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Tag- Digital item (3)
- Eckler, A. Ross, 1901-1991 (1)
- Fitt, Alfred B. (Alfred Bradley), 1923-1992 (1)
- Quigley, James M. (1)
- 1968-10-25 (3)
- Civil disorders (1)
- Vietnam (1)
- Text (3)
- Oral history (3)
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- for the purpose of again becoming a candidate for Congress, which I did in 1958, and I was elected again to the 86th Congress. Come 1960, of course, I had a different handicap. This time it wasn't Ike and his farm; this time it was John F. Kennedy and his religion
- Act; Quigley's work on civil rights; LBJ's growth and sincerity regarding civil rights; civil rights in the Kennedy Administration; the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and HEW's submission of ideas for the Act; 1963 events in Birmingham as a turning point
- : No, sir, I believe there were no other dealings during the period prior to the assassination of President Kennedy. B: And then afterwards during President Johnson's presidency--after late '63 into '64--any contact then? E: The first contact after
Oral history transcript, Alfred B. Fitt, interview 1 (I), 10/25/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- wanted to ask you about was the issue of the overcrowding at Arlington Cemetery. I believe specifically since John F. Kennedy's burial there, this has grown as a controversy and the debate has been whether to expand or confine Arlington Cemetery. whom