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  • transportation, slums and blight, urban sprawl and scatteration-all these problems spawn •ugliness where there should· be beauty, hopelessness and want where there should be hope and abun­ dance. One of the greatest domestic challenges now facing the nation
  • with the blacks in Detroit. He added that he hoped they .would have time to reach a stalemate. He said that he could .not find the weapons allegedly stored by Negroes in Detroit, but "knew" that they must be there. There were other stories told and general
  • . ' NEW YORK. N. Y. DeOClllber Twenty-fourth 1965 .... Dear Bobs Ma7I first ' take this opportunity to express the unprecedented pleasure I have experienced 1n working w1th this •secret" task force. Having bad a mmber ot assignnents ot similar nature
  • has granted a UKA charter to BOB JLEWIS, at Akron, Ohio. · The charter number ancf number of members are unknown. It was reported that BOB LEWIS sent two unnamed men to Tuscaloosa,- Alabamaj during.the week of September 19, 1966, to obtain this chart
  • the Corps is giving Congressmen the pitch that such an arrangement will make it harder to get these projects dear to a . Congressman's heart. We have found this reaction from McClellan, Jim Wright, Edmondson and Bob Jones, and second hand we are told
  • was the .cause of agric:uHurc ~nd there grant thr T,r1shmir plebiscite Pa,s, ned m 19GO for a 4-year pro- is promise that in India's fourth kislan demands. al lhou
  • ;~ OPOS AL FOR A t·1.D.T C:H ;•JG :S 5 S i'• :ILLIO :·J f£r(TILIZER LOAN WOU~D HAVE REQUI~ED . ·4. FULL SCOP ~ OF CAS I ~ET D~CIS I0 ~5 WILL BE REFLECTED IN _SU 3R At:AtHAl'l !..OK S!\B HA STAi z:,: :: ;·~T DE CE: [E5::R 7. l;j £ URGENTLY HOPE FOR QUIC K
  • HARRY 4: z_@ -----. .--,:; I or S f, • 20th w ! ''"'::' ' I of October ' ···""· •• ' ~ I working with you and Bob . _ __ . -· . the committee in doing wha I can to help develop aome imaginative and meaningful recommendation
  • can defeat this Communist propaganda offensive more quickly than the truth. This does not mean that we must merely counter communism. We must at the same time deepen and enrich our own heritag~_oJ freedom. -- ·· Party leaders would hope
  • General authority to sue for injunctive relief against States or units of local government that are in violation of the law, it is hoped that employment dis­ crimination in this area can be substantially eliminated. Costs. Estimates of the cost of giving
  • Employment The Task Force believes that the most direct means of improving the lives of the poor in our cities is to increase their incomes; the oLjective is greatest hope for achieving this through meaningful, permanent and necessary employment. 24 15 1
  • the document. in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. GENERALSERVICES ADMINISTRATION GSA DC 73.495 GSA FORM 7122 (7-72) _________________ __ , -:eAa Thursday. August 26. 1965 t z;~~CUTiV_ -// t/fl-t MEMORANDUM FOR BOB
  • , and to John Buckley of o::;T, Ja:c:.es Flannery of HEW, and ·v.7illian1. Ross of BoB, whose contributions have been pa:i.·ticularly significant. i,:CkINISTRl', TIVELY CONFIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL - 2 lVien:.bers of the Task Force Gardne
  • EMPLOYEES: Transportation, ·Last evening Marad you heard and the State of the Union our President deliver his third State of the Union message. All of that stirring speech is of vital importance to us as Americans and federal employees. I hope you
  • . The Department is gratified by the bipartisan interest in the project as shown by the introduction of identical bills from both sides of the ·aisle. We hope that this augurs well for the eventual success of the proposal. It would be most unfortunate should
  • that the Demonstrations protesting our armed as_s istance to the Vietnamese people in their str·ug·g1e against .COMMUNIST AGGRESSION and TERROR are having a demoralizing effect on . our troops there~ Thus we hope that our activity today wi 11 serve as an emphatic i
