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- Looking Back. ..
Fifty Years
of the
New Deal Legacy
(Stories, pages 2-13)
Symposium panelists and speakers included these present and former members of Congress: from left, Sen.
,Jennings Randolph, Rep. Claude Pepper, Rep. Jake Pickle, former
- hepherding me ov r
th past several weeks to this
event on this day.
Also speaking at the wreath-lay
ing was Air Force Colonel David
W. Allvin, Vice Commander of
the 12th Flying Training Wing,
Randolph Air For Base, Texas.
Colonel All in recalled President
- and Honorable?"':
David M. O'Brien, "The Supreme Court: Institutional
Dynamics, Processes of Decision and Policymaking"; Joseph
A. Pika. "Dealing with the People Divided: Presidents and
Interest Groups", Scott Sagan, "Force Readiness and Crisis
Management
- of LBJ's convictions.
6
In placing the wreath, Valenti
was assi t d by Brigadier General.
Lawrence H. Steven on, USAF,
Commander., 12th Flying Training
Wing Randolph AFB, San Antonio.
The next day, August 28,
Michael Gillette form rly of the LBJ
Library
- ) and
laid the reath, assisted by oloncl
Mark Graper,
Commander,
12th
Flying Training WiJ1g, Randolph Air
Force Base.
As he was coming to maturity in
Great Britain in th 1960 , Mr. Turpin
said, the media ther made the United
States out to be, somehm
- remember a century
from now.
To be sure, some reviewers, reveling in it all, appear ready to help
him in this ndeavor.
But others have raised formidable barriers, questioning his accu
racy, his conclusions, and above all his fairness. David Herbert
Donald
- of 500 boxed sets of the
complete Diary of James K. Polk, a letter by John Randolph of
Roanoke, and the galley proofs of the only lecture that Hugo
Black gave while a member of the Supreme Court. Perhaps
Hardeman's most prized volume is one of 100 copies
-
of
Liberalism·•: Mary Hershberger, ·To
the Shores of Vietnam: Citizen
Diplomacy
and
the
Second
Indochina War": Donna Hunter.
"Middle Powers in the Global
Economy: Britain. Anglo-American
Relations and the Kennedy Trade
Round": David Jardini. "RAND
Goes
Domestic
- , Ind.
~10:--iDAY,
SEPTEMBER 26, 1977-1::J!J-2::30 p.m.
Address:
"The outhern Rim: Persectives on Regional Change",
ROBERT W. SCOTT, Federal Cocbairman, Applachian
Regional Commission
Address:
"The West: Perspectives on Regional Change", DAVID L.
BOREN
- society. Her contractual obligations
prohibited a taping of her remark .
The historian was David
. Oshinsky, Professor at Rutgers
University. He is the fourth winner of the Library's D. B. Harde
man prize for the best book on the Congress published
- ~ the 0owerin~ of American
literature in the 1920s. Dr. Matthew Bruc
coh, Prof~r of English at the University
of South arolina, whose special intere.t
is F Scott Fitzgerald, gave a lecture at the
Library.
Excerpts from Dr. Bruccoli's speech:
The Twenties have
-
Wilhelmina Delco
The Panelists
T. Louis Au5tin. Jr.. prcs1den1and chief executive officer, Brown
and Root. Inc.
Scott Bennett. management consultant and columnist for the
Dallas Morning News.
Norman Bonner, Austin attorney.
William Broyles, Jr .. writer
- because, in the
words of one participant, "clashing, exploratory ...
views could be expressed with little bureaucratic
caution and with confidence no scars would remain:'
In an article in Diplomatic History, David Hum
phrey, Library archivist, traces
- the conference.
David Humphrey, for 16
years archivist and senior ar
chivist at the Library, helped
Gardner with the organiza
tional responsibilities. When
he left to become a State
Department hi torian, his as
sistance duties were taken
over by Ted Gittinger
-
cent standard of living.··
phrased from rapporteur
the day's discussions.
symposium dealt with the War
on insuring "the right to a de
The following points are para
David Austin's summation of
The papers and the panel discussion addressed two ma
jor
- the appearance of Lady Bird .Johnsonin the lecture hall.)
3
"The role of education.' Cathy Gorn; Maura Pierce; Larry Hackman; Rosemary Morrow; panel chair David
Eisenhower.
releases public speeches, and media
articles. That is the first topic the
symposium
- .
The
elder
artists-John
Biggers
Elizabeth Atlett, Jean Lacy, Jacob
Lawrence, Gordon Parks, Faith
Ringgold, John Scott and Carroll
Harris Simms-all underscore the
isolated successes of African
American artists that character
ized the twentieth century. When
- and Presidenl, Washington Press Club: Isabelle Shelton, W· shington tar
columnist; Molly Ivins. co-ed1tor, The Texas Ob
server; Susan Caudill, KERA TV, Dallas; Scott
Tagliarino, editor, The Daily Texan_
Re.~ponder.~:Judith Moye s, 'O-moderator. Jill Ruckel
- . and Keith
Melville of the Public Affam Foundation. will be published
within the next few months. On these pages are s me of the
highlights of the event.
David Mathews, former Secretary of Health. Education and Wel
fare, and now president of the
ttenng
- left: Dr. David on S. H. W. ~icol, Dr. Gunnar Myrdal, Dean Rusk, Aha Myrdal, and Dean Elspeth Rostow.
Reprint,
- , and
they did. Herc is the list:
Lloyd Gardner (Rutgers); Lien
Hang Nguyen (Harvard); William
Duiker (Penn State); Stein T0nneson
(International
Peace Research
Institute,
Oslo);
David
Marr
(Australian National University);
Martin Thomas (University of the
West
-
most sixteen years .... "
'·[II never trust a man with a southern
accent; you know you could talk reason
able English ... if you weren't a phony.··
If your talent is destroyed, you destroyed
And to F. Scott Fitzg raid. now
twenty years dead
- pre
sented by Frank C. Erwm, Jr., President of the Foundation
Board of Directors.
AMONG FRIENDS
F LBJ is a publication of the
Friends of the LBJ Library
Editor:Lawrence D. Reed
Research Assistance: Liz Carpenter, Charles Corkran,
Mike Gillette, David
- on the Net,
and Philip Scott. the Library's audio
visual archivist, described it as a
work in progress. "We 're very gin
g rly taking our first steps in figuring
out how to do this," Scott said, "and
we 're experimenting with the best
ways to scan the photos
- 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
-
Towards its Western Allies, 1963-1965";
Nicholas E. S,mmtakes, "Keystone: ll1e
American Experience in Okinawa'';
Jonathan M. Schocnwald, "More Fire
Than Smoke:
The Conservative
Consolidation, 1958-[ 972"; Scott J.
Spitzer. "Race and Welfare
- .
Charles Cor ·ran, Shirley James,
John Fawcett, Philip Scott. Dorothy
Territo, nnd Gary ·arrington
Research
Photography:
Chevalier
Frank
Wolfe,
tlw estalih ·lmwnt
of the Joh11so11 nwmori.1I, tlll
cm1tnh11tio11s. Tlw Sodt't~ for
a :.fon· ]k.mtil u
- .
The Society of Southwest Archivists held its annual
meeting at the LBJ Library on May 7-9. The regional group
was welcomed by Mrs. Lyndon Johnson at the opening ses
sion. Workshops were conducted by two Library staff
members: Philip Scott explained the use