Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

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

1571 results

  • with Yuki. Marvin met him on Terrace. MJDR met him inside office with letter for General Dwight D. Eisenhower (birthday greetings). President signed mail and worked pictures. On the table were letters of condolence to the of Mrs. Helen Crouch Douglass who
  • Cleveland, Presidents: and Mrs Lincoln Benjamin Harrison, James A. Garfield, William McKinley, Ulysses S. Grant , Herbert Hoover, Dwight D. Eisenhower MF - "any news? Jack Valenti George Reedy close up in MF - in "Ill McGeorge be over 20 minutes
  • Dwight Colonel Cook Colonel Cook General Andy D Eisenhower Palm Springs California Goodpastor President Harry S Truman Independence Missouri Colonel Cook To Mansion Tell them I'm on my way over her on February 15 1965 The General Operator
  • Hon. Francis Bato r (Fowler remained in the meeting) General Dwight D. Eisenhower (at Walter Reed Hospital) (b. 1) YMCA Youth To Fish Room and spoke briefly with th e X&&R& governors, wh o were entertained bv Douglass Cater -- they are attending
  • Truman Gerald R. Ford John F. Kennedy The following Presidents did return the salutes ... : Dwight D. Eisenhower Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George W. Bush A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Records Administration Jr
  • Truman Gerald R. Ford John F. Kennedy The following Presidents did return the salutes ... : Dwight D. Eisenhower Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George W. Bush A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Records Administration Jr
  • by press pool , OFF RECORD Hospital Bill Gill , ABC Doug Cornell , Associated Press UPI Helen Thomas , Star Garnett Horner , 9:47 a.m.10:07a.m. President arrived Walter Reed Hospital to se e OFF RECOR D General Dwight D . Eisenhower 10:07 a.m. President
  • of the delegates at a national convention. So a lot of people [wanted to nominate Eisenhower]. Olin Johnston from my state of South Carolina flew over to talk to Eisenhower about Eisenhower being the Democratic nominee. And there were a lot of stories
  • Adlai Stevenson; 1952 presidential election; Dwight Eisenhower; Harry Truman; Gene McCarthy; John Sparkman; Amon Carter; Senator Richard Russell; Kentucky Derby; LBJ’s relationship with President Eisenhower; economics
  • . ^ ^^^^ today of Stanford Parris as former ^ l3^=^^aZl^L^3^^i^^L^^-
  • h members of Alaska Reconstruction Commission -put 12:00 pm Final meeting of comm. . . .that President created for Alaska's reconstruction following earthquake: Chairman -- Senator Clinton P. Anderson Remarks Exec. Director -- Dwight A. Ink Asst
  • not listen. That is exactly what I thought would happen." Clark Clifford: Would the President like to report on his visit with President Eisenhower? The President: I enjoyed the trip very much. I intend to get away from here Wednesday afternoon and spend
  • Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969
  • had taken leave of absence when I went to Washington. M: Do you remember that Texas State Society meeting where they honored you, and Admiral Nimitz, and General Eisenhower? H: Yes, and I can't remember what year that was in. Do your records [show
  • How Hobby met LBJ; the history of the Houston Post’s involvement in LBJ’s career; Hobby’s appointment as director of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps; Admiral Chester Nimitz and General Dwight Eisenhower; Hobby’s appointment to the Federal Security
  • Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969
