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1424 results
- 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
- States. We're not united on ma:ny things -- not even in our own families -- but we are united on one thing in America. We're united against I didn't Communism. vote for President Eisenhower, but he's President of the United States. He's the only
- contentious questions at issue between the two Governments. Both Prime Minister Dia and Foreign Minister Thiam have attended UN sessions in New York; Dia took the occasion to pay a call on President Eisenhower here in December, and Thiam. saw Secretary Rusk
- that there were certain historical necessities for the Democratic Party that required the passage of legislation. That is, this was Eisenhower's bill; it had passed the House; here it was in the Senate; no legislation had passed in eighty-five years. Secondly
- with Eisenhower Administration; self analysis; leader of an opposition on the staff; censure resolution; HHH; Richard Russell; HR 3; LBJ’s relationship with Kerr and JFK; contempt for some Senators and close friends in the Senate; LBJ singled out protégés; LBJ’s
- (includ e visite d by ) y Genera l Ramse y Clar k returne d t o offic e t bac k int o ova l offic e w / e Califan o r Joh n McCormac k Speake 8:50p t Jo e Califan o x 8 : 53p t Dr . Milto n Eisenhower - i n Baltimore , Marylan d 9:02p f _ 9:06 p
- . Kuchel . Geral d R . For d President givin g the m copie s o f a specia l briefing an d talkin g about President Eisenhower' s statemen t t o th e Platfor m Committe e o f the Rep . Nat'1. Conventio n — likenin g i t t o hi s statement s fo r Presiden t
- they were moving surprising!y fast. On the language matter, he cited a parallel: When President Eisenhower was asked what decisions Vice President Nixon had participated in, he said that if he had a week, he 1 d think of some. The President said he felt sure
- ://www.lbjlibrary.org K: ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] No, no, heavens no. More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh -9- They were going on in Eisenhower's time and elsewhere
Oral history transcript, Claude J. Desautels, interview 1 (I), 4/18/1980, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- changed as people went someplace else. G: Was the pattern something that had been drawn from previous administrations? 0: No, a total break. In the Eisenhower years, predecessor to Kennedy- Johnson, Bryce Harlow had been Larry's predecessor. helpful
- Set-up of White House Congressional liaison office; handling of Congressional mail; comparison of Eisenhower, JFK and LBJ liaison offices; procedure; leadership agenda; guest lists; bill signings; meetings with agency liaisons; intervention of Larry
- [of War Robert] Patterson and General Eisenhower, then chief of staff of the Army. In the separate Air Force concept, all three would be under the Secretary of Defense. The Navy position was one of coordination as against administration. In effect
- , Minority Leader at the time that your father died. T: Yes, that's correct. During the first three months or so, three or four months of the Eisenhower Administration, there was a connection between them in \'/hich they worked together. As a matter
- acceptance speech long after the convention over at Constitution Hall, etc. Truman had gone; Eisenhower had gone; Roosevelt had not gone every LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
- : Right. You've served here at the bank through all of President Kennedy's administration, and then all of President Johnson's. H: The last part of Eisenhower's administration, Kennedy and Johnson, yes. M: Was there any change in the United States
- Biographical information; served under Eisenhower, JFK and LBJ; major growth of bank under LBJ; Punta del Estes 1967; Lincoln Gordon and Sol Linowitz; Dominican problems; Peru balance of payment problems; Bank important element in Inter-American
- to LBJ; J.E. McDonald; 1952 Democratic Conventions – state and national; Governor Shivers for Eisenhower against Democrat Adlai Stevenson; 1972 Democratic National Convention; 1960 Democratic National Convention; contacts with LBJ while President.
