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  • President Clinton never men­ tions are ""Lyndon Johnson""----cven ··1ast year when he rattled off the names of other presidents besides himself who had tried to reform America's [healthl system. he cited Harry Truman, John Kennedy. and Richard Nixon. I
  • , "is just as bipartisan as breathing." Credit: Ausrin America11-S1ares111an David Kennedy LibraryMounts Workof Black Artists An exhibition which proved to be immensely popular was "Harlem Renaissance: Art of Brack America," on display in the Library
  • , Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson-joined with the Brookings Institution in sponsoring a majOI' symposium on a subject important to the Administrations of all four Presidents-wage-price policy. The idea for the multi-Library endeavor was proposed by Walt Rostow
  • . Those receiving grants-in-aid and the titres of their proposed topics are: Joseph A. Bongiorno, "Doves and Eagles: The History of the Relationship Between U.S. Presidents and U.N. Secretaries-General since 1945"; Pamela A. Conn, "Losing Hearts and Minds
  • ident Johnson s chief as­ sistant for domestic legislation, Joseph A. Califano Jr. had unique insights into LBJ's deepest fears about the impact that the Viet­ nam War might have on his be­ loved Great Society. He began his remarks under the live oaks
  • ? What would he do if he came back today? And how will the futme deal with his programs and ideals? LBJ's prowess in the Senate was unequalled, Daschle asserted. and recalled a remark attributed to then­ Senator John Kennedy, who chose LBJ as a running
  • at Berkeley Jerome Cavanaugh Mayor City of Detroit, Michigan Martin Meyers.on , Dean, School of Environmental Design University of California at Berkeley ( \ Norman Kennedy Associate Director, Institute Traffic & Transportation Engineering University
  • of Economics, Wesleyan University Ed Fried 3 Kennedy Administration. . . We had no idea what was down the road. And if we had, I'm not sure we would have been any wiser or any more attentive. You respond to issues. I don't think I would quite call
  • Eisenhower delivers the State of the Union address at 12:30; afterward LBJ meets with JFK and Robert Kennedy. The Democratic Conference meets at 3:30. At the conference, Gore introduces a motion to expand the Democratic Policy Committee from 9 to 15 members
  • agenda-setting works intermittently, contfr,gent­ ly, under c rtain circumstances, but it looks like c ngressional agenda-setting, especially without the involvement of the presid nt, Joseph Califano: "You've got to be willing to risk your presidency
  • these with WJ. Opens Senate, swearing-in of Joseph H. Bottum, Jr., to fill Case’s seat. Kennedy called LBJ to get Albert Thomas and Sen. Russell together, apparently to work out something ahead of time (?). Kennedy calls LBJ at 6:45 p.m. 7/12 P-38. LBJ meets
  • from the collections of the Library of Congress, the National Ar­ chives, the Ohio Historical Society, the Chicago Historical Society, and the Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy Presidential Libraries. From March 15 to April 25, 1976
  • , or in the concentration camps of the Third Reich. One member of the audience wanted to know if Styron found his trade to be hard work. Like Joseph Conrad, replied the author, "I never approach my writing desk in the morning without wanting to burst into tears." Front
  • of the reciprocal trade (tariff-lowering) and foreign aid programs. 1/10 News report: Senate Labor Subcommittee chairman, John Kennedy--often considered too right-wing by many Democrats--will strike a deft coup by unveiling his own labor program for the Senate
  • premises and offer new solutions. The leaders of the party, Fritz Mondale and T ddy Kennedy, each continues o be, in different ways, a Roosevelt legatee. No one then will any longer live in FDR's shadow as Lyndon Johnson did, but it may be sometime still
  • , "Lyndon Johnson ;md the Imperial Mind: The Dominican Intervention''; Charles M. Lamb, "Presidents, Federalism, and Fair Housing Policy"; Rodney K. Longley, "Southern Maverick: The Life and Times of Senator Albert A. Gore, Sr. of Tennessee"; Joseph
  • , the exhibition trace. the development of carloonmg and the graphic arts in America, and presents a visual and narrative commentary on America's President ., epresented are the works of such cartoonists as Thomas Nast, Joseph Keppler, Herblock. Jules Feiffer
  • didn't like the New Dealers; th New Dealers didn't like Truman. But if you look at him, particularly in foreign policy, in looking back, he was a superb President. On John F. Kennedy: H was a great politician-the best national politician, except Roosevelt
  • Archives of the Foreign Service; Federal Republic of Germany; A us tin-Travis County Collection; Harry Ransom Center; National Trust for Historic Preservation; Texas Memorial Museum; John F. Kennedy Library; the Adjutant General's Office, State of Texas
  • ACQUISITIONS (CONTINUED) Landscape painting (oil) by Dwight D. Ei enhower Terra Cotta Sculpture of Ulysses S. Grant Puck cartoon of Theodore Roosevelt. 1904 One of fiv editorial cartoon drawings by Jon Kennedy 8 Sculptur d ma k (carved wood) by Randolph
