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147 results
- is scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. . . Cited on Tuesday night will be those students and adults who have done superior work or made significant contributiona to the 4-H program during the year. • . Awards will also be given for project areas that students have
Press release, "Opening Remarks of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Beautification Meeting, 5/18/1966"
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- cents. If people realize that the cost of throwing a paper cup out of the car window is 34 cents~ this alone should be a deterrent. .. Newspapers are sponsoring anti..litter campaigns. I just ?no-~ read where the N,"'=~..:ee News Advocate
- what 1 have heard and read of President Coolidge, his devotion to duty, his capacity for hard work, his dislike of ostentation and hie ability to express himself in terse phrases. . ln fact, 1 frequently hear a paraphrase of his quotation "Let men
- touch with San Angelo because my husband like most cattlemen reads the San Angelo Standard Times. I am glad to see San Ange lo looking so prosperous and busy. It has taken teamwork in t he Congress and White House to achieve thi s, and I know you
- of the coast who took action to safeguar d the land along whi ch this scenic road now travels. For, this coastline lies here in the afternoon sun - - the western boundary of our continent. Inscribed on this plaque - - we can read the words of Robinson Jeffers
- ('. A TIOH A W ARDS CEREMONY T HE WHITE HOUSE Hearing those citations read , and se~i:'!g the satisfaction in your fa ces has been a very special treat for all of us. Yesterday I drove around the city to see sorne of your accomplish rnents f L s t hand
- weekends driving over the country side to come here. One of my favorite visiting places was elegant Kenmore, so laden with history, eating gingerb read as I strolled across the lawn. Often I walked down to James Monroe 1s law office, stopping by Mary Was h
- FOR RELEASE UPON DELIVERY TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1965 -- 2:00 p. m. CDT REMARKS BY MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON DEDICATION OF HORTICULTURAL DOMES MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN Ever since I read about Milwaukee's exciting new astrodomes for nature I have wanted
- busied herself to find out why, and learned his home folk s could not read any message he would send, and he could not r ead anything they r.ai ght sendto him. i:It always has seem.ed sad to n1e , she s aid, ' 'that t here could exist any where
- setting of America.il lüe will be pleasant or s qualid. If that question is not given a lively and enlightened answer , all our otber efforts could be in vain. Everything I read and see convince s me the Nation is geared for action to attack the problems
- other e, as you may have read. While I was preparing to corne here, 1 had the fun of reading some of the early history of ·southwestern in the Texas handbook. Several intriguing highlights caught my eye. - l learned, for example, tbat the university
- somehow finds the time to teach remedial reading to boys and girls whose reading handicap cuts them off from educational opportunity and coul d easily cause them to drop out of school and blight their entire lives -- the wife of our Secretary of Defense
- of these freshmen was asked to give a tribute at a dinner in Washington. I would like to read from that tribute now, and in doing so, to dedicate this statue to all new members of the 89th Congress and all future Congresses in hopes that -- like Sam Rayburn
Press release, "Remarks of Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson upon Arrival at Santa Fe, New Mexico, 9/22/1966"
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- travel over this land of ours -- the more I see bow much man can do with bis own surroundings. We read a great deal about the onslaught of the city • • • and what the great population invasions are doing to trample out so much of the vinta ge of good
- the White House read in th eir daily newspapers of the problems faced and the decisions made in the President's Executive Office. But tbere is a less familiar and more intimate aide to this building that is home as well as the hub of administrat ive leader
- towns or coal mining communities, but by populations that simply moved to payrolls and excitement in the city. These towns have literally been dying on the map. There are no tombstones for them. might read: But if there were, the tombstone "Here lies
- valley was the spirit of tremendous vitality. Because I was to travel o\·er this route in a few hours that they so laboriously crossed in 3 1/2 months, I recently read about your pioneer ancestors. It is hard to conceive of the phye.ical torment
- what we can do to make our ccipital more beautiful. Perhaps some of you read. as I did, recently the statement of a BritiEJh diplomat back in 1913 who had just spent six years in Washington. He wrote: "Your admirable river, the Potomac, is quite
- of the Johnson tapes. As 1 began listening to them, and then reading about him, there were these amazing things that had been completely overlooked in my mind: his commitment to civil rights ... the liberal programs which are still so important in our society
