March 16-31, 1972
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The Ukrainian Weekly 1969, No.17
www.ukrweekly.com Preparations for 0f 'Ukrainian Day9 in Ausoiiia , Fiction Writer, to 1 Anna Stachiw Elected Head of Yarosiavna ^ ANSONIA, Conn. - The New Haven, chancellor of the Address Shamokin Banquet in Final Staai fourth annual state-wide "Vr diocese, and all parish pastors Shevchenko Scientific Society SHAMOKIN, Ра. - МісЬа–, NEW YORK, N.Y. - Pre- krainian Day," sponsored by are also honorary chairmen. el Kitsock. District Manager, j parations f or the premiere of the ten Connecticut parishes Representatives of the par NEW YORK, N.Y. - Dr. Syracuse, New York'District "Anna Yaroslavna" to be pre of the Ukrainian Catholic Dio ishes arc headed by Roman for the United Service Divi sented by the Ukrainian Na cese of Stamford, will be held Hezzey of Hamden as general Matthew Stachiw, outstand sion of the General Motors! tional Association on Satur on Sunday, June 29, 1969, .it chairman, and Myron Dmyt- ing Ukrainian scholar and his Corporation, and a fiction au day. May 24, 1969 at Carne і Warsaw Park. Pulaski High- tcrko also of Hamden. as vice torian, was elected President ! thor, will be the principal gie Hall in New York City way (State Route 243) in An- chairman. of the Shevchenko Scientific are now in the final stages. sonia, according to Roy Ргі– Society at a meeting of th ` speaker st the 75th UNA an Ukrainian food and bread Rehearsals are being held, machuk. Public Relations, isjeiety's executive board held niversary banquet, which will and a regular picnic menu stage and costume settings j Chairman of the "Ukrainian on Friday, May 9. -
Papers of the Forty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the SEMINAR on the ACQUISITION of LATIN AMERICAN LIBRARY MATERIALS
¡88 L4 546 2002 Trends and Traditions in Latin American and Caribbean History SEMINAR ON THE ACQUISITION OF LATIN AMERICAN LIBRARY MATERIALS XLVII LEE LIBRARY ' AROIDB. UMVERS11T IHAM YOUNG PROVO.UTAH Trends and Traditions in Latin American and Caribbean History SALALM Secretariat Benson Latin American Collection The General Libraries The University of Texas at Austin Trends and Traditions in Latin American and Caribbean History Papers of the Forty-Seventh Annual Meeting of the SEMINAR ON THE ACQUISITION OF LATIN AMERICAN LIBRARY MATERIALS Cornell University June 1-4, 2002 Denise A. Hibay Editor SALALM Secretariat Benson Latin American Collection The General Libraries The University of Texas at Austin ISBN: 0-917617-73-8 Copyright © 2005 by SALALM, Inc. All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America S?nU^<BRARY . Contents Preface vii 1. Dressed Like an Indian: Ethnic Ambiguity in Early Colonial Peru Karen B. Graubart 1 2. Revolutions on the Radio: People and Issues Related to Revolutionary Movements in Latin America, Audio Gleanings from the Peabody Awards Collection Laura D. Shedenhelm 10 3. Atlantic Crossings: The Trade in Latin American Books in Europe in the Nineteenth Century Geoffrey West 29 4. El color, la textura, el peso de la página: el arte del libro en América Latina Lourdes Vázquez 44 5. The Map in the Book: Barbados Alan Moss 52 6. Judging a Book by Its Cover: Cover Art of Editora Política Sharon A. Moynahan Wendy Louise Pedersen 56 7. A Poster is Worth 10,000 Words: Cuban Political Posters at the University of New Mexico Claire-Lise Bénaud Sharon A. -
Briefing Papers
The original documents are located in Box C45, folder “Presidential Handwriting, 7/29/1976” of the Presidential Handwriting File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box C45 of The Presidential Handwriting File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library '.rHE PRESIDENT HAS SEEN ••-,.,.... THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON MEETING WITH PENNSYLVANIA DELEGATION Thursday, July 29, 1976 5:30 PM (30 minutes} The East Room ~f\ From: Jim Field :\ ./ I. PURPOSE To meet informally with the Pennsylvania delegates and the State Congressional delegation. II. BACKGROUND, PARTICIPANTS AND PRESS PLAN A. Background: At the request of Rog Morton and Jim Baker you have agreed to host a reception for the Pennsylvania delegation. B. Participants: See attached notebook. C. Press Plan: White House Photo Only. Staff President Ford Committee Staff Dick Cheney Rog Morton Jim Field Jim Baker Dick Mastrangelo Charles Greenleaf • MEMORANDUM FOR: H. James Field, Jr. FROM: Dick Mastrangelo SUBJECT: Pennsylvania Delegation DATE: July 28, 1976 Since Reagan's suprise announcement that he has asked Senator Schweiker to run for Vice President should the convention ever nominate them as a t•am we have been reviewing the entire Pennsylvania situation in order to give the President the most complete and up-to-datebriefing possible for his meeting with the Delegation on Thursday, July 29. -
February 9, 1967 HON. RICHARD D. Mccarthy
