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  • of President Kennedy's task force on health and social security. 'ow he is a· member of the National Commission on Social Security and chairman of the NationaJ Commission on Unemployment Compensation. Professor Cohen·s experience with HEW began in 1961 when
  • a factor in a successful membership drive in Austin which recently brought in almost 600 new members of the "Friends of the LBJ Library." The total number of members of that organization now stands at 2,575. THE LIBRARY WITH ROBERT FLYNN, author
  • : Charles Corkran, Joan Kennedy, Tina Lawson, Walt Roberts, Cary Yarrington, William Thompson-Wa~hington o//ege Photography: Paul Ch va/ier, Frank Wolfe, J. Tyler Campbell-Washington Staff Assistance· Yolanda 8001er, Lou Anne Missildine 12 College
  • Issue Number XLIV December 15, 1988 Symposium Probes Urban Problems During the Johnson Administration, three presidential commissions­ known as the (Nicholas) Katzen­ bach, (Robert) Kerner and (Milton) Eisenhower Commissions-threw a glaring
  • press conference jointly held by her and six other persons identifiE>d with the Kennedy and Johnson Administra­ tions: Senator Hubert Humphrey, Robert Kennedy Jr., Clarence Mitchell, Joseph A. Califano, Kenneth O'Donnell, and E:sther Peterson
  • from the collections of the Library of Congress, the National Ar­ chives, the Ohio Historical Society, the Chicago Historical Society, and the Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower and Kennedy Presidential Libraries. From March 15 to April 25, 1976
  • to Charles S. Robb went on tem­ porary exhibition in the Library on the 20th anniversary of that event, December 9, 1967. It wm be on display until June of this year. beck as Lyndon Johnson's Mifitary Advisor"; Robert Hilderbrand, "The Johnson
  • . Robert S. McNamara, former Secretary of Defense: "Today there are 50,000 nuclear weapons m the world, roughly 25,000 U.S. and 25.000 Soviet Union. I don't know any anns control negotia­ tor ... who i so optimistic as to believe that in the next 10 years
  • . G. Lo£ of Colorado, a leader in solar energy development. The Award Com ittee of the LBJ Foundation is chaired by Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson and Dr Wil­ liam McGill and includes George R. Brown, Dr. Robert A. Good, Miss Linda Howard, Arthur Krim, Mrs
  • the conversations from November 22, 1963 through March 1965, and plan to open the conver ations for April and May 1965 early next year. 4 Changing of the Guard: Director Middleton to Retire By Robert Hicks Public Relations Ot'ficer Harry Middleton, long-time
  • )' The LBJ School of Public affairs and The University of Texas at Austin. Professor Emeritus Robert Divine stressed that the U.S. fought in Vietnam for many of the same reasons it fought the other wars of this century. 4 Vietnam War Professors Qiang Zhai
  • Stone's film, "JFK," which is based on the allegation that President John F. Kennedy's as·sassination was a conspiratorial effort invol,ving some of the highest officers of government in league with industrialists who feared that Kennedy would end the U.S
  • President John F. Kennedy was shot, Ho pice Austin patient Mary Da is Williams r calJs preci c­ ly what she was doing when she h ard th news. "I was ta.kin" three pies out of the oven h n I h ard. I just couldn't be! ie e ir,'· she said. What's important
  • the Library's doors including Robert Wood, former Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development; K. LeMoyne Billings. Board Member of the John F. Kennedy Library Corporation; House Democratic Majority Leader Thomas (Tip) O'Neill and Congressman J
  • from Attorney General Robert Kennedy, offering to serve in Vietnam "in any capacity." THE VICE PRESIDENT features a bold "pop-art" painting of Hubert Humphrey by Edward Weiss, and documents tracing the long relationship between HHH and LBJ. After
  • Archives of the Foreign Service; Federal Republic of Germany; A us tin-Travis County Collection; Harry Ransom Center; National Trust for Historic Preservation; Texas Memorial Museum; John F. Kennedy Library; the Adjutant General's Office, State of Texas
  • in the Kennedy & Johnson dministration ": Robert Daile!-, "Lyndon B. Johnson. A Biography"; Sally Davenport, "Policy Stralegies for a Progres­ sive Agenda: Adopting and Implementing the Higher Education Act"; Dorothy C Donnell , ·•u Strategic Options in Viet­ nam
  • when Strongbow IEarl of Pembroke] landed in County Wexford to start the long march of Irish misery voted for him. Once Kennedy was elected, that was the end of the American Irish. ... You see, there is never a real ma­ jority in the United States
  • that I wasn't on drugs. [Laughter] That's P-A-S-S- -D. [Laughter] l 've not talked a lot about v hat happened in [the election cri­ sis in] Florida, but I do in this book. My really good pal, Bob Strauss, for whom you've named the Robert S. Strauss Center
