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  • August 28, 2007 Reference No. 12001 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 7/14/67 TIME: 12:22 PM CALLER: Richard Hughes Pages of Transcript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist SERVJCeser
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING; TIME FROM DAILY DIARY
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 12001, transcript, LBJ and RICHARD HUGHES, 7/14/1967, 12:22PM
  • 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
  • ~ NOTES ON TELEPHONE CONVERSATION The President (A) and Mayor McKeldin (B) August 18, 1967 1: 55p B Mr. President, I;m afraid that I can't take that wonderful offer of yours. I've talked to my doctor and my wife and both say that I'm not mentally
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 12102, transcript, LBJ and THEODORE MCKELDIN, 8/18/1967, 1:55PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • September 16, 2007 Reference No. 12306 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 10/21/67 TIME: 5:43 PM .. CALLER: Robert McNamara Pages of Transcript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist ... . . ' ••rt
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 12306, transcript, LBJ and ROBERT MCNAMARA, 10/21/1967, 5:43PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Reference No. 11803 September 17, 2007 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. The date ofthis transcript and the speakers involved in the conversation are not noted in the typed transcript. A= President; B
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING; TRANSCRIPT IS UNDATED AND DOES NOT IDENTIFY CALLER; NAME, DATE AND TIME OF CALL DETERMINED FROM CONTENT OF TRANSCRIPT AND DAILY DIARY
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 11803, transcript, LBJ and ROBERT MCNAMARA, 5/11/1967, 9:40AM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • 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
  • . On the state of the Nation, he said: is going to hell. " 11 1 just don't think this country MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON August 12, 1967 11:00 a. m. MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: Bob Fleming Attached are notes on your conversation
  • of things including the political situation in 1966, which was an off-year congressional election. was no presidential race. There That's been almost ten years ago, and I can't really recall with too much specificity too much of those conversations. I
  • Relations Service has been available at times. helpful. I can't recall the specific instances, but it has been very And of course at the time of the King funeral I was in daily telephone conversation with the Attorney General Clark, and he offered me
  • or a mission LBJ Presidential Library http://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 4 during this conversation? R
  • 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
  • as chairman? Really, I don't know. M: Not why so much, for the technique of selection. Did Mr. Johnson talk to you personally, for example, about it? K: Oh, yes. I had received a telephone call previously out of the White House that the President
  • , and that \/as included in the speech. sa" the draft of the speech. to rr:e. I I It obviously came as a good deal of surprise irr:mediately rClr.cmbercd the conversation I had had with John Connally the:. previc s tem:K:r ",hen he told me that was a possibility
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh How did you communicate with President Johnson--by letter, telephone, in person? Y: By letter, but the only really meaningful communications were in person. What I
  • to them to handle in the manner they considered most appropriate. I also had a long telephone conversation with Senator Kuchel the n1ght before leaving in which I . volun­ teered little and sought much in the way of information and counsel. I tried
  • and things of that kind on equal employment, especially [concerning] my conversations with some of the major business people here in the community and getting them to participate in his Equal Employment Opportunity Program down there. But that was done more
  • at the White House. So he was living right at the White House during this period.. I must say I can't recount any conversation--I had no conversation with him during this period, but there was a constant flow and interchange of information between the White
  • , without the his tory of his relationship with Johnson; and as to what conversations and how many went on I just don't know. F: MOving ahead to '68 when you see this from a different vantage point, how did that develop in your own experience? S: Well
  • Lynda Johnson has conversation with parents in their bedroom; Johnsons go to St. Mark's Church; protests in Lafayette Square; Lady Bird plans for upcoming party; LBJ and Lady Bird have guests on the "Patrick J" boat; Walt Rostow talks of China
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 that the appointment to the World Bank had been made without his knowledge. That was Reston's story. And so the conversation with Reston which, when the call
  • ." - is · - • • ~ . • '~ 1., ,jT• : • (, In virtually every conversation, strong feelings about •, ,• I I, tl police-conununity relations were registered. But there was also [ an undertone of desire to improve such relations: "The police brutalize the Negro. Many
  • r e w a s no co o lin g off p la c e b e tw e e n h is m in d a n d his tongue. O n e of t h e t h i n g s I ' v e e n j o y e d m o s t l i v i n g h e r e i n W a s h i n g t o n i n the W hite H o u se i s good conversation, interesting a s s e s
  • of lectures and conversations with them as to what to expect and what our reaction should be. B: Has there been any thinking in the Justice Department toward establishing sort of a permanent but floating force of federal agents of some kind to handle
  • right after she finished that conversation, the first person to tell Mother about it was our family doctor; Dr. Norman Shepherd had heard it and called. But I didn't know until after the banquet was over and saw the eleven o'clock news re-run, who
  • you get any Congressional pressure on converting the Army over completely to the M-16, or, I should say, to the use of it in Vietnam and the ultimate conversion of the Army? R: No. What the issue in Congress was was when units were issued the M-16