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- and hopeless effort.'· But he ex pressed '·deep regret" over ·'the way in which we allowed the Vi tmlm War to become the totally defining vent of those years and likewise of the his tory. Jn the Johnson years it was the Vietnam War and nothing else. And so
- Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, American Road Builders Association, Denver, Colorado, 2/23/1966"
- Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, University of Alabama and American Association of University Women Leadership Conference, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, 2/25/1966"
- years of LBJ. To the press, a few days before the opening of the renovated area, Library Director Harry Middleton explained: "No museum should go more than 10 years without taking a look at itself and revising and updating its exhibits." The new exhibits
- for research at the Library. (The figure does not include students who come into the research room on tour or school groups for whom research packets are prepared.) Mr. Leeman 's project, for a jour nahsm class, was "LBJ and the Press." 8 Library in May
Reference File, "Camp David"
(Item)
- Pres,s Photographers Honorable William Bundy Hon. Averell Harriman Secretary Clark Clifford 10:30a-REMARKS to phot1,..--...·.phers and press 4:15p-REMARKS to press __,.Aspen Lodge Q. 0 • I.. ' 1 'l : I J! .•. j 12:fJJ-LUNCHEON f .. 0 ! .. l
Reference File, "Camp David"
(Item)
- Pres,s Photographers Honorable William Bundy Hon. Averell Harriman Secretary Clark Clifford 10:30a-REMARKS to phot1,..--...·.phers and press 4:15p-REMARKS to press __,.Aspen Lodge Q. 0 • I.. ' 1 'l : I J! .•. j 12:fJJ-LUNCHEON f .. 0 ! .. l
- toured the Library in October did not noti e the fountains or the panoramic view of the University of Texas. They ignored the size of the Great Hall and were unim pressed by the thousands of red docu m£>ntboxe behind four levels of glass walls. They were
- of Texas A&M Press' re-publication of her Ruffles and Flourishes, a best selling account of her service in the Johnson White House. RichardNorton Smith, directorof the Herbert Hoover Library, brought his just-publishedbiogra phy of the first U.S
- all the present wars are civil wars in which, by almost a IO to- I margin, it is the innocent who perish. ... At a time where for many people the most important issue 1s cyberspace. for other people in the world, the most pressing concern is firewood
- at The University of Texas; Elspeth Rostow, former dean of the LBJ School of Public Affairs; and George Christian, former press secretary to LBJ. The audience was encouraged to submit questions to Dr. Dallek as well, and the discus sion which ensued was lively
- Press release, "Remarks by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson to National Council of State Garden Clubs and American Forestry Association, Jackson Hole, Wyoming, 9/7/1965"
- can't sing for the Prime Mmister who's t.>ndingBritish presence east of Suez. "On the Road To Mandalay'"' And you can't sing for the President who just devalued the British pound. "I've Got Plenty ofNothin!" Well. the British and the American press w re
- the Biggs Chair in Military History at the Virginia Military Institute; author, The Years of MacArthur WILLIAM J. JORDEN, Correspondent, Associated Press, 1948-1952; Correspondent, New York Times, 1952-1955; U.S. Ambassador to Panama, 1974-1978 Panel
- of his meeting with Congressional leaders on 31 January 1968. Most of the notes are open for research in whole m in part. s Tom Johnson Notes of Meetings: Notes taken by W. Thomas Johnson, deputy White House press secretary, at 161 of the president's
- ": Birth of a Symposium It began with a notion that the Library organize a symposium to examine LBJ's relationship with the press. Then George Christian sug gested broadening the focus to include other themes from the sixties. A special committee of Great
- 15. 3/30 Press Club stag dinner. April 4/2 Mrs. [Ed?] Cape is visiting in Washington until April 21. 1950 Chronology ● p. 4 of 12 07/2024 4 lbjlibrary.org REFERENCE: LBJ CHRONOLOGY Drafted by LBJ Library archival staff from oral history
- majority leader, and LBJ is minority leader. LBJ makes a speech at the Women’s National Press Club “Welcome to Congress” dinner. 07/2024 1/7 Eisenhower delivers his State of the Union message to Congress. LBJ is a member of the committee to escort
- relation ship with the press-in the later years mostly the latter. He used to summon us and his beagles for those marathon walks around the South Lawn which we irreverently dubbed 'the Bataan Death Marches.' . . . He wa a spellbinding story teller
- . DouglassCater, specialassistant; 17. Tom Johnson, who as Deputy Press Secretary took notes at the President's meetings on Vietnam: 18. Admiral Thomas Moorer,Chief of Navy Operations; 19. General William Westmoreland, Commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam; 20. Wil
- case, because Ford has tended to be ignored by historians. . .To some extent he has somewhat the opposite effect on his reputation that Nixon has, in that he has been involved with things not particularly related to the press or scholarship
- Yarrington escorts Pierre Salinger, press secretary in the Kennedy and the early part of the Johnson administration, and the Honorable Rene Garrec, Governor of Normandy, through the Library's new permanent exhibition. Vice President I Gore speaks
- John L. Lewis’ striking miners were guilty of high treason. 6/11 LBJ attends Texas Press Association Convention in Galveston, which paid tribute to Ernest L. Kurth, “Pioneer in the Newsprint Industry.” 6/14 LBJ arrives in Corpus Christi from Austin
- with President John F. ew York: Rugged Land Kennedv. Press). Mrs. Connally concluded by an nouncing that she was giving the original copy of her notes to the LBJ Library. A member of the audience asked if she disagreed with the Warren report, the government
- . This was the intention of the President at the time, and its significance was recognized by the press in its reporting of the event. The passage of more than a decade has confirmed the assessment. 15 LBJSchool Graduates Coming Events The Library's major exhibit
- back. "But ever since he got in here;• said Roy Wilkins, pointing to the Oval Office, "ever since he got in here it's been rock around the clock." So it was, and the President never missed a chance to press it publicly .... Of course, our faith
- Foundation Board of Directors, was special assistant to the President and assistant press secretary during the Johnson Administration. At the LBJ Grove in Washington, D.C., long-time friend Dale Miller, in the tradition of LBJ-style racon teurs, told
- that the outcome in Congress will "reverberate for good or ill through the states, and the local institutions, and through the lives of each of us." rostscri~t: W~at t~e1~4t~ tongress Ili~ As this goes to press, Congress has not finished the FY ID% budget
- \, \\ 1·re ,',-pressed • Enrl Lc,...,,,~. T.111111, Unh·cr)ilt,• -rite < h:irlcs M. Unrr. Prnfti~ur of l..t1\\ :it 1,, ,r m.11ont~ n( m 1~ur~ \\ ho t.'ng 1gcd in prmCJpal diffil•uhv , . ~tt:m, fr~m th, Hal\ nrd l ni-1:cr~ll\. sui:~cstoo: no
- those problems. 1 think we have the will to do it. I think tee har;e the intelligence to dn it, and I think our record demomtrales that in the past tee hai:e rt'sponded to challenges. Nancy Teeters The most pressing economic problem, not only of today