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  • , August 2-17, 1968 Activity 8-11:30 Worked with Liz, Simone re: Howard K. Smith show Packed 11:52 On help to Walter Reed 12:00 Visited with Mrs. Eisenhower in her room at hospital. 1:00 Left Walter Reed
  • BILL MOYERS IS MEETING WITH LBJ AT TIME OF CALL; MOYERS ASKS OFFICE SECRETARY TO FIND OUT IF DWIGHT EISENHOWER IS IN WASHINGTON, DC TODAY; GOLDWATER ON HOLD 1:15
  • JCS MEETING ON 2 PLANS FOR MORE US FORCES IN VIETNAM; POSSIBLE EISENHOWER BRIEFING; NUMBERS OF TROOPS IN EACH PLAN; EXTENSION OF TAYLOR'S APPOINTMENT; MIKE MANSFIELD'S, GEORGE AIKEN'S VIEWS; DECISION-MAKING PROCESS; DETERIORATING VIETNAM SITUATION
  • SARGENT SHRIVER'S RESIGNATION FROM OEO, POSSIBLE AMBASSADORIAL APPOINTMENT; ILLINOIS POLITICS; RICHARD DALEY; UNPOPULARITY OF OEO; LBJ'S RECENT MEETINGS WITH US TROOPS, PILOTS, DWIGHT EISENHOWER; AVERELL HARRIMAN; ARTHUR DEAN; ARTHUR GOLDBERG'S
  • Wilbur Cohen Surgeon General , Luthe r Terr v Dr. E d Dempse y Senator Mansfield General Eisenhower Joe Califano Photographers i n t o Loung e t o tak e picture s o f the Presiden t an d Genera l Eisenhower (14 photogs) (Oki e ha d been in thr u th e
  • . White, Cong. and Mrs. Brooks President Eisenhower, Indio, California Retired
  • Lyndon B. Johnson to President Dwight D. Eisenhower. The letter gives Johnson’s observations of President of Mexico Adolfo López Mateos from a meeting in Acapulco. • • • • Date range of collection: 2/1959 Less than 1 linear inch. Available for research
  • Eisenhower, John W. McCormack, and James A. Farley. Many of the letters concern newspaper articles written by Lincoln. Gould Lincoln's manuscript, "The President Looks at the Press," is included in the series, as well as several newspaper articles written
  • (includ e visited by)* D Departed Washington Arrived Salinas, Kansas Departed Salinas, Kansas Arrived Abilene, Kansas Dedicated Eisenhower Museum Departed Abilene, Kansas Arrived Salinas, Kansas Departed Salinas, Kansas Arrived Austin, Texas Attended Tom
  • . In 1953, President Eisenhower appointed Dillon ambassador to France, a position he held until 1957. Upon his return to the United States, Dillon served in the State Department as Undersecretary of State for Economic Affairs from 1958 to 1959
  • to the Lyndon Johnson family. She was a staff writer for the Washington Post, covering the White House during the Eisenhower, Kennedy and Johnson administrations. She authored a biography of Lady Bird Johnson, as well as books on the first families and White
  • Bio: Stephen John Horn (b. 1931), Republican Congressman from California, was born in Gilroy, California. His career began as a young political appointee in the Eisenhower Administration, where he was the administrative assistant to Secretary
  • Correspondence, 1950-83, primarily re Hearings, FRB membership, mortgage market, Maisel, and King] Martin Personal: Congressional Letters Correspondence and Telephone Calls, President Johnson and Nixon Correspondence, etc. with Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy
  • /2 hours) Two Presidents, leave by car fo r E l Dorado Countr y Clu b fo r visi t wit h former Pres. Eisenhower. Arrive Eisenhowe r hom e at E l Dorado Country Club . . .Pres. Eisenhowe r embrace d Pres . Lopez Mateo s upo n arrival and greeted Pres
  • , which I wish every American could have, of spending an hour With General Eisenhower at Frankfurt, and almost another hour thereafter with General Bedell Smith, Chief of statt - to General Eisenhower. ot all the .Ambassadors that we have ever had who
  • President Eisenhower's State of the Union Message Speech by Senator Johnson on the Senate Floor Speech of Senator Johnson at Jefferson-Jackson Dinner, New York City Release from Senator Johnson Letter to Lithuanian American Information Center from Senator
  • of the correspondents included are President Dwight Eisenhower, Senator J. William Fulbright, Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Senator Robert Kennedy, Senator Mike Mansfield, and President Harry Truman. Topics include the Vietnam War, foreign aid, including food aid
  • represented Eisenhower in the Eisenhower Administration although he fought General Eisenhower on some of the basic positions which Eisenhower had taken. He and Lyndon Johnson had a perfectly correct relationship. I was not at all intimate and I don't know how
  • . INVOLVEMENT IN THE FRANCO-VIET MINH WAR, 1950-1954 (1 vol.) Section III. THE GENEVA ACCORDS, 1954 (1 vol.) Section IV. EVOLUTION OF THE WAR IV.A. U.S. MAP for Diem: The Eisenhower Commitments, 1954-1960 1. NATO and SEATO: A Comparison Section IV. EVOLUTION
