With a stroke of a pen, President Donald Trump signed a sweeping executive order on Tuesday that overturned government policies going back six decades that banned discrimination and required ...
A desire to fight wokeness and reduce government spending are among the reasons that Trump supporters back his plans to close ...
The new president just unwound a landmark anti-discrimination measure implemented amid the height of the Civil Rights Movement.
When last we hung out with ol' Beej, he was slung against a fence post, chawing a strand of hay (did we imagine this?), telling tales about this and that while rocking his Stetson, rancher blue ...
The main academic building of the NTID complex was named to honor former U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson. Public law 89-36, signed by President Johnson on June 8, 1965, created a National Advisory ...
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 ...
Of the most interest to posterity, though, may be a hat. It’s the Stetson worn by President Lyndon Baines Johnson on his Oct. 28, 1964 visit to San Bernardino. LBJ was the first sitting ...
A confrontation occurred outside the department of education as Democrat members of Congress were blocked from entering the ...
The soft murmur of a few dozen conversations lingered outside a small auditorium named after Lyndon Baines Johnson, the 36th president who overhauled the way Americans pay for college. Top officials ...
undoing a labor standard that stretches back to the presidency of Lyndon Baines Johnson. The rule Trump nuked, Executive Order 11246, forbade federal contractors from discriminating on the basis ...