Discover Our Collections


  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Contributor > Friends of the LBJ Library (remove)

50 results

  • David Eisenhower, grandson of Presideni Dwight Eisenhower. He sold a copy of it to then-Vice President Richard Nixon for fifteen cents. He has been writing ever since. Library staffers, docents and guests from the University assembled in the Library
  • been very high. . ." Dwight D. Eisenhower: ··very popular but many people who liked 01im] felt that this was not a very serious man, not terribly much on top of his job; he allowed things to drift for eight years, and therefore should not be considered
  • in the short run the war in Vietnam was certainly won by the Communists. they did not con­ quer Southeast Asia. Winston Churchill suggested SEATO to Dwight Eisenhower in 1953 .. The Kennedy administration inherited SEATO Plan 5. a plan for defending all
  • , he said, could be "eas­ ily stated: Why didn't we take Berlin ahead of the Soviets?" But "the answers" he maintained, "are far from easy. Although a single person !General Dwight D. Eisenhowerj was responsible for leaving Berlin to the Soviets, he had
  • Roosevelt. (Below) Ronald Reagan with Nixon, Ford and Carter, October 8, 1981 (Right) WASHING10N, Jan. 20--THE SITUA­ TION DRAWS MIXED REACTIONS-Outgoing President Harry Truman, at right, and Mrs. Dwight Eisenhower, in center, appear to be sharing a joke
  • for a variety of national security offices directed by such well known figures as Dwight Eisenhower, George Marshall, Nelson Rockefeller, Averell Harriman, and Walt Rostow. In 1961, she began working for Rostow, then Deputy Special Assistant to President Kennedy
  • The Eisenhowers: Famous Family Reminiscences Da,id Eisenhower. grand­ son of Dwight D. Eisen­ hower. discussed hi!i work, Eisenl,ower at War, an ac­ count of his grandfather's command of the allied ex­ peditionary forces in Eng­ land in World \.\'ar II. \\hat I mi
  • .-.omeother re ent acqu1s1tions Three of the pieces-the drawing of oodrow Wilson the pamting by Dwighl D. Eisenhower and the wood engraving of Martin Luther King were donate by Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Temple. The others were acquired by the LBJ Foundatio
  • personalities depicted are Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Barry oldwater, George Bush and George Wallace. Although the ollectior will require time for reservation and cataloging before becoming available for r search, it 1s
  • that one frantic guest captured on his film An ebullient Dwight D. Eisenhower, Athens, Greece, 1952. Photo cour­ tesy of Peter Smith, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Turkish cavalry in the snow, 1948. Photo courtesy of Peter Smith, Harry Ransom
  • tclphonecalls and large amounts of correspondence, mak it impossible presently lo assign one archivist exclusively lo one resident or visiting researcher. By contrast, the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library sent me on my last trip several ingle-spaced
  • to the public as offi­ cial souvenirs. For the next 15 years, however, they were sold almost at cost; little profit was expected. Dwight Eisenhower's inaugural committee was the first to sell medals on a large scale - over 25,000 were sold in bronze alone
  • and the problems involve that has in any way approached the significance of the P ley Commis- PllDelblSDon Price, C. GirardDavichon, llDdCraufurdD. Goodwin Eisenhower Administration. When Eisenhower was being pressured to impose controls in order to support
  • in the world. As he often did, Harry Truman put it most pungently when he called the White House "the crown jewel in the penal system." He advised his successor, Dwight Eisenhower, "If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog." Thomas told a packed LBJ
  • on Erwin\ nght are Henry row/er and Lew Wasserman. Library Names New Chief Archivist Christina Lawson John Wickman, D,recwr of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas, spoke at th Library tn May lO a University of Texas group, joined together
  • Harry Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson w re always the bearers of good news. A President in those days seeing on his appointment calen­ dar that he had an appointment with his economist knew they w r corning in to discuss
  • by General Dwight D. Eisenhower (left) and the compass used in the North African cam­ paign by German Field Marshall Erwin Rommel. (right) 8 time the whole dramatic panoply of World War II will be presented in one display." General Bowell's speech is sched­
  • , Beschloss stated. "[IJt's almost a rule of thumb that each time a president\ ... papers are opened, it almost always causes his reputation to go up .... Dwight Eisenhower is a marvelou example of this .... " 'Should the libraries be centers of debate
  • of President Dwight D. Eisenhower pamted by J. Anthony Wills in I 969, acquired through purchase in 1969; (3) a bronze bust of President Abraham Lincoln by Augustm Saint-Gaudens, presented to LBJ by a group of special friends from Illinois, "Land of Lincoln
  • and suggestions into the Oval Office. What is missing is how and why Lyndon Johnson reached his final policy positions. Unlike some of his predecessors, notably Dwight Eisenhower, LBJ did not like to commit himself in writing. There are nu long letters to friends
