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  • the "place to be'' n the party circuit-today his Embassy i • on the auction block and h~'s in exile in Switzerland. For all the changes, Washington is still a town ofpart1e,;. I sup­ pose there will always be stories Ii c the one about the late Sena­ tor
  • , it is con­ sidered a permanent exh1b1l. Radios are part of the new display techniques. From a vintage radio visitor· listen to the voice of Woodrow Wilson. Presidents Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt speak from a radio built in 1933 while campaign
  • these problems into the building blocks of a robust economy that can provide the jobs of the future." The Joint Economic Committee will issue a report from the ideas presented at the conference. Jordan Excerpts from Barbara Jordan's addres : Joint appearances
  • . The Space display shows Vice­ President Johnson superv1smg American astronauts as they sign their names in concrete blocks at the LBJ Ranch. A desk (partly visible in case), rocking chair and other memorabilia were lent to the!Center by the Library. 11
  • journalism and speech communica­ tions. He is president of Martine "I am here," said Vernon Sykes, ''to tell you about a little colored boy born in the Mississippi delta in Forrest City, Arkansas ... in a wood shack that stood on concrete blocks
  • , Wenonah Linoleum block, 1943 Day Bell, 5 BROOKINGS SCHOLAR RECEIVESAWARD FOR THE BESTBOOK ON THE CONGRESS Larrv Reed, Assistant Director of the LBJ Foundation, prize-\\ inning check to James Sundquist. presents Foundation's James L. Sundquist, senior
  • , the Soviet Union, today a powerful force for change is already at work. Education, the bedrock of democ­ racy, the enemy of dictatorship, is plowing its way. Inside the Commu­ nist block, powerful currents are surging against the dam. Premier Khrushchev
  • . It would just requir a egree in a discipline as an academic building block upon which profes­ sional skills would be added. "TEXASIN TRANSITIO " NOW A PUBLICATION Kiran Dix The June 15. 1986 edition of Among Friend~ r1,;pnrted on a ,ym­ [I0sium
  • achieve­ block grants allocated with few restrictions on how or where the funds are spent within certain broad guide­ ment as well as its fru trations and mistakt>s." lines. Expenditures began to shift away from ,;ervice And if any one of those programs
  • with new eyes at my part of the world. . . . The open fields and meadows had disappeared and in their place were shopping malls, suburbs chock-a-block with housing developments and industrial plants and spaghetti networks of highways .... The landscape I