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Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 67: Mar. 14‑18, 1968 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 31
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- they no longer choose · to pay ; it has certainly run into great difficulties. But the reasons why the policy ·was ;tdopted by President Eisenhower and continued by his successors have · ·not · vanished. Let it be said again. There can be no •' compromise
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 46, October 16-20, 1967 [1 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 24
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- include regular reports President Johnson from the Central Intelligence Agency outlining briefings to members of Congress and memorandums and letters related to periodic briefings about world issues to President Truman and President Eisenhower by Central
- EXECUTIVEDIRECTOR DR, MILTON S, EISENHOWER CHAIRMAN CONGRESSMAN HALE BOGGS ARCHBISHOPTERENCEJ, COOKE AMBASSADOR PATRICIA HARRIS SENATORPHILIP A, HART JUDGE A, LEON HIGGINBOTHAM ERIC HOFFER SENATORROMANHRUSKA LEON JAWORSKI ALBERTE, JENNER, JR, CONGRESSMAN WILLIAMM
- See all scanned items from the Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission) Series 44 Box 4
- Folder, "Chapter 13 - State Department Materials on Imported Guns [1 of 6]," Records of the NCCPV (Eisenhower Commission), Series 44, Box 4
- Records of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (Eisenhower Commission)
- 1-9 in 1954 and 1961, when President President Kennedy reaffirmed, a policy of the nations the independence Thus, the story told -Eisenhower .sfmply in terms s-tage in the road, in the broader possible to understand for in Vietnam
- to build nuclear power plant. ~ President Eisenhower offers 5-point disarmament plan that could follow proof of USSR peaceful intent. Vishinsky revives USSR proposal for unconditional· ban on weapons of mass destruction. USSR claims to have H-bomb
Oral history transcript, Jake Jacobsen, interview 1 (I), 5/27/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- nominees. There shouldn't be any hocus pocus about putting Eisenhower on there as the Democratic nominee and putting them on as some kind of independents or something. M: Did Mr. Johnson's activity in the Leland Olds case as he was reappointed
Folder, "Walt Rostow, Vol. 45, October 10-15, 1967 [2 of 2]," Memos to the President, NSF, Box 23
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- . Pres ldent: Ae Here ie Covey's account of where stand• with Mllton J:laenhower. W. W. Roatow WWRostow:rln October 11, 1967 UNCLASSIFIED MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT Subject, Consultant Status for Dr. Milton Eisenhower Dr. Eisenhower told me
- , to propose an International material Eisenhower, Agency. They also the potential led, destructive contributions in part, the major power of of fissionable to the presentation and passage of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 which p~ovided, first
- before making that decision?" (Laughter) So Tom Mattingly, who was one of Eisenhower's physicians, and I went to Nicaragua. They picked us up--picked me up; Mattingly, I think, was in Washington at the time. But they picked me up the next morning
- Eleanor Roosevelt than some of the other first ladies, like Mrs. Eisenhower and Mrs. Truman, who just kind [of] were in back. He always was pressing Mrs. Johnson to get into some thing that she would enjoy and take leadership in. Of course, she did select
Oral history transcript, George R. Davis, interview 1 (I), 2/13/1969, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- Eisenhower after his heart attack, and he was very sensitive about things like cholesterol, he never smoked again, he watched the fat in his diet. Did President Johnson ever give any indication that he was paying attention to a regimen of that sort
- attacked Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy. He added, however, that Fulbright had reported out all of his Ambassadors from his committee. - 6 The President said foreign aid would be reduced, but he thinks that we will wind up with less
- the Eisenhower Administration when the Republicans had charge of the Congress during the 83rd, I believe. I don't recall my first personal contact with the PreSident, that is, person to person conversations with him, unless it was when he was going into North
- LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 4 Kennedy or President Eisenhower
- certainly since the Eisenhower Administration- -it was reaffirmed by President Kennedy- -that the ambassador speaks for the President in a foreign country, that all of the other members of the country team, our people, the C. 1. A. people, the U. S. 1. S
Oral history transcript, John William Theis, interview 1 (I), 12/1/1977, by Michael L. Gillette
