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  • to President Ford. • On the other side were the men and women of the Press: Frank Cormier, Associated Pr
  • . On the corresix1ndents' panel were Frank Cormier, for a long time with the Associated Press and now retired; Helen Thomas, United Press Interna­ tional and dean of the Whjte House press corps: Marianne Means, Hearst Newspapers and l(jng Features syndi­ cate: James
  • , sponsored by U. T.'s His­ tory Department and College of Liberal Arts. His book, scheduled for publication in the spring by Oxford University Press, is titled Lyndon B. Johnson, A PoliticalLife, 1908-1960. lit will be the first of two projected volumes. 2
  • to his predeoessor, Mr. Bush called LBJ •'a towering and passion­ ate figure" who "tried with all his heart to be the best President that this country ever had for the people who are pressed against the wall, whose cries are not heard. But he heard
  • The Ilonorahle Thurgood Marshall, Associate Justice of the Left to right. former Secretary of Commerce Alexander Tro\\­ bridge, Mrs. Charles Engelhard and Associate Justice Thur­ good .Marshall await the luncheon ceremonies. 2 Dr. McGill. IeH, and Mrs. Johnson
  • and/or the Library, there is a pressing need for a major modification of several ar as of space ... in order to make those areas more usable and effective." I ' Along the north wall of the building on the first floor will be 11 new !>etof display cases
  • the Biggs Chair in Military History at the Virginia Military Institute; author, The Years of MacArthur WILLIAM J. JORDEN, Correspondent, Associated Press, 1948-1952; Correspondent, New York Times, 1952-1955; U.S. Ambassador to Panama, 1974-1978 Panel
  • by Charles Taunadi of the Associated Press, won Honorable Mention. AMONG FRIENDS OF LBJ is a publication of the Friends of the LBJ Library Editor- Lawrence D. Reed Research Assrstance: Charles Corkran, Cary Yarrington, Marlene White Photography: Frank Wolfe
  • news photographer for the Houston Press. ov ring the years 19591965, ox's photograph, document national political cam­ paigns. th earl days f the space program, and social and ultural de lopmen s seen from Houston perspective. 1ong the political
  • degrees from the University of Texas at Austin. She ha represented the Library, sometimes presenting papers and serving on panels, at meetings of the Texas Library Association, Society of Southwest Archivist, Society of American Archivist, Organization
  • Presidential papers, 6 million pre-Presidential pages, 6 million papers donated by associates of LBJ, and 2 million federal records. They are stored in 46,000 r,ed boxes, visible to Library visitors through the glass walls of the four floors that rise above
  • to enjoy in full measure. I am grateful that the great constant in my life for 50 years has been my political association and my most affectionate friendship with Lady Bird Johnson. Another constant has been my love of the Capitol Dome and all
  • mate because. among other reasons, "It wouldn't be worthwhile being president if Lyndon were majority leader." rEd. note: A number of LBJ's associates have recalled him saying that one reason among many that he accepted the vice-presidential nomination
  • Gowen, who was honored for her 3,000 hours of service. Florence Nightingale and Her Legacy for Nursing In association with The University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing, the LBJ Library and Museum opened an exhibit on April I. honoring the founder
  • toured the Library in October did not noti e the fountains or the panoramic view of the University of Texas. They ignored the size of the Great Hall and were unim­ pressed by the thousands of red docu m£>ntboxe behind four levels of glass walls. They were
  • was then briefed on the Library's Oral History Project, in which inter­ views with md1viduals who ere associated with Presi­ dent Johnson are taped and transcribed for researchers working with the Library's collections. Ford and Mrs. Johnson examine a document
  • of Texas A&M Press' re-publication of her Ruffles and Flourishes, a best­ selling account of her service in the Johnson White House. RichardNorton Smith, directorof the Herbert Hoover Library, brought his just-publishedbiogra­ phy of the first U.S
  • , that splendid moment." 3 Former Congressman Jake Pickle made a return to the library to delight an audience composed of old friends and former constituents with tales from his colorful career. His appearance coincided with the publication (by the U. T. Press
  • at The University of Texas; Elspeth Rostow, former dean of the LBJ School of Public Affairs; and George Christian, former press secretary to LBJ. The audience was encouraged to submit questions to Dr. Dallek as well, and the discus­ sion which ensued was lively
  • , President's Commission on White House Fellows Frank Ikard, Sr., Danzansky, Dickey, Tydings, Quint & Gordon J. J. Pickle, United States Representative, 10th District, Texas Charis Walker, Charis E. Walker Associates, Inr. system up for ransom." It represents
