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  • Johnson's daily diary, a handwritten memorandum from Vice President Humphrey, cabinet and news briefing books, and a teleprompter print bearing the President's remarks announcing the form­ ation of the Department of Housing and Urban Devel­ opment. OngmaJ
  • son Chair in Public Affairs at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. His appointment was approved on Octo r 12 by The University of T xas Board of Regents. Prof~or Cohen will assume his new post in January. He will teach seminars on weUare
  • , entertainers, and Hill Country neighbors. Among them were repre­ sentatives of the American political scene from the New Deal to the Nixon Administration. ln a nationally televised ceremony the University of Texas, which built and continues to own the Library
  • ’, then leave for Texas. 4/11 CTJ has been ill with cold and fever but is better now. Ray Roberts in Washington working on LBJ’s subcommittee. 4/12 LBJ just back from New York City. FDR dies of cerebral hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Georgia; Harry Truman sworn
  • and administration and LBJ Library staff, . imp!_ ,aw th role of the U. in the world as a natural sour e of interest at the beginning of a new decade: the urgency which Iran and A!ghanbtan brought to that inten~t could not then be foreseen. The ~ymposium's discussion
  • evening I have enjoyed, especially the company of friends frorn past and present. Dr. Reddick who gu.i ded me in journalism school to those two ‫ ס‬r three stories in the Daily Tex.an with the by-line -- "By Claudia Taylor. 11 Does one ever read any story
  • Cohen conducts a tour of the Library for Congressmen Frank Guarini from New Jersey, Jake Pickle of Texas and Charles Rangel of New York. The group was here for an informal public discussion sponsored by the House Oversight Subcommittee on Ways and Means
  • Library, and Dr. William S. Livingston, UT Austin Vice-President and Dean of Graduate Studies. Middleton says he is confident the proposed encyclopedia "will repre­ sent the best congressional scholar­ ship of the last 30 years." Livingston New members
  • in those days, tuition was paid with produce - .. or 11with horse and saddle which the student used to reach school. 11 Prayers were at 4:00 a. m. daily ... with compulsory attendance 1 But I think the thing that most impresses all of us who love
  • on Erwin\ nght are Henry row/er and Lew Wasserman. Library Names New Chief Archivist Christina Lawson John Wickman, D,recwr of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library in Abilene, Kansas, spoke at th Library tn May lO a University of Texas group, joined together
  • 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
  • leaders. film stars, educators, entertainers, friends and neighbors from the Texas hill country - and representatives of t.hc highcsl echelons of the American political scene from the New Deal to the ixon Administration. At President Johnson's request
  • /2024 1/1 Thursday. Former Governor Coke Stevenson announces his candidacy for the U.S. Senate in a New Year’s Day speech broadcast from Austin at 11:45 a.m. According to the American Statesman (1/2/48), Stevenson “followed his usual campaign custom
  • appointee in a new Richardson Fellows Pro­ gram for Distinguished Public Officials in the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. Supported by grant from the Sid Richardson Founda­ tion to the LBJ Foundation, the new program will bring di tingu1shed past
  • A New Portrait of LBJ LIBRARYVOLUNTEERSBEGIN SIXTH SEASON The LBJ Library program hegan in 1980 \\ ith 16 dcxcn1s (those who prm 1de guided tours) and ha!-.stcadtl) grown to 105 volunteers-both men ,rnd \ ·omen-working in four different areas
  • !Plfj. 4 ' u. J am uvzi.i:1..ng, M /Ji.Aedo11. o/. t.Ae Natwnal !ln.v~M CorrmU.i:.ee on F. O-:1. (!]ff 1fledi..on aAiAM /Mm ma.nu pM an4, ·i?p,i 'CJJnmerd:✓.J . . made b!J, t.h.e 'Pll.e44 and. oih.eA new-:1 medi.o.. AILe !JOU adve.lt.4e
  • daily telephone service to all areas and all continents, not just the moie highly developed major populated areas. Business and scientific computers will be tied together across the ocean by means of satellite data links providing solutions to many types
  • 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
  • ~~AmongFriends ofLBJ 1ssue NUMBER xi, JANUARY 24 1978 NEW§LEIJEREUIEUP§ PETHE PETHE LBJ8RAQY b1 ; :,;~;;~- ..~ ,_./!~ .... A National Tribute to Lady Bird Johnson (See pages 2-41 A National Tribute to Lady Bird Johnson It was a tribut
  • that the cities r each out for you - ­ to help people in the public housing units and the crowded slum areas who do not know how to cope with the new and unaccustomed conditions of city life. Indeed, as I consider your pr ofe ssion, there are so many ways in which
  • at the Lyndon Eames Johnson Library m Austin. -The Dallas Morning News November 5, 1978 World War I veteran salutes a11 members of service organizationr;i lay memorial wreathR C remon,>hegin~ at 2 The opening was a community affair. The Austin-Travis County V
