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  • that a democratic nation has an ob]i,ration lo promote imagination and understanding, rings hollow. The British beg·an their government support of the arts in the very darkest days of World War II, when London itself was under bombardment. It was a remarkable time
  • acclaimed biogra­ phy of President Harry S. Truman, titled Truman; in introducing him, Library Director Harry Middleton said, "In David McCullough, Pres­ ident Truman has found for poster­ ity a biographer who understands and respects him." 7 Los Angeles
  • lobby. Library Security Gets New Look Officer Phil Guerra takes a last look at the old ... . . . and Officer David Samuelson models the new. 14 A Narrow Escape in World War II The Los Angeles Times recently reported the death, at age 84, of Saburo
  • . Everything about that event impressed him, particularly LBJ's style. As they were leaving, he asked his mother: "Why does the President talk like a cowboy'?" Irving Bernstein, Professor of Political Science at the University of California at Los Angeles
  • Officer, The Cleveland Foundation; Thomas Bradley, Mayor, Los Angeles; Maynard Jackson, Mayor, Atlan­ ta; Esther Peterson, former Assistant Secretary, Deparlmen o[ Labor; Wendell Anderson, Governor, Minnesota; Earl Johnson, Jr., Professor of Law. Universi­
  • biography of Lyndon Johnson, spoke at the Library on the subject of LBJ and the rise of liberal nationalism. Dallek, a professor of history at the University of Califor­ nia at Los Angeles, gave the third Littlefield Lecture Series in Ameri­ can History
  • Negotiations, and is now a Washington attorney, will be the LBJ School's Commencement speaker on May 22. 5 At Southwest Texas State University Tom JohnsonReflects on LBJ Tom Johns n, Publisher of the Los Angeles Times and President of the LBJ Foundation
  • Society of LBJ. but our best hope in these more than slightly retrograde times.'· Even though, he said. his title is "one grade down from the long­ standing, deathless expression which Lyndon Johnson gave us.'' there should be "no doubt as to where
  • . Taul, "Government, Development & Poverty in Southern Appalachia: The Origins of the Appalachian Regional Commission"; Robert J. Topmiller, "The Unleashing of the Lotus: The Buddhist Struggle Movement in South Vietnam, 19641966"; and Maria De Los Angeles
  • Gerstenzang, Los Angeles Times: Eleanor Clift, Newsweek; and Sid Davis, formerly with Wes­ tinghouse and NBC (and the only cor­ respondent representing television: Sam Donaldson of ABC and Andrea Mitchell of NBC, were scheduled to take part, but were unable
  • have also appeared in The Atlantic, American Heritage. the Washington Post. the Los Angeles Times. and the Boston Globe. From 1998 to 2003 he was a research fellow at the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs. "And that was the story
  • "class" of White House Fellows-selected in 1965 to serve for a year in government-held their annual meet­ ing this year in the Library. The meeting was chaired by class member Tom Johnson, now publisher of the Los Angeles Times and President of the LBJ
  • University Professor, H ■ rnrd I.aw School Anthony Day, Editor of the Edilori11IP11ges,Los Angeles Times Thomas Gibbs Gee, Judge, United Slates Court of Appeals for the Hfth Circuit Joseph Krafl, Syndicated Columnist Mark McKinnon, Editor. The Daily Texan
  • Among Issue Number LXVIl. March, 2002 The Future of Presidential Libraries: A Symposium 2 Congress created tbe nation's presidential libraries system in order lo provide facilities which, a a min­ imum, maintain the papers of the nation's chief
  • , of the Museum Tour Department. The visitors were given a behind-the-scenes preview of the 1920s exhibit (,;ee page 4), which was under con­ struction at the time, and materials for use in their cla ooms KathyScafe Teachers register in the Great Hall
  • IssueNumberL August1, 1991 "It's all here-The story of our time, with the bark off!' -LBJ at dedicationof Library,May 22, 1971. 20 years of Library faces, pages2-3. "20 Yearsof The faces on these pages and the cover are some of the leaders
  • ab ut Vietnam and how­ ever politician shrink from the liberal label, it i time to recognize the reality of this revolutionary's remarkable achievement . To the point of nagging, he reminded us that raci m and poverty amid unpr cedented affluence
  • Rostow (excerpted from an article in the Los Angeles Times-Ed) There is in our country a little noted tribal rite. On the birthday of each former president no longer alive a wreath is delivered in the name of the incumbent and placed on the for­ mer
  • W Westinghouse Broadcasting Co.), Douglas Kiker (New York Herald Tribune), Francis Lewine (As­ sociated Press), John Chancellor (NBC), Marianne Means (Hearst Newspapers; Look Magazine), Bob Thompson (Los Angeles Times, Hearst), Helen Thomas (United
