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  • The scenario for the day (Thursday, Janua ry 19) looks like this: Noon Full Board of Trustees of Johns Hopkim meets to confirm appointment. Between noon and 1:00 p. m. -- Milton Eisenhower telephones Line informing him. of final decision
  • already begun under the Eisenhower Administration with the creation of the Inter-American Bank and with the Act of Bogotá [Bogotá Agreement], which had been agreed to with Douglas Dillon, who was the American representative that summer of 1960. The term
  • fron other sources. It is n P re n ~a Latina story with a Rio dateline, speculating on tho impaot of the Khrushchev-Eisenhower visits on our policy in Latin Amer ica. I would hope that wo would find an opportunity to express ourselves vi g orously
  • MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. :MARVIN WATSON Subject: Request for appointment from General Sir Francis W. de Guingand General de Guingand, who was Field Marshal Montgomery's Chief of Staff during World War ll, has just arrived in U. S. General Eisenhower has
  • ran into Dr. [George] Burkley, who was President Kennedy's private physician, and he was getting into his car. He'd gotten cut off from the President, too. you give me a ride?" I said, "Will I had known him for years, since Eisenhower days; he'd
  • wire of August 10, I cited General Eisenhower's dictum about conquering a battalion by using two other battalions and thus suffering many casualties, or else conquering it with a division, in which case casualties would be very few. This l ed me to say
  • was the demilitarization of the Sinai, which had been agreed to with Dag Hammarskjold. After all, the Israelis in 1956-57 pulled out at our insistence, General Eisenhower's, and part of the deal was what I told you, a letter that the peacekeeping force--which [David] Ben
  • dealing with was going to be a long-term operation. You also have to remember, back in the sixties, that the Kennedy Administration followed the Eisenhower Administration, and there just weren't that many people either at the federal level or at the local
  • this is something again the public never quite appreciates. For example, Eisenhower had never had an attack before, you see, but he had it during the presidency. And I would estimate that if we could look ahead three hundred years from now at presidents who
  • with--but take Brennan, I used to play golf sometimes with Eisenhower and he told me that Brennan had disappointed him; that Judge Vanderbilt, who was then the Chief Justice of New Jersey and upon whose court Brennan sat, had told him that Brennan was more
  • it for a 15 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh Barr -- IV -- 16 long time: from the Eisenhower years to the Kennedy years, the Johnson
  • , but then, he was running against a general, and a very popular one. If you'll notice, in most of his speeches he always referred to Eisenhower as "the general." And isn't it strange that we didn't turn off at a "general" but I guess we were just sold
  • . The original idea, I might say, was that Milton Eisenhower would be invited to be chairman. He was willing to serve on the initial period of the commission, but did not feel he had the time to be the chairman, so he turned it down. It was then hoped that Dr
  • . DISAPPROVED ~ NO------ John McCone is back from a talk with Eisenhower. Would like a mome ~with ~ou in next several days. YES JV 4/27/64 0.. . THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON April 22, 1964 MEMCRANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT AGENDA FOR NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
  • withdrew his offer of two or three inspections when the Moscow negotiations began. ^See Robert W. Lambert, Tsst-Ban Tpeaty^ Secret. IZfie Negotiations of the Limited COWflPBWTIflE -4Outer Space Since the Eisenhower Administration, the United States had
  • Agency. We're now in the Eisenhower administration. And that became one of the focuses of the multilateral control effort, because the act in essence provided that we could cut off aid to a country that was shipping strategic goods to the bloc, unless
  • Eisenhower won the presidency and the control of Congress in the 1952 election--at that time I was administrator of what was the Small Defense Plants Administration, a piece of legislation which Senator Sparkman, Senator Johnson, mostly Democrats but some
  • /exhibits/show/loh/oh 7 Presidency that there was an effective presentation and a creation of the present Department of Housing and Urban Development. As an active mayor, I had been appointed first by President Eisenhower when the Advisory Commission
  • on the qualifications of any potential nominee before he would be nominated. arrangement with the American Bar Association. This was by special Every President--Presi- dent Eisenhower, President Kennedy, President Johnson lived up to it. I think sometimes it irked
  • TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] Johnson More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh VII 22 wasn't brought up until he got back and was able to lead it through. Of course, Eisenhower
  • didn't know when I was going out to Indochina, but I got a call again from him, and th.en I started taking French, and then I got a call from the air force saying, "Th.e President"-- meaning Eisenhower--"has just called. He's been talking
  • at doing, as history has already recorded. I believe President Eisenhower made the statement that without Lyndon he never would have gotten any of his program through. The President was a statesman as well as a partisan, but he appealed to the members
  • of the Eisenhower years. That carne at about the time when I would have been eligible for a more junior position. Then when Kennedy came in in 1960 I was quite available, but nobody ever offered me the kind of a job that I wanted. I was particularly interested
  • not effective. This has to be second hand at best, but did you get the feeling that there was more White House concern with head counting under Johnson than there had been under Kennedy who maybe had even more than Eisenhower? In other words
  • about our relationships with student organizations--youth organizations--and certainly others, made in effect a statement that he had known about these things, and that they had gone on since the early days of the Eisenhower Administration