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  • ISSUENUMBER 2, Library Commemorates ~!. \' -2 m rk ti Ii third. muv r·u • of th • dcd1c,1tio11of th ,·r 11011 Dai11 •s Johmon L1hra11, Thi o • Research Grants Awarded To Ten Presidential Scholars Th "If all h •r : thl' to1 • uC uur tim s­
  • .!.~ISIllll'C LBJ BirthdayNow State Holiday Prcsitlt Ill Jolu1so11"5 Aug1,,1 ir,lt li1rlh­ cl.1\ h LS hi.-crnitc1l11 lhsl lolS holi
  • ..:wu on th" a 1..,wcrin_g cnt!. /{ 11~anc~coo i....c­ in~ M Harr)' Middl ·rrn . 1•op~ Chrii-ii,ma11J[),,,n Carl •ton Jin.:chir 0" IJ.T.• C.cm..:1r 11"nn·A,mcrkan Hi ~n ', rec 1lw 1w·,1ion: from 1hc a dict"cc. S(Jini? • b~ I 1 ·1:: er,: ' on 10 n:n
  • Participants Named For Symposium On Energy and the Environment 11.:m,tal to ft b I, r1d sflrt 1111 Ill
  • Issue NumberLI December 15, 1991 WorldWar II "Wounded at War: Now The Day is Over." Artist: W. G. Laurence; U.S. Coast Guard Art Program Reproduced here and on the cover are three paintings by men who served in the armed forces in World War II
  • . You could see It," "When he'd gel up against the wall, even when he didn't, he'd say, 'Bird, what do you think?' She had far more influence than anybody with any President. Much more to say, and he Ii tened." "He cared deeply about doing what
  • MajorWorldWarII Exhibit General Colin Powen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, will speak at the Library on April 21, at the open­ ing of the long-planned exhibition on World War II. The exhibit, a major undertaking by the National Archives commemo­ rating
  • exhibition ever executed by the Library's museum staff: a documentation, in poignant letters, rare memorabilia, priceless historical documents and art, of the greatest war ever fought. Titled "World War II: Personal Accounts Pearl Harbor to V-J Day
  • rights for very body. II we re trying to do is to make this government of the United States of America honest. We only ask that when we i;tand up and talk about ·one nation under God, liberty. justire for ever bod;,' Lo be able t look at that flag and put
  • this to say that evening: We know how depressed LBJ was in tho e four year after he left the White House. I wi h he were here today to see the budding appreciation of his greatness. "The war in Vietnam is not like World War II and Ko­ r a. . . . Yet, finally
  • Room will be removed. A sliding glass wall will be installed between lhe courtyard and the West Conference Room so that when the wall is fully opened the two rooms will function BS II single room. When the waJIis dosed, the rooms can function separately
  • histor) 1." Military historian Martin Blumenson gave a lyrical account of the libera­ tion of Paris, which he called "the most romantic event of World War II. It was not necessarily the most dramatic, or the most impor­ tant ... but for sheer romance
  • to send it')" I said. "Send it to the White House." There wa ·along pau e, an
  • cent peacekeeping operations, all catastrophi-: failures: So­ malia. Rwanda-wh re the worst geno- II eide since World War II took place-and Bosnia. On the issue of how to supply humanit,u·ian assistance_ Holbrooke de­ clared. there is a '·raging
  • agreed that there would be an election, and that the par­ ties would respect the results of it. A woman named Violeta Chamorro \.Von.The Sandinista lea er Daniel rtega, lost. But 1'II b t you he would never have left office if it had not been
  • . The first, jointly sponsored with the LBJ School of Public Affairs and the Brookings Institution in February, traced the nation's effort to develop an energy policy since the end of World War II and then focused on current problems and poten11al solutions
  • , weighing in at 8 pounds, 2 ounces. The new baby is the seventh Johnson grandchild. Seminar at Library studies impact of "Ultra" on World War II When The Ultra Secret, by F. W. Winterbotham, was published in 1974 revealing that the allies broke the most
  • for the first time. The LBJ Library oral history project is the largest in any of the presidential libraries, and ii is still a work in progress. While the Library is no longer actively seeking inter­ views. an occasional "walk-in'· does happen. A recent
  • pictur on page ne of the New 2 York Time. Lone Ran_ r. like Tont ,:· France l l' (Ill'- aroun Oval madet . hare \d ult. ad Jim o'cl ck going r ha, said. "Fine 1• Larry Tempi Presicll!n! Joi , Wair Rosto,, .ii Whit House ut day m ming. ar home andjm
  • foolishness. "With the limitation of the number of missiles that each sidl may deploy being approximately 2,400," Rusk warned, \\-e will still have "three times the number of MIRVs 1l would take to completely destroy the orld. After World Wars I and II
  • in o exhibit on the 1920s 1980 Walter Cronkite and II panel of national leaders pursued the ques­ lion: "Amerlc lo the 1980's: Where Do We Go From Here?" 1980 In the course of one week, 35,000 visitors filed through the Library to i.ee Great Britain's
