Skip to main content
-
Contributor >
Friends of the LBJ Library
(remove)
-
Specific Item Type >
Newsletter
(remove)
-
Subject >
LBJ Library
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Specific Item Type
Time Period
50 results
- Archivist for Presidential Libraries; Verne Newton,
Roosevelt Library; Clarence Lyons, Nixon Project, Chuck Daly, Kennedy Library; Pat Borders, National Archives; Mar
tin Elzy, As.sistantDirector, Carter Library. Seated: Dan Holt, Eisenhower Library; Harry
- ,
and all future chief executives.
Consequently,
there now exist librnries bear
versity of Texas anJ are operated
by the
:..1tiunal
Services
Archives
of the General
ing the names of Presidents Hoover, Roose
velt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy
- out what his position
should be ... on a policy. . . . He had a policy."
11
The Modern Presidency: The President and the
Domestic Agenda
Burnham; "Eisenhower attempted to act out the famous old whig theory of the pr sidency, "Congress does
- as WilLiam Bundy,
Horace Busby, Joseph Califano, Ramsey Clark, David and Julie
Nixon Eisenhower, John Kenneth Galbraith, Ban-y G Jdwater,
Ann Landers, David McCullough, Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
Charles Robb, Dean Rusk, Liz Smith, William Westmoreland
- for preliminary research."
Mr. Laue's research is impressive;
the annotated
bibliography
of his
sources is thirty-nine pages long. It
includes written con-espondence
and
interviews with General John S. D.
Eisenho\ er,
son
oJ'
President
Eisenhower:
Andrew
-
or even minutes. The Tuesday meeting was patterned after
meetings that President Eisenhower had told me he had
with Prime Minister Churchill during the war, that he
would have a luncheon meeting and an evening meeting,
6
-
Rostow lnterv
and they were
- taught at Trinity College there for eight years.
He has been a frequent participant in Brookings Institution
conferences and an occasional lecturer for Eisenhower Fel
lows.
Hardeman is currently living in San Antonio, where he is a
professor of political
- of official presi
dential Christmas cards began in
1953 with President Eisenhower."
Castro explained, observing that Ike
was a talented amateur painter and
uesigned his own cards. They are
now important collectors' items.
Castro, a Director Emeritus
- with great reluctance
when she moved to Washington. But be
ing a student of history, she decided to
make the most of things by learning what
famous people had lived in her room.
Former President Eisenhower told her that
he believed that the lady-in-waiting
- of example
·r h ·:
Eisenhower on
nn d)
and the "missil ga .
n and
Vietnam. Ne\v in umb
o t n
see reasons to chang their min
once in office. Dean t inberg
quoted a previous boss of hi as
justifying changes in his views
over time this way: 'Things do not
appear