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  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION IN WH SERIES; RECORDING IS AVAILABLE IN LBJ LIBRARY AUDIOVISUAL HOLDINGS, "RECORDING OF RADIO COMMUNICATIONS BETWEEN AIR FORCE ONE AND THE WHITE HOUSE, NOVEMBER 22, 1963"
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 1, transcript, LBJ and NELLIE CONNALLY, 11/22/1963, 4:30PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Reference No. 13115 August 13, 2008 Processing Note Transcript only ofthis conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 617/68 TIME: 9:35 PM CALLER: Nelson Rockefeller Pages ofTranscript: 2 pages Barbara Cline Archivist ·13115
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 13115, transcript, LBJ and NELSON ROCKEFELLER, 6/7/1968, 9:35PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Reference No. 12907 April 21, 2008 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 4/4/68 TIME: 9:36 PM CALLER: Buford Ellington Pages of Transcript: 1 page Charlaine McCauley Archivist , .... ~ ~ ·. From
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 12907, transcript, LBJ and BUFORD ELLINGTON, 4/4/1968, 9:36PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • July2, 2008 Reference No. 13116 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 6/9/68 TIME: 12:41 PM CALLER: Ethel Kennedy Pages ofTranscript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist ·-· -......- - - ~~· ... i
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 13116, transcript, LBJ and ETHEL KENNEDY, 6/9/1968, 12:41PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • 7:10 P. M. November 22, 1963 TELEPHONE CONVERS ATION BETWEEN THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STA TES AND PRESIDENT EISENHOWER J: Mr . President, this is Lyndon Johnson. been a shocking day. E: This has My heart goes out to you. J: It has been
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 2, transcript, LBJ and DWIGHT EISENHOWER, 11/22/1963, 7:10PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 3, transcript, LBJ and ALLEN HOOVER, 11/22/1963, 8:00PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Reference No. 13117 August 13, 2008 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 6/10/68 TIME: 3:00 PM CALLER: Edward Kennedy Pages ofTranscript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist .. . ~~ ··.~ -~·t
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 13117, transcript, LBJ and EDWARD KENNEDY, 6/10/1968, 3:00PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • and personal contact "l'li th Senator Johnson was again through Senator Symington, and this Hould be in early probably F'ebruary or March 1954. 1954, I received a telephone call from i3enator Jymington one day asking me to come up to lunch. He advised
  • with the President over the telephone. that ~ve would have later. It was characteristic of the conversations He began by asking me whether this was ~vorse than Watts, and I told him that I thought it was probably going to be at least as bad as Watts
  • toward Senator Kennedy's candidacy? S: None at all from either party. I saw Senator Kennedy only once in that period, in April or May--had a long conversation with him at his house. I worked with his staff people a great deal on the telephone
  • these affairs small enough for you to have an opportunity to have conversation? K: Oh, no. The state dinners were those great things out in the Rose Garden and in the White House, things like that. No, I had no conversation except the ones on the telephone
  • and Rabago were of the opinion based on their conversation with Sirhan that he had come to the Ambassador Hotel alone since no one appeared to be accompanying him during their approximate ten-minute conversation with him. Three of the five individuals who
  • with my appointment were with the Attorney Genera 1 \vho telephoned ne perhaps as much as a month before the fifteenth of June and there began a series of conversations between us. B: Sir, the Attorney General called--this was Ramsey Clark at this time
  • , and also for evidential purposes. And this has never been considered illegal by our courts, where a party to the conversation consents to the transmission of the conversation. B: Even if the other parties have not? V: That's correct. B: I know
  • it." Mr. Johnson was there the next morning, and, as I recall, the Senator had a little conversation with him and then sent him down to someone in the department. The outcome of it was, with other help that may have been registered, Mr. Johnson
  • his own mind. There were some good meetings of the Cabinet on matters of legislation and things of that character. B: In your personal conversations with Mr. Kennedy, did he ask you for advice in areas other than specifically Commerce things? example
  • daily? N: Not daily, 0:: Cape Cod at the time of the second primary? but I telephoned. I bought the New York Times. Boston pa?ers didn't report anything. The The New York Times would have very confusing information, and I remember I called
  • . Kossack advised them that although their requests would be received and considered, no assurances or commitments of coopera .. tion could be made at this time. In the course of their conversation, the Messrs. Irvin Dymond and Edward F o Wegmann indicated
  • ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -6- Leader, why, he and I would talk over the telephone or see each other two
  • party the individual may have chosen, and to work for the election of that candidate ofthe majority view. That's true whether it's in a Democratic primary or whether it's in a Democratic convention. Conversely it's true for those that work within
  • was practicing law, I became very interested in Democratic Party politics. In 1948 I became especially interested in supporting Lyndon Johnson for the United States Senate. (blank tape at this point: pause for telephone call) Of course, I was aligned
  • by Pershing Gervais, in order secretly to record conversations with me, as well as with other defendants. (It is to be noted that these recordings, secretly made for the government by the electronic equipment worn by Mr. Gervais, turned out to be 11inaudible
  • over in Lexington, Mississippi. B: Hazel Brannon Smith? C: Hazel Brannon Smith did. Oliver Emmerich in McComb did. I think that was all. B: Did you have any personal conversations or letters with Mr. Johnson in connection with the '64 campaign
  • , "Could I have yOI.!r attention, please?" and conversing. And I said a little They went on eating Finally, I shouted out in my best Texas voice, "Simmer down!" And they did. I emceed very much like I did the other functions at the ranch, very
  • on Southeast Asia; Lady Bird's conversation with Lynda Johnson about Hawaii