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2367 results
- , no less than when the decade began, this generation of Americans is willing to "pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty." Since those words were spoken by John
- Washington, D. C. Dear Mr . President: Having sent you a wire right after the bloody events in Selma, I wish to write and congratulate you upon the strong stand you have taken regarding the matter of Civil Rights and personal liberties . It has been
- Civil rights
- ]; Neighborhood Centers; Mexican American race relations; accomplishments of the Johnson Administration in civil rights; Negro appointees; reports on civil disturbances; some material on the Detroit riots in 1967 [see also HU 2/ST 22]; Negro statistical
Folder, "March 12-18, 1965 [Selma Situation]," President’s Appointment File [Diary Backup], Box 15
(Item)
- in 1963 with voting rights; Congress took it o ut (4) Your decis ion on D ecembe r 5 to ask for a strong voting rights bill in your State of the Union message . Not a civil rights leader had discussed it with you at that time (5) This week ' s
- Civil rights
- by a Federal Judge. Such Federal crimes as treason, counterfeiting, kidnapping, smuggling, gun running, ~hite slavery or invasion of Civil Rights as defined by Act of Congress, should invoke this rule. • VIC SET•·. PREAMBLE We., the members
- to support the Higher Education Bill; John Gardner; appointment of a new Surgeon General; suggestions for speeches such as the State of the Union speech for 1966; meeting with the American Medical Association leaders; NIH message. [WHCF 1446; Opened Education
Reference File Folder List
(Item)
- Daniel P. Moynihan Report Muhammad Ali see Clay, Cassius Murray, Miss Pauli (Title VII; Civil Rights Act) "My Credo as an American" "My Political Philosophy" N Naisbitt, John Namesakes see also Facilities Named after LBJ Naming of LBJ National Advisory
- Emigration From The Soviet Union 13. The Desalination Project 14. An "American University" In Israel 15. The Nuclear Reactor At Dimona 16. How Israel Can Help The United State 17. The White House Role 18. A Visit To Israel By High-Level U. S
- 83 Columbus Committee to Defend the Bill of Rights Emergency Civil Liberties Committee (ECLC) Facing Reality Publishing Company or Committees Muslim Mosque, Inc. (MMI) Nation of Islam, Etc. (NOi) Fruit of Islam Muslim Girls Training Muhammad's Temple
- Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
- , Feb 1964 Plan Political Role in 1964, Resolutions on Civil Rights, Cuba, Poverty Program Americans for Democratic Action. Humphrey's Membership and other Issues in 1964 Campaign Americans for Democratic Action Rate the Record of the 88th Congress, 1st
- ., Assoc of Natl Advertisers, Inc Moyers Allan S. , Austin, Chairman, the Austin Co. Secy Connor ID John B. Babcock, President, American Business Press Babcock, Richard J. , President, Farm Journal, Inc for Pix Bache, Harold L. , Chairman, Bache & Co. , Inc
- Boxes 1 and 2 Background Briefing Election Reform Bill 5/26/66 Drafts of Speeches [Two Folders, Includes the Following]: Remarks before the United Jewish Appeal's National Inaugural Campaign Meeting, January 9, 1965 Civil Service Commission speech
- remnant of its former self. On the software side of American civilization, cynicism and solipsism, that fixation on the self that characterizes so many modern trends, have begun to threaten our political and social cohesion. It frequently is ob served
- , and expressing hi-a reg:rets. ,. ~ ,- ~ W. W. Rostow L r ~ Attachment • ·.1 ~ ~ •- - .... I 9/21/67 letter from Felipe Herrera 1.NTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK WASHINGTON, 0. C. 20577 i CAl!SLE ADDRESS PRE:SIOENT INTAMSANC September 21, 1967
- : ~•·w1ure·•.• to'.:'t:011.. , fer and coo...-.... te ..--with · respect to . meaning of the " warning received and th& measu r e s . n e c • ' .' . ' ~ ·• ; ' THE DELUSION of the passive defensive is almost always accom. .Panied by the American myth
- Soviet Union
- : The Soviet Table, or The rise of civilization in Cleveland Publisher: Public Affairs Committee of Cuyahoga County Title of Series/Chapter/Article: Edition: Volume Number: Issue Number: Date of Publication: 1935 Page Numbers: 45 numbered pages
- , 1970 INTERVIEWEE: JAMES J. REYNOLDS INTERVIEWER: JOE B. FRANTZ PLACE: Mr. Reynolds' office, Washington, D.C. Tape 1 of 1 F: Mr. Reynolds, let's talk at the outset about the question of the Civil Service-federal unions third party mediation which
- Civil service federal union third party mediation; the unique issues of a federal worker union; how Reynolds’ became Undersecretary of Labor, 1967; Reynolds’ work in a commission to examine certain U.S. foreign and domestic policies; involvement
- and especially the Relations Committee, and the titular Soviet Union, he has been wiiling to pro head of the Republican Party, dominant pose to put in Germany's hands another in the American Congress. I will not anticipate what will be the sword like unto
- -38 with Congressman Ikard, Civil Defense Director Hoegh (Tex Easley was present at the time) Lunch in P-38 1.50 Sen Margaret Smith, about going with the Senator to Omaha and visit the SAC base there and also to Minneapolis for American Legion
- forms, including boycotts, sit ins. and marches. Photographers con tributed to the movement by relaying the struggle to every corner of the nation. A special exhibition, titled We Shall Overcome.· Photographs from the American Civil Rights Era
- ~~~~~~-J {)fe,, (\ #§. report #6 report: 7) \~/02 \\ L-~ {X;HO \ :r:e HSA:M 364 Tab B "Relations with the Soviet Union and Eas't Ettropean Bloc Countr i es IR the Industr ial and Copyright Fields" Secret 7 pp rJ.;