  • . documentary got enthusiastic ap­ and Los Angeles and has most plause from the large audience, recently produced M,~ Conserva­ which one Dallas Morning News tive: Goldwater on Goldwater, a reporter described as "decidedly 19 After 37 Years, Lady Bird
  • Symposium on Janu­ ary 24, 1972. Since that time, virtually all of the 17 million Presidential papers have been opened on request to re­ searchers. Attention has now shifted lo processing non­ Presidential materials: the House of Representatives papers
  • ? Williams likened LBJ's tele­ phone style Lo a famous painter's technique. "[lJt was during the long conversations, like Jackson Pollack's broad strokes, that the poetry was Lo be found, the philosophy of Lyndon Johnson, and the beauty of it and, at times
  • Lands lakes place al the time of Texas' fight for independence from Mexico. TruC' Women is based on the lives of three of Ms. Windle 's ancestors. Michael Beschloss Assesses Presidential Greatness Historian Michael Beschloss gave a penetrating insight
  • shared the ideal expres cd by President Johnson at the opening of th Library in 1971: "We are not here today lo celebr te the breakthroughs of yesterday, bu to try to chart the hould breakthroughs of tom rrow. It is the future to which address ourselves
  • gnarled cypress trees," and the '·first wild violets" of spring. She speaks of a '·Jove affair wirh nature" that began in childhood. Mrs. Johnson's mother died when Lady Bird was only five years old, and her mother's maiden sister, Aunt Effie, came lo
  • of the Johnson family received a numhcr of distinguished visitors lo the Librar Below, top lo bottom, Mrs. John on welcomes Ambassador and Mrs. Zhang Wenjin, from the People's Republic of China; The Right Honorable Sir Robert Muldoon, Prime Minister of 'cw
  • with the insight of a philo opher." She ended with a few "final words Lo the students who are privileged to be here at this time. Your attentions are going to be concentrated on gaining practical skills and that is as it should be in our expanding adventure
  • of the library prior to reviewmg the bulk of the documents, the processing of requests to declassify items, I he need to provide information Lo governmental agencies, the time required to gel ready for symposia, and the Lask of simply having lo answer innumerable
  • \\TOIi! >0t1 in your to 10,000 given h, th 7 Im, ~fim>r of Los Augcle.,, I\! ml.1trfil1(11, of 1:nurse. is still open. All m11nh n: ore 1:-ncour.igt-dto in,,t.., fr1c11cknm1 ~ocl lies to JOU\m :.ul'}J(lrt t.11th Lil min ·s ncthitfo . Smn, of ti fl~c
  • by Marvin Watson, former Postmaster General, and U.S. Represen­ tative Tom Loeffler from the 21st Congressional district. Mrs. Johnson ended the program on a poignant note: "Tonight is full of memories, a time of reunions and thoughts of dreams pursued
  • Foundation Boar of Directors met November 15 in special session lo elect new officers following the death of the Board's longtime Chairman Frank C. Erwin, Jr. (see story on p. 9) Newly elected officers are W. Thomas Johnson, President, George Christian
  • Endowment for the Arts, the Library will host a majur national Symposium on "THE ARTS: Y ars of Development, Time f Decision." That evening, as the major event in this year's program, the Friends of the LBJ Librar ,,..-it be invited with the symposium
  • GREAT SOCIET'Y ALUM l LBJ Remembered The fi"rxl n·!'nl 11( I/ie 1·0111·ocario11w1Is cm e1·('fli11g of' r!'minisccnce hy 1/icse Washi11g1011 I•ererc11Is Frum lc:/i lo righr • Lurry Tl'111ple: Sic/11ey Om·is; Bill Mm·ers: Bom,ie Angelo: George
  • Burnham of the University of Texas led off the morn­ ing session, with Robert Strauss, for­ mer Chairman of the Democratic Party and one-time Ambassador to the Soviet Union. The three joined in agreeing that, overall, the political culture in Washington
  • e lle r w a s g o in g to m a k e i t p o s s ib le to h a v e a lo n g te r m p la n fo r th e J o h n so n P a r k i- ^ ^ n e by. the N a tio n a l P a r k S e rv ic e . how m u c h /^ 6 ^ 1 p o u t w ith th e e x h ib its . h e s it a t e a m o m
  • qualities when he spoke from this stage in the final months of his life ... But he was also a realist, and he saw the pendulum begin lo swing the other way, and he instructed us in the virtues of contention. He made it clear that he wanted us to create
  • time. They have made a differ­ ence, said York, in more ays than one. John Barrymore, when earnestly a ked as lo whether he thou 0 ht omeo and Juliet, as teenagers, had enjoyed a full physical rela­ tion hip, "he famously replied, 'W 11 th y certainly
  • '' The following comments are extracted from Mr. Cronkite's address: The 1980s have not gotten off lo a very auspicious beginning. In that time we have heard America mocked and taunted as an impotent giant, gutless and evil-the most powerful and technologically
  • of the time--Kennedy and Humphrey because Johnson eliminated one and selected ,theother as his vice presidential running mate, Goldwater because he would be the Republican candi­ date in the election. "An Evening With .... " Frank Vandiver, President