Skip to main content
-
Tag >
Digital item
(remove)
-
Collection >
Reference File
(remove)
Limit your search
Tag
Contributor
Date
Subject
Type
Collection
Specific Item Type
Time Period
225 results
- L.
Lewis charges Krug with responsibility for Centralia disaster and demands Krug
resign.
4/4
Mrs. Rebekah Johnson still in hospital, in wheelchair, but hopes to be walking
soon.
4/7
300,000 telephone workers in 39 states go on strike. Long
- time.
I sincer ely hope that a meeting - if even very brief - can be arranged
sometime during the night of 17 August. As an American citizen I woµld
also like to meet the Leader of our great Nation.
Thank you for the time given to this letter.
Cordially
- the "Presiden1·y and Lht>Press m a sym
posium co-sponsor d b the Library and the LBJ ~•chool of
Puhlic ffa1rs.
William S. White DeliversKeynoteAddress
'
'
Expressing t e hope that the symposium would
re. ult in "improved understanding and a hcii:rhtt>ne
- advocacy, he
hoped, would not be obscured by bomb blasts and body counts.
Lyndon Johnson never had enough time. It was precisely
this realization - that time for him was limited - which
caused him to speak to his fellow countrymen so urgently in
his last
-
opportunity for the distressed,
the beauty of our land, the hope
of our poor? ...! believe that we
can continue the Great Society
while we fight in Vietnam. But
if there are some who do not
believe this, then, in the name
of justice, let them call
-
During th
the Ln p
Lone. ht: l
L have
a
great-great-grandclaclcly at the Alan o,
and I hoped the press pool had no
Texans in it.
T had to tell the President, "Mr.
President, you said up there that your
great-great-granddaddy
died al the
Alamo."
He
- -- the lasting quality of greatness.
Today, millions of Americans have been travelling fat' and
near and iooking at their new highway systems with fresh eyes. A
few rnom:hs ago when the Highway Beautification Act became law, it
marked the beginning of wh~t I hope
-
dinary? It was simple. Lyndon
Johnson believed that every citizen
was entitled to as much respect and
dignity as every other citizen ... Laws
testify to his commitment. He left us
a legacy of hope."
Two other departures:
• Homer Thornberry, who suc
- is available to visitors for
the first time. It is hoped that eventu
ally the patio will take on the look of
a sculpture garden.
7
Foundation Awards Fall Grants
FoUowing the LBJ Foundation's poli
cy of giving grants twice a year, a
University of Texas
- any real hope
that something could come of it? And
who was President Johnson·s 'spe
cial" person in lran?
Someday an enterprising histori
an will pick up this thread and run •
to earth. In the meantime it is
intere:ting anecdote from a contr
vcrsial
- don't know
where you ever got the idea. You must
have been listening to the Governor of
New York.''
Damaging Cues. After New Hampshire, Goldwater came out with a paper
insisting that he not only wanted "a
sound social security system" but indeed hoped
- don't know
where you ever got the idea. You must
have been listening to the Governor of
New York.''
Damaging Cues. After New Hampshire, Goldwater came out with a paper
insisting that he not only wanted "a
sound social security system" but indeed hoped
- will significantly strengthen
and enrich the educational programs in which that great
institution is engaged. I would also hope that your action
would enhance the opportunity for improving the academic
endeavors of all institutions of learning, and provide addi
- and will continue through
November 3.
"Ruth Harding," by Thomas Eakins was a gift to the White House
in 1967 from Joseph Hirshhorn. (In her diary, Mrs. Johnson
recorded: "I hope ... that one of the 32 Eakins Mr. Hirshhorn
owns will come to rest in the White House
- Education Act is all about.
And I hope we never forget it.
COMING EVENTS AT THE LIBRARY
February 28. Opening of exhibition. "Texas and the Ameri
can Presidency." Observing Texas' sesquicenten
nial tt will featur the four U.S. Presidents
Jackson, Van
- must see it. By recalling this vivid
selfless courage-full part of our past,
we make our current lives more mean
ingful, and we make our future more
hopeful. We come to understand more
fully what we owe to the generations
that went before us and what
- years with
excitement and great hope.
r
To an early gatherin,g of scholars and public uf
ficials at the Library, President .Johnson delivered
this challenge: "We are not here to eel brat the
breakthrou.ghs of yesterday, but to try to chart
- 1:P11lr.il
dtl,·, ..
E:1.1·111th,Di11l'!111 of th1· l . S. Conln
• Trn,1s Co11111, C.011rt )111!~1 ~1.uy
r•m·,• of \l,l\ors. \\Ith Bid,.ml C. Le,·,
'I Ire mosl hopeful note \\ as :.II11d, h>
l'l'arl \\ illi.uns: ''The l'l lllll11,il
-
a('repting our unfair share, with our serving as willing
In her welcoming remarks, Liz Carpenter set the tone for the
Conference: " ... I would hope that you "ill find perhaps a
ne • Acnse of destiny \ltithin yoursehes. If \H' can do that.
then this year has
- the reasons for the shortage. W really didn't
have any authority to do anything in the voluntary alloca
tion program. What could you possibly do other than call
oil companies up and jawbone and hope they got the
message?
- Duke Ligon, former Assistant
- an updated version that includes photos, an
omission in the first edition.
And with a new publicist, Hanny says he hopes to continue with the spate of more than 100 signings he
did three years ago, when the book first came out.
His goal, he says, is to go
- an updated version that includes photos, an
omission in the first edition.
And with a new publicist, Hanny says he hopes to continue with the spate of more than 100 signings he
did three years ago, when the book first came out.
His goal, he says, is to go
- . the environment. and
the lum.bcapc iL,clf. and that is a very basic and very powerful rcaltty
on which to build and it is to me a sign ol hope and promise.
16
Charles Moore, Architect
Our problem I think. we have as we try to make the future. we hav
quite vivid
- " about their income security,
Cisneros said. And yet, as speaker
after speaker affirmed, the hope and
health of our national) future depend
on our ability to open the doors of
education and opportunity to all
American youth. The alternative,
Barbara
-
John W. Gardner
Secretary
of Health,
and Welfare
David E. Bell
Administrator,
International
,,
College
College
John Hope Franklin
Professor,
University
of Chicago
to the
Mrs.· Arthur
Charles
Frankel
Assistant
Secretary
for Educational
• Affairs