- , American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. Trustee Syracuse University. Member of Commission's Task Force on Personnel and Civil Service. tor, Waldorf Astoria and Vice President in Charge of Hilton Hotels Corporation operations in the East
- in the good faith of Johnson as far as civil rights, and so we had no difficulty. But among liberals and union people it was some load to bear. F: Johnson had voted wrong back there, too, on the Taft-Hartley from the labor standpoint. LBJ Presidential
- Meeting LBJ in 1936; the 1960 Democratic convention in Los Angeles; the role of the Michigan delegation in shaping the platform; LBJ's record on civil rights an impediment to nomination; Leonard Woodcock; LBJ as a candidate in Michigan; appointment
- against the .4.meric an Inter-University Committee on Travel Grants, a committee made up of more than forty leading .American universities, which conducts educational ex changes with the Soviet Union ; complicity wit:i CIA wa s charged . Westing-house El
- . To summarize: Bobbitt believes that there is a real war against ter ror; that civil liberties as previ ously understood may need to be curtailed to win it; that we must nevertheless fight it without vio lating our commitment to the rule of law
- of Houston, I would like to take this opportunity to express my viewpoint as an American citizen concerning an international problem vital to us all. I am proud that so many Americans in high offices today feel that t .h e free city of Berlin, Germany
- World Federation of Trade Union, American Confederation of Worker, of Ouatemalan organized labor. Ar&valo and government cloeel.7 themselves with theae ~ Dq December 18-19. 1949 Committee adopted Ba.ilwq Worker11 Political Communist-line policy
- on our part now in Civil Defense will: I. Make it clear to the Soviet Union and our allies that we mean what we say on Berlin; z. Alert our people to the real and present danger and get them going on the road to survival. [2 of 4] -2Proposal
- fought "for a fairer and more decent standaird of living for the American working man. for th· ri.;ht l lriticize the government. and l r aceful integration of the rn •• Journalist Takes Hardeman Prize A journalist from California, John Jacobs, received
- for her to stay. There is no hope of Aunt Effie’s recovery, but she might last two or three months.” Judge I.[?] Allen Goldsborough orders a trial of the coal miners’ union for civil and criminal contempt. 11/27 LBJ is back in Austin office
Folder, "[Papers for] November 14, 1968 Special Cabinet Room Meeting," Meeting Notes Files, Box 3
(Item)
- experiment of democracy had endured even the test of Civil War. healing. The divisions were deep, but the scars were On the Fourth of July in 1876, Americans knew in their hearts I I i. I that we were going to make it. \. Our second centennial
- Civil rights
- of America cannot d!rect)y on American otec't,l.on? a relationship does not exist? : be the bulwark of liberty and independence It is all very well to e !n fasb· n-'--but how that SU unless !ts people continue to be vigilant a.nd does fashion match with fact
- was airmailed to 31 posts for immediate local distribution. - - The bi-monthly Latin American film news magazine, Horizons, covered the new President's White House meeting with representatives of the Alliance for Progress countries. -- For African countries
- See all scanned items from file unit "Civil Rights – Miscellaneous 1964"
- Civil rights
- Folder, "Civil Rights – Miscellaneous 1964," Office Files of Lee White, Box 6
- Civil Rights Files
- Publication." in eltile" The March, 1965, issue of RAM. reflects WILLIAMSis "chairman The January 1, 1968, edition of "The Charlotte Observer", a daily circulation newspaper of Charlotte, North Carolina, reported that the American Civil Liberties Union
- Civil disobedience
- Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
- Issue Number Lil April 15, 1992 SHARlNGTlfE DREAM Oil, 1984 Lent from the collection of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stewart. Denver, Colorado BlackHistoryMonth at the LBJLibrary(see page2) Black History Two major American artists dis played their works
- the pending civil rights bill and the inspiration ot your personal •••age to the■ will be carried back to the 39,000 Mlllbera ot the RASW and their friends through the delegates repreNnting eftry atate'exoept Miaeiaeippi. Again, thank J'01l tor granting ua
- -Alnerican Development Bank, the Agency for International Development and the Credit Commodity Corporation. My Government bas given priority to the five projects presented to the Inter -American Development -Bank, which total $33, 300, 000. 00. The total
- as a United States territory. 9. The Trust Territory government gets good marks from the Micronesians, however, for its genuine fostering of as.>cratic civil liberties and in creasing the participation of Micronesians in various levels of local
- recall..." s 1 n.d. A 21a report RE: Negro American Labor Council, National Economic Conference,Hotel America, Washington, DC, May 27-28, 1967 C 4 6/1/67 A i e,,e,er ", s 1 811i~Z A- s i a,~l/Q. I P4atie111sl C&Rte,eMeof ~4eg1U
- Civil disobedience
- Records of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (Kerner Commission)
- • • ,.r,• "' • ... I t fl I • J • "" .. ..- ., - .. ..... l. ..... 'I: I !II,~ ,,t •• I ■ - ~ > .-< ..•••.,....,, .. '" ,._.,, "1 • Ir' .. ~ I' 33 --UNITED STATES INFORMATION AMERICAN SERVICE. EMBASSY TELEPHONE 56
- difficulty in having an American Ambassador talk directly to the Constituent Assembly; but they are working on other ways to give him something dramatic to do. on the civil side, if he goes to Saigon; for example, speak at the American tln iversity