- is typical of the Johnson pattern ever since the Eisenhower years. Mc: How do you mean? P: He made ever effort to be cooperative with Eisenhower. It's the con- sensus business, and I think he honestly felt--there is a great streak of fundamental
- President Eisenhower? M: No, you see-- B: Oh, recommendations from the previous administration? M: Right. President Truman had convened a committee of distinguished citizens who presented to him a series of things which they thought would be helpful
Oral history transcript, George E. Reedy, interview 4 (IV), 5/21/1982, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- 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
- McCormack meet with Truman at 10:45 a.m. Truman had just held a meeting with General Eisenhower, who is leaving today for Europe. Luci and Lynda host a birthday party for Speaker Rayburn during the afternoon. That evening the Speaker and Miss Lou Rayburn
- the national security was in jeopardy, impose a quota system. So this was enacted and President Eisenhower then appointed a group that made findings relative to the importance of oil and gas to national security and then based on that he imposed quotas which
- to Taft and Eisenhower. G: Do you recall LBJ's reaction to this, to the Truman announcement? J: No. I think he liked Truman, and he liked him better in perspective as the years went on, as so many people did, but he was very much aware of his
- in the fading hours of the Eisenhower Administration, late 1959, early 1960. Eisenhower was facing his last year in office and there were these stories about news management, that Eisenhower was managing the news; Jim Hagerty, his press secretary, was managing
- ://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Bonanno -- II -- 2 went to the few colleagues--there were only two alive when I worked for him, Truman and Eisenhower--when you wanted advice
- LBJ's relationship with Presidents Eisenhower, Truman, and Nixon; LBJ's 1968 speech to the Ladies Garment Workers in Atlantic City; LBJ's meeting with Australian Prime Minister John Gorton and U.S. relations with Australia; LBJ inviting Bonanno's
- abrupt way of doing things. G: There were a number of former presidents [there]. Let's see, President Truman was there at the funeral and President Eisenhower. B: Eisenhower, yes. G: Of course, President Kennedy came. B: Yes. G: Anything else
Oral history transcript, Thomas K. Finletter, interview 1 (I), 10/29/1968, by Paige E. Mulhollan
(Item)
- a historical question, it started with the Eisenhower Administration. And I think that we had been engaged in supporting a colonial war by the French in Indo-China, and that there was no reason at all in terms of any obligations of the United States that we
Oral history transcript, William Hunter McLean, interview 1 (I), 5/11/1971, by David G. McComb
(Item)
- - fifties when the Harris Gas Act was laboriously passed through both houses of Congress under the Eisenhower Administration, it was due in the main to the work of Johnson and Rayburn. Eisenhower vetoed it, yet Eisenhower got the support of the Republican
- --Senator Johnson go? M: In the fall of 1955, I was playing golf one day, on a Sunday. Governor Stevenson called me off the golf course [and] said that President Eisenhower had had a heart attack, and the press was LBJ Presidential Library http
Oral history transcript, Gerald W. Siegel, interview 3 (III), 2/11/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- at that time, Eisenhower, .and that the worst thing that could happen for the Democrats was to get bloodied 3 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org f More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh ORAL HISTORY
- could control it. were unalterably opposed to it. The bureaucrats Eisenhower was opposed to it. It was just because of sheer personal power that we were able to start it. Now, our original idea was to build a center on top of Diamond Head Mountain
- . They missed a bet in not, as I say, using it as a more versatile institution. On the one hand, I think the Eisenhower use of the Cabinet was with these long meetings and having all the Cabinet members sit and discuss at great length--you know, the classic
Oral history transcript, William S. White, interview 2 (II), 3/10/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
(Item)
- could scarcely have survived, I think, politically had he not had the faithful support in this matter of most of the Republican leaders--certainly beginning with General Eisenhower. So in brief, to summarize, the number one divisive factor so far as his
- of airplanes--Rayburn didn't like flying. He finally got used to it when his sister, Miss Lou, was dying of cancer. But he had flown with Eisenhower in 1945, right after World War II, when Eisenhower, who didn't know where he was born, finally was convinced
Oral history transcript, Sidney A. Saperstein, interview 1 (I), 5/26/1986, by Janet Kerr-Tener
(Item)
- Eisenhower came in, of course the Republicans then were less suspicious because it would be the Republicans who were doing it. And it was converted into a department. K: What kind of functional difference did it make to no longer be an agency but a cabinet
- Conversion of Federal Security Agency to HEW; observations on Eisenhower; biographical information; early recollections of FSA; the Hill Burton Act; reflections on working on legislation over the years; memories of working on Medicare
- Security, and before that the chairman of the Social Security Board. He remained in Washington until April of 1953 when he retired under the Eisenhower Administration. In one form or another from 1935 to 1953, I was in effect closely associated with Mr
Folder, "Right Wing Extremism," Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission), Series 11, Box 5
(Item)
- Eisenhower and Kennedy Administrations condemned as 'treasonous, 11 with suggestions for lynching Earl Warren. (12/8/61) 11 The latter reference was elaborated on by Newsweek (12/4/61) in consider a ble detail. Reporting a Dallas meeting of NIC in late
- See all scanned items from Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission) Series 11 Box 5
- Folder, "Right Wing Extremism," Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission), Series 11, Box 5
- Records of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (Eisenhower Commission)
Oral history transcript, John V. Singleton, Jr., interview 2 (II), 7/15/1983, by Michael L. Gillette
(Item)
- on a private, social basis, no. But certainly on a political basis, Governor Shivers was Democrats-for-Eisenhower, he was a states l rights person, he was a LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson