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120 results
- receh-ed your letter and a•ked me to thank you for wriliD&, It wa• thoughtful of you to •end in your •ncgeatfon foz honoring the lat• Preaidant Kennedy. it nfi.i',o/_y f 'f ,(tl Wtdol. lo_ fl
- . Kronheim; a lithograph print of President John . Kennedy by Bernard Fuch~. a gift from Edward Swayduck; and an m-;c.ribed photograph of President John F. Kenned\ an his daughter Caroline with Tex, a rcg1 t reJ Galice o ~tallion (gi" ·n to Carolin by the J
- Taylor Johnson) EOB - Executive Office Building JBC - John B. Connally LBJ - Lyndon Johnson JFK - John F. Kennedy MF - Marie Fehmer MMV - Mary Margaret Valenti (née Wiley) MMW - Mary Margaret Wiley P-38 - LBJ’s Capitol office PCEEO - President’s Committee
Reference File, "Camp David"
(Item)
- ...._____--------~--•-•- - I Swimming Pool Processing Note: According to Archivist Stephen Plotkin and Supervisory Archivist Allan Goodrich at the John F. Kennedy Library, the Patrick "J" was the Secretary of the Navy's yacht, used as an auxiliary or "chase" boat
Reference File, "Camp David"
(Item)
- ...._____--------~--•-•- - I Swimming Pool Processing Note: According to Archivist Stephen Plotkin and Supervisory Archivist Allan Goodrich at the John F. Kennedy Library, the Patrick "J" was the Secretary of the Navy's yacht, used as an auxiliary or "chase" boat
- cities and a campaign of vitriol by racist Alabama Governor George Wallace, a Demoetat who challenged Johnson in several primaries. LBJ, who assumed the presidency on the death of John F. Kennedy the year before, was running fot election in his own right
- cities and a campaign of vitriol by racist Alabama Governor George Wallace, a Demoetat who challenged Johnson in several primaries. LBJ, who assumed the presidency on the death of John F. Kennedy the year before, was running fot election in his own right
- on television ... lt was one of the finest moments of the Kennedy presidency, and the man for whom this building was named had a great deal to do with that." Richard Reeves, biographer of John F. Kennedy, presented a fasci nating look at that president. Some
Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Florida State University, Tallahassee, 10/8/1964"
(Item)
- for increased assistance for higher education and most specifically for a m u ch broadened educational vocational program. 1 am sure 1 do not have to tell you -- who sit here watching launchings at Cape Kennedy - - how tremendous our scientific achievements have
- , "is just as bipartisan as breathing." Credit: Ausrin America11-S1ares111an David Kennedy LibraryMounts Workof Black Artists An exhibition which proved to be immensely popular was "Harlem Renaissance: Art of Brack America," on display in the Library
- Kennedy called me and said he wanted to see me. When I went in he said, '' I want you to run with me on the ticket.'• I said, "What you want is a good Majority Leader for your programs " I didn't want to be Vice President. The night before 1 had talked
- was hired during the Kennedy Administration. But a clear division of labor developed: Verdon prepared all of the VIP meals in the White House's basement kitchen while Wright did all of the home cooking in a private kitchen on the White House's second floor
- was hired during the Kennedy Administration. But a clear division of labor developed: Verdon prepared all of the VIP meals in the White House's basement kitchen while Wright did all of the home cooking in a private kitchen on the White House's second floor
Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Dedication of Stage - East Room, 9/29/1965"
(Item)
- billiantly than President and Mrs . Kennedy. Within this year the first ~pade of dirt was turned for a great cultural center for all our nation. Within this month the Congress passed the bill to provide a National Arts and Humanities Founda tion so
- President Clinton never men tions are ""Lyndon Johnson""----cven ··1ast year when he rattled off the names of other presidents besides himself who had tried to reform America's [healthl system. he cited Harry Truman, John Kennedy. and Richard Nixon. I
- ber of conversationsduring the period. AttorneyGeneral Robert Kennedy (left), Senator Hubert Humphrey (cen ter), and Senator Barry Goldwater (right) were among the persons President Johnson talked to, all of them fig ures in the political environment
- in, Washington. CTJ goes to Alabama to visit Aunt Effie, ill in hospital. June CTJ arrives in Washington. Sherman Birdwell recalls that CTJ drove up to Washington with Mrs. Birdwell. Birdwells lived with Johnsons at Kennedy-Warren Apartments, #1127, until
- , bul I think lhis time you've brought home a man." Fast forward Lo November 22, 1963, and Mrs. Johnson's memories of President Kennedy's assassina tion: the startling crack of gunfire; the wild ride to the hospital, the return to Air Force One, where
- Remarks of Mrs . Lyndon B. Johnson at a tea for members of the Fine Arts, Painting and Advis ory Committees on the Restoration of the White House, May 7, 1964 Friends : Welc om e to this house to which, under the inspira tion of Mrs . Kennedy, you