February 9, 1967 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD- SENATE 3281 CONFIRMATIONS FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION APPALACHIAN REGIONAL COMMISSION Executive nominations confirmed by Lowell K. Bridwell, of Ohio, to be Adminis Joe W. Fleming II, of Arkansas, to be Fed the Senate February 9 (legislative day of trator of the Federal Highway Administra eral cochairman of the Appalachian Regional February 8), 1967: tion. Commission. EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS Rail Rapid Transit emphatic yes! The poor and indigent must tegrate pieces. The wide right-of-way is in have ready and economical access to the out appropriate in cities. It wreaks havoc with er communities. This is where many of the existing structures; takes too much off the EXTENSION OF REMARKS employment opportunities these people seek tax rolls, and cuts great swaths through the OF are located. neighborhoods." (Patrick Healy, executive The model city sessions were devoted pri director, National League of Cities.) HON. RICHARD D. McCARTHY marily to the conditions within our core Again, there was the W1lliamsburg Confer OF NEW YORK areas. Through a common effort, many of ence, where Detroit's Mayor Cavanaugh, the problems faced by the forgotten, un President of the National League of Cities, IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES skilled and deprived groups, could be solved. said: "We must keep in mind the necessity Thursday, February 9, 1967 In addition, certain areas outside of our of including a strong component of rapid present city limits are also plagued by pov transit if we are to end up with a balanced Mr. McCARTHY. Mr. Speaker, the erty. These neighboring residents could be transportation system in the comprehensive necessity of rail rapid transit to match helped by the opening of job opportunities plan because huge sums for urban highways America's future transportation needs which were previously limited because of the will never by themselves solve urban trans and requirements was emphasized to me lack of good public transportation. -
IME $6.7 Million Bioengineering Grant the Quad
UNIVERSITY of PENNSYLVANIA Tuesday, October 16, 2001 Volume 48 Number 8 www.upenn.edu/almanac/ IME $6.7 Million Bioengineering Grant The Quad: Spruce, Woodland and Ware The NIH National Heart Lung and Blood Institute has awarded an Next fall, the completed Quad interdisciplinary research grant to Institute for Medicine and Engineer- will boast three Houses, each with ing (IME) investigators led by Dr. Peter F. Davies. The grant, totaling its own courtyard, lobby, mailroom, $6.7 million over five years, focuses on the biomechanics of cardio- exercise room, library, seminar vascular cells, membranes, and molecules with emphasis on how these rooms, computer labs and refur- properties determine and control cardiovascular tissue function. The bished student rooms. “The Quad’s partnership is composed of two interactive components: fundamental system of courtyards naturally sup- cell and molecular investigations of cardiovascular mechanotrans- ports a division of three—the archi- duction, and preclinical studies of engineered arteries, heart valve tects and the planning committee of calcification, and microcoil treatment of intracranial aneurysms. students, faculty and staff saw that Complementary experimental approaches that are both design- right away when they looked closely driven and hypothesis-driven include geometric constraints, spatial at the Quad,” noted Dr. David analyses, protein conformational changes, deformation properties of Brownlee, director of the College molecules and membranes, and mass transport characteristics that Houses. regulate vascular cell structure, gene expression, function, and malad- The present four Houses in the aptation to blood flow forces leading to pathological change. Quadrangle—Community, The integrative group of IME investigators is Dr. Peter F. Davies, Goldberg, Spruce and Ware—will director, IME, professor of pathology and laboratory medicine, SOM, be replaced beginning in the fall and bioengineering, SEAS; Dr. -
The Loneliness of Richard Nixon They Check the Tapes out of the Locked and Guarded Room of the Executive Of- Fice Building Next Door to the White House
THE PRESIDENCY/HUGH SIDEY The Loneliness of Richard Nixon They check the tapes out of the locked and guarded room of the Executive Of- fice Building next door to the White House. Then Stephen Bull, special assistant to the President, sorts them out by number and date, as designated in the subpoenas. It is not all that easy to find the exact conversations that the prosecutors want. While the tape reels from the Oval Office have only one day's conversation or less on them, the reels from the President's hideaway in the E.O.B. may have as much as a week's conversation, depending on how frequently he secluded himself in that office. The recordings from the bugged phones in the Oval Office, the Lincoln Sit- ting Room and the E.O.B. may have as much as two or three weeks of conver- sation on them. Tension and concern now run so high in the White House over the tapes and the future of Richard Nixon that Bull and others have instituted a kind of Fail- Safe system to help guard the integrity of the tapes, or whatever of it remains. Bull will not handle the original reels. He gets only duplicates. He carefully takes each 5- in. reel and puts it on a small Sony tape recorder whose erase mechanism has been immobilized by White House technicians. Then he clamps earphones on his head and begins to track down the specified conversations that the court has ordered to be turned over. When Bull finds the right conversation he stops the machine. -
