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  • Subject > Assassinations (remove)
  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Subject > Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985 (remove)

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  • there; she was at the Ranch. Was it her birthday? Was it an anniversary? G: No. N: Maybe he was just homesick, but he got the violinist in the phone booth with him and called Mrs. Johnson and he had the violinist serenade Lady Bird over the telephone. G
  • to Washington. Some way that message must have fallen into the hands of the press, because the next morning when I got to Naples I was awakened about six-thirty by a telephone call from the local consulate telling me tha~ there was a group of news- papermen
  • returns over the telephone from Texas. Finally at midnight. Rayburn said crossly to me, "I'm going home, and 1'11 give you a ride if. you want to go." I said, "All right." And as we went out Johnson was yelping into the phone, "46 votes to 8, ruh. That's
  • on several good-sized telephone banks to make phone calls to get people to the polls etc., and labor usually does this. Labor did not turn out. We had a small telephone bank in Racine and one in Milwaukee, and this was all that we LBJ Presidential
  • in EOB, just frankly doing anything I could to assist. Of course, the office was inundated with telegrams and letters of condolence, best wishes for LBJ, et cetera. Well, in workin~ with so many politicians, in correspondence and the telephone while I
  • --business-F: Was he pretty good in those kind of in-between years at staying in touch? G: Oh, yes. You mean with people? F: Yes. G: Very. F: He didn't wait for the need for Irving Goldberg to arise, and it's the Pick up the telephone, call you