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Lyndon B. Johnson: Remarks at the White House Correspondents' Dinner - May 11, 1968 ...
Work-life balance is understandably unattainable for presidents, and Johnson was no exception. Haller writes that he liked to start his day's work at 6 a.m.—from his bed.
Lyndon Johnson’s “roll of the dice” appeared to have won the high stakes. Washington became an electric place. Congress, the bureaucracy, even the media, pulsed with a new current of respect ...
President Johnson on the Vietnam War President Lyndon B. Johnson explained and defended his Vietnam War policies in a November 17, 1967, White House press co… About C-SPAN ...
Driskill Hotel, 604 Brazos St. (Easy) This grand old hotel, built in 1886, made a perfect spot for Lyndon and Lady Bird Johnson to oversee their various businesses, buttonhole cronies, and enjoy ...
When U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson took the stage at Howard University in June of 1965, he had already signed the Civil Rights act into law, and he said he expected to sign the Voting Rights ...
Lyndon B. Johnson in talks with Civil Rights leaders in the White House, including Martin Luther King, Jr. By Christmas 1963, Whittington's presence was quietly dismantling segregation across LBJ ...
President Lyndon B. Johnson works on a speech in the White House Cabinet Room on March 30, 1968. He announced the next day that he would not seek or accept the Democratic nomination for reelection.
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