Discover Our Collections


  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Contributor > Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (remove)

Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

11 results

  • 7:10 P. M. November 22, 1963 TELEPHONE CONVERS ATION BETWEEN THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STA TES AND PRESIDENT EISENHOWER J: Mr . President, this is Lyndon Johnson. been a shocking day. E: This has My heart goes out to you. J: It has been
  • LBJ ASKS EISENHOWER FOR HIS SUPPORT FOLLOWING ASSASSINATION OF JFK; EISENHOWER TELLS LBJ HE WILL BE IN WASHINGTON, DC, FOR SERVICES TOMORROW; LBJ ASKS TO MEET WITH HIM FOLLOWING THE SERVICES
  • Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969
  • Telephone conversation # 2, transcript, LBJ and DWIGHT EISENHOWER, 11/22/1963, 7:10PM
  • DWIGHT EISENHOWER
  • MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON June 7, 1967 Wednesday, 7:45 p. m. ~COWFIBENTIAL FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: Larry Levinson Ben Wattenberg Lr(..~ v,-.> We talked to David Brody of the Anti-Defamation B'nai B'rith, and he reported
  • of the same date. s ~ r ait j In this personal exchange I should like to emphasize one point which goes beyond general principles about international rights of pas sage through narrow waters. President Eisenhower, in 195 7 was faced with the problem
  • to Kefauver in New Hampshire. I also agree with this course, generally. I have this doubt. In 1958, you had to go to the UN, et al, to keep the world from regarding Eisenhower as a lame-duck, impotent President. I think it possible that making yourself
  • briefly by Mr. Paley in a statement released through CBS last week, his work as radio chief, attached to General Eisenhower's headquarters under General McClure, and as a member of the OWI's overseas staff involves the following activity: broadcasting from
  • real recommen­ dation of the Administration was really when President Eisenhower told Presidc:nt Kennedy he felt the first action we would have to take would be in that area -- Laos, and Viet-Nam -- and that he would have taken it ex.ct!pt th,":lt he
  • thing in 1936 and on the farm question, even in the middle of the campaign; He sent for the people • : . P: Oh, we do that all the time.' · I went to Eisenhower the other day across the country. We will be fully briefing Nixon and the others from
  • HOUSE WASHINGTON January TO: THE FROM: OKAMOTO 10,, 1~ . PRESIDENT These pictures were not released, but you might to send them to President Eisenhower. Yes Attachments C4115-4 C4115-10 A3502-14 A3502-08 No care Monday, TO: THE PRESIDENT
  • anything else. I got it from the Nevi York Ti!'l~.5-. of yours this morning. I've never seen But that's the way Eisenhower took Part Three and Russell just ran him out of the White House balcony, because said, they slip nr never heard of it, didn't
  • never a question of doing what's right. It's a question of knowing what's right. Those first few days Vietnam was on top of the agenda, before the visiting heads of state got home from the funeral. In the outer office of the EOB I saw Eisenhower sitting