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  • --and a World War unmatched: in its destruction. They chronicle the end of colo­ nialism-and the beginning of the Cold War and the Atomic Age which still threaten mankind. 4 They cover the time when liberty was challenged in Europe and Latiin America and Asia
  • arated by him. And now I must tell you that...l miss him." Noted Historian Chronicles the Civil Rights Movement "An Evening With Taylor Branch" brought a crowd to the LBJ Library to hear a leading historian's fascinating insights into the early civil
  • . architeclllrc. economics. reli 0 ion. wars and government, as well as tht: history of families, towns and cities­ the National Archives gathers up the chronicles of this nation, transmitting them from generation to generation. and in doing so creates a spirit
  • wood engravings made from H m r" drJ.\\ in-=-. They cover the period 1857-1888. Homer was one of the most prolifi 1llu ra.tor ot' his time. The exhibition, chronicling a bygone ·m in th nation's life. was organized by the Cornell Fine ..\rt· Museum
  • . The preser­ vation work on several colleclions of Johnson family photos has been completed. [t has been a busy year. Juan Williams Chronicles Life of Thurgood Marshall Juan Williams calls Thurgood Marshall "a genuine American hero." Late in his years
  • Uni­ versity. Then came the ?Os and 80s at the University of Texas. Not included in their chronicle, but in the minds of many in the audience, were Walt's prodigious production of 17 books to add to the 12 turned out earlier, and Elspeth's six-year
  • . President Johnson "saw the bigger picture" of space exploration, said Ellen Ochoa, the first lispanic woman in space and the deputy director of the Johnson Space Center in Houston. "He saw that it should be devoted to the peace­ ful purposes for all mankind
  • for first-year srudents from the LBJ School. who spent consider­ able time loolung at the exhibit on the 1960s. The exhibit itself, which opened several months ago, continues to receive wide and favorable attention. A recent article in the Houston Chronicle
  • Butler began sketching at the age of seven with an insightful look at the Spanish-American War in 1898. While at a boarding school he chronicled the rough-and-tumble world of high school football. During his years at Yak his work often appeared
  • chronicled the 1920s. Friends of the LBJ Library had a special loo at the exhibit at a reception on ovember 2. Flapper costumes, like those worn by the guests shown here with Mrs. Johnson, a jazz band and the Charleston helped re-create the mood
  • the museum was renovated two years ago, is "A Family Album," a photographic chronicle of the Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson family through the years. The final panel, showing the Johnson grandchildren to the present time, has to be brought up to date every year
  • chronicles events both momentous and quiet cheerful and tragic. as seen through the eyes of the First Lady. The :-.elections in the exhibition arc dramatically illustrated with photographs. paintings. drawings. sculpture. plus a variety of historically
  • (•rance belwt:en two great inslilutions," Pulitzer Pri1.e winnm journalist Willi, m fi. Whitt. n0\\ a prolcssor of 1ournalism, key no c- the scs,.1on with a chronicle of his C>,.perien es covering the Presidency from RoosevC'lt to Nixon. While labe ed
  • , but it is a cookbook that is a good read too. Lynn Boswell ofVillita Productions produced the DVD specifically for the exhibit, to chronicle how electricity changed the Hill Countrv., and LBJ's role in that transformation. We are proud that it features one of the LBJ
  • even get a taste of the -called Johnson Treatment, LBJ's unique and highly effective style of persuasion. The exhibit covers LBJ's Senate career from his election in 1948 to his elevation to the vice-pre idency in 1961, and it chronicles his rapid rise