventually Kansas, even at the Los Angeles convention, had a deadlock. the convention. Kansas was unable to cast its vote at And Wyoming put Senator Kennedy over the top before Kansas could finish its caucus. B: Were partisans of Mr. Johnson and Mr
  • O'Donnell and Godfrey McHugh were obsessed with the idea of getting the plane off the ground, because the county medical examiner had told them that the body couldn't be flown out without an autopsy, and they were determined to get that plane off the ground
  • deal. Of course, the FBI was here, and they We examined various items and questioned where certain things happened and all that sort of thing. I'll get to Warren now. He had a very brilliant lawyer from New York that he was fond of, and he made him
  • w a s lo o k in g up a n d s e e i n g M a r y G r i f f i t h l e a n i n g o u t o f a w in do w w a v in g a t m e . M ary f o r m a n y y e a r s h a d b e e n i n c h a r g e o f a l t e r i n g th e c l o t h e s w h ic h I p u rc h a s e d
  • ONLYFOR BALL FROMRUSK Request you check with Justice Departr:ent whether it would be appropriate for ne to say in clo""ed se sin Ministerial meeting that so far as we can determine after~ ·t thorough -examination we have been unable to uncoTer a. evi.de
  • otherwise. But within the CIA, was his reputation equally illustrious? H: He was well regarded in the CIA, but one must realize that those who were working side by side with him and examining exactly what was going on did not think that he was the hot
  • : In that sam:: summer of 1967 you were on a commission with Walt Rostow and with Leonard r~arks, and domestic policies. R: to name two, to examine certain U.S. foreign Just how active a group was this? Well, again, this was one of those matters whereby
  • Civil service federal union third party mediation; the unique issues of a federal worker union; how Reynolds’ became Undersecretary of Labor, 1967; Reynolds’ work in a commission to examine certain U.S. foreign and domestic policies; involvement
  • , as amended (44 U.S.C. 397) this material shall not, for a period of fifteen years be available for examination by anyone except persons who have received my express written authorization to examine it. This restrictio2 shall not apply to employees
  • : for examination by anyone except persons who havL received my express written authorization to examine it . This restriction shall not apply to employees and officers of the General Services Administration (including the National Archives and Records Service
  • aptitude test? Y: A physical aptitude test. M: What does that mean? Does that mean reaction time-Y: Well, yes, that and reflexes coupled along with an annual physical examination. You see, these people are working on and off of moving follow-up cars
  • : Is that also competitive examination? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Curry
  • into a more systematic and rigorous approach to the evaluation of the programs they were running and an examination of the alternative strategies which were available to them. The main step, however, came after I left the Budget Bureau in August of 1965 when
  • a little background on this. In a major case, every airline that is interested comes in and asks for everything; and then there is a weeding out process from there. Now, after the examiner's decision came out, we had a meeting in Dallas, and we
  • was to create some self-examination in the agencies, and to require the agencies to in a sense start from zero base on their budget and then come in with their prediction. The third piece of it was an effort to try to project not for one year but for five
  • . You didn't start out to be a career diplomat . I took the Foreign Service examinations in May of 1936, and I started my first post at Vancouver at the end of December of '36 . F: Did you have any background in Latin America, or did you just sort