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1424 results
- , then they have to come along and say "But all is not lost.We have a solution." That's the format that has always been used. Guys like Eisenhower who philosophized about the way "things are pretty good and we don't really have to get too worked up"--they don't
- you recall an example of this kind of--? R: Well, the best example was landing in an air field in Boise, Idaho, after the Walter Jenkins case had broken. And in talking to the press he made some remark about President Eisenhower having had
Oral history transcript, R. Sargent Shriver, interview 5 (V), 11/29/1990, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- /loh/oh Shriver -- V -- 11 if you said to Eisenhower, "Here are three million men. Use them in Europe." Well, he decides he's going to attack [a] Normandy beach at a certain time with two million of those men. He doesn't distribute them all down
- on the staff. There was no justification for having an agricultural economist as a member of the council, even though that had been the tradition under Eisenhower and Truman, I guess. F: Did the President ever voice the opinion that in one sense agriculture
Oral history transcript, Joseph C. Swidler, interview 1 (I), 3/11/1988, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- this. But they didn't get around, by any means, to all the industry. And that was about it. No rate regulation, virtually. G: Would you attribute this to simply a more laissez-faire attitude on behalf of the Eisenhower Administration? Or did it go back even before
- The Beck Engraving Company has printed the official photographs for Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson. Attached are sample copies of their four color work for the National Gallery of Art. The names and addresses of the officials contacted
- by a number of senior officers of the State and Defense Departments, and of the Agency for International Development, and his trip grows out of an early visit by Mr. David Bell which was concerned with many of these same problems. ### THE WHITE HOUSE
- was originally to have been, I think, a very superficial session but which really did get into the entrails of foreign aid. When we left, David Bell told me he thought this had been perhaps the most useful discussion with the President on foreign aid that he
- Meeting LBJ in 1963; Robert McNamara; Dean Rusk; David Bell; Ralph Dungan; James Farley; Alfred Gruenther; Eugene Black; John Gardner; General Advisory Committee on Foreign Assistance Programs; James Perkins; Robert Kintner; Kennedy Center
- were here under the Eisenhower administra tion? Chancellor - ADENAUER~ Mey I ask you to tell me exactly what you mean by it, do you mean the behavior? (mor e) 7 [11 of 16] 1961 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE Mr. RmToN. No: I waa tblnklng prl marlly
Oral history transcript, John Chancellor, interview 1 (I), 4/25/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- David with him. My wife and I spent quite a bit of time that spring with the Johnsons, and this culminated in my being appointed to the Voice of America job. M: Do you recall any other sort of illustrations such as the one you have given me that were
- through the state, and in a city, I believe it was Dallas, we held a rally, and Senator Johnson read a letter from General Eisenhower, then President, to a prominent Texas Republican, and after the rally was over, I walked up to Senator Johnson and I said
- and his predecessor Dwight Eisenhower said was critical to the free world." That's murder. Anyway, there was everything--The investment was tremendous. And now you get slugged. You get the Tet offensive and all the doves and the doubters who are, as you
- /29 No entry. 4/30 Meets during day with Amon Carter Evans; Carl Phinney; Max Freidman, David Schoenbrun; Ted Schroth; Corky Barner. discoverlbj.org May 5/1 Flies to Abilene, Kansas and dedicates Eisenhower Museum then flies to Austin and attends
- . Such FBI field investigations were re4uired by Dwight Eisenhower for all his presidential assistants. One check eliminated a possible appointee to ]ke's personal staff on the ground of perversion just before Eisenhower's inaugurntkln, Kennedy, in his tum
- . Such FBI field investigations were re4uired by Dwight Eisenhower for all his presidential assistants. One check eliminated a possible appointee to ]ke's personal staff on the ground of perversion just before Eisenhower's inaugurntkln, Kennedy, in his tum
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 52: Nov. 26‑30, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 26
(Item)
