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256 results
- , the water that you touch is the last of what has passed, and the first of that which is to corne; so it is with the present tirne." So it is with Hemism ir. Now it is my privilege to start this symbolic waterfall for the first time. May all who corne here
- where people can not . only prosper but where they can see and feel the beauty of our time and place. lt gives me special pleasure to see that it is a service-oriented business club that is l eading the way. lt has been said that: "In the country, people
- with men. But she wants to be ... while being equally involve d -- preemi nently a woman, a wife, a mother, a thinking citizen. Time has broug:it the emergence of the woman with the dual role, but necessity first created her in the expanding West. As we
- down muddy banks into dark, enchanted bayous. While we fished through the long summer days, we enjoy e d the illusion that time was standing still. But time never stands still. I grew up, went to college and married a tall Texan. My horizons have b een
- of rugged mountains fronted by deep, blue water. By the calendar of man 1s existence, J ackson Hole has had a very short history. From the nomadic Indian to the wandering trapper to the pioneer rancher to the setting now before me is but a moment of time
- of your state have contributed to the defense of the free world. It is also significant that it was at the small community of Arco where atomic ene rgy was used for the first time to supply the electricity and lighting for an entire community. Eastern
Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Campobello Island, New Brunswick, 8/20/1964"
(Item)
- know that Campobello is unique. Its name has become synonymous with greatness. In a troubled time, it stands as witness to our unfortified boundaries and to our friendship with our generous Canadian neighbors. As an American, the journey to Campobello
- of Fredericksburg and nearby c ounties are looking to future needs -- and preparing to meet them in time. - 1 : ( .... . .. ... " I heard with interest of yotr Salem Church Dam Project which will conserve that resource that every Texan appreciates water
- to 300, 000. And on all fronts, women's organizations are eager to g ive time in the 1, 000 communities where programs will get u.n derway on July 1. ~lunteer This response is a great joy to all of us. The President has asked me to thank all of you
- will be t~=:.il ~d to b~ar ci.bm.:.t. the program. There is now a wav all o: t~em can help either i n encoaraging a child to attend or in giving volunteer time at foe p r ojects. Hea.d Start is the pr~gram organized and adminis tered by tb.e waich will gi·1e
- bestowed upon me. I shall treas u re it and remember always thia spring evening when this great city is filled with blossoms and music . No one can drive through N ew York at this time of year .... as \", I have done this afternoon -- without realizing
- to respond to loving care . It has been a brief time since the start of Head Start. Its measure will be seen years f.rom now when these children have progressed - - most hopefully - - through school toward a happy and self-reliant adulthood. All of its
Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Dedication of Stage - East Room, 9/29/1965"
(Item)
- and President Buchanan was host to entire companies of opera stars . In the time of President Theodore Roosevelt these very walls vibrated to the magic of Enrico Caruso and to the power of Paderewski. So you can see there have long been ties between the White
- . What is it that prompts us all? Since the beginning of time, man turned to nature -- for inspiration, for joy, for solace. The psalms and the poetry · throughout our history recount the strength from the hills and the peace from the waters which comes
- , weapons, uniforms, paintings, car toons and memorabilia lent by a dozen institutions and individuals across the country. Also shown are some newsreels of the time. The exhibition will run until January 8, 1989. TO G i'ERAL A catalogue of the exhibition
- "' and the 40-some conference and ymposia that have been held since the Library's birth. Recalling the 1960s, Ramsey Clark said. --Youcan say that [theyJ were the best of times or the worst of times and maybe they were both." The burgeon ing fear of crime
- on her time and her country. The event was Lady Bird Johnson's 80th birthday, celebrated at the LBJ Library on December 4-5 (three weeks before the actual date of December 22). Family members, friends, associates stretching deep into the past
- ab ut Vietnam and how ever politician shrink from the liberal label, it i time to recognize the reality of this revolutionary's remarkable achievement . To the point of nagging, he reminded us that raci m and poverty amid unpr cedented affluence
- . Abon>, Prt•si dt>nl Johnson addresses the crowd of 4.000 friends, 1H·ighbors, long-time allies and political opponents. Although the race to complete last minute details was, in Mrs. Johnson's words, a ''cliff-hanger," at 11:30 a.m. on May 22, 197 l