Contents (Click on Index Item to Locate)
Contents (Click on index item to locate) Subject Page Introductory Note 1 June 22 1972 Excerpt from the President’s News Conference 2 August 29 1972 Excerpts from the President’s News Conference 3 October 5 1972 Excerpts from the President’s News Conference 4 March 2 1973 Excerpts from the President’s News Conference 5 March 12 1973 Statement by the President on Executive Privilege 6 March 15 1973 Excerpts from the President’s News Conference 8 April 5 1973 Statement by the president on the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. 11 April 17 1973 Remarks by the President Regarding Investigation Development and Procedure 12 April 30 1973 Statement by the President on the Attorney General and White House Staff 13 April 30 1973 Address to Nation on the Watergate Investigation 14 May 9 1973 Remarks by the President at a Republican Fundraising Dinner 19 May 22 1973 Statements by the President on the Watergate Investigation 21 July 6 1973 Letter from the President to Chairman Sam J Ervin Jr 26 July 16 1973 Letter from the President to the Secretary of the Treasury 28 July 23 1973 Letter from the President to Chairman Sam J Ervin Jr 29 July 25 1973 Letter from the President to Chairman Sam J Ervin Jr 30 July 25 1973 Letter from the President to Chief justice Judge John J Sirica 31 August 5 1973 Address to the Nation on the Watergate investigation 32 August 15 1973 Statement by the President on the Watergate Investigation 40 August 22 1973 Excerpts from the President’s News Conference 44 September 5 1973 Excerpts from the President’s -
In a Lonely Place Arlen Specter Is the Same. It's the GOP That's Changed
WEEK OF NOVEMBER 22, 2004 In A Lonely Place Arlen Specter is the same. ROBERTO WESTBROOK ROBERTO It’s the GOP that’s changed. BY T.R. GOLDMAN staff member was now 14 months away from being the longest serving senator in the history of Pennsylvania—after fellow The harsh glare of the single television spotlight made Arlen Republican Boise Penrose, who died in office on Dec. 31, 1921. Specter’s face shine unnaturally, and his smile was tight and He had survived a grueling primary against Rep. Patrick prearranged. Toomey (R-Pa.), and an unexpectedly tough general election The disembodied voice of CNBC’s Gloria Borger was work- against Rep. Joseph Hoeffel (D-Pa.). ing its way into Specter’s ear. Behind him, the rotunda of the But when Specter takes over the Senate Judiciary Committee Senate’s Russell Building glowed in the sunset. in January, as he now appears certain to do, he will be noted The conversation had turned to Richard Viguerie, the arch- more for surviving an infelicitous remark at a euphoric Nov. conservative direct mail guru, and one of those most promi- 3 press conference—that it was “unlikely” that the committee nently opposing the Pennsylvania Republican’s ascension to the would confirm any judicial nominee who would overturn Roe chairmanship of the Senate Judiciary Committee. v. Wade—than for possessing what his supporters say is a long “I’m not about to make any deals with Richard Viguerie,” and distinguished career as one of the Senate’s few remaining said Specter, his eyes blinking with intensity. -
A Historical Study of Mental Health Programming in Commercial and Public Television from 1975 to 1980
Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Dissertations Theses and Dissertations 1985 A Historical Study of Mental Health Programming in Commercial and Public Television from 1975 to 1980 Jan Jones Sarpa Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss Part of the Education Commons Recommended Citation Sarpa, Jan Jones, "A Historical Study of Mental Health Programming in Commercial and Public Television from 1975 to 1980" (1985). Dissertations. 2361. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss/2361 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © 1985 Jan Jones Sarpa A HISTORICAL STUDY OF MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAMMING IN COMMERCIAL AND PUBLIC TELEVISION FROM 1975 TO 1980 by Jan Jones Sarpa A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of L~yola University of Chicago in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Education January 1985 Jan Jones Sarpa Loyola University of Chicago A HISTORICAL STUDY OF MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAMMING IN COMMERCIAL AND PUBLIC TELEVISION FROM 1975 TO 1980 There has been little to no research on the subject of mental health programming on television. This dissertation was undertaken to help alleviate this void and to discover trends and answer questions about such programming. The medium of television was researched specifically due to its access (98 percent of all U.S. -
Cabinet Room Scope and Content Notes
