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  • delibera­ tions was the occasion for a discus­ sion of Churchill by one of the contributors, Gordon Craig. George M. Woodwell, President and Director of the Woods Hole (Massachu­ setts) Research Center, an institute devoted to research in the global
  • ISSUENUIIEIIW,JM~Um • ~mongFriends ofLBJ NEWSLETTER OFTHEFRIENDS OFTHELBJUIIIAIIY Dr.a.wing Givento Friends of Library FourLibraries Sponsor Seminar In a trial cooperative effort, this fall four for the six Presidential Libraries-the Truman
  • Library holds week of lectures historia In conjunction with the exhibit tracing the history of World War I, lectures November 13-16 by three of the most distinguished living histor Milton Cooper, Jr., Professor, Department of History, of the Universi
  • Resources 1964 Legislative Task Force on Intergovernmental Fiscal Cooperation 13. 14. Programs to Improve the World-Wide Competitive Effectiveness American Business ... 1965 Outside Task Forces 1965 Task 1965 task 1965 Task 1965 Task Force Force Force
  • the rumor in Austin that LBJ and Gordon Fulcher have bought the old St. Mary’s tract of land for $400,000 and are selling it to the Post Office for $1,000,000 for the site of the new Post Office. LBJ denies knowing anything about the new Post Office contract
  • -state-local cooperation has re· r.eiv
  • by CTJ, MF, CCC, Sen. and Mrs. Monroney, Cong. Albert, Mrs. Gordon Cooper, Mrs. J.J. Truscott). 5/21 Leaves for WH at 8:40 a.m. for conference w/JFK, Cabinet meeting and TV interview with Nancy Dickerson. Arrives at noon at the Zero Milestone
  • ,) DIRECTOR GORDON I. R. LORE, JR . ASSISTANT DIRECTOR ] ADMINISTRATIVE 01"P'IClt ■ 1 WASHINGTON. 0. C. 20036 HS3G CONNECTICUT AVE,. N.W. 30 April 1968 Tll:Llt~HONl:1 ( 202) 867-9434 The Honorable Lyndon B. Johnson President of the United States
  • basketball, not so they would grow up to be seven foot giants-these were small. peasant-stock people They ere teachmg them how to get along together. They were the children of peasants; they knew only how to bump each other. not how to cooperate
  • and Mrs. Kennedy in greeting Democratic Women on WH lawn. Hosts luncheon at State Department for U.S.-Japan Science Cooperation Committee. Attends 6:45 reception concluding WH Economic Conference, and later addresses American Cancer Society at Shoreham
  • , President's Commission on White House Fellows Frank Ikard, Sr., Danzansky, Dickey, Tydings, Quint & Gordon J. J. Pickle, United States Representative, 10th District, Texas Charis Walker, Charis E. Walker Associates, Inr. system up for ransom." It represents
  • . The elder artists-John Biggers Elizabeth Atlett, Jean Lacy, Jacob Lawrence, Gordon Parks, Faith Ringgold, John Scott and Carroll Harris Simms-all underscore the isolated successes of African­ American artists that character­ ized the twentieth century. When
  • , the exhibit featured this letter from Benedict Arnold which is the only known written account by the General of his treasonous act. 3 toward new human rights Symposium Announced In Washington On September 12-16 the Library, in cooperation with the JFK
  • to be complete or definitive. discoverlbj.org Former UN delegates Senators Sparkman, H. Alexander Smith and Cooper voice approval in separate interviews of LBJ’s plan for UN program of manning space for peace. 1/16 LBJ, CTJ (Lady Bird Johnson) and Senator
  • attends the 81st Club luncheon at the Kennedy-Warren with Mrs. Maury Maverick. Senate passes the St. Lawrence Seaway Bill, establishing a St. Lawrence Seaway Development Committee to construct in cooperation with Canada a canal, lock, 1954 Chronology ● p
  • : former LIFE magazine photographers Gordon Parks and Charles Moore: Mag1111m photographers Bob Adelman and Leonard Freed: then-staff photogra­ pher for the Nm ion of Islam, Robert Sengstacke;and Black Star photogra­ phers Matt Heron and Bob Fitch. The LBJ
  • on the phone during the day. 3/6 LBJ flies to Chicago this morning to address the national meeting of the Rural Electric Cooperative Association, returning to Washington that evening, In his address, LBJ proposes that co-ops send outstanding high school
  • Many members of the Committee for a More Beautüul/Capital bave watched you plan your plantings, your clean-up campaigns, your community cooperation--and we have been cheered by your enthusiasm• I , / .'. . r"' We are grateful, too, to the memb ers
