468 résultats
Q-023102472XColumbia University Press. Hardcover. New. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Columbia University Press hardcover
1014151163.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1258083213.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
SONG023102472XColumbia University Press 1960-10-15. 1st edition assumed. hardcover. Used: Good. 5.84x0.99x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Columbia University Press hardcover
DADAX023102472XColumbia University Press 1960-10-15. 1st edition assumed. hardcover. New. 5.84x0.99x8.66. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Columbia University Press hardcover
19511604641951. Commemorating the American fallen A compelling album apparently made by the family of a fallen serviceman and therefore unique commemorating Eisenhower's presentation of the Roll of Honor to St Paul's Cathedral. The roll lists the 28000 American soldiers stationed in Britain who gave their lives in the Second World War. The album includes large-format photographs of the military procession to the ceremony; attendees entering the cathedral including Churchill Mountbatten Attlee the Queen Mother and Princess Elizabeth Eisenhower and Curtis LeMay; photographs of the service including the congregation singing hymns and the sermon by the Archbishop of Canterbury; and Eisenhower leaving the Cathedral. The ceremony was held on Independence Day. Eisenhower delivered a message: "Each name inscribed in this book is a story of personal tragedy and a grieving family; a story repeated endlessly in white crosses girdling the globe. The Americans whose names here appear were part of the price that free men have been forced a second time to pay in this century to defend human liberty and rights". The album includes a copy of a page from the roll listing names from Hiltabidle to Hitchings - presumably the album was made by the family of someone listed there. We could trace no other similar album. In 1958 the American Memorial Chapel was completed in a part of the cathedral that a bomb had hit in 1940. The roll now resides there and a page is turned each day to show different names. Landscape quarto album 318 x 419 mm. Four letterpress leaves partly printed in gilt comprising title excerpt from the Archbishop of Canterbury's address Eisenhower's introduction to the Roll of Honour and copy of page from roll all with acetate covers. Tan leatherette front cover lettered in blind "Commemoration Service - St. Paul's Cathedral - July 4. 1951." cord-bound cord recently renewed 33 heavy card leaves with 28 mounted black and white silver gelatin press photographs 203 x 254 cm most captioned by hand. Binding neatly restored and consolidated the photographs in sharp unblemished condition slight discolouration around letterpress leaves. In very good condition. hardcover
19531581571953. A notable portrait presented to a prominent early supporter Inscribed by the president "For Senator William A. Purtell with best wishes and warm regard from his friend Dwight D. Eisenhower"; an appealing image of a pensive Eisenhower by renowned Capitol Hill photographer George Tames taken in the White House as Eisenhower announced the truce ending the Korean War. Purtell 1897-1978 served as Republican Senator for Connecticut in 1952 and from 1953 to 1959. He was one of the earliest Connecticut Republicans to support Eisenhower's run for the presidency. In turn Purtell's success in the November 1952 Connecticut senatorial election rode on the back of the strong public support for Eisenhower in the simultaneous presidential election; Purtell allied himself closely to Eisenhower's campaign platform. "A strong supporter of President D. Eisenhower's policies Senator Purtell was also a staunch American who liked to say: 'we have the finest country the finest system of society and the finest government in the world'" New York Times obituary 1 June 1978. The photographer George Tames 1919-1994 worked for the New York Times on Capitol Hill and in Washington from 1945 to 1985 taking many shots which became iconic. He took the photograph after Eisenhower's joint radio and television address to the nation announcing the signing of the Korean Armistice 26 July 1953. Interestingly this image would have been familiar to millions of Americans through its use on the 6 cent stamp issued in 1970. Official photograph taken by George Tames 358 x 280 mm copyright notice to verso stating reproduction by the Signal Corps of the US Army. Dark oak frame with conservation acrylic glazing 427 x 351 mm. Slight cockling inscription a little faded but still clearly legible very good. unknown