  • added that he hoped they would have time to reach a stalemate. He said that he could not find the weapons allegedly stored by Ne·g roes in Detroit, but "knew" that they must be there. stories· There were other told and general statements made
  • the desree to which Castro bas fulfilled his procises, the degree of hope reooining tor the future realization of as yet unfulfilled prooises, and the extent of psychological identification with the Revolution. It is thot port of the newly self-conscious
  • a great interest in beautifying the landscape, and she said, "I think the time is ripe -- the time is now -- to take advantage of this yeasty, bubbling desire to beautify our cities and our countryside. I hope all Americans will join in this effort
  • the institutions of their society, but individually. Hope for the future rests on the good will and hard work of all 4 .. ~' ·s~ ""' I THE RIOT ENVIRONMENT The focal point of the riot was the South Los Angeles area, which is heavily populated by Negroes
  • of unemployed Negro youths; and (c) the sudden cancellation of a job fair, disapp9inting hopes that had been precipitously raised. The initial acts of violenc e window- breaking and looting -- followed immediately ·o·n the heels of a debate at the first
  • --· •• and sonic boom ~~e-s, and the initial six months of prototype con­ struction.-·· We hope to conduct first in late 1969, and,ntroduce flight tests of the supersonic it into commercial service transport by mid-1974. \ Advanced After years other
  • urban needs is a source of great satisfaction to the Task Force. Its members hope that the report may be useful to you in fash­ ioning policies to ensure that American urban communities in the future will be great 1n spirit and in quality as well
  • the top . But as a symbolic focus f or hopes and fears they can gener~te ·the emotional predisposi­ tion which might encourage disorder. In this respect, a good deal depends on the mood of their audience when they arrive on the scene. In Atlanta
  • , Jl003, 11047,.11161; and International Aviation Pacilitiea Act, Sectiona·7, 8, 9) 2 . The hoped for improvementain air safety and technological development that lay behind these actions have been realized in satisfying measure, largely because of PAA
  • -- Boston Mayor John P. Collins said he hoped the new deparonent would be created "this year." Collins said he did not want to see the newDeparonent delayed while Congress studied possible creation of a department which would Include more agencies than
  • vein, the _N ovember 4, 1964 issue of '' On Target'' reported that '' The hopes of millions of Americans that the communist tide could be stopped with ballots instead of bullets have turned to dust.... What more is needed as proof of the basic premise
  • hope-and my trust-that all Americans of good will, regardless of race, color, or creed, will unite in both these endeavors. EDWIN E. WILLIS, JULY 15_. 1966 Chairman. ANNUAL REPORT, COMMITTEE ON UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES 55 HEARINGS ON THE ACTIVITIES
  • are ~esolute pa~t. In contraqt which ha~ been de oted to military repair, securi 0 4. cm thelr aid ~ar damage the people, political Thi~ is needed noc only to give th and hope but ol~o to iapress the farther of their f~ and a break with pa~t
  • "to the area to t ake pictures l1ith the . hope · of selling thet.t, b~t . the : _photogr&:phs . .he to~k · were ~f poor, qua l ity. he WABAll. stated . that .ha s .J1ad..- no c 'ontac·t . with '..people · .he h ad met --through .:the JFK . House.9 .who a1·e
  • ■• the greatest th1 ■ aee our paper on planning submitted to the Bureau of the Budget an4 Position In addition quired. to thia operating tool. hope for the Paper.II.) other approach•• are re­ mm ahOlll.d review the impact of Federal program■ upon
  • Presbyterian Church beginning about 8:00 p.m. CARMICHAEL spoke ltabout the background of the Negro in Africa, how everything was stripped from the Negro by the whites, and that the Capitalist system exists to keep NegroeliL,sul;>servient, with no hope for Negro