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- Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Thei s -- I -- 11 were not happy about some of the leftover commitments from the QuemoyMatsu days, the Eisenhower years. It was one of those things that has continued up until--and still
Oral history transcript, W. Marvin Watson, interview 1 (I), 11/22/1968, by Dorothy Pierce (McSweeny)
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- . It was there that Governor Shivers, having bolted the Democratic Party in behalf of President Eisenhower in 1952, some of us felt that that same posture would be taken in 1956. LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson
- , extend to the White House? W: Hhy, yes, of course it was of concern. F: Did you have any opportunity to observe Mr. Eisenhower's hand in the committee or not? Or did he seem to leave it alone? W: As far as I know, he left it alone. F: They had
- that over a year we looked at the Truman Library and Eisenhower Library and other libraries--tried to-F: Was Wayne Grover often with you on this? LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral
- was an army officer, and although I was born in Texas, we lived all over the world. M: Like Eisenhower's birthplace was Texas. H: Yes, that's right. And the President didn't know my grandfather. My grandfather had been chief justice of the Criminal Court
- the Landrum-Griffin Act under my immediate responsibility. It had been passed by the Congress in late 1959, and the Eisenhower Administration had really dragged its feet in implementing it because it was a sen- sitive matter. So it came really to us to put
Oral history transcript, Sidney A. Saperstein, interview 2 (II), 6/28/1986, by Janet Kerr-Tener
(Item)
- seldom vote Democratic, in our precinct convention we carried it for Lyndon Johnson over Allan Shivers. Shivers, of course, had been an active Eisenhower supporter, beginning in 1952 and 1956. M: You must have been involved in that Shivers-Johnson fight
- Walt Rostow was to this, but I have the feeling that he was not one of the--didn't this idea get started in the late Eisenhower period? M: Yes, apparently-- L: Jerry Smith. M: Jerry Smith was very closely connected with it. L: And Bob Schaetzel
- with the Congress are in some way a favorable reflection on the capacity of Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn in the Eisenhower years. So I think that even though the presidency was held by the other party, that both of them were steadfast in working with the President
- the contact. We had some other people. there. I think Charlie Woodson from Brownwood was Charlie and I were always good Democrats together, [for] almost everything, including during the Eisenhower race. Even though I had served under Eisenhower, we worked
- in September 1963. I well remember when President Kennedy completed his briefing with former President Eisenhower before he took over the White House, President Eisenhower concentrated on the Laos crisis and never mentioned Vietnam when he reviewed the various
- then, and he and Sam [Rayburn] were the government. It's true that Eisenhower got some of the things he wanted by means of the veto, but what he got, he got because Lyndon and Sam let him have it. G: Can you recall, for example, his role in the Big Inch
- at Littauer in the Bureau of the Budget. My class had mostly gone to Washington. I worked for three years in the Budget Bureau through the transition, Truman to Eisenhower. M: That was about 1951 to 1954? W: That's 1951 to 1954. I got my early
- , there was one guy down there named Bob Hill who was the ambassador to Mexico. Now Bob Hill was the ambassador because Lyndon Johnson put him there! F: He was Eisenhower's appointee, wasn't he? C: Yes, but he was a congressional liaison man to the Hill. He
- accurate. The President sets the policy. They set them in different degrees. President Johnson is a man--President Truman likewise was a man--who personally followed the pros and the cons and made a lot of the decisions. General Eisenhower, with a different
- was wondering what he had that maybe some of the others lacked since Eisenhower was not noted for his own outgoing-- K: I think Hagerty was an extremely good organizer and manager. That job does take a lot of organization and management, and people who
- people then, or what? M: No, my job there was somewhat like the 1944 job. It was in the area of publicity in what they called propaganda, to get Negro votes for the Democratic ticket. Eisenhower had made some inroads into the Negro vote in the election
Oral history transcript, Lawrence F. O'Brien, interview 26 (XXVI), 8/26/1987, by Michael L. Gillette
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- then we've known of a candidate advocating raising taxes, and it was a disaster. G: Nixon wrote in his memoirs that had Wallace not been in the race, he would have won in a landslide comparable to Eisenhower's in 1952. O: I don't know whether he would have