impact. you and i have lived through it. i ve lived through maybe more history. and i remember during the november period of 1963, and all of those weeks that we were hearing about the violent attitudes down in dallas, texas, and how people were out to get kennedy, there were ads in the paper, horrible stuff, calling him a traitor. adelaide stevens, the ambassador to the u.n. was spat upon. there was all of that atmospherics. and then, a guy on the hard left, a communist sympathizer, lee harvey oswald comes and shoots kennedy. somehow, there seems to be a kind of electrical atmospherics that sort of creates something that may not be related the same thing happened in the spring of 16, dr. king is shot and bobby is shot. it does seem to be atmospheric. your thoughts about that? it gets into our systems and people who are a little nutty to begin with or a little far out politically think, oh, here s my permission slip to shoot somebody. well, so 1963 was a year before i was born,
and bobby himself called is and said that the president had talked to him and had asked him to give him a copy of the oath, so that he could take it. it s an interest thing, that that would have happened, because a lot of people would have had it s in the constitution. but robert kennedy gave him the oath and he relaid that to lyndon johnson. but it was an event that you would never forget. i was with adelaide stevens and others that night and everybody so stunned beyond belief. and suddenly lyndon johnson is on the phone and inviting you over to the white house and reading the transition. can i ask this question, i think, will betray my age a little bit, but i m going to ask it anyway. if you poll people today, there s still tremendous confusion. the majority think that we don t know the full story, that it wasn t the lone gunman theory of oswald. what was the tenor at the time about how secure how sure
because a lot of people would have had it s in the constitution. but robert kennedy gave him the oath and he relaid that to lyndon johnson. but it was an event that you would never forget. i was with adelaide stevens and others that night and everybody so stunned beyond belief. and suddenly lyndon johnson is on the phone and inviting you over to the white house and reading the transition. can i ask this question, i think, will betray my age a little bit, but i m going to ask it anyway. if you poll people today, there s still tremendous confusion. the majority think that we don t know the full story, that it wasn t the lone gunman theory of oswald. what was the tenor at the time about how secure how sure people were about the chain of events. that it was lee harvey oswald, lone gunman who had shot the president of the united states, that he had been called by jack ruby four days later on national
it s an interest thing, that that would have happened, because a lot of people would have had it s in the constitution. but robert kennedy gave him the oath and he relaid that to lyndon johnson. but it was an event that you would never forget. i was with adelaide stevens and others that night and everybody so stunned beyond belief. and suddenly lyndon johnson is on the phone and inviting you over to the white house and reading the transition. can i ask this question, i think, will betray my age a little bit, but i m going to ask it anyway. if you poll people today, there s still tremendous confusion. the majority think that we don t know the full story, that it wasn t the lone gunman theory of oswald. what was the tenor at the time about how secure how sure people were about the chain of events. that it was lee harvey oswald, lone gunman who had shot the president of the united states, that he had been called by jack ruby four days later on national