- , physically as sound as they were two hundred y ars ago. McCullough recalled the awe he felt when he first took one of the letters in his hands to read. When no other lawyer dared to defend the British soldiers accused of murder in the Boston Massacre, Adams
- of Texas culture, too, and always have been.'· Brian Lamb, president of C Span. provided a look into its opern rions. concerning the books he reviews and the authors he interviews for his program "Book Notes.'' "1 read all the books myself.. .. Some
- -- gotten part-time jobs. That is an important part of learning. But don't let the next three months just waste away. You can do all kinds of thing s . You can, for instance, g o down to the Urban Service Corps where Mrs. Annette Read will be g lad toagn you
- .:\•eryone started doing som ething about it. And, if you think your l etters-to- the - edi tor columns bring a varie ty of opinion, I invite you to c ome read mine. But, let me point out, all you have to do is print them. have to answer them . I
- historical, as well as artistic, acquisition." 3 Renovation of the Museum and 0th 1. Outside, cranes lift construction the roof of the building. 4. Three posters along lhe corridor which leads to the temporar!' exhibil lell the whole story. (Read from
- to the environmental movement of the late 60s and beyond." Six women who have shared important parts of Lady Bird Johnson's life read excerpts from her writings that traced some of her vivid and memorable experiences. They were college friend Cecille Marshall; Nellie
- Christi Caller-Tirnes who helped edacate the reade rs to the advantages , and won an award for it. It takes surveys, and then it takes legislation - - the tedious process of seeing-it-through the subcommittees and cornrnittees of the Senate and the House
- ! This is a large - scale solution to one of the greatest needs of our city. I hope everyone of you read the Washington Post last Sunday which proposed we celebrate America•s bicentennial in 1976 by a great effort to achieve our goals for houGing, transportat
- have a continuing obligation to their alumni, offers a course that shows a 45 year-old graduate who wants to get back into the labor market how to refresh her skills. I am glad to read in the ALCALDE that our own Ex-Students' Association is converting
- of Art, or Beltsville to see a model kitchen. And they have given special attention to possible school drop-outs by sitting hour after hour with youngsters of low -income and sometim es b roken families, helping them with remedial reading so
- -income and sometimes broken families, hel ping them with remedial reading or helping during summertime to introduce t eenagers to jobs and educational opportunities. They are typical of the women in this administration who are concerned with their country
- administration. She read from her diary. Some excerpts are presented on the next page. Fromthe Diary Of An Ambassador'sLady One of those days that has, ( sup pose, changed ,the course of our lives,. I feel keenly tonight tile brevity of ltfe and the necessity
- , "Dear Daughter, I am sending you 1he last dollar from the 4 ca~h register. We don't know when the banks will open." Times were hard and you could read it in the lrncs of letters and faces. In 1934 when Lyndon, who \\35 then secretary to a Con gressman
- beautiful. Things happen when -- up in the mountains of Appalachia - women take the bookmobiles back into the forks of the creek -- carrying the miracle of good reading to people who never before knew the joys of a library. Things happen when women support
- not supposed to read this mail, don't send it to me merely as a formality. If it is sent, don't tell me how to respond, if even by coincidence I read it. The boy will be brought here, and his papa and mama if he has such, so he won't be lonely in a strange land
- to be lifted by fork lift to the Library's second floor where the exhibition is installed (right). The exhibit ends with a display of life-size airbrushed images of mod ern Tejanos by EI Paso artist Gaspar Enriquez. The concluding text reads: "These pilgrims
Press release, "Remarks of Mrs. Lyndon Johnson, Youth Conference on Natural Beauty, 6/27/1966"
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- crossed my desk in recent months. They will give you an idea of some of the things that youth bas done; they may be stepping stones on which you can build. After reading their letter, I could just see tbose 70 boys in the Neighborhôod Youtb Corps
- special attention to possibl e school drcp-outs by sitting hour after hour with youngster s of low income and sometimes broken families, helping them with remedial reading so t hat they have a better chance to become self-sustaining useful citizens
- it and then shepherded it through from plan to execution. Dr. Livingston is editing the book based on the symposium which will be published in the fall. Following are his reflec tions on the conference. As I rl!fkct on the sympo~ium and as I read through th
- are (abO\'e left) Researcher. work in the reading room, (abo,·e right) Archi\ • t fill numerou document request for researchers each Ja •. (right) The recoilecti ns of people who knew Lyndon Johnson ar taperec rded and transcribed for the Oral History
- , child and maternal health. national parks, the environmental laws. But of course Vietnam was his denouement." Ms. Thomas credited Liz Carpenter with a story of LBJ scanning the first draft of an addre.s he had a signed to asp echwriter. As he: read, he