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  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Contributor > Cater, Douglass, 1923-1995 (remove)

11 results

  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 3636, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLASS CATER, 6/6/1964, 5:45PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 4244, sound recording, DOUGLASS CATER and OFFICE SECRETARY, 7/15/1964, time unknown
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • OFFICE CONVERSATION
  • OFFICE CONVERSATION PRECEDES CALL
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 5038, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLASS CATER, 8/19/1964, 7:19PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • "1ST PART IS CONV. W/DOUG CATER 2/5/66"; SLIP INCORRECTLY LISTS DATE AS 02/05/1966; CONTENT OF CONVERSATION INDICATES DATE IS 02/04/1966; TIME FROM DAILY DIARY; RECORDING STARTS AFTER CONVERSATION HAS BEGUN; TV OR RADIO AUDIBLE IN BACKGROUND
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 9620, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLASS CATER, 2/4/1966, 6:40PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • TIME FROM DAILY DIARY; RECORDING STARTS AFTER CONVERSATION HAS BEGUN
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 8642, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLASS CATER, 8/26/1965, 4:45PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 4465, sound recording, LBJ and DOUGLASS CATER, 7/31/1964, 8:47PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • on up until midnight and send it over to the usher's office to be sent up and put on his bedside table. M: Did he use the telephone as much as he has the reputation? In the books and so forth they say the telephone is one of his chief instruments. C
  • use of telephone; nature of LBJ’s mind; capacity to remember; LBJ’s energy; talking to relax; sense of humor and temper; LBJ as a decision maker; effect of the Vietnam War on domestic policy; relationship to communication media; virtues as a chief
  • about or talk about, at least. C: No, I don't remember ever having a conversation with a colleague in the White House or with my wife to the effect that I think the President is on the physical edge or that he may have a breakdown. He himself kept
  • ] around the President. He's a quiet kind of man, and they never had an easy conversational relationship. It came his turn and he made what I 13 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
  • to the education or health one. During the campaign, however, as a result of some conversations I had with several people and as a result of some soundings with the President, I developed the firm conviction that the President ought to make education his top