Discover Our Collections
Limit your search
Tag- Digital item (145)
- new2024-July (29)
- 1964-10-27 (4)
- 1964-10-26 (3)
- 1964-10-xx (2)
- 1941-xx-xx (1)
- 1946-xx-xx (1)
- 1952-xx-xx (1)
- 1954-xx-xx (1)
- 1955-xx-xx (1)
- 1956-xx-xx (1)
- 1957-xx-xx (1)
- 1960-xx-xx (1)
- 1961-xx-xx (1)
- 1962-xx-xx (1)
- 1963-07-18 (1)
- 1963-xx-xx (1)
- LBJ Library (78)
- Lady Bird Johnson speeches and statements (35)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973 (11)
- Beautification (7)
- White House administration (4)
- Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007 (3)
- Whistle Stop (3)
- Abell, Bess, 1933- (2)
- Camp David (2)
- Cooks (2)
- Dogs (2)
- Jenkins, Walter (Walter Wilson), 1918-1985 (2)
- Johnson family (2)
- Presidential campaign, 1964 (2)
- Awards (1)
- Text (146)
- Reference File (146)
- Newsletter (78)
- Speech (35)
- Folder (22)
- Chronology (11)
- Meeting notes (1)
- Reference material (1)
- Transcript (1)
146 results
- with the townspeople to shape new patterns of hope for the town. I read, not long ago, tbis judgment of a cynic: "The National purpose of the United States, from the very beginning, bas been to let everyone make as much money as be possibly can. If they found oil under
- program geared to the family without modern equipment, th e family that can read, perhaps not well or , not in English, may offer these people the lifeline they need. Your president, Florence Lowe, t ells me of the El P aso Project in which a bi-lingual
- and they all have oany o ffictal duties. But they go far be yond those in giving service t o t heir cooounities. Aoong the things th0y do are t each~ ing r eoedi al reading t o boys and girls who oight other wis e drop out of school, the y help find j o bs f
- station will feature a video of Kirk Douglas and Helen Hayes, reading from letters which rs. Johnson and LBJ exchanged White House Telephone Tapes Project Continues The latest release of tape record ings of White House telephone con versations during
- tum Into a vegetable and getting to know many more brilliant and intcres ting, de• and appeared to slow or even read slowly, to some extent, stop some domestic progress when I want to. I do l!Ot lightful people. • • • One of my favorite things as far
- tum Into a vegetable and getting to know many more brilliant and intcres ting, de• and appeared to slow or even read slowly, to some extent, stop some domestic progress when I want to. I do l!Ot lightful people. • • • One of my favorite things as far
- techniciamj at work Sights and sounds in the Audiovisual Archives by Philip Scott It is March 31, 1968. The President looks straight into the camera, reading hi::.addres to th American people. "We support a return to the essential provisions of the Geneva
- ol Freedom, the highest award that can b given to an Am rican citizen uts1de the military services, post humously to Lyndon aines Johnson and Hubert H. Humphrey. The c1tat1on accompanying President Johnson's medal read: ' Lyndon B Johnson cared dee
- was to read some of his poetry At fiN. Lowell accepted this invitation. but on May 30. 1965. he sent President Johnson a letter which he had also released to the Ne\\' l'!,rf..7imt•~- In his letter. Lowell saiu "When I was telephoned last wed.. and askcd 10
- his teaching of men and worn n preparing for careers in public service. "1 learned firsthand about some subjects I had only read about," he said, referring specifically to the regulatory process in the Department of Labor. He said that, in addition
- !liamBundy, Assistnnt Secre tary of State; 21. Ben Read, Executive Secretary of Department of State (22. 23, 24): Oral Historian Ted Gittinger, and Library Archivists Regina Greenwell and David Humphrey; (25, 26, 27): William Gibbons, George Herring
- with the challenge, .. Let us contin ue.' On display in this section is a handwritten note from rs. Johnson delivered to the President at 2:00 a.m., as he and his staff labored to complete the address. The note reads, "In the name of tomorrow come eat-then sleep
- . or Promdheus-bo11nd. rather than unbound ... And it isn't ;ust the Soviets, I tco11ld say. that have read the lessons of the last tm years. It i.1·the OPEC countries. Jlere are countries that are driving up the inflation into double digits, creating a recession
- could do i go and see this exhibit on the 80's, and look at it, read it. It's not just things up on the wall. Read it. Everything is a document of that past life. And that past life is still with us, m attitudes and in fact, a Jot." Mrs. Johnson gives
- ha, ing written two other spc ches without a break. It vas a bad draft-and I knew it was bad But it had lo be in his morning reading when he awoke, and I was com plet ly drained of ideas and roo tir d 10 uite another line. I was back at my desk arty
- which we have witnessed for the last two years be pictured in that light? In which all the great nations of Europe were involved, wherein no bril liant battles such as we thrill lo read about were either lost or won, but few national figures decorated
- Uohnsonj ... in his mind as to what he was going to do, or whether he had talked to six other people on the telephone in Lhe course of the next tv;o r three days, or had consulted Mrs. Johnson, or talked six more times to the Secretary of Defense, or read
- the event. A plaque on the wall inside the the ter reads: Arthur B. and Mathilde K.riin, for whom this theater is named, were both alued and intimate advisers to President Johnson dur ing his administration. Arthur Kritn, an attorney and busineS! executive
- a letter of reprimand. 'Dear Captain Blumenson,' the letter read, 'a VD rate of 50% in your command is unsatisfactory.'" (Left) A. Stuart Daley prepared a report-which later disappeared of one of the most bizarre episodes of the war: the riot of communist
- , 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
- Among Photo by Charles Bogel Wearing historically correct uniforms, these bluejackets from the USS Constitution heave a gun into battery. Story on page 3 Future Forum Rings In New Year . .. The invitation read: Future Forum. l.ocation: Matt's
- all of the l!xhibits in the museum workshop beneath thr Library. Left, scho(i)I children huddle to read the exhibit of po'litical cartoons. The Record of Temporar11a11dTouri11gExhibitio11s The sales desk, which originally offered only postcards, has
- ; in France it is over 1 It's called Death and the Maiden, by the Chilean writer Ariel Dorfman. Aside from its artistic me1;ts, just consider what has grown from that single, subsidized, cheap, rehearsed reading, in terms uf employment, and skill, and money
- work force. if we have people who can read and write and compute and analyze. If we can take care of that human infra ~tructure. economic development will take care of itself." Texas has a good track record in education, it was pointed out . ..One
Newsletter, "Among Friends of LBJ, Symposium: Children in Crisis, 18-19 September 1992," LBJ Library
(Item)
- . They need treatment for common childhood ail ments such as strep throat and ear infections. Children who go to school sick cannot learn. Children who have trouble seeing cannot read. Children who have undiagnosed and untreated disabilities cannot flourish
- . EXECUTIVE SECRETARY Gordon Murray Bureau of the Budget (Alternate: A. J. Read MEMBERS Allen R. Ferguson International Air Coordinator State Department Marver Bernstein Dean, Woodrow Wilson Princeton University George W. Wilson Senior Staff Advisor