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  • of getting the facts. So that's when Kellis Dibrell and Jim Gardner [?] came in, two ex-FBI men. G: Did you hire them? JG: No, they volunteered through Coke. They had known Coke longer than I had. They really did not claim to be lawyers representing him
  • Democratic primary race; why the case was initially taken to federal court rather than state court; Bob Smith and Mack Burnett's work as commissioners; Kellis Dibrell and Jim Gardner's work; the 1948 vote of the state executive committee in favor of LBJ
  • ? Did you--? R: Well, of course, Kellis Dibrell and Coke and the boys were down there working on it. I never did go down there myself. I was down here trying to take care of my business, but I 4 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org
  • come from various agencies, including the Peace Corps, understood how to put together an agency. Bill Kelly certainly knew about these things, others did. Much more thought and effort went into figuring out who would do what than what had to be done
  • of the celebration featuring gags, spoofs and surprises, appears to cause the honoree some ap­ prehension. No, that's not Bill Clinton, but it is Jake Pickle. Congressman Pickle and his harmonica were joined by President-elect-impersonator Keith Kelly. 5 A giant
  • of the Job Corps, the director of Head Start. So at that time Bill Kelly would have been closing them up, and Bill Kelly was just terrifically good as a manager and thank God he was in charge. That's one reason why I don't remember the details. G: Did
  • and Janice Kelly, Mike Myers, and Bernard and Audre Rapoport. Ben Barnes Assesses Erwin Legacy The biannual Frank Erwin lecture, co-sponsored by the Library and the LBJ Schooi, was delivered at a din­ ner in the Library by Ben Barnes, a long-time friend
  • Collection: Files of Charles Roche, 1966 - 1968 [NAID 28265044] https://www.discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/pres/aides Box No. 7 8 10/19/17 Folder Title Status "FARBSTEIN NYC" open "GILBERT NYC" open "HANLEY 34 New York" open "KELLY NYC" open
  • you know Mr. [James] Gardner or Mr. [Kellis] Dibrell? O: I knew them both slightly at that time and knew them better during the years after that time. G: How did you come to get involved in this controversy? O: I had a wing
  • was younger and more energetic in those days. G: Now, in February of 1964 American Banker Association President William Kelly made a speech in New York deploring the lack of cooperation and the overlapping of the three federal agencies involved
  • made or a judgment made that this won't sell, and this won't go. So we weren't only discussing right and wrong, we were discussing what was doable or not doable. G: Bill Kelly perceived three stages in task force composition in terms of the types
  • in Vietnam at the time? S: That was the Special Forces group in Vietnam. G: Who was the commander? S: Francis Kelly for the first nine months and Jonathan Ladd over here Deputy commander of the Special Forces group. in Watergate Apartments
  • [director of selection?] then, Mr. [E. Lowell] Kelly and I each split up and went to the homes of the families to inform them, because after the accident occurred it was suggested the plane had crashed, but it was a matter of days before it was discovered
  • a quick summary of it. I'll give you I had been fascinated with the prospects of supersonic transportation ever since I had seen some sketches at Lockheed in the summer of 1955 where Bob Gross and Kelly Johnson showed Eddie Rickenbacker and Laurance
  • Jenkins was meeting and in correspondence--and of course, Jesse Kellam--with a lot of people from all the networks and agencies. I remember early on meeting Stew Kelly [?], who became one of our best friends among the agencies. There was a Texas poll
  • O'Boyle 7-16-67 Kelly AFB Golden Anniversary Letter 5-1 Long Island Railroad Emergency Board, Reedy, Boyd, and Powers- Letter 7-5-67 Navy League Annual Convention- Message 4-18-67 Riots- Letters to Mayors 7-29-67 Letters- Members of Board on Railroad
  • . But we had some basic differ- ences of opinion on the political implications of certain of his programs. It came down pretty much [to] myself, General Counsel Don Baker and Bill Kelly, who had been in the Job Corps before [Otis] Singletary
  • to the Vice President's home, and that was the first time I met Lady Bird. The Vice President was a terrific host; it was one of those times when he was going around handing out the drinks and everything. I remember Kennedy and Gene Kelly singing some old
  • it possible to release some installations. This was a Kelly-Springfield plant up at Cumberland, Maryland which was no longer needed, and that was returned to KellySpringfield. We began to develop some disposal procedures early. In this way I came
  • - For some reason I wasn't vying for particular positions, so I didn't give a damn except I wished people would act rationally. They used to trot out all of these organizational maps, and [William] Kelly used to do so, others used to do so. They'd have
  • off was the family? J: Well, to start in, first you go back to the Johnson family. There you see the big pioneers in the trail drivers, the largest trail driver in five or six counties. Now, yesterday a Mr. [Konrad] Kelly was up here interviewing
  • support. 5/26 LBJ has breakfast at the White House this morning with other congressional leaders. At 3:30 he, Moyers, Wiley, Busby, Senator Frear, and Bob Kelly fly to Wilmington, Delaware where LBJ addresses a Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner. They return