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  • Time Period > Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-) (remove)
  • Subject > Voting rights (remove)

7 results

  • had to take the oath of office that night around seven o'clock . F: That must have stopped the conversation? M: That did stop the conversation . F: Were you around? M: I was here . But I don't recall that particular time of it happening
  • there were conversations to that effect. Did you talk face-to-face with Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Johnson about this? R: No, Mr. Randolph did. group should go. I did not. The decision was that a small Therefore since Mr. Randolph and I represented the same
  • and then to Florida. V: As I recall the conversations that he had with me, he realized that John Connally as governor would bear the brunt of this visit, and he knew that there were problems between Connally and Yarborough. Also, he wasn't sure this was the time
  • , without the his tory of his relationship with Johnson; and as to what conversations and how many went on I just don't know. F: MOving ahead to '68 when you see this from a different vantage point, how did that develop in your own experience? S: Well
  • conversations with Attorney General Clark, but not those I had with the President shortly after I had succeeded-it's·a little immodest, but I suppose it's true--in securing congressional approval of the reorganization plan. Even before that, I had recommended