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- ," was strategically more impor
tant than Berlin.
Then there was the division of
post-war Germany (by the allies meet
ing at Yalta) into their occupation zone.
"Why take ground only to have to part
with it?" Pa11icularly if taking it would
cost an estimated 100,000
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
-
courage.
"When
left the Johnson
2
White
House, I practiced law. I was able to
represent the Washington Post and the
Democratic Party during Watergate ....
We filed a suit against the Committee
to Reelect the President three days af
ter Watergate
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post. Both men spoke on
the topic, "G vernment Support for the
Humanities."
Dr. Duffey maintained that federal
funding for the arts and humanities has
increased more rapidly over the last dec
ade than any other part of the federal
budget. He added
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
-
son Chair in Public Affairs at the Lyndon
B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. His
appointment was approved on Octo r 12
by The University of T xas Board of
Regents.
Prof~or Cohen will assume his new
post in January. He will teach seminars on
weUare
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- of the Soviet and Eastern Euro
pean Research Program at Johns Hopkins Univer
sity; Strobe Talbott, diplomatic correspondent for
Time magazine; Philip Bobbitt, UT law professor;
Robert Kaiser, national correspondent for the
Washington Post; James Goodby
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- as an apology because other
presidents so rarely admit any mistakes, has stood for more than a
century as an accurate and fair self-appraisal.
During a post-presidential trip around the world. a leisurely
journey consuming more than two years, the Grants
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- exchanges between Jerry
Brown, Ann Richards, academics
James Reichley
of Georgetown
University and Larry Sabato of the
University of Virginia, and journal
ists Meg Greenfield of the Washington
Post and Marianne Means of Hearst
Newspapers.
Only Brown
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- an agreement between
business, labor and government for wage-price guide
posts of the kinds we had in the '60s, accompanied by
an attempt by the President and others to convince this
nation of what Switzerland, Japan and Germany have
by and large learned
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- ; rather, it had been failing lo
enter the League of Nations. It
became the common wisdom that
collective security and military pre
paredness
could have prevented
World War II. So collective security
and military preparedness became
the themes of post-war
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- for
the fulfillment of the American dream.
The words on your diplomas are the sign posts on your road
to the future. Horde are wonderful, magi.cal messengers. The
words of the wise, of the g reat, of the prophet, the poet, and the
philosopher have become yours. You
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- by President Carter to head the U.S_
Civil Service Commission. Campbell had been dean 64
days when he resigned to take the federal post.
Mrs. Rostow, Professor of American Government
and Dean of the University's Division of General and
Comparative Studies
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- . columnist for
the Washington Post, set th
stage for each discussion with a
brief review of the issue
involved. Referring to the need
tor public partic1pa11on he said:
"Washington has ... a bad habit
of using verbal shorthand or
technical jargon to keep out
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- of cily·building and hu
man resource development strategy."
Conference in Houston Explores World of Texas Politics
"The World of Texas Politics," said
Lynn Ashby, editor of The Houston
Post, "is fill.ed with some of th.e
most offensive, slimy, repugnant
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- Moyers: Many times he
didn't mean what he told ou to do.
On
vening he had a particularly
fu1ious s rap with McG orge Bundy,
who he thought was I aking to th
Washington Post. I was in the bed
room late in the ev njng, and h, said,
'·Would you mind hanging
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- interests
- Texas and landscape beautification." Mrs. Lanier said. "The
highway department is like family ·to us. I think everybody takes
5uch pride in the proj~ and that is because of Ladf Bird Johnson."
The Laniers, asked by Mrs. Johnson to take the post
- interests
- Texas and landscape beautification." Mrs. Lanier said. "The
highway department is like family ·to us. I think everybody takes
5uch pride in the proj~ and that is because of Ladf Bird Johnson."
The Laniers, asked by Mrs. Johnson to take the post
- , property tax adminis
tration, post-secondary and vocational education, social ser
vice delivery systems, special revenue sharing, energy
policy, and state insurance policy.