  • a distinguished American. (The Presirent later identified this as General Eisenhower.) This memo 0 utlined. what :courses this "distinguished American thought were offered to us. 11 (That memo is attached as appendix A. ) Clark Clifford: Any way you look
  • Eisenhower, Dwight D. (Dwight David), 1890-1969
  • 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
  • . When they had meetings that all three were involved in--Eisenhower, Nixon and Johnson--obviously Johnson, with his fixation on dealing one on one, physically and otherwise, would direct his focus toward the President. I can recall Nixon saying how
  • of Medicaid/Medicare; the relationship between LBJ and Nixon after the Johnson Administration; the relationship of LBJ, Nixon and Dwight Eisenhower during the Eisenhower Administration; enlisting the support of senators and governors in presidential election
  • 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
  • INTERVIEWEE: MERRELL F. SMALL INTERVIEWER: Michael L. Gillette PLACE: Mr. Small's residence, Sacramento, California Tape 1 of 2, Side 1 G: Let's start with your going to work for Senator [Thomas] Kuchel. S: Well, Eisenhower was elected in 1952
  • Going to work for Senator Thomas Kuchel; presidential appointments from California during Dwight Eisenhower's administration; political factions in California in the 1930s and 1940s; Earl Warren's early law and political career; Kuchel's rise
  • of State Dean Rusk 11:33 a.m. t Joe Califano C C C 12:35 p.m. President said, "take a f Expenditure Code leave word." Rowe Daniel, Director, OEP t pl re McKinney task force on travel President Dwight Eisenhower, Indio, California Secretary
  • Da y e | l Dwight D . Eisenhower , Pal m Springs , Calif , (b-2 ) e President walke d ou t to Secy McNamara' s ca r w/ hi m an d returned t o his offic e immediatel y w/ do g 1:16p t Harr 1:17p t Sec
  • Jones:mf Peace Association Award has previously gone to General Marshall, General Eisenhower, Cardinal Spellman, Secy Dulles, and President Kennedy. IDntr AugUSt11, White House Dav 1966 Thursday 11:30a OFF RECORD: Governor G. Mennen Williams
  • Texans who just couldn't take Truman's stand on tidelands, on FEPC [Fair Employment Practices Commission], on Taft-Hartley. There was a strong tide running for [Dwight] Eisenhower. You were really bucking it when you went against it. However, there were
  • and pets; LBJ's relationship with his mother and siblings; LBJ considering if he could be an effective Senate minority leader; LBJ's relationship with Allan Shivers; LBJ's view of Dwight Eisenhower.
  • and a deersKin Bookmark President autographed "To Dwight D. Eisenhower With respect and high regard, LBJ" Ex ( p t Decembe Dav_ Frida r 16, 1966 y Activity (tnc!ud e visited by ) Departed Walter Reed Army Hospital Returned to the White House
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: DWIGHT A INK INTERVIEWER: DAVID G. McCOMB More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • See all online interviews with Dwight A. Ink
  • Ink, Dwight A.
  • Oral history transcript, Dwight A. Ink, interview 1 (I), 2/5/1969, by David G. McComb
  • Dwight A. Ink
  • EISENHOWERS' GOLDEN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY AND RELATED FUND-RAISING EFFORTS FOR EISENHOWER COLLEGE
  • it if you knew that Dwight D. Eisenhower was strongly in favor of it?" There was a long pause. assuredly is. He said, "Well, is he?" I said, "He most Bob, that's a ghastly bill, a horrible, nasty, terrible LBJ Presidential Library http
  • [For interviews 1 and 2] LBJ’s role as member of House Armed Services Committee; LBJ’s role as Democratic leader in the Senate; LBJ’s qualities of leadership; LBJ’s relationship with Eisenhower; White House-Congressional relations.