- •• aot alrelMly. w. w. WWRoatow:rla lleetow MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 30, 1967 Memo to Walt Rostow Press Contact David Breasted, New York News. called to ask me about rumors that Goldberg was resigning the first
- of the Appropriations Committee; Dr. Milton s. Eisenhower, President, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; the Honorable Thomas s. Gates, Jr., President, Morgan Guaranty Trust Company and former Secretary of Defense; Dr. James H. McCrocklin, President
- Washington about the importance of Vietnam~ and they were beginning-prior to that, they had pretty much run stories that were critical, and did afterwards, too, from time to time. But gradually in the latter days, the last days of the Eisenhower
Oral history transcript, Helen Gahagan Douglas, interview 1 (I), 11/10/1969, by Joe B. Frantz
(Item)
- singing, word came from my family that father was dying, but did not know it. He had terminal cancer. cancelled my engagements and returned home. me the star part in a play, TONIGHT OR NEVER. leaving New York for Europe. I David Belasco had offered I
- guess on the organizational chart were outside of the realm of my responsibility, but I was there "Call Secretary Udall and talk to him about such-and-such when he said, a park. Find out what the details are of the gift of the Eisenhower farm
Oral history transcript, Earle Wheeler, interview 2 (II), 5/7/1970, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
Oral history transcript, One More Story (group interview), 11/17/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh "One More Story" -- I -- 13 David. They were talking in French, and pretty soon
- a couple of phone calls during this time, probably within a week or two, that came out of nowhere. There was a call from Jim Hagerty, who had been Eisenhower's press secretary and then held a senior position at ABC Television. He said that there was a need
- /30/95, State Guidelines BveJr..l:, , NARA, Date -1·,-J;·c~ Even in the sions little General Eisenhower argued with Dulles on the presence of this fleet Mediterranean as being impractical. Certain elements of the five divi of ground forces could
- ormatton which Hlu wu retary of State by President-elect 111that I personally know .. ; elected president and I did not Eisenhower. • even attend that meettq " Ths 19:U presidential candidate /Much later, people who saw copies of the correspondence • O made
- President Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company 44 Wall Street New York, New York 10015 {Phone: (212) 350 - · 1688) I Mission Me~bers l. I Mr. David S. Meiklejohn Financial Vice President & Treasurer Am.eri¢an ~Iachine and Foundry .Company 261 Madison Avenue
- several years in the U.S. Attorne y's office, and I must say it was a thorough ly enjoyab le experie nce--the work there. But my boss there, who was David Acheson , United States Attorne y, was appointe d to a new position in the Treasury departm ent which
- Biographical information; prosecuting White House sit-in demonstrators; Frank Reeves; Howard Reed; Ralph Roberts, clerk of the House, and the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party; David Dellinger and the March on the Pentagon; "Murphy" confidence
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 32, June 21-30, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 18
(Item)
- Service Association Senator Milton Young Foreign Policy Association, N.Y. 2.' As you directed, I called on General Eisenhower in Gettysburg on June 29 and gave him the latest information which Mr. Rostow had given me on Soviet Middle East Arms Policy
- to imports from the United States. David E. Bell Annexes: A. B. Recent Self-Help Actions. Status of Self-Help Related to Proposed Connnitments. APPROVE -------- DISAPPROVE -------- _.CONFifiEN'f lAi:, --- 3eAnnex A Recent Self-Help Actions
- as Presidential yacht in 1945 and served in this capacity under Presidents Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower. Placed out of _commission in June 1953, the ship remained on reserve status until 1962 when President John F. Kennedy made her available
- to Mac when he goes up there for lunch with the Princess. 2. On MLF I ANF, you will wish to get David Bruce's views about how we might play the British. This is a very hard problem for Wilson. He must cut back on defense somewhere to make his balance
- with Bill Brennan, and we sat together in Hudson County, as I recall. He was on our superior court, then on our supreme court, and then he went by appointment of President Eisenhower to the United States Supreme Court. So that at Los Angeles Meyner
- . Rusk has .n on-proliferation language. 1 · t· - ,, ... Mr. President: .,}, . .l. ' Sunday, October 16, t-: ■ ·.- ~·- ' .· ,• :::S.S CKE I • I My only comment is this: Anything beyond yo~ r Camp David .,.. _position is R likely to involve