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  1. Friday January 20,1961. President Kennedy delivers his Inaugural Address in which he challenges Americans to “ask not what your country can do for you— Ask what you can do for your country.”. President Kennedy formally nominates his 10 member Cabinet plus Adlai Stevenson as Chief Delegate to the United Nations.

  2. 21. Sept. 2010 · Book review: ‘White House Diary’ by Jimmy Carter. By Tim Rutten. Sept. 21, 2010 12 AM PT. Los Angeles Times. Presidents Jimmy Carter and Herbert Hoover might be bracketed together for a number ...

  3. The diaries can provide answers to key questions: who, what, where, when, how. Who: refers to who a president meets with and talks to. In addition, keep a look out for who he doesn't see as well. What: what are the activities he regularly is involved in, such as trips across years to the annual G-8 conference. Where: where does the president go ...

  4. 28. Dez. 2021 · A White House diary by Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007. Publication date 2007 Topics Johnson, Lady Bird, 1912-2007, Johnson, Lyndon B. (Lyndon Baines), 1908-1973, Washington (D.C.) -- Social life and customs -- 1951-Publisher Austin : Univ ...

  5. 30. Aug. 2011 · I began keeping this diary in part due to an offhand comment by Richard Nixon. Rosalynn and I first met Nixon when we attended the National Governors’ Conference in 1971. The president walked up to us at a White House reception, turned to Rosalynn, and asked, “Young lady, do you keep a diary?” Rosalynn replied, “No, sir.” Nixon then ...

  6. www.amazon.com › White-House-Diary-Jimmy-Carter-audiobook › dpWhite House Diary - amazon.com

    In his preface to “White House Diary,” former President Jimmy Carter writes, “For the sake of compression I concentrated on a few general themes that are still pertinent – especially Middle East peace negotiations, nuclear weaponry, U.S.-China relations, energy policy, anti-inflation efforts, health policy, and my relationships with Congress.

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  7. Portrait of a Lady. A White House Diary. by Lady Bird Johnson. Holt, Rinehart & Winston. 791 pp. $10.95. No longer, if ever it was, a presence in our public life, the voice of a lady is, evidently, still marked by certain authenticating notes: it is still just perceptibly chilly to one’s enemies, gracious to one’s inferiors, loyal to one ...