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  • , who was hailed by Newsweek as "The nation's leading Presidential scholar," has written five major books focusing on the presidencies of Roosevelt, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson. He has also published works on the Cold War and the relationship
  • -.'2 PL 3 FG2/Eisenhower co 1-3 MC FO 6 PC FG 170/N* ..... Two folders containing· sent to Central Confidential material Files March dated M~y 9, 1968, from 1967 - January b4 John P. 1968. Paul J)ouglas and the f.ational C~tizens Committee
  • so, at least I never saw that when I was in the Post. M: It's going to be a hard thing to track down fifty years from now. F: Well, put it this way. Phil Graham was strong for Eisenhower in 1952; he was sort of halfand-half in 1956
  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Braestrup -- I -- 20 delivered communiques in Tokyo during the Korean War, and as Eisenhower's people issued communiques in World War II. So you had to have a communique, an official
  • the National Guard for anything in race, we would have had a different racial history, just like if you had a northerner as president at the time of Selma and all like that, and they had sent in troops as Eisenhower did in Little Rock, we wouldn't have
  • ~~™~tlie ~~AqB.tlilt~~ which were yesterday postponed; that is, with Senators Rus sell and Dirksen; Congr·e ssman Rivers; and, via General Goodpaster, with General Eisenhower. ' :: 6;t-~~. Once y ou have come to a decision, y~u will need urgent refinement
  • . .( .. -:..---- ,, Monday, March Zl, 1966 4:30 pm · ~ ·10 the draf reply to De Gaulle , for signatur appr ove. s o attach ed is General Eisenhower's comment to Goo dpa ster on the letter • which Andy read to him . While accepting the force of Eisenhower's sugge s t e d
  • advisory posts prior to your involvement in the Johnson Administration. You were on the Regional War Labor Boards during the war and then you were on Eisenhower's Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, Eisenhower's Commission on National Goals
  • 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
  • that he did the most for were the first to turn on him when he was in the White House. B: Like who? E: Oh, you can take most of your southern states. My gosh, when we were needing so much help under the Eisenhower Administration here in the Tennessee
  • it out of a department, we never would have had any means to get anything done with. So that's the reason why we put it there. It was well known that the Congress was not going to let anybody go beyond what Eisenhower had done in expenditures. You'll
  • what he thought was best for the nation. History has proven what Mr. Eisenhower said) had it not been for Lyndon Johnson as the majority leader, President Eisenhower never would have gotten a program passed. When the President [Johnson] thought
  • idea of what the business and banking community really operate like. That's a bad sentence, Eisenhower syntax. But the real question is what is banking like in the real world and not in the textbook; what is the way in which IT&T conducts its affairs
  • also seen in your government service a transition from the Eisenhower years to the Kennedy years. Did this kind of situation develop there, too? Between the old and the new? R: In the beginning there was certainly some suspicion as to actions taken
  • . But that time \'/hen the argument got too hot and heavy, General Twining would just bundle all up and go over and sit down and talk to the President. The President didn't agree with Taylor either, talking about President Eisenhower, so that was it. with his
  • arose because of Johnson's leadership in the Senate. And insofar as it was a problem the problem was that Stevenson felt Johnson was not making the issues on which he would have to run in 1956, because as you recall, Johnson was supporting the Eisenhower
  • of credit really for saving the life of the Council in 1953 when it looked as though Eisenhower might not use the Council at all . I think on grounds of institutional loyalty and on grounds of his own very good personal relationships with Paul McCracken
  • appointment to the AEC. I received the balance of Sumner Pike's term and was not reappointed by President Eisenhower. M: I'd like to get started just generally speaking and ask you if you recall your very first acquaintance or association with Mr. Lyndon
  • HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh - 25­ If Eisenhower had said this in '55 or '56 after the Geneva Conference, in my opinion
  • was involved, he really VJas involved, in those early days; it vJas during the last days of the Eisenhower Administration. And I found him supportive of LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library
  • within the Wh i t e House, and I think it deprived the public of a really full understanding of the problems that the Eisenhower Administration were up against. My view of it is that the open approach, as the Nixon people call it, is really a pretty good
  • not to oppose for non-Catholics. declaration with for .U.S. Government in family planning programs. of complete extensively a field for official government an family assistance. 122 President Eisenhower., that government for example., clearly
  • policy - the one which President Eisenhower approved on August 5, 1959. We have kept this draft up-dated, so that it could be promptly made available for NSC consideration, if this is desired. Category I: Planning Tasks. These cover unresolved problems
  • , and on that basis I chose Ur. Robert Anderson, the distinguished former Secretary of the Treasury under President Eisenhower, to be my _special Ambassador on this prohlern. Since then AMbassador Anderson has been working with the American Ambassador, nr. Vaughn
  • ~ESIDENT EISENHOWER ISSUED A PROCLAMATION 0~ THZ DISPLAY OF THE FLAG OF THE UNITED STATES OF At1£R lCA AT ' }{ALF_: ST .t,FF UPON THE DEATH .OF .CERTAIN OFFICIALS ANO FOR:·1ER OF~ICIALS. THIS PROCLAMATION STATES THAT THE FLAG SHOULD 3E J!S?LAYED AT HALF
  • reports phone conversations I had with General Eisenhower at noon today. /J#-4 ?- A. J. G O O D ~ Lieutenant General, U.S. Army 1 Att as DETERMINED TO Bf AN ADMINISTRATIVE MARKING NOT NAT'l SECURITY INFORMATION, E. 0. 12356, SEC. 1. 1