Discover Our Collections


Limit your search

Tag Contributor Date Subject Type Collection Series Specific Item Type Time Period

27 results

  • to the people. The meeting therefore adjourned so that the officials could go into the ghetto xkxxxxx■ while it was still light. After proceeding through the checkpoint and into the cordoned off area, the Commissioner addressed the crowd with a bullhorn from
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT ~ -cvv . CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE - v.L·u.i. v .n. .1..11.;e vepar-r.meri" - . . u..L ~ FILE "RtWorts IF D :tl4Jjt rjo±ii91,. .-:3 p
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • THE NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMISSION ON CIVIL DISORDERS 1016 16TH WASHINGTON, STREET, D. C. N.W. 20036 December 20, 1967 Bob: I asked Chick to have a few team people read the revised version of your paper (i.e., the version that the Commission
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • is "I don't believe there was as .much snipe"'ng as we thought at the time the insurrection was on" Spfoa 84 \ . untrained p. 49 - Carry-over paragraph. The quote is "inexperienced National Guardsmen who had never been in combat, who had never
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • jUV3nile gangs nre activ~ in .the area. A Negro le~cer in i public statement attributed the riot to the uork of a fe~ boojl't!!:s who used the of· the ?iation~l opportunity to v~dalize ~11d··1oot. A leader .Association :for the Advance~ent of Colored Peo
  • A-National Security
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • to the uork of a fe-a hoo:ll ,, ...s t1ho used the oppoI"tuni ty to v~dalize ~d loot. A le2.dex of the ?latioocl. Association fo~ th3 Advance:::.cnt of Colored People stated.the riot ba~an t•1hen the Mez!'oas heard a false report that a. wo::ian who h~d bean
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manuf~cturers, Labor groups, business­ men, Veterans organizations, mayors organizations, and Governors, and took every question every one of them wanted to ask. He said he doesn't do this before cameras because
  • conditions, according to a prominent member of the County Bar Association, were so bad that "People would be kinder to their pets," were Negro migrants, Cubans and Puerto Ricans. In six years the city switched from 65 per­ cent white to 52 percent Negro
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • Catherine Feuer Wurster* University of California at Berkeley Saul B. Klaman National Association of Mltual &wing's Ea.nks Paul Ilvisaker Ford Foundation Ralph E. McGill 'i'be Atlanta Constitution ***** Bichard Goodwin White House Liaison • Deceased
  • was no longer the minor adjustments in current programs. The nation's urban condition What more it demands is A much higher level of money. private as well as public - is concur in your own expressions, that money in itself is not an demands early in time
  • community development is a promising but complex undertaking. A new community could be a microcosm of what is best about our urban society, but it is a micro­ cosm that might include 100,000 people .. Many Departments, besides Hou.sing and Urban Development
  • NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT RESTRICTION DATE CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE /c{'' FILE LOCATION Kerner Commission ( NACCD) Box 79 "Homicide-" RESTRICTION CODES (Al Closed
  • Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
  • Use of.Environmental Resources; 3. Safety in Transportation; 4 .. Support of Other National Interests, including such social purposes as·.improving the status of poverty groups. All of these are applicable to the Urban Mass Transit Program. .. . 2
  • for your support as responsible Negro leaders. (The President read Associated Press item on Stokely Carmichal.) UNDER SECRETARY KATZENBACH: The loss of this leader is so tragic. We must see what we can do to further Dr. King's objective. SECRETARY CLIFFORD
  • represent discriminate. I hope you will put an end to this. It's just not American. Some people tell me I should remake the nation quickly. I know that cannot be done. I had more sense than that 30 years ago. We can't remake America with ghetto labor alone
  • military people feel it can be handled. The President said he had been assured by the Joint Chiefs that Khe Sanh could be defended. 3. On Korea, the President read Clark Clifford's statement to the Congressional leaders a day or two before, outlining
  • are fringe benefits that flow from Vietnam. 11 On Vietnam, the President said the question was out to achieve maximum effort for minimum cost. He said there is a revolution in the cities, where 80% of the people live. We have undertaken a good many reforms
  • . B It was one of the most He 1 s a very decent fellow. What about the Present situation? Let me ask you. Can you in any way entertain that idea of a appointing a Committee? I tell you why•••• Kennedy called me, and he says a lot of people
  • National politics
  • and everyone here wants to support you and give you any aid. Jim Jones tells me that you've submitted a report, you've done a good job, I want you to set an example. I'm absolutely positive the people of this country do not want to violate the law Gov
  • on in as far as he is concerned.' Let him go? P: We just work like unshirted hell to get every vote at this tlrlng and I think the people will feel he is self-centered and pretty selfish:· While I am trying to do a job for the nation, he is out picking at me
  • National politics
  • of the Co:rnlnission members. He pointed out Governor Kerner 1 s experience and the good record on civil rights, and said that Mayor Lindsay is a man who is close to the people in the ghettos and has a general understanding of the whole picture. On Roy Wilkins
  • household and .m y own family I have always felt that you had to stand up at tiJnes and have so.m e courage. If people were trying to do the wrong things to you. We have a unified ticket all unified behind the Presidnet. I'm calling you up - you can help us
  • National politics
  • plane rides and other contributions by private industry have become part of the recreation effort. A major breakthrough has come about in the use of military facilities for camping opportunities. Revised regulations issued by the National Guard Bureau
  • United Nations
  • , he referred to the experience of a small foundation he had set up that had gotten huge capital gains on local Texas common stocks. He emphasized how many meetings he had had in the White House with private groups -- guessing that more people had been
  • la te it a little bit into a speech. And then at one o’ c l o c k , t h e r e cam e one of those things that m u st be p e c u lia r ly A m e ric a n , a s m a ll g e s tu re of our national fee lin g fo r the ind ivid ual. Sen ato r M a rg a re t C
  • Collection Title Lady Bird Johnson's Diary Folder Title Lady Bird Johnson's Diary, April 9-30, 1964 [Book 6] Box Number 1 Restriction Codes (A) Closed by Executive Order 13292 governing access to national security information. (B) Closed by statute
  • that w ill eventually have 80,000 people. B ut the p a t t e r n is s e t. At p r e s e n t , th e r e a r e only a b o u t 2 ,0 0 0 . H ouses and c o m m e rc ia l a re a and s tre e ts and r o a d s a r e l a i d o u t s o t h a t i t i s p l e a s