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  • back into those y ars with startling immediacy. And the Johnson Library has them. Virtually every time the President made formal remarks, a Communications Agency crew was there with tape recorders running. Those tapes, nearly a thousand of them
  • Office. SoreJ Etrog, a Romanian-born artist who studied in New York City, pro­ duced this bronze abstract. Titled simply "The Source," and massive in appearance, it weighs less than six hundred pounds. Its permanent pedestal had not arrived at the time
  • . Scott, L. Kaneem Smith, Kathleen Varnell 2 join in a discussion that has been going on since the time of W. E. B. DuBois: How best to represent a black aesthetic? What is the black aesthetic?" Alvia J. Wardlaw, Curator of Twentieth-Century Art
  • and piece of fur­ niture has a story attached to it, such as the , triking Welsh dress­ er used as a buffet in the West Room of the house. The dresser was a gift of Ms. Jane Engel­ hard, and Mrs. Johnson says it has crossed the Atlantic Ocean three times
  • was an experience that you couldn't fully appreciate. Rarely did you get any time to see and enjoy the country and people, except from the back of a tlatbed truck in a motorcade looking through the view­ finders of a camera. Buf every now and then from that vantage
  • the Watergate scandal, and the Per ian Gulf War. His hallmark has been quiet and effective diplomacy; hi mantra was always " ever l t the other fellow set the agenda." Time magazine once called him "the Velvet Hammer." In his first statevvide campaign
  • by the Pedernales under the big oak trees preparing. The Secret Service, of course, with justi­ fication were concerned that there might be an accident so we were crossing every "T" as far as safety was concerned. About that time we heard the honking of a horn
  • told them, and aplendor the time would o( the Presidency come wlien I would look lack and !ind it hard on the majeaty to believe that I had actually in ~r•, I slept been there. But on thh ~ night, I went to bed then. And for the first
  • on her time and her country. The event was Lady Bird Johnson's 80th birthday, celebrated at the LBJ Library on December 4-5 (three weeks before the actual date of December 22). Family members, friends, associates stretching deep into the past
  • , 0eft) who spent time as a lecturer at the LBJ School of Public Affairs. He was escorted through the museum by volunteer Susan Dimmick. 2 Early Decisions on Vietnam Discussed A scholarly conference to explore the early decisions made by the Kennedy
  • as if you'reeavesdroppingon history." So finally we've hecked off the last thing on the list that there ·s time to do! I've just walked down to sec the tiny little garden which we want to leave for White House children and grandchildren of day· to come. I like the way it's
  • Congress, he said, is "bigger and busier. It's better educated and more experienced. It is more ethical, regardless of what you read, and more open. It is more democratic and more accessible. It is too accessible, I might add, at times. It is more
  • and Museum Mrs. Johnson began to see how a presiden­ tial library might dramatically portray the decisions of a president and his effect upon his times. The archives and displays should represent a melding- "a melding of both library and museum," she wrote
  • discovery shocked the western world in the early days of the cold war and who were the subject of a recent book written by him .... . . . Nan Robertson (below), Pul­ itzer-prize winning former reporter for the New York Times, whose own just-published book
  • Johnson's-urban residence from the late 1950's. Home, of course, is still the LBJ Ranch. The program of activities in the time ahead includes participating­ along with former First Ladies Betty Ford and Rosalynn Carter-in a symposium on "Women