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  • to a conversation that I had had with him in which he was telling me that the Regents were going to consider it at that meeting. So I was providing a kind of aide-mémoire to Harry about 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT
  • to do at that time that I didn't think I could . So during the conversation Mac Bundy put the President on the phone, and I was shanghaied into this job. M: He used what they call the treatment on the telephone? B: That's right . So
  • a standard conversation after the riots that began by saying that the country wouldn't tolerate rewarding the rioters.And it would end by the development of substantial programs to rush into the area. And knowing that we were doing precisely what we said we
  • , "up the road about half a mile." In the wake of his smashing victory at the polls in November, 1964, LBJ could still find a dark lining. Here is an excerpt from a telephone conversation with George Reedy, November 16: Their theory. which they've
  • some three thousand conversations that were taped, both on the telephone and the Oval Office and Cabinet Room discussions. Harry Middleton is eager to get these opened, obviously. Because you know Johnson didn't commit himself to paper all that much
  • the next day after it arrives there. When I talked to you and Charles and Alice_by telephone, I could hardly do more than keep the telephone booth door closed and talk loud enough to keep the workers from drowning me out. I t may be that I will get ordered
  • . It was a matter of clearing the air, but the implementation in terms of the structure of the campaign was never discussed in any detail. I was left, when I arrived at the headquarters, to pursue my own course. As I mentioned, Gary Hart had a lengthy conversation
  • of of a fairly recent controversy, or revived controversy, in connection with the Oxford affair; precisely, what went on in the telephone conversations between Robert Kennedy and Governor Barnett of Mississippi. It was, I believe, the Justice Department's point
  • : Was there discussion of how this would alter the political arrangements? Here a major figure and certainly a major adversary of the President's was taken out of the picture. B: You know, there were certainly conversations as to how this was going to affect Hubert
  • office was organized; Bonanno's regular duties for LBJ; methods people used to get LBJ's attention; how LBJ used private telephone lines to contact people directly; how most telephone calls were made from the White House; the Diary Backup file; Bonanno
  • there to be introduced to President Johnson, I can only assume, because maybe someone had the idea that I was a possible candidate for one of the top jobs in the agency. I had a brief conversation with President Johnson, and then I went in as an observer to a National
  • meeting, which are the only two personal meetings I have had with him--I did have a conversation with him on the telephone one time, which I will get to later, I had forgotten to mention that--he asked me how things were going out there, what
  • Biographical information; meetings with LBJ; BPA; confirmation; cabinet meetings; telephone conversation with LBJ regarding the riot in DC; Park Police and DC riot; March on the Pentagon; Resurrection City permit; closing down Resurrection City
  • in a telephone conversation with Anderson, LBJ recommends that Anderson meet with the House and Senate committees in executive session as soon as possible about the legislation because there will be considerable opposition to the measures. He cites his recent
  • -------- ---------------------------- , .. . '. =10PSECRfTTHE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF WASHINGTON, 0. C. 20301 CM-2944-68 3 Feb 1968 ...__ MEMORANDUMFOR THE PRESIDENT SUBJECT: KHE SANH DECLASSIFIED Authority Jc S II)- 3 - 7i' ~ '{P , NARS, Date By ::::s 3- /' - 77 In response to your telephone call
  • say is he never mentioned that to me. were never at great length. Now, our conversations As I recall, after talking with him on the telephone, I visited him a couple of times later on in his office. Our relationship was not so close that he would
  • used a pseudo [pseudonym], and he'd call in with a pseudo. He'd never use his own name; his pseudo was Juan Conelli, which was Connally. If you hear any recordings of telephone conversations, if there are any available, and there's a Juan Conelli
  • his day at (Place) T-_ Telephone Entry f j^o 1 : : I n Out 1 The White House or t Expend!; Activity Lo Tuesday Day . (include visited by) ture DC L 7, 1967 -> 0 ^ . ATTENDANCE; """ Mi9«BfiHibiniMUMMri»tPtl^AMf>1STCr^n
  • with immediately." Because there was no way that I could carry on this conversation with Mary McGrory. So I got rid of her and I closed the office door and buzzed Phyllis Maddock, now Nason, my long-time assistant. I said to her, "The President said he's naming me
  • to undertake an active role. It was more exploring what potential he had and how he might go about it. I recall particularly a small cottage alongside the railroad track, with a smaller cottage adjoining where his mother lived. It recalled conversations I had
  • reforms; McGovern's 1972 campaign financing; O'Brien's efforts to attack Richard Nixon; the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation (ITT) scandal; how O'Brien became chairman of the 1972 Democratic National Convention; Daley's reaction to his
  • light on the topic we are about to discuss. Also, on December 14, 1966, Mr. Rowe had a memo which says: Mr. Rowe telephoned George Christian, press secretary to the President, and repeated his conversation with Dudman. Christian the President had told