264157No place nd. 1 vols. In 11 3/4" x 14 3/4" frame. Fine. Framed and glazed. 1 vols. In 11 3/4" x 14 3/4" frame. From the Estate of actor Robert Montgomery. unknown
2551The black and white glossy photograph by "The News" captures Eisenhower in academic robes when he was President of Columbia University and Bourke-White also in academic robes on the day they each received honorary degrees from Rutgers: the future U. S. President for Doctor of Laws and renown World War II photographer for Doctor of Letters. The explanation of the photograph is docketed on verso. Trim lines visible with notations on verso. Condition: Bends at corner tips cracking at lower left corner and throughout visible under light. During the Second World War he served as Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces in Europe with responsibility for planning and supervising the successful invasion of France and Germany in 1944-45. After the war he served as President of Columbia University and in 1951 he became the first supreme commander of NATO. As a photographer for "Life Magazine" Margaret Bourke-White was the first female photographer to serve with the US armed forces covering World War II. She photographed Eisenhower for Life Magazine in 1942. unknown
1956H35632Washington DC: The White House 1956. Very good. 14 x 8 inches 3 sheets stapled with Eisenhower's statement on the testing of nuclear arms with a committment to testing them stil further which had bipartisan support along with Eisenhower's reaffirmation that his committment is also to peace and de-escalation of Cold War tensions. We could not locate this on Worldcat. The White House unknown
1258411571.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
P12OS-00063National Archives of the U.S. Used - Very Good. Very Good condition. united states politics and government sources A copy that may have a few cosmetic defects. May also contain light spine creasing or a few markings such as an owner’s name short gifter’s inscription or light stamp. NOT AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES. National Archives of the U.S unknown
00598720United States Government Printing Office. Hardcover. Very Good. A nice set of the First Printings . Complete set eight volumes 1953 - 1961 . The hinges are tight on all of the large books . The graphics on the spines are bright . All of the books are clean no marks of any kind except for a large bookplate on the front pastedown of volume eight . Volumes one and two show faded spots to the cloth on the back boards . Otherwise the cloth on all of the books is fresh . The books are protected with mylar covers . Overall a solid nice set . United States Government Printing Office hardcover
BOOKS330188United States Government Printing Office. Used-Very Good/NO DUSTJACKET. Hardcover. Sm 4to. . United States Government Printing Office hardcover
195869212Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office 1958. Presumed first edition/first printing. Second volume in series. Hardcover. Good. No dust jacket. Cover has some wear and soiling. Corners bumped. xxxiv 1220 pages. Includes index. Frontis. List of items The was published by the Federal Register Division National Archives and Records Service General Services Administration. From Wikipedia: "The Public Papers of the Presidents contain the papers and speeches of the Presidents of the United States that were issued by the Office of the Press Secretary. The series constitutes a special edition of the Federal Register. The Public Papers of the Presidents series was begun in 1957 in response to a recommendation of the National Historical Publications Commission. An extensive compilation of messages and papers of the Presidents covering the period 1789 to 1897 was assembled by James D. Richardson and published under congressional authority between 1896 and 1899. Since then various private compilations have been issued but there was no uniform publication comparable to the Congressional Record or the United States Supreme Court Reports. Many Presidential papers could be found only in the form of mimeographed White House releases or as reported in the press. The Commission therefore recommended the establishment of an official series in which Presidential writings addresses and remarks of a public nature could be made available. The Commission s recommendation was incorporated in regulations of the Administrative Committee of the Federal Register issued under section 6 of the Federal Register Act 44 U.S.C. 1506 which may be found in title 1 part 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations." The Public Papers series is compiled and published by the Office of the Federal Register National