  • isn't it? But nee ssaT1Jso my guards thought - and they are the ones exposed to danger. 14 A draft of Dwight D. Eisenhower's speech on February 29, 1956, announcing his dedsion l seek reelection, addresses itself m part to the matter
  • speeches by Harry Tru­ man and Dwight Eisenhower are heard from a radio of around 1950. The exhibit opened on July 4. Scholars get grants for Library research Twlnly-one scholars have been select­ ed as lhe I 978 recipients of grants to study in the LBJ
  • , Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson-joined with the Brookings Institution in sponsoring a majOI' symposium on a subject important to the Administrations of all four Presidents-wage-price policy. The idea for the multi-Library endeavor was proposed by Walt Rostow
  • page 12). Both exhibitions will travel to all presiden­ tial libraries. The art show was put together by Dennis Medina, curator of the Eisenhower Library. "BobHope EntertainingTroops,Somewherein England."Artist:Floyd Davis, U.S. ArmyArt Collection
  • for Presidents Truman and Eisenhower, represented the U.S. at the coronation of Queen Elizabeth and covered the Korean War cease­ fire talks at Panmunjom, ranged across her eventful life and some of the world figures she has known. Among them: Bernard Baruch
  • ''; Catherine Gudis, "A Landscape of Signs: Outdoor Advertising in America, 1920-1990''; Byron C. Hulsey, "Everett Dirksen and the Modern Presidents: Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson"; David K. Johnson, "From Deviant Bureaucrats to Homosexual Citizens
  • imperatives shaped the policie::. of Roosevelt's successors, Presidents Truman and Eisenhower, Gardner said. We want­ ed France to give independence to Vietnam, but at the same time we had to avoid offending Paris-we needed France on our side in Europe. We
  • and the Foundations which support them. At left, Wilson (in center) convenes the assembly. Flanking him are David Eisenhower, representing the Eisenhower family; Martin Allen, an associate of President Gerald Ford; LBJ Library Director Harry Middleton and Richard
  • concerns about Vietnam with numerous people, including President D,vight Eisenhower, Sen­ ators Mike Man ·field and Richard Russell, and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. There are approximately 18 hours of recorded conversations from thi • time p riod
  • time. Earlier. he notes, LBJ was instrumental during the Eisenhower administration in the framing and passage of the National Defense Education Act, and the Education Professions Development Act. Rulon traces Johnson's youth, his education at Southwest
  • that moment on, I was a partisan. On President Eisenhower The first few days, in the outer office of the EOB, I saw President Eisenhower-he came just to see if he could be of any assistance-sitting down with Marie Fehmer. Ike had a yellow tablet. He
  • factor, and it wa:-.a very int resting one. It was that Eisenhower. who was th President. was a man 1hat in a peculiar ,ort of way was on the wrong tidet. After all. hi~ entire career had been managed under Democratic presidents. and Ialthough! he
  • Issue Number XLIV December 15, 1988 Symposium Probes Urban Problems During the Johnson Administration, three presidential commissions­ known as the (Nicholas) Katzen­ bach, (Robert) Kerner and (Milton) Eisenhower Commissions-threw a glaring
  • is the chair of the President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, which reviewed the report. The President's Foreign Intelli­ gence Advisory Board, familiarly known by the acronym PFIAB, or "Piffy-ab," was begun during th Eisenhower Administration
  • seemmgly be made available for researcl during the 1980s rather than the 1990s On plember 18 and 19, archivists from lhe Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Ford Libraries gathered at the Johnson Library with representatives from tbe National Archives
  • Archivist Office of Program Support; Dan Fenn, Director of the Kennedy Library; Ben Zobrist, Director ot the Truman Library; John Wickman, Director of the Eisenhower Library; George Curtis, Assistant Director of lhe Truman Library, and William Emerson
  • through his mind as he started to answer, ... he said, "Eisenhower used to tell me that this was a prison. I have never felt freer." ... Sitting [one] day outside the Oval Office. waiting for the President to get off of the phone so he could go in to see
  • to v.nrk as closely a.~ they did. I doubt it. Johnst1n \\ orked that way with Pre~idcm Eisenhower and he fully expeckd Dirben to , 1or!-. that wa with him .ind Dirl-.sen did. Johnson knew that Dirk.,cn was going to help him every way he could but in some
  • known as the Dartmouth Conferences, held every two years and alternating between the two countries. Begun in 1960 at the sug­ gestion of President Eisenhower, they have served as a significant un­ official channel in which the Rus­ sians and Americans
  • Connally, Barry Goldwater. Middle row: Helen Hayes, Gloria Steinem. Bottom row: David and J uJie Eisenhower, Jimmy Carter, Henry Kissinger. On page 3, top row: Ann Landers, Kirk Douglas, Hubert Humphrey. Middle row: William Westmoreland, Barbara Jordan