  • States Steel. September 18, 1918. (Photographer: R. Gallivan) 5 ''The American Image'' (continued) Son or Caleb Hicks, miner. Bradsha , McDowell County, West Virginia. August 27, 1946. (Photographer: Ru~II Lee) Burial at ·ea for the officers :md men
  • Department; 7. Roger Hilsman, Assistant Sec­ retary of State; 8. Harry McPherson, Special Counsel to the President; 9. Nicholas Katzenbach, Under Secretary of State: 10. Ray Cline, Deputy Director for Intelligence, C.I.A.; ii ii. McGeorge Bundy, National
  • . The Sm:iet U11inn u·as challmged /Jy a Muslim in.rnrge11cy i11 Ajgha11Ma11. a chaflc11ge to a puppet rrgime that it had itself installed through a coup. and ii respo11deciu;ith 100,()()0 troops. i\'ou; the difference betu;een tho,\e t1ro rcsponscs is 1wt lost
  • House years The importance of th papers and records in the Johnson Library Ii s in the insight it gives scholars into the key issues of the 1960s. The Library archives are most helpful on Great Soci­ ety domestic questions, and there arc extensive
  • The Eisenhowers: Famous Family Reminiscences Da,id Eisenhower. grand­ son of Dwight D. Eisen­ hower. discussed hi!i work, Eisenl,ower at War, an ac­ count of his grandfather's command of the allied ex­ peditionary forces in Eng­ land in World \.\'ar II. \\hat I mi
  • At The Library The year (we start it in September) began with a rousing program bringing the music of America through seven pre idents by Ken Ragsdale and his orche tra. Historian Stephen Am bro ·e. whose D-Day: The Climactic Battle l World War II was widely
  • the Southwest to New England and from Europe to Mexico. During World War II Butler r mained stateside, anxiously scan­ ning the newspaper and listening to radio reports of the war. Frustrated at being a mere second-hand observer of thi his second war, his work
  • of nations TR ·ent America's Gr at White Fleet of battleships around th world. But Congress would only appropriate half of the mone • ne es-.,an. Quit all right, niffcd Ro c\·elt. I"II only send them halfv,a): C n""ress can get them ba ·Ii.. Lu kinbill R's
  • to the dedication of the horseshoe pit." Clinton's heart was in the right place, "but he made terrible mistakes , ith his personal Ii fe." George W. Busb'i "A work in 11s. pr gress" -but Thomas was gloomy about his prospect . especial!_ with regard to Iraq. Speaking
  • following Dr. Schick's address, a Library tribute was paid to D. B. Hardeman by Maury Maverick, Jr., San Antonio attorney and long-time friend of Mr. Hardeman. 6 Schick Hardeman "Texas Women .. II Exhibit Opening Draws Mary Martin and Large Cast Mary
  • , 112,862 ........ Cleaning, Utilities, Mechanical Services $311,239 ........ Guard Services Personnel-The Library now has 28 persons on its staff. To supplement this, the LBJ Foundation pays the salaries of II per­ sons who work on Library programs
  • President_ how to push hut1ons to make things happen. But in addition to being a consummate legislator he ,,.as also a \'Cry able admini~tra­ tor. He kept the operation in the White House on its toes, he delegated frmly w II-not all the way. I don ·1 think he
  • of alien influences. American labor unions, to their great credit, have stood resolutely against the incur­ sions and influence of communism s,ince World War II. At the same time, American business has played a part much larger than it receives credit
  • who per­ Camp/Jell and the Power ()j' Myrh; A World of Ideas; Healing and the sonify Th Univ r ity'. ommitment to the ta k of transfom1ing Ii es." Mind; and Genesis. She has pub­ lished two books of poetry-Four 2 Author McCullough Reflects on Latest
  • forces with Huston-Tillotson Collegt> of Austin lo co-sponsor an exhibit of Afro-American art, featuring 83 contemporary works of black American artists. Tht> title of the exhibit, "Ami
  • with significant increase~ of government regulation, both by law as well as 1 executive mandate. The ,urge f (social) legislation in the late 1930s, which is the hallmark of the New Deal, continued to a le ser degree in the post-World War II period in the Truman
  • and CNN may get over 30 million viewers. CN and the traditional broadcast networks are the nearest thing we have to a public square. Paul Taylor: "The era of broadcasting is now giving way to an era of narrow­ casting." 9 ii The Modern Presidency
  • of curiosity and wonder that stays with you and never stops. Relatively few of you will yourselves become scholars. But all of you will be citizens-thinking, participating citizens. Your lives, the Ii es of your children and your country will be enriched if you
  • , a street brawler at 11, and a mugger and shoplifter in his teens. He dropped out of school in the 9th grade and was into so much trouble that the Houston Police gave him a choice­ •olunteer for the Job Corps or go to jail. He chose the Job Corps. Ii