Between the first and second years of study, students are
required to participate
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- -in-Residence program
Ambassador William J. Jorden, former U.S. Ambassador to
Panama and a member of President Johnson's National
Security Council Staff, has been installed as the Library's first
Scholar-in-Residence. The post, the first of its kind launched
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- in commencement, but not
for commencement I 964. There were
more volunteers than could be
accepted, and the posts had to be
carefully assigned to reflect University
constituencies. In a similar departure
from recent tradition a large
proportion of the graduates
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- 'lary of tatc Henry Kissinger, Fo1wer Seer tary of
Defense Roberl M N, mara and Congresswoman Patricia
Schroeder.
Serving on each of the panels also vill be three or four
citizens who have part" c1pated in the comm unit discus
sions.
Wash111gton Post
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- House, when he
visited the Library to discuss that fascinating history of the
White House.
3
VISITORS TO THE LIBRARY
Katherine Graham, publisher of the Washington Post, wa.,
here for the opening of the exhibit on Drew Pearson. (See
page 6.) Charles
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- , and she read intelligence for the
O.S.S. in Washington-they returned
to Europe and married in Oxford.
Writing a memorandum for the State
Department outlining a proposed
structure for post-war Europe led to
Walt's working in the late 1940s for
Gunnar Myrdal
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- and Luci did the honors at the
ribbon-cuning. The U.S. Post Office
commemorated the event with a spe-
cial cancellation which was present
ed in honor of the day. Several
mementoes of the opening are avail
able at the Museum srore, including
signed copies
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- ,
140 photos relating to the Vietnam
War, and 15 images of Museum arti
facts. The National Archives staff
created digital images of all those
9
items and put them on the ARA
web site. Our staff posted oral histo
ry interviews to our own Library
web
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- of
meeting Jacquelin (Jackie) Thornburg, his new secretary.
Born and raised in atchez, Mississippi, Ms. Thornburg
flipped burners in L.A. for a while aft r high school. then
went to work for the Chicago Post Office in 1970. Since
then she has worked
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- , to be followed by the Senate papers, the Vice
Presidential papers, the post-Presidential files, and finally
the personal papers of associates.
Of the Library's one million security-classified
docu
ments- primarily concerned with foreign affairs - more
than
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- the
veto.
Late May
The Saturday Evening Post publishes an article about LBJ as a possible vice
presidential nominee in 1952.
June
6/7
LBJ and Tom Connally meet to discuss appointments for the federal district
attorney position for the Western District
- . . . . The next
90 days will tell which direction we go from here.”
Mussolini put to death by firing squad of Italian partisans.
May
5/1
Hamburg radio reports that Adolf Hitler has fallen in battle at his command post
in the Chancellory in Berlin.
5/3
- egg buying program throughout Texas on Monday
to insure producers a return of 26 cents/dozen. LBJ says price would fall to 20
cents/dozen without relief.
3/29
LBJ and Ewing Thomason named to Post-War Military. Planning Committee.
3/31
FDR permits
- .
The University of Texas
Board of Regents voted June
9 to accept funding by the
Sid W. Richardson Found taon for the post Ms. Jordan
will occupy at the school. Be
ginning in January, the
Foundation will prov1de an
annu 1 salary of $38,000 for
five years
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- in
San Marcos, Texas. He recalled
how the famed "Johnson treat
ment" moved him from his cabi
net post as Postmaster General to
another job: "[President John
son] called me into his office and
told me how important Eastern
Europe
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- posted on the east wall of
the LBJ Library building ...
...
,jl.'...
'
.
_..,.
G.•5'•.__~~
~
'
I •'
-
____.L_--i/L.-
• .
....:I
... and the Oags flew at half-mast.
10
Phorv.1by
CharlesBogel
Local High School Student "Casts a Shadow
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
- of Barrett's book:
Professor Barrett has given us an engrossing account of the highly secret, oft n contentious relationship
between Congress and its post-World War II creation, the Central Intelligence Agency. Thoroughly researched,
rich in fascinating detail
- Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)