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  • can't sing for the Prime Mmister who's t.>ndingBritish presence east of Suez. "On the Road To Mandalay'"' And you can't sing for the President who just devalued the British pound. "I've Got Plenty ofNothin!" Well. the British and the American press w re
  • buy with $50) held over his breast and the perfectly pressed long coat covering most of the striped trousers. The whole scene was per­ fectly framed by the ivory-colored Doric columns which line the curved drive. The music was marvelously clear
  • ": 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
  • Press relations
  • LBJ has a fever; Lady Bird and Liz Carpenter work on beautification; lunch and discussion about presidential libraries; Lady Bird meets with Bess Abell; LBJ has press conference; representatives chosen for Churchill funeral; Nicholas Katzenbach
  • Press relations
  • Lady Bird & Lynda Robb to Smithsonian for "Reading is Fundamental;" welcoming speech by Dillon Ripley; speeches by Lady Bird & Margy McNamara; LBJ Library meeting covered by press; Lady Bird bowls with Muriel Humphrey & Jane Muskie; press take
  • , but isn't elusive on the tapes." George Christian, who served as the president's Press Secretary and who was present at the Library when the transcripts were opened, echoed that assessment. "The telephone transcripts," he said, "reflect how he did business
  • . In Memoriam George Reedy, 19J7-1999 Of President Johnson's press secretary, 1964-1965 ·oy JR. When the Library staff learned of the tragic loss of John Kennedy, Jr., they searched the archives for items to assemble a remembrance to him in the Library foyer
  • and applause. Because of that, Mamet said, he spent ten years without giving interviews to th press, because they are a waste of time. Once he fell off the wagon and granted an interview. The reporter asked him why he had avoided interviews. "Because
  • Press relations
  • LBJ & Lady Bird to Hemis Fair, San Antonio; gun control legislation; ceremony at Hemis Fair; speeches by Ed Clark, Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa, John Connally & LBJ; LBJ & Lady Bird tour exhibits; LBJ receives questions from the press; painting for LBJ
  • Press relations
  • Bombing halt in Vietnam; Mar-a-Lago becoming part of National Park Service; Lady Bird describes china for Preservation & Restoration luncheon; Lady Bird names speakers & guests; press are invited to speeches; Lady Bird gives remarks & introduces
  • Press relations
  • Lady Bird tours architecture at Yale University and New York; LBJ is in the hospital; Lady Bird likes rare books display at Beinecke Library at Yale; press are waiting outside the Beinecke for photographs; Lady Bird sees public housing units; Lady
  • Press relations
  • some of the guests, the press, and the entertainment for the night; Lady Bird visits with Erhard about Germany; toasts; LBJ mentions Vietnam & Great Society in toast; visits with houseguests upstairs; Lady Bird introduces entertainers
  • Press relations
  • LBJ and Lady Bird attend National Christian Church with guests; LBJ whispers a joke to Lady Bird during the service; press stories about Johnson family; lunch at White House and watching Senator Russell Long and Averell Harriman on television; Lady
  • Press relations
  • Lady Bird and Luci Johnson have clothing trip to New York; possible trip by Lynda Johnson to Spain; press stationed in hotel; tea for Mrs. Diaz Ordaz of Mexico; Elizabeth Arden hair stylist does Lady Bird's hair for party; Lady Bird to Mary Lasker's
  • .) , 5 I Eveningsat the Library George Reedy, Allen Drury and Marijane Maricle provided three lively and different kinds of pro­ grams at the Library. Reedy, aide to LBJ through the Senate and vicepresidential years and the first press secretary
  • Foundation Board of Directors, was special assistant to the President and assistant press secretary during the Johnson Administration. At the LBJ Grove in Washington, D.C., long-time friend Dale Miller, in the tradition of LBJ-style racon­ teurs, told
  • for reform, unless some crisis mobilizes the populace, none of the three morn­ ing speakers saw any truly funda­ mental change in the offing. George Christian, fo1mer press secretary to President Johnson, chaired the afternoon session, which featured spirited
  • as president. Included c1re viJeo tapes of network coverage of maior addresses and press conferences. Researchers use specially equipped carrels to view requested capes and films. The huge still photo collection, which includes all the photographs raken