Archives and Records Administration. Each volume generally covers a 6-month period of a given administration and presents content in chronological order with headings providing the dates of the documents or events. In instances when the release date differs from the date of the document itself the date of public release is shown in the textnote. Remarks are checked against an audio recording if available or read aloud against official transcripts if no audio source is available and issued documents are checked against the original with exacting attention paid to preserving the integrity of the signed document. Textnotes and cross references are provided by the editors for purposes of identification or clarity usually of notable people referred to by the President or others participating in an event. Speeches are assumed to have been delivered in Washington DC unless otherwise indicated in the item heading. The times noted are assumed to be local times. All materials printed in full text in the book are indexed in the subject and name indexes and listed in the document categories list. With few exceptions deceased people are not indexed by name. The notes are intended for the general reader and specific criteria govern decisions about inclusion in or exclusion from the note with an eye toward keeping references standardized succinct and useful. U. S. Government Printing Office hardcover
81273718Government Printing Office 1960. Library Binding. Very Good. Clean unmarked pages. Good binding and cover. Hardcover. GPO 1960 printing. Ships daily. Government Printing Office unknown
007868Government Printing Office. Hardcover. Very Good Plus. Eight Volumes complete set covering the two terms of his Presidency from 1953 through 1961. All volumes are First Printings. This is a very nice complete set of Eisenhower's presidential papers. The set is visually attractive with the gold gilt graphics very bright on the spine of each volume. The hinges on the large books are very tight. The interior of each volume is clean no marks of any kind. The cloth on each volume is fresh and shows very light rubbing All books are protected with mylar covers. Government Printing Office hardcover
19591394Paris: USIS/Ambassade des États-Unis 1959. First Edition First Printing. Oblong 16mo 6 1/4 x 5 1/4 inches 160 x 130 mm 19 1 pages in stapled white wrappers. Wrappers a bit soiled and showing a little edge wear interior pages clean and bright. A Very Good or better copy. Text of an address by President Dwight Eisenhower on March 16 1959 about the growing crisis in Berlin. French text issued by the U.S. Information Service and the U.S. Embassy in Paris. The Soviets had demanded Western forces pull out of West Berlin a demand rejected by the U.S. Britain and France. In his speech Eisenhower says that the crisis was provoked by the Soviet Union and that the West must confront Soviet imperialism. "We shall continue to exercise our right of peaceful passage to and from West Berlin" he says. "We will not be the first to breach the peace. It is the Soviets who threaten the use of force to interfere with such free passage. We are ready to participate fully in every sincere effort at negotiation that will respect the existing rights of all and their opportunity to live in peace." Page 10 translated from the French. OCLC WorldCat shows three institutional holdings all in France. No other copies in commerce as of July 27 2017. A rare bit of Cold War ephemera. RARE. <br/><br/> USIS/Ambassade des États-Unis unknown
1946190508Washington DC: US Government Printing Office 1946. Presented to his "oldest and best friend" a key commander at D-Day First edition presentation copy specially bound for Leonard T. Gerow and inscribed by Eisenhower on the initial blank "To 'Gee' one of the outstanding battle leaders of World War II with the admiration and gratitude of his old friend Ike". Gerow 1888-1972 was in command of the V Corps at Omaha Beach on D-Day and became the first American general to enter Paris after its liberation in 1944. "Gerow was his oldest and best friend in the theater and V Corps headquarters would provide a haven in moments of anxiety more than once" Eisenhower p. 176. The careers of the two men were closely intertwined. "Eisenhower and Gerow were opposites. Gerow trim and meticulous was a chronic worrier. Eisenhower hale and robust had a gregarious and confident manner. But the two men shared similar thinking and tastes and had similar prewar professional reputations as staff officers. In the summer of 1916 Eisenhower and Gerow had first served together in the 19th Regiment based at San Antonio. In 1926 they had been classmates at the Leavenworth