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  • restmg, Mr. President," and LBJ ·aid "Wi II. get him up. l want to talk with him." And she said. "No, I work for him and not for you, Mr. President." I came to about 7 o'clock and learned what had happened. It sounds very amusing now: it didn't sound
  • agencies and institutions as ·ell - indcc;d all of u .... Profes~or Ii~ man said the on-.titution had been amended lundamentally at Ap- pomattox. Several spoke of a '· living constitution·· constantly growing, changing. adapting. And finally. some. said
  • turning toward the Pacific already on the eve of World War II. Korea indicated a tilt in American policy that is going to be significant from here on out ... Korea is the benchmark in our emergence from a continental power into a perpetually globally
  • on December 7. 1941, from both Japanese and American perspectives. The conference provided the occasion for a reunion between two former ene­ mies who last met in combat in the skies over the Philippines in the early hours of World War II-retired U.S. Air
  • l'dunttion 1n· think Wl'ought to han,. for all the pl'opk that think thl•~·ought to han• ii.."' The second symposium, Equal Opportunity in the United State!i, was keynoted by Earl Waun·n and markl'd Presidl·nt .Johnson's last publk appearann·. Othl•r
  • , the C e c il K in g s o f C a lifo rn ia , and the C a r l P e r k in s o f K e n tu c k y - - she had gone w ith me on m y tr ip to L i c k B ra n c h S c h o o l. h e r h usb a nd . A nd p re tty P a ts y M in k fr o m H a w a ii w ith A nd C o n
  • s e d a y s . r-r ■ ,, ...........ii. t w r r i i i M M M I i i ^ i ■ .i | m" T h u rs d a y , J a n u a r y 19 (Ci^ntinued) ( *■ ■■ ■ ^ • '■ ; ^ - ^ T h e r o o m lo o k e d a s co zy a s ,w e c o u ld m a k e i t f o r fifty w o m e
  • fo ld e d He w en t up a n o th e r I a s k e d th e C h ie f to ta k e h e r u p s o m e s le e p in g m e d ic in e , a n d s a id m y g o o d n ig h ts . w a s in b e d a t a r e a s o n a b l e h o u r . _____ -a-ii
  • s w a s th e r e w ith us.^^^ We h a d a h a i r - .‘•ii X . d r e s s e r A vaiting. S w e e t l i t t l e M r s . F r e d e r i c k B u rg who h a d le f t h e r tw o' ' c h i l d r e n w i t h ^ b m e 'b a b y s i t t e r "an c o m e 'o v e r
  • activities: II Institute Sponsors Historic Art Exhibit At The Library Reprinted by permission from the Foundation Jin· Religious Studies in Texas The UT Institute for the Study of Antiquity and Christian rigins (ISAC) is sponsoring an art exhibit
  • World War II-have disrupted or destroyed many of these crucial supports for healthy development. Just in the 30 years between 1960 and 1990. a blink of the eye in Monica Nagel Ray Marshall 7 Alice Honig EDUCATION OF PARENTS nonwhite preschoolers
  • a p e of a \eB .ii f r o m M r s . F l a n d e r s , w h o h a s b e e n o a e f o r ^ e r y y e a r f o r 20 y e a r s . b r i e f l y lo o k in g a t th e fa m ilie s. a n d th e alK ia e w h ic h th e y p r e p a r e f o r s e r v i c e A n d th e
  • e d u p h i s m o t h e r , p h o n e d u s , a n d b r o u g h t h e r to t e a . V. ... J ' i . , j a m iiiii.i ii i ! n i l .■ MEMORANDUM TH E W H IT E HOUSE " T h u r s d a y , J u n e 2, 1966 Page 3 Wa s h i n g t o n We h a d a d e
  • m a n , w ho i s q u ite - 2 - ....... .... II 1965 T u e sd a y , S e p te m b e r 2nd (co n tin u ed ) h a le and h e a r ty and so s e n s ib ly s o lic it o u s o f h im , l i s t e n i n g to th e d r a m a o f h im e x p la in in g th e L
  • of efforts to establish the endowment. A program featurmg performances by Hel­ en Hayes and Kirk Douglas wa attended by more tha 1,000 persons. The ribute was co-chaired nationally by Henry Ford II of Detroit and Mrs. Albert L sker of New York. Amb. Ed Clark
  • , working as hard as they can, I r to achieve some stability in it. f i And so with this mixture of problemsXnd blessings, my dear husband went to I:>ed about midnight, and I rem etnbered one amusing little vignette iI T~ts~ of the morning, at the T
  • i t f e e l to be a G e r m a n s c i e n t i s t w ho h ad b e e n en g a g e d in W o r ld W a r II and th e n find y o u r s e l f liv in g in and w o rk in g fo r th e U nited S t a t e s . And n a t u r a l l y you d o n 't a s k the q u e s t i