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  • of 11 Folder Title 1967 Conversations which were Page 1 PCI 4 Date Restriction 5/26/1967 Telephone Conversations--White House Series not Recorded 11 Box Number Restriction Codes (A) Clo•ed by Executive Order 13292 governing acceH to nallonal
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING; FORMERLY CLOSED IN FULL, A; DECLASSIFIED AND OPENED, 09/13
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 11804, transcript, LBJ and LESTER PEARSON, 5/26/1967, 4:30PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • November 6, 2008 Reference No. 13511 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 10/2/68 TIME: UnknoWn . CALLER: Dean Rusk Pages ofTranscript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist /1'f r. Pt '€ J" SI ~ c r
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • ROSTOW SUMMARIZES HIS CONVERSATION WITH DEAN RUSK, WRITES THAT RUSK IS SENDING DETAILED REPORT ON HIS MEETING WITH ANDREI GROMYKO TO WH VIA COURIER; ROSTOW WRITES BRIEF SUMMARY OF RUSK AND GROMYKO'S DISCUSSION OF VIETNAM, MISSILE TALKS, AND MIDDLE
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 13511, transcript, WALT ROSTOW and DEAN RUSK, 10/2/1968, time unknown
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • August 28, 2007 Reference No. 11911 Processing Note Transcript only of this conversation; there is no recording. DATE: 6/21167 TIME: 2:03 PM CALLER: George Aiken Pages of Transcript: 1 page Barbara Cline Archivist
  • *TRANSCRIPT ONLY OF THIS CONVERSATION; THERE IS NO RECORDING
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 11911, transcript, LBJ and GEORGE AIKEN, 6/21/1967, 2:03PM
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • Reference No. 12514 September 17, 2007 Processing Note This is the transcript of an office conversation between President Johnson and Arthur Goldberg which includes a note from Marvin Watson to the President. There is no recording of this meeting
  • Telephone conversation
  • Telephone conversation # 12514, transcript, LBJ and OFFICE CONVERSATION, 12/6/1967, 2:35 PM
  • OFFICE CONVERSATION
  • White House Telephone Recordings and Transcripts
  • Recordings and Transcripts of Telephone Conversations and Meetings
  • conversation. And before ^the evening was over there was dancing to the piano music of an eighty-one year old German with a curly white mustache and an alpine cap and a vest that was covered with medals. He played a ll the old favorites lik e "Carolina
  • ; Lady Bird works while men talk; lunch; telephone calls about LBJ Library, LBJ Park & office business; drive through Reagan Ranch; LBJ eats dinner at Dale Malechek's; Lady Bird exercises & watches Gunsmoke; to Arthur Krim's for New Year's party
  • Clark looking in bouncy good health, one of the most genuinely at-peace men I know. Madame Shoumatoff came in and she was indeed in a way the guest of honor this evening. She wears her considerable years lig h tly and her conversation is bright
  • Brief conference with Abe Fortas; meeting with Henry Middleton about films; meeting of LBJ Library Audiovisual Committee; to theater to view "The President's House;" office work & telephone calls; hair styled; portrait party at the White House; Lady
  • apparent target for an attack was Syria. If Israel attacked Syria , Hussein continued, Jordan would not take action unless the U.A.R. intervened, 1 From Tel Aviv , tel. 3648, May 18, 1967, secret/nodis . 2 Memor~ndum of telephone conversation between
  • target for an attack was Syria. If Israel attacked Syria, Hussein continued, Jordan would not take action unless the U.A.R. intervened, 1 From Tel Aviv, tel. 3648, May 18, 1967, secret/nodis. 2 Memorandum of telephone conversation between Harman
  • ON UNDERTAKINGS CONVEYED BROMELL YESTERDAY CCAIRo•s 7153). CBROMELL HAS APPOINTMENT 6i00 PM THIS EVENING TO RE.CEIVE WORD AS TO WHAT STEPS HAVE BEEN ACCOMPL.ISHED AS A RESULT HIS ·MAY 5 CONVERSATION.> ( TO PLEAD TOO FREQUENTLY FOR HELP WILL NOT O~LY
  • Businessmen invited to Cairo by UAR First Vice President and ¥ield Marsha l · Hakim Amer was received by President Nasser on March 28, 1967. The following is based on a telephone conversation with Mre Ernest Henderson of Sheraton Hotelse We have requested
  • ,' Dear V. I This is to thank you for calling me. We 'Will advise you of our Executive Vice President's conversation 'With President Nasser. If imperative, ve 'Will however seek your help. With kind good "Wishes. The Honorable Walt W. Rostov The White
  • " AND THAT ONLY ALGERIA IS CAUSING PROBLEMS BY CRITICIZING THE SOVIETS FOR NOT BEING TOUGH ENOUGH ON THE SUBJECT OF ISRAEL. (SOURCE COMMENT: THE SUBJECT OF THE SOVIET BLOC DECLARATION ON ISRAEL IN WARSAW ON 22 DECEMBER WAS NOT BROUGHT UP DURING THE CONVERSATION
  • regret it in the long run. -- - The most awesome decision he has made during his Presidency was made following the Israeli attack in his hotline conversations with Kosygin. --- He understands Israel's reluctance to counsel with the United States
  • !Son \~ [1 of 3] ~EYESONLY - 2 - Secretary Rusk said that Israel "has won a battle and not a war." Mr. Rostow discussed his conversations with Mr. David Ginsburg and Mr. Abe Feinberg. The President said many of the Jewish leaders want us to make
  • and unbending. We will stop bombing under right conditions. PRIVATE CONVERSATIONS: We have tried to come up with formula to let us stop the bombing with no public Vance: They have refused to suggest anything at this point. will not permit the Thieu-Ky
  • influence in the area has been deteriorating. Conversely, S oviet influence has been increa sing. He sugges t ed discussing this problem under two headings - - our relations with the countries of the Near East and Soviet intentions toward the area . Speaking
  • to do is make a speech from the pamphlet. The group adjourned for lunch and the President opened the luncheon conversation by asking about Buttercup response. "Are both Bunker and Westmoreland coming back?" the President asked. McNamara replied
  • 27, 1964 ~ONFIDENTIAL) , ... 1874 and 1889, February 20, 1964 {SECRET}_, and 2316, April 5, 1964 ·(SECRE'f); Memo­ randum o·f Conversation between President Johnson and UAR Ambassador Kamel, May 25, 1964 (SECFET),_ ll From Cairo, Telegram 1995, March
  • u r s t made conversation there was any time easy. 4 /1 4 / 6 4 Although I c a n 't say I made re a l contact with him. We sp oke about him h aving p ilo te d the 707 on the way over. I approached gingerly the subject of water, he him self
  • being the life blood of T exas, and dams and irrigation the biggest interest Lyndon during his fir s t four ye a rs in the C on g re ss, so we had our conversation cut out for each other. . / ? And another thing, I had read with great delight aboutDr
  • of State Memorandum of Rusk-Brown Conversation, January 11, 1968 (Secret/EXDIS). SECREf time he stated his own objectives in the Gulf, largely revolving about five mid-Gulf islands disputed between Iran '}_/ On February 1, at and the British-protected
  • This conversation is spread across three separate tapes
  • to have some private conversation and that would be m y time to depart. So I did, thereby not seeing the thousand or so guests cla m o rin g at the gates. I rushed hom e, feelin g stra n gely truant, jumped into m y red lace dress and went out to the W
  • HOUSE WASHINGTON fMonday, June Z:4; ~ 968 And presently Luci came in. Page 6 She had been out to dinner. She curled up on the bed beside me and we had one of those long conversations which make me jokingly tell her that she is a part time