  • , electric utilities, juvenile justice, and family issues. Hood gets a lot of good press. he was still a thief. Baxter favored eliminating the Robin Hood system entirely, and replacing rhe lost revenues wiU1state ap­ propriations. The ensuing con ersalion
  • to succeed Han-y Middleton as Director of the LBJ Library and useum. The University of Texas at Austin has re ently named Dr. Flowers, Professor of Engli h and former Associate Dean of Graduate Studies, a Distinguished Alumna of the University. She has served
  • ;.,eparate session~. probed three issues of compelling concern: prioriti1:, m c
  • for research at the Library. (The figure does not include students who come into the research room on tour or school groups for whom research packets are prepared.) Mr. Leeman 's project, for a jour­ nahsm class, was "LBJ and the Press." 8 Library in May
  • , a junior at Southwest Texas State University. Horace Busby, long-time aide to and associate of Lyndon Johnson and now a consultant in Wash­ ington, D.C., reminisced about the man he knew at a breakfast meeting of Washington alumni of the LBJ School
  • with the Associated Press and The ew York Times for many years in the Far East, especially in Japan and Korea. He was chief of The Times' bureau in Moscow in the mid-1950's and then was that paper's diplomatic correspondent in Washington. When he entered Governments
  • A. Baker, Historian of the U.S. Senate; Raymond W. Smock, Historian of the U.S. House of Representatives; Roger Dav,idson, a University of Maryland political scientist who also is associated with the Library of Congress; Donald C. Bacon, Senior Editor
  • . before President Johnson's 75th birthday anniversary. Following are excerpts from the memorial speech made by Jack Valenti, president, Motion Picture Association of America, and former special assistant to the President: The measure of a great leader
  • Among Issue Number LXX, January 2003 George Christian,Former Press Secretaryand LBJ Foundation George Eastland Christian died of lung cancer on November 27. His illness had been diagnosed as termi­ nal a year earlier. After a brief try
  • are drying up. If we cannot find ways to prevent that happening, future his­ tories will be written from press "Accessissues."Robert Schulzinger;John Prados; W. Roger Louis; John Brademas;Martha Kumar; panel chair Hugh Graham. (The panel is applauding
  • they addressed ... No one .:an doubt the Roosc\(:lt virtuosity in speech, in ealing with the press. and above all on che radio, but none of thi" talent would have \Urvivcd and scr\'cd for lhll e tweh· int nse year
  • on White Houses past and present. The evening panel featured Liz Carpenter, former press secre­ tary to Lady Bird Johnson; Carl Sferrazza Anthony, authority on First Families; Mark Shields, moderator of CNN's "The Capital Gang" and Richard Norton Smith
  • and hopeless effort.'· But he ex­ pressed '·deep regret" over ·'the way in which we allowed the Vi tmlm War to become the totally defining vent of those years and likewise of the his­ tory. Jn the Johnson years it was the Vietnam War and nothing else. And so
  • , and George Christian. Carpenter was press secre­ tary to Lady Bird Johnson; Hardesty was a speechwriter, and Christian was LBJ's press sectretary. 2 is kind of a cap ·ulation of Texas his­ tory in this century .... The oth r thing is the release
  • at the University of Texas, made the exhibit the subject of an editorial. "The exhibit is not only a reminder of what war really is, but a reminder that wars begin all too easily ... " And a columnist from the Minden, La., Press-Heral.d wrote, " ... Most of you have
  • change is not progTess, nor all movement forward," said jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America, "bul you can't stop it. It's going lo happen. Change is upon us." Valenti mused that the NEA might evolve into the "National
  • case, because Ford has tended to be ignored by historians. . .To some extent he has somewhat the opposite effect on his reputation that Nixon has, in that he has been involved with things not particularly related to the press or scholarship
  • Yarrington escorts Pierre Salinger, press secretary in the Kennedy and the early part of the Johnson administration, and the Honorable Rene Garrec, Governor of Normandy, through the Library's new permanent exhibition. Vice President I Gore speaks
  • . Other Committee members include Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall, George R. Brown, Robert A. Good, Katharine Graham, Linda Howard, Arthur Krim, Mrs. Albert D. Lasker, Harry McPherson and Mark Ward. Dr. Lof will receive the Award in special luncheon
  • of the press and of public opin­ ion. Probably the worst distortion is this picture of the President walled off by his advisers, his courtiers. Well, perhaps this could happen if a President were blind and deaf and lazy and a fool as well. I think it is fair