Command and General Staff School. They had formed a two-man study group in Eisenhower's tiny attic" Eisenhower pp. 176-7. It was Gerow that introduced Eisenhower to his future wife Mamie. Gerow originally headed the War Plans Division until the role was reassigned to Eisenhower due to Gerow's failure to foresee Pearl Harbour. Eisenhower was gracious to Gerow acknowledging it was only fortune that led to his taking the position; afterwards Eisenhower's career was to inevitably eclipse that of his old friend but Gerow still rose to a highly respected position eventually leading the Fifteenth and Second Armies. The book prints Eisenhower's official report of his role leading the Allied liberation of western Europe and the defeat of Nazi Germany. Eisenhower had copies bound for presentation to close family and military leaders the Eisenhower library have his brother's copy in the same binding; we could trace no other example on the market. Folio. Original black morocco front cover lettered in gilt silk endpapers. Housed in a custom black cloth solander box. With 11 colour maps of European battle theatres. Spine and front inner hinge neatly repaired light rubbing and wear at extremities. A very good copy. David Eisenhower Eisenhower at War 1986. hardcover
194645447Washington DC: Government Printing Office 1946. Paperback. 4to. Stiff pictorial wrappers. x 123pp. Maps. Very good. Faint wear to outer wrappers only -- tight and internally fine. Handsome first edition of Dwight Eisenhower's 13 July 1945 report. Top half of front wrapper bears an interesting tipped-on "War Department Bureau of Public-Relations" notice titled "FUTURE RELEASE" in large red typeface presenting this report "For Release by Press and Radio After 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time Sunday June 23 1946 For Use in Morning Newspapers Appearing on the Streets After the Above Time. Government Printing Office paperback
1946027927Washington: United States Printing Office 1946. xi 123p. colored maps original stiff wrappers quarto format. United States Printing Office unknown
1975Q-0893870307Aperture 1975-01-01. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Aperture paperback
51846John S.D. was son of 5-star general and U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower -- and himself a U.S. Army brigadier general U.S. Ambassador to Belgium and respected military historian. Milton S. was President Eisenhower's youngest brother a distinguished academic administrator and likewise a president -- of Kansas State University 1943-50 Pennsylvania State University 1950-56 and Johns Hopkins University 1956-57 1971-72. Signed FDC 6½" X 3 3/4" envelope postally cancelled in Casa Grande Arizona on 28 January 1972 and with "First Day of Issue" so stamped. Fine. Full block of eight 8-cent Eisenhower stamps at upper right and left third filled with ArtCraft engraved portrait of Eisenhower captioned "8¢ Dwight D. Eisenhower Booklet Pane of 1972." John S.D. Eisenhower signs boldly in blue ballpoint just below the stamps and Milton S. Eisenhower signs below his nephew in black fineline. This FDC is accompanied by a superb original glossy 6½" X 8½" new agency black-and-white photograph a candid shot showing Ike in uniform seated at left on a bench smiling at his niece Milton's daughter Ruth who sits on the lap of his son John also in uniform. Original printed text tipped to verso dates this image 23 June 1945 captions it "Gen. 'Ike' Relaxes at Home" and describes the scene: "General Dwight D. Eisenhower sits on the porch of his mother's home at Abilene with his son John and his brother's daughter Ruth six years old. She listens as the family's famous members speaks." sic A delightful and unusual pair. unknown
194514891n.p.: n.p. 1945. good. 8" x 10" 1 photo 8" x 10" black & white photograph of Gen. Eisenhower in victory parade inscribed to Arthur D. Anderson by Eisenhower. Lower corner of photograph creased. It is not clear whether this might have been signed by one of Ike's skilled secretaries who on occasion handled autograph requests or by Eisenhower. In any event this is a scarce post-war military career related Eisenhower item. n.p. unknown
1993013588Norwalk CT.: The Easton Press 1993. First Thus . Full-Leather. Fine/Issued Without Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. xxvi 436 pp. maps b/w photos & illus. footnotes notes bib. index. The U.S. War With Mexico 1846-1848. Dark blue full leather bound hardcover book in fine cond. Gold foil decoration to the front & rear covers gold foil title stamping to the spine. All edges gold guilt. Flat signed by the author. First Easton Press eedition. <br/> <br/> The Easton Press hardcover