- of Amb.assador Joseph Kennedy, Palm Beach :, : ·speech, Democratic Party Dinner, Miami .... :. . .·,_ ....'.. ·September 11, 1964 . . . View Damage from Hurricane Dora, Jacksonville ,.Re·marks, Naval Air Station . . :··· . :_ September 15, 1964
- and show some of their favorite wor~ (pages 2-3). ,.. Kennedy photographer Cecil Stoughton caught a delightful moment of a president at play with his children (above). Jerry Pulley preserved an historic meeting between his president and Prime Minister
- Eisenhower delivers the State of the Union address at 12:30; afterward LBJ meets with JFK and Robert Kennedy. The Democratic Conference meets at 3:30. At the conference, Gore introduces a motion to expand the Democratic Policy Committee from 9 to 15 members
- , Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson-joined with the Brookings Institution in sponsoring a majOI' symposium on a subject important to the Administrations of all four Presidents-wage-price policy. The idea for the multi-Library endeavor was proposed by Walt Rostow
- at stake in America this November. 1 belicve that issue is simply this: Will America, ha.ving forged so far ahead under President Kennedy and Preside nt Johnson, toward a more just and compassionate society, now turn back? Will we lQJeheart becaus e
- are, to use the title of a book by President Kennedy, "a nation of immigrants." But what we often fail t סrealize is how quickly new Americans and their families make their contribution t o a better America. We have with us today, for example, a number
- Young said, "Suppose there was a union of effort in every political and financial matter, undertaken for the benefit of the whole people? Who cannot see the good that would result? 11 It was this same union of effort that our late President Kennedy spoke
- will open in the spring of l 995. The Exhibition The exhibit opens with a d,trk corri dor recalling ovcmber 22, 1963 the day of the assassination of President Kennedy. The captions accompanying th photographs are in Lady Bird Johnson·· words, taken from
- changing selections from .the Library's holdings. Currently, an exchange of letters between President Johnson and Senator Robert P. Kennedy captures a poignant moment in a frequently tense relationship. Text of RFK Letter Dated January 1966, to LBJ
- the entries she wrote after the tragic day in Dallas in 1963 when President Kennedy was assassinated and her husband, Governor John Connally, was wounded. Mrs. Connally put the notes aside after writing them and only discovered them last year. 7
- , and Presid nt John . Kennedy nominated him to be Commandant in October, 1963. Orville L. Freeman Wallace M. Greene, 1907-2003 Photo by Yoichi Okamoto Orville Freeman died of complications of Alzheimer s disease on ebruary 20. President Kennedy named him
- was instituted by President Kennedy, who pre ented the first award on July 4, 1963. The medal has smce been presented lo 133 Americans. Mrs. Johnson's medal is on display at the Library. Ford visits Library while planning his own Former President Gerald Ford
- . It was supposed to have taken place in November 1963, when Lyndon Johnson was Vice Pre 'ident. A grand tour of Texas had been planned for President Kennedy and his First Lady Jac queline. An overnight visit to the Ranch was on the agenda, with a big barbecue
- rable passages-at-arms with former presidents. One reporter asked John Kennedy, while aloft in Air Force One what would happen if the air craft should crash. "Well, I know one thing," said JFK. "YOUR name would just be a footnote." Pr sident Ford once
- of the reciprocal trade (tariff-lowering) and foreign aid programs. 1/10 News report: Senate Labor Subcommittee chairman, John Kennedy--often considered too right-wing by many Democrats--will strike a deft coup by unveiling his own labor program for the Senate
- ? What would he do if he came back today? And how will the futme deal with his programs and ideals? LBJ's prowess in the Senate was unequalled, Daschle asserted. and recalled a remark attributed to then Senator John Kennedy, who chose LBJ as a running
- and Sciences. He was Deputy Director of the Peace Corps in the Kennedy Administra tion, and was later special assistant and then press secretary to President John son. It all began. Moyers recalled, when fifty years ago almost to the day, he and his bride
- , 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
- anything else, Eisenhower. .. was able to keep clown inflation and thus helped the country in a way that probably any one else who might have been presi dent in the late l 950s would not have been able to do." John F Kennedy: "When he was tragically
- . Glancy, Jr., "Quid Pro Quo: U.S. Approaches Toward West German Trade with Eastern Europe during the Kennedy/Johnson Administration"; Jussi M. Hanhimaki, "In the Shadow of Vietnam: U.S. Foreign Policy, Bridge-Building, and the Specter of Neutralism
- to childiren's health. Attending were: Arthur Fleming, 10 Ro'bert Finch, Elliot Rich ardson, Joseph Califano, Richard Schw,eiker, Mar garet Heckler, David Math ews and the current secre tary Otis Bowen. Reflections of a Kennedy-Johnson Loyalist by Walt