  • of the Committee for a More Beautiful/Capital have watched you plan your plantings, your clean-up campaigns, your community cooperation--and we have been cheered by your enthusiasm. We are grateful, too, to the memb ers of the Awards ~ury who went about
  • , what the alter­ native might have been -- a freeway with billboards, perhaps flashing neon signe. But the p eople of this area were determined tbat this would not happen. And it d idn 1t. It took the cooperation of planning commissions, boards of super­
  • into the cause. But -- in the end -- the success of freeing our neighborhoods from hoodlums and fear depends upon the cooperation of all citizens. W e can take the lazy path by me rel y sounding the alarm and putting the extra bolts on our door. But I think more
  • that cooperation between Washington and South Carolina was the key to progress . - 1­ .. So with your leaders today . Our good friend, Olin Johnston, has never wavered in forging that partnership since he arrived in the Senate, four years before my husband
  • betterment, and each has been the catalyst that has evoked cooperation from hundreds and thousands in her community. These are records of ingenuity, and courage• and faith, and hours and hours of hard work. One ‫ס‬f the awardees, Mrs. Mattie Coney
  • the U.S. (and reclaim Texas in return), and President Wilson's copy of the Treaty of Versailles. Distinguishedscholars to lecture on World War I Dr. Cooper As part of a week-long com­ memorative look at World War I, the Librar has invited three
  • , formed the Austin Project, in a cooperative effort with the local community. The Rostows "could have rested on their academic accom­ plishments after long and highly acclaimed careers," the Ausrin American-Sraresman said in an editorial. "They chose
  • no burden on anyone else that can be removed by foresight and cooperation. What all of us can do, each in her own degree, is to dedicate ourselves to the high ideals of citizenship enshrined in the university tradition and resolve that we will never depart
  • values and cooperation. NATIONAL HEALTH EDUCATION CONSORTIUM: As outlined by Brenda Leath, associate director for Special Popula­ tion Initiatives of the National Commission to Prevent Infant Mortality, the consortium, an initiative of the commission
  • of Regents in July to undertake major improvements, cited the close cooperation between the Library and the University, and the "extensive u5e" \\ hich the University has made of the Library sine it was dedicated in May 1971. "For the pa t several years
  • , Alan Shepherd, Walter Schirra, Scott Carpenter, Donald (Deke) Slayton, and Gor an Cooper. Missingfrom the photo: John Glenn. 6 HISTORY OF THECONGRESSLAUNCHED wenty leading congressional authorities assembled in Wash­ ington on July 22 to discuss
  • of Alaska (Ernest Gruening and E. L. Bob Bartlett). LBJ is re-elected majority leader; Everett Dirksen defeats John Sherman Cooper for the position of minority leader left vacant by the retirement of William Knowland. When the Senate opens, LBJ, exercising
  • economic and social progress among the developing nations. 4. Encourage cooperation among nations of the same region. Noting that this principle had resulted in new strains of rice and wheat being developed in the Philip­ pines and Mexico, the text
  • with the posi­ tions they held during the administra­ tion. Around the table are: I. Richard Helms, director of Central Int lligcnce Agency: 2. Chester Cooper, Senior Mem­ ber of the National Security Council Staff: 3. Harry Middleton, Library Direc­ tor who
  • "; H.R. McMaster, "The Advisory Role of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Escalation of the Vietnam War, Nov. 1963-July I 965"; Harry Mcr­ r itt, "John Sherman Cooper, a biography"; Christine Wing, "Security Policy and the Balance of Economic Power
  • Korea to Vietnam"; Francis J. Gavin, "Gold, Dollars and Power: A Political History of the Balance of Payments, 1958-1968"; Terence Kehoe, "The Persistence of Cooperation: Government Regulation of Great Lakes Water Pollution, 1960-1978"; LeeAnna Y. Keith
  • the need for pro­ tection and their role in achieving it. • governmental actions that are based on incentives to cooperate rather than punishment. • awareness of the inteJTelationship of all forms of life. ("It isn't enough just to list 30 animals