  • at the women's underwear in the Sears' catalogue .. • • • SENATOR JOSEPH BIDEN OF DELAWARE: Excerpts: In the next few years we will do one of two things: We'll either deploy a new, so-called strategic defense system - Star Wars - or we will achieve the most far
  • Deathe, Bolton, Elmo Brown, Chuck Brooks and Charles Howell. 2/14-2/25 At the 20th Congress of Soviet Communists Party in Moscow, Nikita Khrushchev proclaims a new party line, including destruction of Joseph Stalin as national idol. The rush to “de
  • maintenance organization (HMO). The 25,000 award, designated to be given in 1977 for health and medical services, was presented at a luncheon in New York on October 27. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Joseph A. Califano spoke on national health
  • reunion. They are: Willard Wirtz (labor), Alexander Trowbridge (Commerce), Joseph Barr (Treasury), John Gardner (HEW), Clark Clifford (Defense), Robert Wood (HUD), Alan Boyd (Transportation), Rober,t McNamara (Defense), Anthony Celebrezze (HEW), Orville
  • and Sciences. He was Deputy Director of the Peace Corps in the Kennedy Administra­ tion, and was later special assistant and then press secretary to President John­ son. It all began. Moyers recalled, when fifty years ago almost to the day, he and his bride
  • to childiren's health. Attending were: Arthur Fleming, 10 Ro'bert Finch, Elliot Rich­ ardson, Joseph Califano, Richard Schw,eiker, Mar­ garet Heckler, David Math­ ews and the current secre­ tary Otis Bowen. Reflections of a Kennedy-Johnson Loyalist by Walt
  • press conference jointly held by her and six other persons identifiE>d with the Kennedy and Johnson Administra­ tions: Senator Hubert Humphrey, Robert Kennedy Jr., Clarence Mitchell, Joseph A. Califano, Kenneth O'Donnell, and E:sther Peterson
  • '' of his career­ that of LBJ-in a one-character play called "Lyndon", which opened at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D. C. in f bruary. In preparation for his role, lugman visited the Library to do res arch on Johnson. Th· play, based on the boo by th
  • personalities depicted are Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Barry oldwater, George Bush and George Wallace. Although the ollectior will require time for reservation and cataloging before becoming available for r search, it 1s
  • discusses public perceptions of the Congress. 3 Speakersat the Library. .. Jim Ketchum Jim Ketchum, presently curator of the U.S. Senate, was curator of the White House from the Kennedy through the Johnson and into the Nixon administrations. Among his
  • of A life Wei/ lived, Harry Middleton's tribute to Mrs. Johnson. with written contribution~ from Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, Presidents Nixon, Ford. Caner. Reagan, and Bush; and posters of ..Breakfast at the Driskill,'" the original artwork memorializing
  • in 1995 and 1998. he orked with an international ream to write Global Scenarios f r Shell Inter­ national in London-. to1;es about the future of the world for the next thirt year·. he has r cently edited a book in conjunction with Joseph Jaworski
  • to go head-to-head. The 1960 contrast between Nixon and John F. Kennedy illustrated Marshall McLuhan's dictum about the risks "hot" personalities face on television when confronting "cool" personalities. And, under the klieg lights, JFK was definitely
  • to go head-to-head. The 1960 contrast between Nixon and John F. Kennedy illustrated Marshall McLuhan's dictum about the risks "hot" personalities face on television when confronting "cool" personalities. And, under the klieg lights, JFK was definitely
  • occupation." "Johnson," Cater said, "was a tra ic president-not in the sens that Kennedy and Lincoln were tragedies, they were sad-but in the sense that all men who try to accomplish good deeds fall v1i.:timto erv rse !ate." IO Joseph A. Califano, one-time
  • , and the venue is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. While many youth voting projects have surfaced in the past year, this one promises to be different by "hiring a network of young leaders and employing them in their hometo~." It also promises
  • , and the venue is the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. While many youth voting projects have surfaced in the past year, this one promises to be different by "hiring a network of young leaders and employing them in their hometo~." It also promises
  • Among Bob Hope's daughter Linda opened the exhibit honoring her father at the Johnson Library. Story on page 23. Photo by Charles Bogel. An Evening With Joseph A. Califano, Jr. Joe Califano was LBJ's top aide for domestic legislation. He oversaw
  • . In the House, Charles Halleck defeats Joseph Martin for minority leader. Martin had served as the Republican leader since 1939. Rayburn is re-elected speaker. The Senate consists of 64 Democrats and 34 Republicans, including 2 senators from the new state
  • awarded to David M. Barrett, for his book The CIA and Congress: The Untold Story from Truman to Kennedy (University Press of Kansas). Don Bacon former editor of the Encyclopedill of the Congress and a member of the award committee, had this to say