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- Pendleton;·~
Diego · :· ··:'. ·
· ..
,..
'
CALIFOR~IA, continued
Noven,ber 10-11, 1967
Overnight stay aboard USS Enterprise (Ship was
, anchored about 10-20 miles outside San Diego
Harbor)
· Remarks - Veterans Day ·ceremonies aboard
USS Enterprise
- , to restling oil rigs, to football.
there is a myth of the supporting women who fostered these male
enterprises, diminished nowadays t the exhibition of furs and
bangles in the sky boxes, and pompons and pomty bras at half
time on the field. I distrust
- mate because.
among other reasons, "It wouldn't be
worthwhile being president if Lyndon
were majority leader." rEd. note: A
number of LBJ's associates have
recalled him saying that one reason
among many that he accepted the
vice-presidential nomination
-
(Handwritten on Senate stationery)
Dear Mr.President,
Reading the newspapers and
their columnists and listening to my
colleagues in Congress (including
myself) on what to do and what not to
do in Viet Nam must become some
what discouraging at times.
I
- on the second floor~
Renderings by Graeber, Simmons & Cowan, A.I.A. Architects, Inc. In association with R. Max Brooks, FA/A
3
Foundation Board Meets
At LBJ Ranch
Members of the LBJ Foundation Board of Directors,
meeting at the LBJ Ranch on June 7-8, approv d
- .
On the corresix1ndents' panel were
Frank Cormier, for a long time with
the Associated Press and now retired;
Helen Thomas, United Press Interna
tional and dean of the Whjte House
press corps: Marianne Means, Hearst
Newspapers and l(jng Features syndi
cate: James
- and Native
American settlement sites across the country.
The United States Newspaper Progrnm,
created by the NEH in ID8'.2,is microfilming
.>4 million pages from hundreds of thousands
of local newspapers that would otherwise be
lost to decay. The Endowment
- protection t mpcred the 111herent
hardships and cruelties of\\ hat is still, by some, called the
free enterprise system ..
The R osev It Revolution, the New Deal, to this day is
both celebrated and not quite forgiven The poor ;.ire still
though! y the -.tern
- ;.,eparate session~. probed
three issues of compelling concern: prioriti1:, m c
- in the school newspaper
and yearbooks, to the delight of his
classmates, who voted him "Wittiest"
and "Most Original."
Butler even found humor in the
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- was then briefed
on the Library's Oral History Project, in which inter
views with md1viduals who ere associated with Presi
dent Johnson are taped and transcribed for researchers
working with the Library's collections.
Ford and Mrs. Johnson examine a document
- , President's Commission on
White House Fellows
Frank Ikard, Sr., Danzansky, Dickey, Tydings, Quint & Gordon
J. J. Pickle, United States Representative, 10th District, Texas
Charis Walker, Charis E. Walker Associates, Inr.
system up for ransom." It represents
- compiled by Dr. Hurst
and his colleague, the late Dr. Jim
Cain of the Mayo Clinic, also a long
time friend of the Johnson family.
The book, titled, LBJ: To Know
Him Better, contains recollections of
Johnson by some 40 persons who
were associated with him
- the President
while writing the report for a presi
dential commission.
Prior to that he had worked as a
reporter for the Associated Pr ss. as
news editor of Archirecrural Fortun
magazine, and as a freelance writ r.
A native of Kansas Middleton grad
uated
- in print.
Now Caro is at work on the final
volume of his LBJ biography.
The author began his remarks with
praise for LBJ Library archivists Clau
dia Anderson and Linda Seelke, who
have helped with his research over the
long years.
As a young newspaper
- had a long
association with the University of
Michigan, where he currently is Prof or
of Education and Public Welfare Admini
stration. From 1969 to 1978 he was Dean
of the Michigan School of Education.
During his career as teacher, admini
strator
- .
Other Committee members include Associate Justice
Thurgood Marshall, George R. Brown, Robert A.
Good, Katharine Graham, Linda Howard, Arthur
Krim, Mrs. Albert D. Lasker, Harry McPherson and
Mark Ward. Dr. Lof will receive the Award in
special luncheon
- to
President Ford.
•
On the other side were the men and women of the Press:
Frank Cormier, Associated Pr
- .
before President Johnson's 75th birthday anniversary.
Following are excerpts from the memorial speech made by
Jack Valenti, president, Motion Picture Association of
America, and former special assistant to the President:
The measure of a great leader
- and, in many cases, more effective with me. I read
newspapers and magazines. I watched television for news
and comment. I was in touch with many members of Con
gress every single day. I was receiving letters from friends
and enemies, from the informed
- Association of America
Charis E. Walker, adjunct
Professor at the LBJ School of
Public Affairs; Chairman of
Walker Associates
Lee C. White, Special Counsel
to LBJ; attorney,Washington,D.C.