  • ; Hanard ';itkol'I, l!nhersity of !'t'\\ llampshirc; Robert H. Ah,ug, l nhersity of Te a, al Au,tin. Radical Politic, in the Thirties Oa,id A. Shannon, Lnh·er, ity of \ irginia; Da,id H. Bennett, Syracuse linhersity: Donald R. McCo), llnhersily of Kan
  • of the year. They included: • enator Daniel Patrick Moynihan. who served as assistant ·ecretal) of lab r during the Kennedy anJ Johnson admin­ istratiom,. and later as a-;sislant to Presid ·nt RichJrd !\ ,on a
  • rebels with­ out a cause, "with their contempt for the squares of the world," and for America at large, "an old country ruled by old men." The election of John Kennedy in 1960 signaled a seismic shift. A new generation was taking over. The New Frontier
  • by the acquisition of the personal papers of columnist Drew Pearson and former Johnson cabinet members John Gardner and Robert Wood, and the diary of Ambassador U. Alexis Johnson. In its continuing solicitation program the Library has now acquired the papers of more
  • by Robert Knudsen Some 600 members of he Friends f the LBJ Library from around Washington, D.C. gathered in the nation's capital on \1arch l J for the premiere of the film, ''The First Lady: Portrait of Lady Bird Johnson." The e\ent brought out much
  • Government, but the University owns il. The LBJ Library was the first Presidential Library to be built on a University campus. (The John F. Kennedy Library has since risen on the University of Massachusetts' Dor­ chester campu , and the Gerald R. Ford
  • . Like the time Robert Merrill, the great baritone from the Met­ ropolitan pera. came to the White House to sing for the Prime Mm1ster of Gr at Britain The day before the dinner my phone rang and 1t was Walt Rostow. He said. "You can't be serious You
  • is entitled "Viva Jesus, Maria, y Jose." It was borrowed from Robert Wynn of San Antonio, Texa . The display as featured in the Library from December 12, 1977 until February 2, 1978. Officials of the alional Geographic visiting the Library at that time made
  • 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
  • . 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
  • omniscient. But it is possible that we still may nurture the last best hope of mankind. Robert Hardesty, UT System Vice President, introduced Cronkite as "America's Window on the World." 3 The Morning Session Norman Podhorelz .... 1 do11't think
  • he takes off his shoes and gets up on the chair, stands and raises his voice, his face up directly into the chan­ delier. He said, "Buzz, if that outfit doesn't get this room cool by the time I get back from lunch I'm going to call Jack Kennedy
  • ~ry aec tion, men like 'l'heodore Roos evelt, men l ike Frank:U.. n Roosevelt, men like John F. Kennedy , men like Robert S. Kerr, men like Mike Monroney and your House Delegation, all be~n to act and to protect and to develpp the natural resources
  • with Johnson's personal or political life is a candidate for donating personal papers. Recently ac­ quired files of government are those of Wilbur Cohen (pov­ erty program), Robert Allnutt (NASA), and Gerold Bau­ mann {Peace Corps). Other papers concerning
  • Members: ANTHONY CELEBREZZE, Secretary, HEW ROBERT F. KENNEDY, Attorney General FRED KORTH, Secretary of the Navy JOHN w. MACY, JR., Chairman, Civil Service Commission GLENN T. SEABORG, Chairman, AEC JAMES Eo WEBB, Administrator, NASA WALTER REUTHER
  • for increased assistance for higher education and most specifically for a m u ch broadened educational vocational program. 1 am sure 1 do not have to tell you -- who sit here watching launchings at Cape Kennedy - - how tremendous our scientific achievements have
  • receh-ed your letter and a•ked me to thank you for wriliD&, It wa• thoughtful of you to •end in your •ncgeatfon foz honoring the lat• Preaidant Kennedy. it nfi.i',o/_y f 'f ,(tl Wtdol. lo_ fl
  • billiantly than President and Mrs . Kennedy. Within this year the first ~pade of dirt was turned for a great cultural center for all our nation. Within this month the Congress passed the bill to provide a National Arts and Humanities Founda­ tion so
  • Remarks of Mrs . Lyndon B. Johnson at a tea for members of the Fine Arts, Painting and Advis ory Committees on the Restoration of the White House, May 7, 1964 Friends : Welc om e to this house to which, under the inspira tion of Mrs . Kennedy, you
  • , Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson-joined with the Brookings Institution in sponsoring a majOI' symposium on a subject important to the Administrations of all four Presidents-wage-price policy. The idea for the multi-Library endeavor was proposed by Walt Rostow
  • at stake in America this November. 1 belicve that issue is simply this: Will America, ha.ving forged so far ahead under President Kennedy and Preside nt Johnson, toward a more just and compassionate society, now turn back? Will we lQJeheart becaus e