On October 14, 1972, President Richard M. Nixon and Raymond K. Price, Jr. talked on the telephone from 10:58 am to 11:01 am. The White House Telephone taping system captured this recording, which is known as Conversation 031-045 of the White House Tapes.
Transcript (AI-Generated)This transcript was generated automatically by AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Do not cite this transcript as authoritative. Consult the Finding Aid above for verified information.
Yeah.
Mr. Price.
Sure.
Ray, I just approved the final draft, and that's fine.
And I'm glad we were able to add those 200 words.
Well, I like that Huxley thing in there.
The reason I had the impression the other was shorter
is that I told Haldeman to check.
I had the feeling.
I didn't realize it had gone 2,000 words.
But we want to keep it beneath 15.
Not that we can't buy more, but I'd just like to run over.
How long did it take?
Does anybody know?
It took about 16 minutes, but I don't have the whether it's just under or just over.
Basically, in the future ones, let's run them about this length.
1,700 will run.
In a 15-minute broadcast, we should go 13 and a half minutes.
Because one of the reasons is it isn't like a presidential thing.
They have to have the political sign-off.
This is paid for by the committee to re-elect the president.
You see, it takes a little bit of time.
So 16 and a half.
This is a change that I have made, and I just sent it back to Rose for final typing, is this.
On the letter from the boy in the Midwest, as you probably are aware, I called that boy.
I have stricken out the name David in both cases, the point being that I don't want him to be that identifiable.
And I don't want the letter to be put out.
You understand?
Mm-hmm.
What I mean is if anybody in the press asks about it, say, no, that's a confidential letter.
The point being, we don't know what this boy now, the brother, is up to.
So I just said my brother in both instances.
What I wanted you to know why I'd done that.
See?
Because we haven't consulted.
about using the letter, but we don't identify the letter.
Do you think there's any problem there, do you?
I don't know.
I think it's the sort of thing that's very personal.
And the point is, though, I want us all to know that they were not going to put out the letter or identify it.
The only identification we have is that it's from the Midwest.
I wonder if we need that in it, even.
Uh, it probably helps authenticate it a little bit.
All right, fine.
Okay.
Fine.
Fine.
You tell the Andrews everything is fine.
I was just in the process of doing a memo to you on the question of the education one.
Oh, you decided?
Well, I thought we were leaning against that now.
Well, my recommendation, we've been crashing to try to get one that could be done.
My recommendation at this point would be to hold off because I think we're going to have some, you know, it's going to take some time clearing it and so forth.
I don't need it now.
I don't need it right away.
Don't worry too much about it.
Just move on some of the others.
All right.
But if you can't get it done, we'll wait until next week.
Okay?
All right.
Fine.
We've got plenty of them.
Okay.
Good.
Bye.