Thomas Wicker, journalist,
New York Times
arc also frequently
- institutional
inferiority when it came to for
eign policy. In Congress and
the Cold War, however, Robert
David Johnson ucce, sfully
cha II nges that assumption
showing us an enterprising and
activi t legislative branch that
used its constitutional tools
- is to be misunderstood.
And when we say we stand or snmc things wc must never be
seen to have done che opposite. And people associated with
!hat have to leave. It doesn't matter which party.
As an ambassador you use back-channel communications
occasionally to get
- with every American
President during that time opened at the Library in February.
Titled, "Boy Scouts of America: From the Brush of Norman
Rockwell," the exhibit features 15 of the original works which the
famed painter undertook during his association
- majored in
journalism and became sports editor
of the student newspaper. the Daily
Texan. After a stint as capitol corre
spondent for International News
Service, he became press secretary to
Texas Governors Price Daniel and
John Connally. ln 1966 he
- of the Great Society,
In April, the LBJ Library and LBJ
School of Public Affairs joined with
the Texas Young Lawyers Association
and the Texas Bar Foundation in a con
ference held at the Library to . urvey
the status of the program.
Panelists Dan Morales
- .; Honorable Thurgood
Marshan, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the U.S.; and Mr. Mark Ward,
graduate student at the University of Minnesota.
Lew Wasserman, Chairman of the Board
of MCA, Inc., and Board member of the
LBJ Foundation, and Mrs. Wasserman,
chat
-
committees, trade associations, and
others with vested interests in gov
ernment operations."
One reform needed, Rove sug
gested, is "fuller disclosure ... es
pecially as to the source of money
[and] the principal occupation [of
the donor]. Shipley agreed
- r
the last two hundred years, and
much of the change has been driv
en by improved technology. Early
newspapers were largely political
organs devoted to boosting one
candidate and attacking his oppo
nent. The appearance of the first
wire service
-
Civil Rights leader who served two
decades as a director ofG.M.
3
VotingPatternsin U.S.
A symposium which the Library
jointly sponsored with the LBJ School
of Public Affairs. the Texas Ytrnng
Lawyers Association and the Texas
Bar Foundation pursued
- 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
- degrees
from the University of Texas at
Austin.
She ha represented the Library,
sometimes presenting papers and
serving on panels, at meetings of the
Texas Library Association, Society of
Southwest Archivist, Society of
American Archivist, Organization
- or the Far
East Command during the Korean War.
BEVIN ALEXANDER, Author, Korea: The First War We Lost, moderator
MARTIN BLUMENSON, Author of 15 books, including The Patton Papers and Patton: The Man Behind
the Legend
ARTHUR STUART DALEY, Retired Associate Dean
- for history by members of the White House New PhotogT11phersAswciation and are
included in the Association's 39th annual awards exhibitions, on loan to the LBJ Library from the Lib111ryof Congre5S. The photo of
President Reagan, titled "Custom Fitted," taken
- to enjoy in
full measure.
I am grateful that the great constant
in my life for 50 years has been my
political association and my most
affectionate friendship with Lady
Bird Johnson.
Another constant has been my love
of the Capitol Dome and all
- News Photographers
Patricia Burchfield, Museum Registrar, discusses Head of State gifts with Library volunteers, who number almost 100 this year.
Association 40th Annual Exhibition.
February 22-April 21, 1985: Photographing the American Pre.
idency
- interviews with LBJ associates, are not intended as
reflections of the substance of that work, but simply interest
ing or amusing footnotes to a complicated history.
eedy
Johnson was a pack rat for information, and more particularly
for points of view
- . and inter
preting the stories of "Old Ironsides" and
the people associated with her.
During each
i it of "Old Iron-
sides" Across the Narion. active-duty
Navy er wmembers and Mu: 'um staff
visit local el rnentary school cla.- rooms.
pres nting int racti e l
- Presidential
papers, 6 million pre-Presidential
pages, 6 million papers donated by associates of LBJ, and
2 million federal records. They are stored in 46,000 r,ed
boxes, visible to Library visitors through the glass walls
of the four floors that rise above
- ' Boggs
Paptr
"Lyndon Johnson and the Senate Leadership", RALPH K.
HUITT, Din·c·tor. National Association of Stal' Universities
and Land Grant Colleges
14
D1scussirm
ALAN BIBLE, Former United States 'l·nator, 'llcvad.1, R, p.
Ll~DY BOGGS. 2nd District