  • halfway." Caro's first book, The Power Broker, appeared in 1974. It was the story of Robert Mo­ ses, the man who virtually created New York City as it appears today. Caro necessary to tell the story of New York City. The resultant book won both
  • writes that the amendment is the subject of almost daily conferences between the President, the Attorney General, Senator Bricker and other Republicans, but that he has not been asked to participate in the discussions. 1/17 In his regular Sunday radio
  • Among Issue umber LXXU, January, 2000 New Exhibit Features Work of Cartoon Genius Bud Butler Story on Page Two A Romp Through Peace and War: Illustrations and cari­ catures of everyday life in the early 20th century make up the newest exhibit
  • in Austin. I'd been around the capitol a lot, edi­ tor of The Daily Texan. and to hear a man talk this way three days after I left [ there] was kind of boggling. And he said, 'We're in a race with time, and I hope we can succeed be­ cause if we don't
  • when to mow, when the land is most hospitable to seeding. But you have given us the biggest garden of the world in the roadsides of OID' state.'' She pointed out that Georgia, Oklahoma and New Mexico have developed programs of highway beautification
  • when to mow, when the land is most hospitable to seeding. But you have given us the biggest garden of the world in the roadsides of OID' state.'' She pointed out that Georgia, Oklahoma and New Mexico have developed programs of highway beautification
  • rchives Capture Project, headed by the Central Intelligence Agen y. The growth of Lhe world wide web has created new demands for electronic access to our holdings. The Library sent to the National Archives about 500 pages of President Johnson's Daily Diary
  • Adler. "He hooked me up with a very creative new publishing tirm called Rug­ ged Land, and a dear old friend. Mickey Herskowitz, a writer. "I never dreamed that my story would appem on the front page of the New York Times... Since that artide ap- Ms
  • , 000, 000 and create 13, 000 new jobs. I am a Democrat and proud of it. I have - - for 29 years -­ had a front row seat on what the government and the m en and women who play the hard, daily role in it, do about the problems that come before them. And I
  • , archery, badminton, horseshoes, tennis, hiking, and playground equipment. Movies are shown daily in the camp recreation building, Hickory. They may be shown in Laurel upon request. Trout fishing can be done in the nearby streams of the Catoctin Mountain
  • , archery, badminton, horseshoes, tennis, hiking, and playground equipment. Movies are shown daily in the camp recreation building, Hickory. They may be shown in Laurel upon request. Trout fishing can be done in the nearby streams of the Catoctin Mountain
  • . The vacated space, located next to the replica Oval Office, proved to be an ideal spot for a new gallery. The quandary of financing the project remained. There would be significant costs, which the Museum budget was unprepared LOcover. That problem vanished
  • when this tree gr ew to c aturi ty it wo uld s hade gener ations ye t m born and that a President rs daily wo rk, like this tree , e;hould be f o.r cor e than his own tiae. This was no t t he e xpression o f a philos o phy new t o c y husband . It has
  • . Give us this day our daily bread; and forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever. Amen. *HYMN540 God Be with You Till We Meet
  • . Give us this day our daily bread; and forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors; and lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever. Amen. *HYMN540 God Be with You Till We Meet
  • ~ . rr - : ,.. () - .. . FOR RELEASE UPON DELIVERY FRIDAY. MAY 7, 1965 -- 8: 30 P . M. REMARKS BY MRS. LYNDON B. JOHNSON "SALUTE TO SPRING" CEREMONIES NEW YORK, NEW YORK Mr. Mayor• Friends: Thank you so much for the honor you have
  • New York
  • Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, 'Salute to Spring' Ceremonies, New York, New York, 5/7/1965"
  • ".. , ..· ... . ~. Suggested remarks for Mrs . Lyndon B. Johnson at Dedication of new Science Center at Wilkes College, Wilkes - Barre , Pa . , Saturday , January 11 , 1964 . I have just had a whirlwind tour of so~e Area Redevelopment
  • "Suggested remarks for Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson at Dedication of New Science Center at Wilkes College, Wilkes-Barre, PA, 1/11/1964"
  • and Faculty of Columbia College: I am delighted to visit Columbia State Community College, which tells so much about the new vitality of education in our country. Consider this story: The people of a county provide Z04 acres of empty land, some seed money
  • ROOM, THE V/HITE HOUSE NOVEMBER 22, 1968 Welcome to your house -- for it is your house now. And welcome to your country -- for frorn this moment, America is your country. It is appropriate, I think, to begin our trip around the New America of 1968