Discover Our Collections


120 results

  • have withdrawn their troops and therefore the U.N. cannot make exceptions for Israel. 2/22 Assistant Secretary of State Robert Hill attempts to deliver Dulles’ reply to LBJ’s letter of 2/11 to LBJ’s Senate office. LBJ meets Hill as he is leaving his
  • . Like the time Robert Merrill, the great baritone from the Met­ ropolitan pera. came to the White House to sing for the Prime Mm1ster of Gr at Britain The day before the dinner my phone rang and 1t was Walt Rostow. He said. "You can't be serious You
  • , and the venue is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. While many youth voting projects have surfaced in the past year, this one promises to be different by "hiring a network of young leaders and employing them in their hometo~." It also promises
  • , and the venue is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. While many youth voting projects have surfaced in the past year, this one promises to be different by "hiring a network of young leaders and employing them in their hometo~." It also promises
  • is entitled "Viva Jesus, Maria, y Jose." It was borrowed from Robert Wynn of San Antonio, Texa . The display as featured in the Library from December 12, 1977 until February 2, 1978. Officials of the alional Geographic visiting the Library at that time made
  • are drying up. If we cannot find ways to prevent that happening, future his­ tories will be written from press "Accessissues."Robert Schulzinger;John Prados; W. Roger Louis; John Brademas;Martha Kumar; panel chair Hugh Graham. (The panel is applauding
  • . Other Committee members include Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall, George R. Brown, Robert A. Good, Katharine Graham, Linda Howard, Arthur Krim, Mrs. Albert D. Lasker, Harry McPherson and Mark Ward. Dr. Lof will receive the Award in special luncheon
  • omniscient. But it is possible that we still may nurture the last best hope of mankind. Robert Hardesty, UT System Vice President, introduced Cronkite as "America's Window on the World." 3 The Morning Session Norman Podhorelz .... 1 do11't think
  • he takes off his shoes and gets up on the chair, stands and raises his voice, his face up directly into the chan­ delier. He said, "Buzz, if that outfit doesn't get this room cool by the time I get back from lunch I'm going to call Jack Kennedy
  • p.m., just before Lyn- only one belated, curt and inadequate don was to call on Jackie Kennedy at comment. This time he waited for 24 her new Fifth Avenue apartment, a hours before •saying anything publicly. newsman called Press Secretary Reedy Finally
  • p.m., just before Lyn- only one belated, curt and inadequate don was to call on Jackie Kennedy at comment. This time he waited for 24 her new Fifth Avenue apartment, a hours before •saying anything publicly. newsman called Press Secretary Reedy Finally
  • attends the 81st Club luncheon at the Kennedy-Warren with Mrs. Maury Maverick. Senate passes the St. Lawrence Seaway Bill, establishing a St. Lawrence Seaway Development Committee to construct in cooperation with Canada a canal, lock, 1954 Chronology ● p
  • ~ry aec tion, men like 'l'heodore Roos evelt, men l ike Frank:U.. n Roosevelt, men like John F. Kennedy , men like Robert S. Kerr, men like Mike Monroney and your House Delegation, all be~n to act and to protect and to develpp the natural resources
  • in President Truman’s 1948 budget. Meeting of special session of the State Democratic Executive Committee in Austin, called by Chairman Robert W. Calvert at the request of Governor Beauford Jester, makes plans for taking over organization and financing
  • , on duty in Paris as NATO commander, announces he will run for president as a Republican if he receives a “clear-cut call to political duty,” but will not actively seek the nomination. The other Republican candidates are Robert Taft, Earl Warren and Harold
  • of his continued hospitalization at Mayo’s. Juanita Roberts writes LBJ at Mayo’s and reports on the progress of the redecoration of LBJ’s office. 1/30 LBJ is released from Mayo’s and goes to Austin for a 2-3 week recovery period at the Ranch. February
  • with Johnson's personal or political life is a candidate for donating personal papers. Recently ac­ quired files of government are those of Wilbur Cohen (pov­ erty program), Robert Allnutt (NASA), and Gerold Bau­ mann {Peace Corps). Other papers concerning
  • Members: ANTHONY CELEBREZZE, Secretary, HEW ROBERT F. KENNEDY, Attorney General FRED KORTH, Secretary of the Navy JOHN w. MACY, JR., Chairman, Civil Service Commission GLENN T. SEABORG, Chairman, AEC JAMES Eo WEBB, Administrator, NASA WALTER REUTHER
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • 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
  • , 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
  • Truman Gerald R. Ford John F. Kennedy The following Presidents did return the salutes ... : Dwight D. Eisenhower Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George W. Bush A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Records Administration Jr
  • Truman Gerald R. Ford John F. Kennedy The following Presidents did return the salutes ... : Dwight D. Eisenhower Jimmy Carter Ronald Reagan George W. Bush A Presidential Library Administered by the National Archives and Records Administration Jr
  • will be decided at the polls in November ? 1 believe it is this: Will America, having forged so far ahead under President Kennedy and President Johns on toward a more just and compassion­ ate society, now turn back? Will we continue on the upwa rd, hopeful road
  • Kennedy, when he created the Commission on the Status of Women, envisioned our participating as full partners. Because of t his President's determination women will no longer be the forgotten sex in labor, in business or in Government. And, I know you
  • . Kennedy mourning his assassination, was given to the Library by Ann Cofrin Baldeschwiler, Austin art patron. The painting was displayed in the Library lobby until the renovation began. Gary Yarrington, curator of the museum, calls it an "important
  • Kennedy, who made renovating the White House her cause, had about 40 people on staff, Cordery said. Eisenhower Library-Wichitopekington Blog October 5, 2009 Monday 12:14 PM EST Military historian to assess Abilenes influence on Eisenhower BYLINE: Dion
  • ·. ::-•.., : ·'·.- :: : .'. ··:'·.::'. _.,.··. · tfon of President Kennedy to_ her grandmother, had a ~~e;o:~~g~~~; :~~;t;~~f:s . _··.:.(.r'.//:·)\·: ..:··: ,._.':~::s:n:e!~r~h~: .:-~7
  • Kennedy, who made renovating the White House her cause, had about 40 people on staff, Cordery said. Eisenhower Library-Wichitopekington Blog October 5, 2009 Monday 12:14 PM EST Military historian to assess Abilenes influence on Eisenhower BYLINE: Dion
  • ·. ::-•.., : ·'·.- :: : .'. ··:'·.::'. _.,.··. · tfon of President Kennedy to_ her grandmother, had a ~~e;o:~~g~~~; :~~;t;~~f:s . _··.:.(.r'.//:·)\·: ..:··: ,._.':~::s:n:e!~r~h~: .:-~7
  • to do anything except get along together. One day we might hope that the conference table in Birmingham or Geneva will be as successful as the assembly line in Huntsville and the launching pad at Cape Kennedy. The second problem is closely
  • is currently Styles Pro­ fessor Emerita in American Stud­ ies and Professor of Government. Professor Parker teaches at the Harvard Kennedy School of Gov­ ernment, and is the co-founder of the magazine Mother Jones, which has described itself as "your home
  • Archivist for Presidential Libraries; Verne Newton, Roosevelt Library; Clarence Lyons, Nixon Project, Chuck Daly, Kennedy Library; Pat Borders, National Archives; Mar­ tin Elzy, As.sistantDirector, Carter Library. Seated: Dan Holt, Eisenhower Library; Harry
  • , and all future chief executives. Consequently, there now exist librnries bear­ versity of Texas anJ are operated by the :..1tiunal Services Archives of the General ing the names of Presidents Hoover, Roose­ velt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy