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Baskin, Robert E.
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Huntley, Chet, 1911-1974
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McCone, John A. (John Alex), 1902-1991
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Meany, George, 1894-1980
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Patman, Wright, 1893-1976
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Stoughton, Cecil (Cecil William), 1920-2008
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Weisl, Edwin L. (Edwin Louis), Sr. 1896-1972
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- !
Did you have any political occasions
to work with Mr. Johnson in this period?
H:
No.
I recall having, oh I would say, two or three telephone conversa-
tions with him.
I'd just call up and want some information on legislation
and what it was about
- , because we had helped in a very substantial way
in electing them.
was constant.
So the contact with President Johnson from that time on
I would say that every week there would be two or three telephone
calls and visits.
I was in the White House
- the CIA.
What happened to
intelligence in that case?
M:
We had no advance notice of it.
advance notice of it.
I don't think that anybody had any
I learned about it by a telephone call from
Moscow telling me that Khrushchev was going to be removed
- know, everybody was
at lunch and everybody left his lunch untouched.
What happened to you in
the next three or four days following the assassination?
touch with the new President?
~'l
:
He got in touch \vi th me, yes.
F:
By telephone?
l.J:
Yes
- , we were in a recess and Mr.
Rayburn was the only one there from the House and Mr. Truman was over
there from the Senate--he was Vice President--and the telephone rang
and Mr. Rayburn was sitting at the desk like this, answered it, says,
"It's for you