  • he won out. I don't need to go into details of that, but Cliff Durr was the one that pulled him out. James Lawrence Fly was determined; it was something he had put his staff on, Pete Shuebruk and Nate [Nathan H.J David, two brilliant lawyers
  • direct comments on the paper -- including their flavor. Hal is an extremely well-balanced analyst of the Middle East. I would divide my own comments into two parts: first, the items in David s paper which we had planned already to support or could support
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: HAROLD HOWE II (Tape 1) INTERVIEWER: DAVID G. McCOMB More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • Oral history transcript, Harold Howe II, interview 1 (I), 10/29/1968, by David G. McComb
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: JOHN GARDNER (Tape #1) INTERVIEWER: DAVID McCOMB More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • Oral history transcript, John W. Gardner, interview 1 (I), 12/20/1971, by David G. McComb
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: STANLEY H. RUTTENBERG INTERVIEWER: DAVID G. McCOMB More on LBJ Library oral histories: http
  • Oral history transcript, Stanley Ruttenberg, interview 1 (I), 2/25/1969, by David G. McComb
  • 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
  • , not even his own Dutchess Countyo You carried the State as a whole by over two and a half million, as against Roosevelt's i,112,000 in 1936, and Eisenhower's one and a half million in 1956. Your percentage of the total vote was 68.5%, and Roosevelt's
  • . They all did. My present boss, Bill Foster, Harriman, David Bruce. I didn't really go in that direction so when I was offered a job as general counsel of the AEC, I took it. I had barely taken the job, which I actually went in to around the lst of March
  • 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
  • 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
  • to dothlo? / Yea____ No___ _ (3) Dr. James "!>er kine whose Committee le working with David Bell on new ideas ln the AID program is very anxious to have Davld-a.ockefeller on this group •. Rockefeller le agreeable to serving - but must get off
  • when she thought I was being cussed out, even though I probably needed it at times. I said that on the David Frost show one time but I didn't go into detail. Anyhow, we got there. That's beside the point. He called me up, went over to Mr. Kleberg's
  • Committee, not supporting either the AFL-CIO bill or the Teamster's bill or the Eisenhower bill. The Teamsters and the Machinists very much opposed my re-election in any year after that. K: Because you had organized his--I don't know if organized
  • http://archives.gov National Archives Catalog https://catalog.archives.gov http://www.lbjlibrary.org WHCF NO. Box NO. FOLDER TITLE 7 Background Material for Meeting of Gen. Goodpaster with Gen. Eisenhower at Gettysburg 8/65 7 President asking
  • LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL HISTORY TRANSCRIPT Lyndon B. Johnson Library Oral Histories [NAID 24617781] INTERVIEWEE: MILTON EISENHOWER (Tape #1) INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ F: More on LBJ Library oral histories
  • See all online interviews with Milton S. Eisenhower
  • Biographical information; FDR; LBJ's relationship with Eisenhower; invitation to LBJ to speak at Johns Hopkins; Senator Joseph McCarthy; Chamizal dispute; LBJ as civil rights leader; Latin American affairs; 1960 election; Dominican Crisis; Panama
  • Eisenhower, Milton Stover, 1899-1985
  • Oral history transcript, Milton S. Eisenhower, interview 1 (I), undated, by Joe B. Frantz
  • Milton S. Eisenhower
  • OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN OPEN ,- 12 "Displaced Persons" [1950] "Draft" [1951] "Eisenhower" [1951-53] "Economics" "Economic Controls--For and Against" "Editorial Attitude" [Games] "Atlanta Broadcast Copy Requests" [July 1946] [Klan May-July 1946] "Klan
  • supported Eisenhower in 1952 that Lyndon and Price weren't very close, you see. So he [Gooch] told him he came up to get information, mainly on me at the time, but just that something was wrong. here. It seems to be that Johnson knows what we're going
  • 24617781] More on LBJ Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh and I always followed the President's instructions. I resigned as director of the women's division after the Eisenhower election --well, I didn't resign until
  • and completely isolated from the public. F: Everything has got to be filtered through somebody. M: That's right. Eisenhower was in that position. Roosevelt was in that position. Nixon is now in that position, But Kennedy and Johnson, as far as I could ever