Discover Our Collections


  • Contributor > Friends of the LBJ Library (remove)
  • Type > Text (remove)

52 results

  • ." 2 Two historical figures came to life on the stage of the LBJ Auditorium. The first was. Abigail Adams, in ,the person of Rebecca Bloomfield, who has created a one-woman show on the celebrated-and outspoken­ wife of America's second President
  • and memorabilia of servicemen who the day before their deaths had been part of peace­ time America are among the most poignant items in the display. Visitors study a mock-up of desert tank action. 3 Lifesize figures add interest to the exhibit
  • pany the document on its travels. but on October 28, 2003, he made an exception for the LBJ Library. He has under­ taken this project, Lear says. as part of his three-stage love affair with America. That affair began when he was very young. His grand­
  • preoccupied by the crisis in Cyprus than events in Asia, LBJ was acutely concerned about launching any warlike action against Hanoi unless he was assured "beyond doubt" by his senior military and civilian advisers that our destroyers were indeed attacked
  • which the exhibit labels ''The War That Broke America's Wilt" They are poised for action against a photographic backdrop of a battlefield. The accompanying soundtrack carries LBJ's voice expressing his own anguish in committing them to war. 7
  • in these early months cover events such as the pas­ sage of a bill to cut taxes and congres­ sional action on the civil rights bill and the poverty bill. Listeners will hear LBJ exhorting his staff and his Cabinet to appoint African Americans and women
  • not qualify for either [program], has become the great albatross of this new right in America." "It wasn't possible to put cost controls in in 1965," Wilbur Cohen maintained. "It would never have passed the Congress." In fact, Califano pointed out, Presi­ dent
  • at the Johnson Library and Museum. The artist, Alban B. "Bud" Butler, Jr., used his travels around the United States, Latin America, Europe, and his service in World War I as fodder for his whimsical and entertaining illustra­ tions. A Romp Through Peace and War
  • operators wou'kljust move [out of the city]. That meant they had to have the Governor's Mansion, and also for the first time they started looking seri­ ously at the presidency. The Democratic Party before the Triangle Shirtwaist fire had been a weird
  • , "Korea: America's First Limited War," can be obtained from the Library's museum store for $8.95. cAJtTHUR TO l'E SIGNED f'Y Photo by Pat Burchfield _,.,. my duty aa Prraidt!nl and Com­ Stat-,a nuhtary forctea LO r.-placr you a• Po
  • , had spent a good deal f time thinking about the long­ term consequences of his decisions. hree, the President must look far into the future at the consequences of his actions, or there would not be effective national planning. Only the Presidential
  • about the actions of our adversaries in Hanoi, and our allies in Saigon? UT Professor Emeritus Ro rt Divine put the Vietnam War into context in his keynote address, "Perpetual War for Perpetual Peac ." That tit! Divine explain d, "cap­ tures the ess nee