President Lyndon B. Johnson ... a year. Johnson had as many as 300 telephone lines installed, and a white phone still hangs underneath the head of his dining room table, right next to his ...
For Lyndon Johnson ... At the moment, Johnson can hardly consider himself entrenched. The dump L.B.J. Democrats stand to his left, Alabama’s George Wallace to his right, and a newly vigorous ...
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 Act ...
In July 1964, the Republican party nominated Senator Barry Goldwater as the candidate to unseat President Lyndon Johnson. The ultra-conservative Arizona senator, whose radical right-wing rantings ...
There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood in 1964, led on to fame for Lyndon Baines ... With Johnson, everything has to be done yesterday and done right.
President Lyndon B. Johnson ... and had the right to sell them. Cohen insisted that there was no "unstated agreement by the lawyers not to sell the shares." Costa. After Johnson left office ...
Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson assumed the presidency after the assassination of President John Kennedy in November 1963. Johnson declared a “war on poverty” in his 1964 election campaign, ...
President Lyndon B. Johnson informed the nation ... South Vietnam join in the negotiations. Johnson asserted that, "What we now expect--what we have a right to expect--are prompt, productive ...
Dedicated to the 36th president of the United States, the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library houses all the expected artifacts – such as presidential papers – as well as several quirkier ...
"A Great Society" for the American people and their fellow men elsewhere was the vision of Lyndon B. Johnson. In his first years of office ... removal of obstacles to the right to vote. Nevertheless, ...