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  • selection com­ mittee recommended the awarding of 14 grants totaling $15,000 for the fall semester. The funds, a bequest from the Moody Foundation, are used to help defray travel and living expenses for researchers using the Library's resources
  • Library Grants Fourteen recipients were award­ ed grants-in-aid of research for the second half of the year. The funds result from a bequest from the Moody Foundation to provide travel and living expenses to students, teachers, and writers, enabling them
  • for so many years: thank you, thank you, thank you." Library Travels the Information Superhighway by Bob Brewin The following is excerpted from an article that appeared in Federal Computer Week magazine. rt is reprinted with the magazine's per­ mi ion
  • at the Johnson Library and Museum. The artist, Alban B. "Bud" Butler, Jr., used his travels around the United States, Latin America, Europe, and his service in World War I as fodder for his whimsical and entertaining illustra­ tions. A Romp Through Peace and War
  • Carpenter: LBJ ah ays kne\ what was in the papers. Once w wer traveling ilh Mrs. Johnson and report rs t the Big Bend, and Stewart Udall was along, making grand ges­ tur .·, pointing: "Look at the mountain. Mrs. Johnson!" Mrs. Johnson was w aring a cowboy
  • in Dallas, was in Austin touring with friends when she visited the Library on July 30. Mrs. Hay is a teacher of gifted children in third through sixth grades in the Somerset School District in Pennsylvania. Mrs. Hay said that she and her traveling companions
  • the Library·s resources by providing support for travel and living expenses. Thos receiving granls-in-aid and he titles of their proposed projects are: Marcel Bearth, "The South Asian Policy of Presi­ denl Johnson"; Avital Bloch, "The N.Y. Intellectuals
  • . the shovel she used on numer- A replica of Air Force One. fascinating particularly to young visi­ tors, is accompanied by a map showing the more than 500,000 mile traveled by President Johnson, often accompanied by his wife. 6 ous occa~ion.,, and-at right
  • available by the Lyndon Baines John­ son Foundation by virtue of a grant from the Moody Foundation to help students. teachers, and writers use the Library's resources by providing support for travel and living expenses. Those receiving grants-in-aid
  • ," the exhibit-which General Powell called "America on display"-was commissioned by the National Archives. After it leaves the LBJ Library on August 31, it will travel to the other Presidential Libraries, end­ ing up at the Archives building in Washington, D.C
  • herself took. The gallery concludes with photos of family and travels from Mrs. Johnson's personal photo albums, and special tributes from presidents, first ladies, and close friends. Mrs. Johnson and her daughters share a moment with Lowell Lebermann
  • of the scholars. working in l'he Library are recipients o.f research grants-in-aid from the Friends of the LHJ Library. More than 887,000 has been awarded to provide travel and li\•,ing assistance to scholars who could not otherwise aUord to visit the Library_
  • personal tour of lhe ranch house. Docents Tour Ranch he Library's docent -lh volunt ers wh conduct tour~ of the museum for visitors-took a vantage of the early spr­ ing and traveled to the Hill Country for at ur of their wn, to the LBJ sites, including
  • Indochina war. where Capa was killed in 1954. The traveling exhibit will be at the Library until August IO. UIO, 'G FRIENDS OF LBJ 1.1a p11b/icati11n of 1/w Frirnd.< 11}the LBJ lihrary f"Jliwr f..1.1h·r
  • for - was the riile of goodwill amba,~ad'1r. bc­ cau,c sh• did travel to 78 nation, aroum.l th wurld rcpre,enting ,he United States (beginning! during the E:i,enh1mcr adminb1n11ion. My n11.1thcrdid not feel comforta k gelling imolved in poll
  • ," who were busy fostering a se­ ries of pseudo-scandals. The lirst was Whitewater, which "became the germ that led to the plague of the impeach­ ment trial." There were the Iirings of the White House travel office staff, and the missing FBl files, which
  • or as much as he wants to make out of these travels. And I think my Vice President greatly benefited from them and he gave me the benefit of what he gained. As President of the Senate, the Vice President has a chance to keep in close touch with legislative
  • husband, UT Professor Walt Rostow, will go on leave for a year beginning in July, filling lectureships that will take them to Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Europe. A major reason for the Rostows' travel is their joint appointment as Distinguished
  • of the photos also serve as the material for an exhibition sponsored by the International Center of Pho­ tography. The exhibit opened at LC.P. in New York City in May and will travel tooth r institutions across the country. Paula Okamoto (above}, widow
  • months before, to David Eisenhower. But Tricia was still having dates, and hadn't connected yet with the young ox boy. "I was impressed. I didn't know Nixon at all; I was the only person at the White House who had not traveled aboard the Tricia, and been
  • at an airpo1t, knowing per­ fectly well that no matter how hard I might strain, I couldn't read the numbers. It took me quite a while to conquer my reluctance to ask a fellow traveler for help." "Finally it is imperative always to remember that there are many