WHITE HOUSE TAPES CABINET ROOM CONVERSATIONS Nixon Presidential Materials Staff National Archives and Records Administration Linda Fischer Mark Fischer Ronald Sodano February 2002 NIXON WHITE HOUSE TAPES CABINET ROOM TAPES On October 16, 1997, the Nixon Presidential Materials staff opened eighty-three Nixon White House tapes containing conversations which took place within the Cabinet Room from February 16, 1971 through July 18, 1973. This release consisted of approximately 436 conversations and totaled approximately 154 hours. The Cabinet Room was one of seven locations in which conversations were surreptitiously taped. The complete Cabinet Room conversations are available to the public on reference cassettes C1 – C251 During review of the Cabinet Room tapes, approximately 78 hours of conversations were withdrawn under the provisions of the Presidential Recordings and Materials Preservation Act of 1974 (PRMPA) (44 USC 2111 note) and Executive Order (EO) 12356. These segments were re-reviewed under EO 12958 (April 17, 1995). As a result, the Nixon Presidential Materials Staff was able to open approximately 69 hours of previously restricted audio segments. The declassified segments were released on February 28, 2002, and are available as excerpted conversation segments on reference cassettes E504 – E633. These recorded White House tapes are part of the Presidential historical materials of the Nixon Administration. These materials are in the custody of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) under the provisions of the PRMPA. Access to the Nixon Presidential materials is governed by the PRMPA and its implementing public access regulations. A Brief History of the White House Taping System In February 1971, the United State Secret Service (USSS), at the request of the President, installed listening devices in the White House. -
Kent State 1970 - Legal Article 6 Background and Implications
Cleveland State Law Review Volume 22 Issue 1 Symposium: Kent State 1970 - Legal Article 6 Background and Implications 1973 Kent State - Justice and Morality John P. Adams Follow this and additional works at: https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevstlrev Part of the Criminal Law Commons How does access to this work benefit ou?y Let us know! Recommended Citation John P. Adams, Kent State - Justice and Morality, 22 Clev. St. L. Rev. 26 (1973) available at https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/clevstlrev/vol22/iss1/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at EngagedScholarship@CSU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Cleveland State Law Review by an authorized editor of EngagedScholarship@CSU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Kent State - Justice and Morality John P. Adams* N SEPTEMBER 1970, THE PRESIDENT'S COMMISSION ON CAMPUS UNREST' made a strong recommendation that the President of the United States exercise ". his reconciling moral leadership as the first step to prevent violence and create understanding. '2 Although this recommendation was made in a report by the Commission on Campus Unrest which met the deadline that had been set for it to complete its work before the reopening of the colleges and univer- sities in the fall of 1970, nearly three months passed before the President wrote a "Dear Bill" letter to the Chairman of the Commis- sion, former Governor William W. Scranton, and gave any response to the recommendation.3 In his letter to Governor Scranton, the President -
The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project
The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project THEODORE SELLIN Interviewed by: Tom Dunnigan Initial interview date: March 3, 2003 Copyright 2004 ADST TABLE OF CONTENTS Background Born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsyl ania Uni ersity of Pennsyl ania Entered Foreign Ser ice - 1952 Copenhagen, Denmark - Consular/Political Officer 1952-1956 Politics So iets U.S. military ,ATO State Department - British -est African Affairs 1956-195. ,ational Intelligence Estimates 0,IEs1 State Department - FSI - Finnish 2anguage Training 195. Uni ersity of Indiana - 3ussian Studies 1958-1959 Helsinki, Finland - Political/2abor Officer 1959-1965 Communist Party 2abor unions So iets Elections 6ekkonen 7erman 8threat9 -orld Federation of Democratic :outh 0-FD:1 Vice President Johnson isit ,eutrality 3ussians Sweden State Department - Office of International Affairs 1965-196. Program officer 1 Oslo, Norway - 2abor/Political Attaché 196.-19.1 Vietnam -ar 7o ernment ,ATO Oil disco ery Economy Barents Sea Helsinki, Finland 19.1-19.3 Conferences Security and Cooperation in Europe 0CSCE1 So iets Vietnam ,a al isits Communists 8Finlandization9 SA2T talks Vietnam 3ussians COAECO, ,a al -ar College 19.3-19.4 State Department - Oceans and En ironment and Science Bureau 19.4-19.8 Antarctica 7othenburg, Sweden - Consul 7eneral 19.8-19.9 En ironment U.S. military deserters Consulate closed 3etirement INTERVIEW ": Today is March 3, 2003. This is being done on behalf of the Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training. Today I will be talking with Ted Sellin who was a Foreign Service officer for almost 30 years and had many interesting assignments.