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  • up Do you think I What year was he elected majority leader? F: He was elected minority leader after the 1952 election. G: Then it is minority. F: He held that for two years and then in the midterm of the first Eisenhower Administration
  • a ITleITloranduITl at that tiITle to Johnson--I sent it to JiITl Rowe, who worked for hiITl at that time- -not on the advantages to the disabled of getting Social Security but on the political iITlplications of getting Disability. Because Eisenhower had at first
  • abhor most types of speculation, and this is one that is as bad as most. This matter has been hanging fire for eight years. President Eisenhower was unwilling to sign off on it after years of very costly hearings during his Administration
  • : Which was on the top floor of the White House and was used by General Eisenhower as a card room and by Caroline Kennedy as a school. luci redecorated it herself and made it into a very comfortable living room-type with a record player up there and book
  • there was no woman on it. And of course this comment has been made with respect to the Nixon Administration. I'm not quite as critical as most people because on this issue nobody has done very well since President Eisenhower with Mrs. Hobby who, if you recall
  • , Eisenhower had Sherman Adams, Harry Truman had General Vaughan, and Kennedy had Bobby Kennedy. These were their lightning rods. They were the bastards. The President was always the good guy, and when anything would happen, they would say, "Well, it's
  • he became president, in later years, kind of like Eisenhower. Except he was always hipped on the subject of getting people to church on Sunday, especially Catholics. When Sally would spend the night with Lynda, he'd have her come and-0: Walter
  • --at least the public sector of it--is by exercising political influence in one way or another. Actually, my father has only become active in politics--at least in the foreground, let's say--in recent years. He went under President Eisenhower. He
  • president would be a lousy press secretary for another. This is little understood. Jim Hagerty was the perfect press secretary for Ike Eisenhower. He wouldn't have lasted two days with LBJ. I would say that the perfect press secretary for LBJ was George
  • on several projects for President Kennedy. In the mid-fifties I had also come down and met President Eisenhower on an anti-inflation program that the Advertising Council was running. But I found being one of fifteen young men seated in two rows
  • of President Eisenhower's farewell reference to the military ind us trial complex! Nobody knew of its importance at the time of its delivery, although some might have prized the prominence it has today. Think also of the actual positioning of President
  • a couple of phone calls during this time, probably within a week or two, that came out of nowhere. There was a call from Jim Hagerty, who had been Eisenhower's press secretary and then held a senior position at ABC Television. He said that there was a need
  • Works Committee on the Federal Aid Highway Bill. This was the time when the Interstate System was being proposed. Senator Gore was one of the principal. F: This was during the Eisenhower Administration. C: When President Johnson was the Majority
  • Simbel; Cyprus issue; CENTO; Eisenhower Doctrine; Vietnam; India-Pakistan War; LBJ's speech for advice on foreign policy matters and his diplomatic performances; Richard Rovere; John Leocacos; The Establishment; personal and private papers
  • [For interviews 1 and 2] First meeting with LBJ in 1948; Thomas C. Henning, Jr.; Joseph R. McCarthy; Senator Earle Clements; Senate Campaign Committee; Walter Jenkins; George Reedy; John Connally; Eisenhower inauguration; LBJ's organization
  • the 1299th, the squadron that I was in, was so-called the state side. We were stationed at Bolling and at that time we were flying C-131s and they had some U-4s and they had a helicopter because of Eisenhower, a previous president. The other squadron, the so
  • , 1964 Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson The White House Washington, D.C. Mr. President: As an Eisenhower Republican, I am deeply concerned with the possibility that, by due democratic process, this nation just might elect the Sen. from Arizona to the high office
  • September Subjoc:t: St~tc econou1lc data !or poc:dble l:> 1 19~4 u~o lti the week ot October 6 NORTH CAH.OLL.'4A l. ~oJ:'th Ca:r~lina la growing much f:u:ter under the pre:tent tion th.an it
  • !ly is ran opportunity for them." Klein said the Democrats "during the early stages. of the j Eisenhower administration'' gave Nixon the image· of a man who uses subterfuge and strata­ gems, but tha1t this. was not an issue this year
  • which includes Bill Drake as a candidate for mayor. Mayor Tom Miller is threatening to run again. 2/11 Eisenhower is named by Truman as head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and principal consultant to Secretary of Defense Forrestal. 2/12 Pope Pius XII