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  • confidential call with the President when a third caller suddenly broke into their line. It quickly became apparent that the third party-actual­ ly a couple. a man named Walter and a woman named Cecil-were phon­ ing from Denver, and had placed a call Lo "Jim
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • an agreement between business, labor and government for wage-price guide­ posts of the kinds we had in the '60s, accompanied by an attempt by the President and others to convince this nation of what Switzerland, Japan and Germany have by and large learned
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Federation of Miners, which later became the Industrial Workers of the World. They got tu San Francisco; they took over Denver. they took over Seattle. they took over Kansas City. Now in some instances, sheer numbers had a lot to do with it. In a city like
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Issue Number Lil April 15, 1992 SHARlNGTlfE DREAM Oil, 1984 Lent from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stewart. Denver, Colorado BlackHistoryMonth at the LBJLibrary(see page2) Black History Two major American artists dis­ played their works
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Moyers: Many times he didn't mean what he told ou to do. On vening he had a particularly fu1ious s rap with McG orge Bundy, who he thought was I aking to th Washington Post. I was in the bed­ room late in the ev njng, and h, said, '·Would you mind hanging
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • pungent xamples of the Lruth of that aphorism. The Denver Posr revi w d one unfortunate King Lear thus: "Mr. Clarke played the king all evening under con tant t ar that someone else Willi about t play the ac .• In 1896, G org Bernard Shaw panned Herbert
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • said. "He figured everybody was intelligent unless they proved otherwise." Luci Baines Johnson drew a connection between her father's legacy and the events playing out at the Democratic National Convention this week in Denver, where Wednesday Senator
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • for the American people. So what I try to do in this book is to see the war from LBJ's eyes." Katharine Graham, long-time publisher of the Washington Post and now chairman of the executive committee of the Washington Post Company, was interviewed by a panel
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • as First Lady, there will be considerable space devoted to her life before that time, and also to her post-White House days at the LBJ Ranch. This new exhibit will display video excerpts from Mrs. Johnson's home movie , never before seen by the public. One
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • to important federal posts, and hear him tackling his first foreign policy crises-the Panama Crisis, the Cuban Guantanamo Water Crisis­ while warily confronting the growing turmoil in Vietnam, all as he surveys an election-year political scene nationally
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . "As a reminder of what the Great Society was about, and of how another president approached the issues that recurred ... in Los Angeles," the Post printed excerpts from a speech President Johnson delivered at Howard University in June 1965. The Civil Rights Act
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • activities. The presidential collection con­ tains 500.000 photographs of John­ son, his family. friends and associates. and his political and social activities at the White House and on trips ... taken by White Hou. e staff photographers .... The post
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • as Solicitor General, the first African-American to hold the post, as well as appoint·ing A11hur Goldberg as Ambassador to the Unit- d ations and Abe Fortas to the Supreme Court. During this p riocl, Congress consid­ ered the Voting Rights bill, an omnibus
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • El Rancho, 2613 S. Lamar Blvd .. Austin, TX. When: Thursday, January 23, 7:00 pm. Happy New Year! Please come join other Future Forum members for a post-holiday season Re-Gift Party at Matt's El Rancho. Bring your least favorite holiday gift, that old
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • to meet Senator Russell Long of Louisiana in his office to discuss a new post office for Shreveport. Shreveport was the largest city in Congressman Joe D. Waggoner's district. and Congressman Waggoner was conser­ vative, even for Louisiana. He was far
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • with significant increase~ of government regulation, both by law as well as 1 executive mandate. The ,urge f (social) legislation in the late 1930s, which is the hallmark of the New Deal, continued to a le ser degree in the post-World War II period in the Truman
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . in the post-cold war era. Betty Friedan, who a generation ago was a leading force in the women's movement with her book, The Feminine Mys­ tique, is now ploughing new ground with her just-published, The Fountain of Age, which poses the proposition
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . But it was a Medicare pen. Pat Borders, Assistant Director of the Library, posted the notice clos­ ing the Library officially for three and a half days in November when the .government ran out of money. 9 Museum ,CuratorRetires Gary Yarrington, curator
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . Robert Breunig is the new executive director of the National Wildflower Research Center. Dr. Breunig comes to the post having served as Executive Director of the Museum of Natural History in Santa Barbara, California, and before that as Executive Director
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ," was strategically more impor­ tant than Berlin. Then there was the division of post-war Germany (by the allies meet­ ing at Yalta) into their occupation zone. "Why take ground only to have to part with it?" Pa11icularly if taking it would cost an estimated 100,000
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • courage. "When left the Johnson 2 White House, I practiced law. I was able to represent the Washington Post and the Democratic Party during Watergate .... We filed a suit against the Committee to Reelect the President three days af­ ter Watergate
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • Post. Both men spoke on the topic, "G vernment Support for the Humanities." Dr. Duffey maintained that federal funding for the arts and humanities has increased more rapidly over the last dec­ ade than any other part of the federal budget. He added
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • son Chair in Public Affairs at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. His appointment was approved on Octo r 12 by The University of T xas Board of Regents. Prof~or Cohen will assume his new post in January. He will teach seminars on weUare
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of the Soviet and Eastern Euro­ pean Research Program at Johns Hopkins Univer­ sity; Strobe Talbott, diplomatic correspondent for Time magazine; Philip Bobbitt, UT law professor; Robert Kaiser, national correspondent for the Washington Post; James Goodby
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • as an apology because other presidents so rarely admit any mistakes, has stood for more than a century as an accurate and fair self-appraisal. During a post-presidential trip around the world. a leisurely journey consuming more than two years, the Grants
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • exchanges between Jerry Brown, Ann Richards, academics James Reichley of Georgetown University and Larry Sabato of the University of Virginia, and journal­ ists Meg Greenfield of the Washington Post and Marianne Means of Hearst Newspapers. Only Brown
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • ; rather, it had been failing lo enter the League of Nations. It became the common wisdom that collective security and military pre­ paredness could have prevented World War II. So collective security and military preparedness became the themes of post-war
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • by President Carter to head the U.S_ Civil Service Commission. Campbell had been dean 64 days when he resigned to take the federal post. Mrs. Rostow, Professor of American Government and Dean of the University's Division of General and Comparative Studies
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • . columnist for the Washington Post, set th stage for each discussion with a brief review of the issue involved. Referring to the need tor public partic1pa11on he said: "Washington has ... a bad habit of using verbal shorthand or technical jargon to keep out
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • of cily·building and hu­ man resource development strategy." Conference in Houston Explores World of Texas Politics "The World of Texas Politics," said Lynn Ashby, editor of The Houston Post, "is fill.ed with some of th.e most offensive, slimy, repugnant
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • , property tax adminis­ tration, post-secondary and vocational education, social ser­ vice delivery systems, special revenue sharing, energy policy, and state insurance policy. Between the first and second years of study, students are required to participate
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • -in-Residence program Ambassador William J. Jorden, former U.S. Ambassador to Panama and a member of President Johnson's National Security Council Staff, has been installed as the Library's first Scholar-in-Residence. The post, the first of its kind launched
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)
  • in commencement, but not for commencement I 964. There were more volunteers than could be accepted, and the posts had to be carefully assigned to reflect University constituencies. In a similar departure from recent tradition a large proportion of the graduates
  • Post-Presidential (Jan. 21, 1969-)