  • think there would have been a major confrontation in the Republican Party, because they were not prepared to accept Milton Eisenhower in place of Dwight Eisenhower. F: Okay, you have got an overturn now in the leadership in the Senate in 1955. What did
  • of Eisenhower. Knowland’s interest in Asian countries, his opinion of Senator Joe McCarthy, the supposed usurpation of congressional authority by the executive branch, the Civil Rights bill of 1957, the beginning of the space program, running for governor
  • won; [Dwight] Eisenhower was going to be inaugurated on January the twentieth. We had lost Senator [Ernest] McFarland in the election, and Lyndon, who had been McFarland's whip, or assistant, was elected minority leader of the Senate. At forty-four
  • LBJ's election as Senate minority leader in 1953; the small numerical difference between majority and minority parties in the 1953 Senate; committee assignments; the Johnsons' social life in early 1953; the Eisenhower inauguration and related events
  • of MacArthur? W: No, I don't. G: Let me just clear up something you said in your last interview. You said that he supported Eisenhower over [Adlai] Stevenson, and I'm wondering if you meant that he felt personally favorable, or if he actually privately
  • visit to the Ranch; the Trinity River Project; John Tower; LBJ's glasses and contacts; Ayub Khan's visit to the Ranch; LBJ's opinion of General Douglas MacArthur and Dwight Eisenhower; the Cox family in Johnson City; the Elms, the Johnsons' home
  • , and then G o vern o r H a rris o n o f V irg in ia gave a little talk. Next G en era l B ra d ley h im s e lf, and then G en era l Eisenhow e r - and a ll day long, people r e fe r r e d to him as G en era l E is enhow er, not P re s id e n t Eisenhow e r
  • Dedication of the George Marshall Research Library; to Virginia Military Institute; ideas for LBJ Library; Lady Bird describes ceremony with speeches by Omar Bradley, Dwight Eisenhower and LBJ; dinner at the Fortases; Lady Bird mentions Abe Fortas
  • /5 LBJ (Lyndon Johnson) and CTJ (Lady Bird Johnson) are already in Washington at the beginning of the year. LBJ and other Democratic and Republican legislative leaders meet with Eisenhower at the White House to discuss Eisenhower’s State of the Union
  • on in as much detail as you can. Let me ask you first generally about foreign policy during the [Dwight D.] Eisenhower years and how bipartisan it was. The Democrats controlled Congress through much of that time and the Republicans--many of them--had a more
  • Foreign policy during the Dwight Eisenhower administration; Robert Taft and the Hill-Burton Act; partisanship in the Senate during the Eisenhower administration; the Bricker Amendment; support for organized labor in southern states; separation
  • : Early on, Stewart Alsop reported in his column that LBJ was circula­ ting a memorandum among fellow Democrats to lay out a plan of party strategy, and this was the plan that the Democrats would not categor­ ically oppose the Eisenhower Administration. R
  • that the country, while it had just elected a lot of Democrats to the Senate, was still devoted to Dwight Eisenhower, and to pass something that attacked him would be futile. It wouldn't get you any money spent any faster; it wouldn't help the unemployed
  • not be put on the ballot, that [Dwight] Eisenhower be both the Democratic and Republican candidate. Well here again, it showed the statesmanship of Allan Shivers. He went to the platform and made an appeal that the people of Texas had a right to make
  • at the Democratic National Convention; Weldon Hart's work for Shivers; concern that Shivers might leave the Democratic Party and issues of party loyalty; the Texas State Democratic Convention resolution directing Democrats to support Dwight Eisenhower rather than
  • Jones mf Dr. William Lukash Yoichi Okamoto Tom Johnson and Yuki down at Walter Reed Hospital -the President and Mrs. Johnson departed the helo site in a car... en route visit to General Dwight Eisenhower t^*" Frances 12:10p Wheels ~7 " - . briefly
  • . Katzenbach, and Katzenbach daughter Anne where the President had LUNCH as his guests sat with him in the room and visited with him President Dwight Eisenhower - Gettysburg, Pa. (b.5) to today concerning the winning of the war in VietNam explain his
  • 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
  • as he walked away. I went the next day to Washington to see President [Dwight] Eisenhower to report that "we've got an ally in the UN, that the ambassador secretly agrees with our side." The President ordered the heat to be put on that man; it was done
  • received worldwide as the founder of Flair; Cowles' work as a "personal ambassador" of President Dwight Eisenhower; Cowles' friendships with foreign dignitaries; how Cowles got involved with government work during President Harry Truman's administration
  • about little bitty new quails falling into those cracks. Lyndon was introducing, along with other senators, a request for emergency aid to the cattlemen. [Dwight] Eisenhower had already declared the area a drought disaster area. G: LBJ worked