Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Collection > Reference File (remove)
  • Subject > LBJ Library (remove)

33 results

  • lobby. Library Security Gets New Look Officer Phil Guerra takes a last look at the old ... . . . and Officer David Samuelson models the new. 14 A Narrow Escape in World War II The Los Angeles Times recently reported the death, at age 84, of Saburo
  • Officer, The Cleveland Foundation; Thomas Bradley, Mayor, Los Angeles; Maynard Jackson, Mayor, Atlan­ ta; Esther Peterson, former Assistant Secretary, Deparlmen o[ Labor; Wendell Anderson, Governor, Minnesota; Earl Johnson, Jr., Professor of Law. Universi­
  • , and the rest were blind. Tour Coordin a tor Joan ands in th 2nd floor thea­ ter spoke lo the group, first describin , the Library in general, then passing around e hibit, which the" pee at rs•· could examine by handling. Most of the "feelable" objects were
  • biography of Lyndon Johnson, spoke at the Library on the subject of LBJ and the rise of liberal nationalism. Dallek, a professor of history at the University of Califor­ nia at Los Angeles, gave the third Littlefield Lecture Series in Ameri­ can History
  • Negotiations, and is now a Washington attorney, will be the LBJ School's Commencement speaker on May 22. 5 At Southwest Texas State University Tom JohnsonReflects on LBJ Tom Johns n, Publisher of the Los Angeles Times and President of the LBJ Foundation
  • for the Dallas Times Herald. Cyndi Krier. Texas state senator from Bexar County. Earl Lewis, department chairman and professor at Trinity University. Larry McMurtry. novelist. Dave McNeely, political editor of the Austin American-Statesman. Bill Messer. Texas
  • have also appeared in The Atlantic, American Heritage. the Washington Post. the Los Angeles Times. and the Boston Globe. From 1998 to 2003 he was a research fellow at the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs. "And that was the story
  • or that shortsighted notion about public service are disturb­ ingly obvious. We have let our bridges rust and our highways clog. In too many areas of this nation, we can see the air we breathe. From Philadelphia and New YorkCity on one coast to San Diego and Los
  • Among Issue Number LXVIl. March, 2002 The Future of Presidential Libraries: A Symposium 2 Congress created tbe nation's presidential libraries system in order lo provide facilities which, a a min­ imum, maintain the papers of the nation's chief
  • , l hope we wi11 all see each other again in heaven. My only prayer is that there are no cell phones there. an you imagin what it must be like, for all those angels and souls who sought eternal rest in heaven, if Lyndon J hnson is up
  • . documentary got enthusiastic ap­ and Los Angeles and has most plause from the large audience, recently produced M,~ Conserva­ which one Dallas Morning News tive: Goldwater on Goldwater, a reporter described as "decidedly 19 After 37 Years, Lady Bird
  • Foundation Boar of Directors met November 15 in special session lo elect new officers following the death of the Board's longtime Chairman Frank C. Erwin, Jr. (see story on p. 9) Newly elected officers are W. Thomas Johnson, President, George Christian
  • Youth Administration, and his lime spent in Washinglun were examined, il became clear thal the whole story of modern educational d vclopm nt in this country could be lold by compiling a biography of the 36th President. The idea seemed lo possess merit
  • . And when he chose LO address the country on the energy cri is, he deliberately picked the format of the fireside chat. In the 1980 campaign, even Ronald Reagan quoted from FDR to such an extent in his acceptance addre. s that the New York Times titled its
  • gnarled cypress trees," and the '·first wild violets" of spring. She speaks of a '·Jove affair wirh nature" that began in childhood. Mrs. Johnson's mother died when Lady Bird was only five years old, and her mother's maiden sister, Aunt Effie, came lo
  • of the Johnson family received a numhcr of distinguished visitors lo the Librar Below, top lo bottom, Mrs. John on welcomes Ambassador and Mrs. Zhang Wenjin, from the People's Republic of China; The Right Honorable Sir Robert Muldoon, Prime Minister of 'cw