  • , but we did and just thoroughly enjoyed it. M: Was the conversation invariably on politics? B: Almost always. They would listen to Drew Pearson. Everyone had to stop talking until Drew Pearson had finished his broadcast, and then they would talk about
  • this. They There was a telephone conversation. The word was that the President would like to see Abel and me and have us tell him about this accomplishmente So we were escorted over into the White House and we waited in the Fish Room. Wirtz and Connor were with us as we waited
  • three of those things? E: Probably all three. Actually, I think, probably more by letter and by personal visit than anything else. I'm not very articulate, unfortunately, on the telephone and I don't really like to get too deep into telephone
  • and radio from here. It is possible, although I am not certain of it, that Edward R. Murrow was among those in attendance. Because as a House member, he commanded that kind of level of folks. Well, at this meeting, the Texas editors in my conversations
  • through a deep depression and money was in short supply. One day the telephone rang and it was LBJ. He said: "Glynn, don't you have a new car?" Glynn said that he did. "Where is it parked?" he wanted to know. Glynn told him it was parked right under our
  • ; Stegall's work transcribing Cabinet Room meeting recordings; Helen Markovich's transcription work; Stegall giving LBJ's telephone recordings to Harry Middleton of the LBJ Library in 1975; story about LBJ's request that Stegall figure depreciation on a bull
  • relations with the business community. G: I notice, too, that you had a conversation with Don Cook with regard to this. C: You know he was a friend of the President's. I just can't remember what we talked about. I'm sure it was aluminum. (Interruption) Oh
  • assignment for me, and it meant lots and lots of conversation sitting on the airplanes and the buses and every spare moment as we proceeded on the trip. The question that I found hardest to cope with which a number of them asked me was, "Why is the First Lady
  • for the record because future research scholars may spend time looking for memoranda of conversation between me and my Presidents, which are simply not there. Finally, I had no mechanical means in my office at any time to record telephone conversations or other
  • to discuss this legislation, fair housing legislation. And the conversation was going around the table. The President would call on first one person for a reaction and then another person for a reaction. Then he stopped and he looked 1 LBJ Presidential
  • it. President, MW and Bill Moyers - to Fish Room for Telephone call inaugurating the new submarine cable linking Venezuela w/ U. S. REMARKS of both President's released to press in press releases (see p. 3 for more there) The cable links Venezuela w/ the U.S
  • . oved in WhHe House 4/23/64 OF STATE Memorandum ol Conversation DATE: SUBJECT: General Situation April 16, 1964 in Korea PARTICIPANTS: Too Chin PAIK, former Korean Prime Minister Yie Joon CHANG,Economic Attach&, Korean Embassy Michael Forrestal
  • three or four months after I came here that the decision was made on these two college presidencies. During the meantime I was travelling over the country meeting with National Education leaders and I had a telephone conversation every so often with Mr
  • ://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 Bundy, something like "as per our telephone conversation" in regard to that. C: Do you know anything about ,that? No, I don't. And Bundy, I don't know what his recollection of this was, but I was morally convinced
  • , was consulted about the telegram. Indeed, we had a number of teletype conversations between Rio and Washington. They were mainly between George Ball and me, and George was on the other end of the telephone to the President while these were going on. We worked
  • on--just as a favor to me they'd been sitting on the story for three days and that time had just run out. His final comment was "Hell of a way to run a Department." And that was the last telephone conversation. F: Did he ever explain why he ad-libbed
  • a conversation in Danang two years ago when a U.S. lieu­ tenant in the special forces said: "After Indochina we also will have our Algeria. It will be Latin America." The French distort our global experience to suit their own. As Karl Marx said: "Men make
  • , the continuing group, the carry-over group from administration to administration, which consists basically of a file room, a mail room, a correspondence section, telegraph and transportation services, a telephone room, an administrative office, a messenger
  • this information against Nixon? O: Actually, when this information finally developed into something assumed meaningful with the Anna Chennault situation, it was very late in the campaign. It was not brought to my attention. This is not general conversation
  • a telephone. There are people here, secretaries, that say that he just grabbed the phone away from them while they were talking on the telephone, cut off the conversation, and dialed hi~ number! They were just in tears. boyfriend was on the line, I don't
  • of the then, I identified later as the Johnson men there. Woody was talking to the Senator. Then he said, "The Senator wants to talk to you, Jack." When I got on the phone, I probably had never had a private telephone conversation with Lyndon Johnson in 1960
  • of Chemistry, Ithaca Dr. William D. McElroy, Chairman, Dept, of Biology, Johns Hopkins Univ. Dr. Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky, Director, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Dr. John R. Pierce, Exec. Director Research, Bell Telephone Laboratories Dr. Edward M. Purcell