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24 results
- . The first, jointly sponsored with the LBJ
School of Public Affairs and the Brookings Institution in
February, traced the nation's effort to develop an energy
policy since the end of World War II and then focused on
current problems and poten11al solutions
- to stablish a
permanent endowment for the Friends of the Library in Mrs.
Johnson's name
Former Ambassador Edward . Clark announced during the
evening the success of that effort - the goal of $1 milJion was
surpassed by m re than $250,000.
It i especially
- of International Expositions of this intention
and reserve a six-month period on the BIE schedule for this
purpose.
Presidential aides Ralph A. Dungan and Edward L.
Sherman in early June established contacts with the State
Department, Commerce Department, Interior
- of National Educati n"";
Loyal Greer "Projects Camelot and Sim
patico in Chile and Colombia, 1965";
Douglas Kinnard "Maxwell Taylor and
1 ational Policy"; Elise Kirk "Historical
Study of Music Related to the White
House": Edward Kutler ..Presidential
Economic
- on (;roup,: llr. Kan·n Davi,,, St nior F1•1low.
Brooking-, ln,titulion
Impact nn llt·liH·r) S~,lt•m,: David W.1rm•r. l'r•>·
ll's,or, LHJ S1·hool uf l'uhlic \[fair,
l'an< l l'· rlkipanl.:
llavid 11.imburg. Chairman - l'r1•~idl nl.
Institute
of MPdidne
- Humphrey, Edward Ken·
nedy, Joe Califano, Harry McPherson, Kenneth O'Don
nell, Esther Peterson, Clarence Mitchell.
Others demurred. Horace Busby warned that the
idea was premature. John Gardner was worried that
the thrust of the conference was misdirected
- , ,\11n!mb1•1·.9
/'ant'/: Exn•rpb rrom pertinent
motion pittures
and
tell•vision film'i.
J/11dnalor: lr or1a Steint·m, '.\-ls.Magazine
0Jher l'arlidpUJ1l.~: James Brooks, l'roduc r, "Rhoda";
\ irgini·1 Carter, Assislant lo 'orman Lear,
an
dl·m
- a visit with Mrs.
Johnson to reminisce about bygone
days in Washington and Texas.
Several from the group visited the
Library as well, and they are pic
tured here.
Kent Hance; Jim Chapman; J. J. "Jake" Pickle; Jim Wright; Jack Brooks; Jack Hightower
- , 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
- at the Smithsonian
Institution, the National Park Service,
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
in Williamsburg,
Virginia,
The
Mariners'
Museum
in Newport
News, Virginia, and the Museums at
Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New
York.
Ms. Royse brings to the Library
a strong
-
President Johnson's Model "T" A Popular Tourist Attraction
Brookings Team Studies Wag ~Price Policies Since 1950's
II
•
th.
pro
thr
01
'ic11
th
hra
II
u
ihru .
•t
.
nu,g ricnds
ol LB!
Chief Archivist Charles Corkron
Heads Team of Professionals
- , Wenonah
Linoleum block, 1943
Day Bell,
5
BROOKINGS SCHOLAR RECEIVESAWARD
FOR THE BESTBOOK ON THE CONGRESS
Larrv Reed, Assistant Director of the LBJ Foundation,
prize-\\ inning check to James Sundquist.
presents Foundation's
James L. Sundquist, senior
- , and former Secretary of
Energy and Secretary of Defense, was keynote· speaker at the Brookings conference. Here he is flanked by LBJ
School Dean Max Sherman, LBJ Library Director Harry Middleton and senior staff member Nanette Blandin of
Brookings.
The LBJ
- ;
Congressman Jack Brooks, the incoming Dean: Dr. Melville
Bell Grosvenor,
hairman of the Board of the
a·ional
Geographic; Robert Wynn of San Antonio, de igner of the
exhibit, and Mrs. Johnson.
More than 300 Friends were on hand for the event.
Lynda Robb
- a distinguished array of experts from
the lields f political science, his ory and journalism. Among the
po itical scientists w re Joseph Cooper, Rice niversity; oger
Davidson. Library of C ngress; Richard Fenn , niversity of
Rochester· Sam Kernell. Brookings
- ,
Australia, an Vietnam.
Conferences Slated for Spring
A confer nee jointly sponsored by the Library, the LBJ
School and the Brookings Institution, to be held February
12-13 in the Library, will examine the history of energy policy
in the United States
- taught at Trinity College there for eight years.
He has been a frequent participant in Brookings Institution
conferences and an occasional lecturer for Eisenhower Fel
lows.
Hardeman is currently living in San Antonio, where he is a
professor of political
- , the
Houston Post and R,ice University
jointly sponsored at Rice September
29-30.
Four panels explored various
areas of that world.
In the first panel, moderated by
State Senator Chet Brooks, the thorny
matter of political financing was ad
dressed by three
- Brooke, Thomas Hardy and Joyce
Kilmer, from tht> University of Texas
Harry Ransom Center.
Bronze Memorial Sculpture, gift from the French nation. In
scribed "to the 36th Division in memor} of the Victory of Cham
pagne, September 26-0ctober 10, 1918"
5
- on the second floor~
Renderings by Graeber, Simmons & Cowan, A.I.A. Architects, Inc. In association with R. Max Brooks, FA/A
3
Foundation Board Meets
At LBJ Ranch
Members of the LBJ Foundation Board of Directors,
meeting at the LBJ Ranch on June 7-8, approv d
- Brides
.James L. Sundquist
Senior Fellow
The Brookings Institution
Concluding Remarks:
Elspeth D. Rostow
Professor, Lyndon B. Johnson
School of Public Affairs and
Stiles Professor in American
Studies and Government
The University of Texas at Austin
9
- .
The commlltee includes such well-known environmental
leaders as Laurance Rockefeller, Mary Lasker, Brooke
Aslor, Jane Engelhard, and Enid Haupt.
Other knowledgeable experts serving on the commmee
include Nash Castro, diret.:tor of the Palisades Interstate
- or thL nati n s pnht1cal his
tory. ,, ho have both recent!) \Hittc:n hliok~ about their
•amou, rdativi.:s.
• H1,t1man David kCullough
whose pn.:vious book, have
bt: n :inc.mtTheodore R sevclt tht. Pan· ma Canal and lhL
Brook)) n Bridge. JnJ \\ hose
- and a quarter
before, of New Harmony
and
Brook Farm,'' with similar unsatis
factory results.
Some did yeoman
work in
promoting
civil rights. "Nearly
a thousand white students went
South during "freedom summer" in
1964 ....
Nine civil rights workers
were