Mr. Jenner. Yes.
Mr. Stuckey. Because I tried to find a copy of that mainly to take it off the market and never did locate it. I couldn't find it. This must be a recent development.
Mr. Jenner. Yes; but despite that would you tell us about that broadcast?
Mr. Stuckey. Yes.
As I said, this was a 37-minute, rambling interview between Oswald and myself, and following the interview, first we played it back to hear it. He was satisfied.
Mr. Jenner. That is, you played back the tape of which Exhibit No. 2 is a transcript?
Mr. Stuckey. Correct; Oswald was satisfied. I think he thought he had scored quite a coup.
Then I went back over it in his presence and with the engineer's help excerpted a couple of the remarks by Oswald in this. I forget now what the excerpts were. It has been so long ago. I think we had his definition of democracy because that, in particular, struck me, and we had a couple of his comments in which he said Castro was a free and independent leader of a free and independent state, and the rest of it, as I recall, was largely my summarizing of the other principal points of the 37-minute interview, and it was broadcast on schedule that night.
Mr. Jenner. You had watered it down in length to how many minutes?
Mr. Stuckey. Five minutes.