News

Bill Moyers, a soft-spoken East Texan who became a White House aide and then a standard bearer of quality in TV news, died ...
His career ranged from President Lyndon Johnson’s press secretary to senior news analyst at CBS News, but he is perhaps best ...
Bill Moyers, who served as chief White House spokesman for President Lyndon B. Johnson and then, for more than 40 years, as a ...
They may not have been the most successful bids for election—and some definitely didn't stand the test of time—but these are certainly the funniest presidential campaign slogans ever created. Yes, we ...
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz meets US President Donald Trump in the White House for the first time. It might be the beginning of a terrible friendship. How did Merz's predecessors cope with the ...
Retropolis In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson’s election exit stunned Americans More than 50 years ago, President Lyndon B. Johnson shocked Americans by announcing that he would not seek a ...
Lyndon B. Johnson wanted his presidency to be focused on civil rights and his domestic programs started with the “Great Society” — but the shadow of Vietnam loomed over the White House. What ...
President Lyndon B. Johnson also had a "blind" trust created for his television station. In 1943, Lady Bird Johnson purchased a small radio station in Austin, Texas for $17,500.
In 1964, 55.75% of Oklahomans voted for Lyndon B. Johnson, a stark contrast to his vice-presidential run with President John F. Kennedy in 1960, where 59.02% of the state voted for Richard Nixon.
President Johnson repeatedly attempted negotiations to end the war but was unsuccessful. In 1968 President Johnson surprised the nation when he announced he would not seek re-election.