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  • Time Period > Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-) (remove)
  • Subject > Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985 (remove)

6 results

  • they might have been good intelligence gatherers, but because it would really blow the project. You did have terribly suspicious political leaders in the foreign countries j if suddenly a hundr~d, two hundred, road surveyors [arrived] like on the Ghana
  • . tough j ob. He said, " It's a tough, It means you have to work full -time, you have to be on the floor full-time, and you have to go around and do the little housekeeping chores that nobody e l se would do them." •~as prepared to do . And he
  • \.J e:-:cept, as you and I been there. waving, I Bill Hopkins has been the fellow who has kept the White House think he C2,lnC over under Hoover. F: Hf.: 's about as apo Ii ti l',-:1 as T: E:.:actly, lcJ"J' th-inE;s both know, th!:! people
  • did you work with, J. P. Boyd? $: Boyd and a fellow by the name of Gartland. They called him Judge Gartland. marily. He was on his staff also. But I worked with both pri- Boyd, of course, was in Washington. Gartland actually went out
  • [are examples]. Ray Roberts, I think he sized up people like Ed Clark, John Connally, Cecil Burney down in Corpus Christi, John Singleton who is a Federal j udge down in Houston, Joe Kilgore, John Peace over in San Antonio, many many people that you could
  • expensive as hell. for each of us. God knows what they cost Bird, but he had one He was a gadgeteer; he just loved gadgets. Like the windows that he had Hoover put in the White House so that he could lie in his bed and push a button and the windows would