  • ": 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
  • ays been identified as a man who understood the works of Congress. how lo make things happen in Con­ gress. who understood the strengths and weakncs:,,cs of people he dealt with when he was in the House of Repre­ sentatives and in the Senate, as Vice
  • who are dear to you. -Interview in Austin American Statesman My life is full and good. -Interview in Dallas Times Herald , Gould Book Describes 'New Role' Played By First Lady by Nancy Smith Lady Bird Johnson and the Environ­ ment, by Lewis Gould
  • background in museum pol­ icy and procedures, collection man­ agement, and exhibitions. She will be assisting with the upcoming exhibit, Los Teja11os:Sus Hue/las en la Tierra (The Texas Mexicans: Footprints on the Land). This exhibit, curated by Curator
  • -a massive display two years in the making-documents the contributions of people of Mexican ancestry to the creation and develop­ ment of the state of Texas. Titled "Los Tejanos: Sus Huellas en Esta Tierra (The Texas Mexicans: Footprints on the Land
  • century Presid nt Johnson gave new life to the environment, for he thought of the land as more than an eco­ nomic resomce. This form of 4 Photo by Charles Bogel thinking inspired Lady Bird's much-heralded,mucb-admired and still-embraced beautifica­ tion
  • of distingui. h d p akers came to the LBJ Auditorium to examine some pivotal events in history. and to com­ ment upon how differently things might have turned out. Victor Hanson posed the question, what if Socrates had died early? Cecilia Holland pondered what
  • University, and is President of the International Solar Energy Society. He and his family have Jived in a solar heated home of his own design for nearly 20 years. Dr. Lo£ was selected by a Committee co-chaired by Mrs. Lyndon Johnson and Dr. William J. McGill
  • Goodpaster, Assi. tant for National Security Affairs; Ross Perot; and Sergei Khrush hev, son of Nikita Khrushchev. Mr. auc's mother Susan wrote, "My observation about John's experi­ ence at the LBJ i that he was able to examine primary sources and original
  • l\ladison wrutc lo her sister to sa) that the Briti,h were coming and ,he was savmg this portrait. Well \\ hat wa, not known is that she uho saved her own portrait trom the Whit House; and 1h1s turned up at the Pennsylrnma A1.:ademy of Art. (1 now H
  • , bul I think lhis time you've brought home a man." Fast forward Lo November 22, 1963, and Mrs. Johnson's memories of President Kennedy's assassina­ tion: the startling crack of gunfire; the wild ride to the hospital, the return to Air Force One, where
  • lifted off on a documentary lilm mission Lo follow a restored Vietnam-veteran H-IH 'Huey· helicopter on a I 0,000-mi.le flight across the country. Accompanied by an aerial cinematography chopper and three sup­ port vehicle , the crew of !11the Shadmr
  • that our young essays, covering both domestic and foreign policy during the people get a firm grounding in how our system works." Johnson Presidency, will examine the existing literature on For the moment, however, the skepticism remains, and as each topic
  • careers, combining textbook and classroom teaching with practical experience. This pioneering approach to education seeks to teach and examine public policy by involving students and faculty in the day-to-day affairs of government, working
  • Among Issue Number LXXI], June, 2000 Former Presidents Ford and Carter with NBC's Tim Russert Whither the Oval Office? Symposium Examines the Once and Future Presidency Story on Page Five African-American Art Featured in New Exhibit Lift every
  • was maintai11ed much more systematically. Copies of his memos to LBJ and their attach­ ments comprise more than 25,000 pages. A third way to get a handle on what the President read and, in this case, to gauge his reactions, is by examining those memos and other
  • to World War 11, Wright examines what he calls '·significant. gaping dif­ ferences.·· "To say that we were the ·Greatest Generation' is, I think, stretching it;' said Wright. "We were people just like all the other generations: maybe we had been through