- sixth from the left on the front row. Loaned by Mrs. Ava Cox, Johnson City. 2 Blacksmith shop in nearby Blanco, circa 1808. Loaned by Mr. W. L. Bayars, Blanco. THE ARTS: Years of Development, Time of Decision Th weather was magn.ficent
- making. So the \A/ashing /on Post called him and asked, ·ts it trne thal Califano made half a million dollars practicing law')' And Ed Williams said, 'Yeah, we had a terrible year.' "Not satisfied with that. A Time re porter called him and said
- educational vistas ? There was a time when a library was viewed as a cold storage locker for books; a time when the watchword of the librarian was "Silence PJ.ease . " There is the story told about John Langdon Sibley, a librarian at H a rvard in the 19th
- long to answer: "You ask if it will work to invest some time and money in the kids of this country? l remember 40 years ago in Cleveland. Tbere was a group of young boys -- out on the streets. They were ripe for trouble. But a young teacher, Miss Jesse
- slums, ghettos, littered roads. But we should remember, perhaps, that our word "criais" cornes from the Greek word for decision. A time of difficulty calls for dêcisions - and this ti me calls on us to choose: between apathy and action in cities
- , not oniy within the seashore areas, but on its commercial fringes, to make man 1s structures in harmony with na,ture 1 So The time and thought inve sted in s uc h d atails as whel"e the roads will thread the island, where build ings ·w!ll b e in harmony
- grew up in a uaii rural tonn. This was the important pl a ce and S aturday afternoons wer e the important time. You drovc to to1m, circled. the sc;_u a re over and ove r to see what was happening in the world • iLrid yo u probably bought a double-dip
- of time and thought tbey represent -- must continue. And they must increase, for population is going to increase; awareness is going to increase; products and their packages are going to increase. Sur ely it is time for Americans to cure the litterbug
- am glad and grateful to have the opportunity to play a role in this campaign. The writer, E. B. White, has remarked: "Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half of the people are right more than half of the time. 11 This is our faith
- to undertake extensive new exhibit on the life, time and programs of Lyndon Johnson. The new orientation theater will be carved out of the area which now contains large transparencies of rooms in the White House. Those transparencie will be moved to a ne," lo
- IssueNumberL August1, 1991 "It's all here-The story of our time, with the bark off!' -LBJ at dedicationof Library,May 22, 1971. 20 years of Library faces, pages2-3. "20 Yearsof The faces on these pages and the cover are some of the leaders
- and memorabilia of servicemen who the day before their deaths had been part of peace time America are among the most poignant items in the display. Visitors study a mock-up of desert tank action. 3 Lifesize figures add interest to the exhibit
- ~~ T{D GllTlNG~. {DITO~ DOUG m~~rnmL PUIGN ~ND P~OPUCTION T~e ~limate T~en ... When President Lyndon Bainesjohnson sig11ed the National Foundalion on the Arts and the Humani ties Act in EHiS, it wa.~a time of limitless possibilities. The economy
- Endowment for the Arts, the Library will host a majur national Symposium on "THE ARTS: Y ars of Development, Time f Decision." That evening, as the major event in this year's program, the Friends of the LBJ Librar ,,..-it be invited with the symposium
- , 0eft) who spent time as a lecturer at the LBJ School of Public Affairs. He was escorted through the museum by volunteer Susan Dimmick. 2 Early Decisions on Vietnam Discussed A scholarly conference to explore the early decisions made by the Kennedy
- administrations has implemented the commission's recommendations. They spent considerable time 111reinvent ing the wheel. - C. Girard Davidson, former Assistant Secretary, Department of the Interior Lee White The Histo11· Truman Administration. The Paley
- Among Issue um ber LX'Vlll ' July 2002 What If: No Socrates? No William the Conquerer? No FDR? Victor Hanson: For want of a Socrates, a Plato was lost. .. 2 On Ma L. for the e nd time in the LBJ Library' Evening With series, a panel
- special intere\t. I don't think at that time the Founding Fathers really understood what spe cial intere
- as if you'reeavesdroppingon history." So finally we've hecked off the last thing on the list that there ·s time to do! I've just walked down to sec the tiny little garden which we want to leave for White House children and grandchildren of day· to come. I like the way it's
- the American lune "Danny Boy," for instance-delight ed the audience, which soon gave up resisting the urge to keep time. Ms. Miller, a prize-winning clog dancer, demonstrated the form which she learned in Appalachia and per fected on her own. She and husband
- sails on.' Mrs. Johnson, Luci Baines Johnson, and long time LBJ staffer and family friend, Mildred Photo by Charles Bogel Stegall. 2 "As we celebrate the 95th birthday of Lyndon Baines John son. those of us who knew him can reminiscence about him