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- seeds in areas of good TEXAS ~ssCLIPPING BLJR[Atr PR DALLAS E., ' a h Ii I h 1' d I 9 I O San Antonio, TX Express (Cir. M. 80 286) (Cir. S. 185,479) ,,,;fp2 8 19BL . ffighway workers lauded for projects \ B NORA LOPEZ Exy N StO ff w •t preu
- , to oonfront the race issoe head on and to campaign In the Oki Confederaey. And he did ii acting like president, circuit riding preacher and ·good ole boy." LBJ signed the CM! Rights Act of 1964 on July 2.. • It was foUowe
- . It was the War to End all Wars. It set the stage for World War II and ultimately, the wars in Korea and Vietnam. November 11 marks the 60th annwersary ,f the armistice that stopped World War I. [It] also marks the opening of a major exhib 't on World War I
- of Congressman Buchanan. Upon LBJ's resignation, Jesse Kellam, the deputy state administrator, was appomted to the administrator's job and served in that capadty until the outbreak of World War II when he went into the navy Of th folks who attended the reunion
- Zealand, and Lad) Muld on, and World War II hero Harold Russell, Chairman of the President' Committee on Employment of the Handicapped. Al right, Luci Johnson sh ws Prince and Princess Michael of Kent through the Museum. THE LIBRARY Two alumni
- of rigid New Englanders and the son of sodalist parents who met in the summer of 1937 in Paris on their way to a seminar in Geneva. After World War II-during which he served first with the O.S.S., and then with the U.S. and British Air Forces in Lon don
- in the Carter Administration was extensively ,involved in the Camp David negotiations, explored the challenges of the 1990s. Oliver Shewell Franks, whose experience as a British diplomat began with World War II, gave his reflections on the history of that era
- Lh, ma.-,terpie e of his alreac..l) di Lrnnui hed rie., of 'vVOrkson th Jae~ onian r.i or . S. History. ··1 w uld t II prl.' l'nl members of the Congres .. ·Read \\ch ter_... said Rernini. " s he ,aid t th Congress. 'Generations tn t.: me v 111 h 1I
- kept tbe word of L ndon Johnson, who remarked during the Library's 1971 dedication cer monies: "II is all here: tbe story of our time-with the b ·k off. There is no record of a mistake. nothing ritical, ugly or unpleasant that is not includ ed
- that a democratic nation has an ob]i,ration lo promote imagination and understanding, rings hollow. The British beg·an their government support of the arts in the very darkest days of World War II, when London itself was under bombardment. It was a remarkable time
- be as if applicable • specific as possible. ) ,IJ, • ......... L,J ;;: -J,, /- < S-~ . , . 0 1 /.,- , r ~ I L 7'/2 , ~ - .. -;,( II ' - ~ ,, _,- , ~ Document Date ~ /./1-:J ¾~ - « Number of Pages ~ - -/~H) . ., ~ ,· Address for off-site
- one nickel towards their own cultural institutions." The internationally acclaimed mger said "I.here 1s a need in II of us that draws us together in one common bond. And that is the need for little be uty in our live ... Our artists, our museums, our
- Spain and acquir ing possessions oversea . American entry into World War I was followed by an attempted return to isolation but after World War II the onset of the cold war prevented any such re version. lnstead, as a deadly rivalry with the Soviet
- 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
- : An evening in Old Austin with Liz Car penter, George Chris tian, Sue McBee, Cactus Pryor, Texana Faulk Conn, and Emmett Shelton will look back at what life was like in this town before World War II. Dec. 13: Chr,istmas Program Karen Kuykendall and Standish
- at the LBJ Grove outside Washington, D.C. as an actor. II is simply-well, stand up there and try to allow a deep kind of "Amcricaness·· come through all the make-up and the thousands of words I must say. Just be there. and so will Lyndon. I believe Lyndon's
- . in the years ahead. George Christian and Harry Middleton moderated, their discussion. Another return speaker was World War II historian Martin Blumenson, who described the resistance move ment that formed inside France after the German occupation
- Dudziak, "Cold War Civil Rights: ivil Rights and Foreign Affairs after WW II"; Steve Estes, "I am a Man: Race and Masculinity in the Civil Rights Movement''; Alexandra Friedrich, "Awakenings: The Vietnam War and U.S.-West German Relations in the 1960s
- Beschloss if he thought the archivists could find that le11er as well. Archivist John Wilson did. Here is what Williams wrote: Ncve..-.b .. ...- ~s.,1q,,< th e Qr HOw d O,
- " Henry Ford II, Preston Jone!!, Ed Clark, Linda Tobias, Helen Hayes, Jake Pickle, Mrs. Johnson, Kirk Douglas and emcee Cactus Pryor, after the program. This hope has he n made a reality through the activities of the Friends of the LBJ Library, and now
- these notes and these things that identify this Deep Throat to Katherine Graham;·· the publisher of the Post. "The judge would have to think hard before he sent Kath erine Graham to jail for contempt; it's not Ii ke these two brash young reporters. Among us
- : "During World War II," And perhaps, ultimately, there is something in the national John Swearingen reminded the symposium, "the priorities of character that responds appropriately to crisis. "I just believe in the people of this country," Strauss said
- out siders. That\ why you· II hear phrases like. 'the 0MB and the CBO clashed today over the appropnauon of UMTA.' That's a v.ay of keeping all citizens out of the discussion .. 2 Daniel Yankelovich, presi dent of the Public Affairs Foun dation
- fighting in the night. '' And one night I ran down the hall. My mother had a rifle drawn, my father's 22. And I stood in the hall and I cried and I begged her not to shoot. But she could not put up with it any more. She pulled the trig~ II '' Did Lyndon
- the exhibit on World War II, saying '"You must see this exhibit. This i Ameri a!" Currently a collection of great rarities. treasures from the University of Texas Ransom Center's collec- 6 tion ·, is on di play on the Library's second floor. The Museum has
- decencies, and they outnumber the slicked-down crowd"-and here he would wrinkle his m ~e as ii. squinting through pince-nez "Lc.:11million to ont:." Bill Moyers, at the Johnson family cemetery: "... he touched me more deeply than any man, taught me more
- the Ohio River Ba.sin. Then men of little vision cried out against this as ' 1 pork barrel n. They were a gainst this progress. Well, we ignored their warnings. we moved ahead . Since \~o rld Jlar II alone, over >21 billion of new industry develop ment has
- 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
- over the district. (See Stuart Long note.) September Sept-Oct. LCRA electricians on strike. 9/2 World War II ends officially as Japanese envoys sign formal surrender documents aboard U.S.S. Missouri. 9/5 Congress reconvenes. LBJ returns
- /22 FDR signs “G.I. Bill of Rights” authorizing broad program of benefits for veterans of World War II. 6/22 Congress recesses until 8/1. 6/24 LBJ writes: “I am trying to get up to NYC next week before going to Texas for the summer.” 6/26 LBJ
- 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
Newsletter, "Among Friends of LBJ, Symposium: Children in Crisis, 18-19 September 1992," LBJ Library
(Item)
- 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
- 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
- publishes an article speculating on whether or not Governor Shivers will run for LBJ’s Senate seat in 1954. CTJ attends a luncheon at the White House. 6/2 CTJ attends a reception at the British Embassy in celebration of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II