The Movement, November 1968. Vol. 4 No. 11
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Ain't Goin' Nowhere — Bob Dylan 1967 Page 1
AIN 'T GOIN ' NOWHERE BOB DYLAN 1967 by Olof Björner A SUMMARY OF RECORDING & CONCERT ACTIVITIES , RELEASES , TAPES & BOOKS . © 2001 by Olof Björner All Rights Reserved. This text may be reproduced, re-transmitted, redistributed and otherwise propagated at will, provided that this notice remains intact and in place. Ain't Goin' Nowhere — Bob Dylan 1967 page 1 CONTENTS: 1 INTRODUCTION..................................................................................................................... 2 2 THE YEAR AT A GLANCE ................................................................................................... 2 3 CALENDAR .............................................................................................................................. 2 4 RECORDINGS ......................................................................................................................... 3 5 JOHN WESLEY HARDING ................................................................................................... 3 6 SONGS 1967 .............................................................................................................................. 5 7 SOURCES .................................................................................................................................. 6 8 SUGGESTED READINGS ...................................................................................................... 7 8.1 GENERAL BACKGROUND ..................................................................................................... -
Comparison of 1968 and 1969 Temperature Conditions in the Gulf
International Commission ~ for the 1950 Northwest Atlantic Fisheries 1970 RESTRICTED Serial No. 2398 ICNAF Res.Doc.70/59 (D.c. 1) ANNUAL MEETING - JUNE 1970 Comparison of 1968 and 1969 Temperature Conditions in the Gulf of Maine and Adjacent Waters by John B. Colton. Jr. and Walter R. Welch Bureau of Commercial Fisheries Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass. 02543, U.S.A. Surface temperatures at Boothbay Harbor, Maine have proved to be a good index to offshore surface and subsurface temperature conditions in the Gulf of Maine and contiguous waters (Colton 1968a, 1968b, and 1969). The monthly mean temperatures at Boothbay Harborllwere higher in 1969 than in 1968 in all months except September and December (Figure 1). Positive anomalies (1969 minus 1968) of 1.OoC or greater occurred in January, February, March, June, and November. The 1969 annual mean temperature was a.8°C higher than in 1968. The only temperature data available for offshore comparisons are from B.T. observations taken on the annual fall groundfish surveys (Albatross IV Cruise 68-7, 10 October - 25 November, 1968 II These data were made available by Mr. W. R. Welch of the BCF Biological Laboratory, Boothbay Harbor, Maine. G2 - 2 - and Albatross IV Cruise 69-11, 8 October - 23 November 1969). Al though there was a considerable time period reqmed to cover the area as a whole, most 60-minute quadrangle areas were sampled at roughly the same time (! week) each year. Anomalies were computed as the difference between the 1969 and 1968 mean temperatures within 30-minute quadrangle areas at depths of 1, 50, and 100 m. -
1968 UN Yearbook
QUESTIONS RELATING TO AFRICA 155 S/8731. Letter of 6 August 1968 from Turkey. CONSIDERATION BY SPECIAL S/8732. Note verbale of 1 August 1968 from Paki- COMMITTEE OF TWENTY-FOUR stan. S/8734. Note verbale of 30 July 1968 from Norway. Special Committee on Situation with Regard to Im- S/8735. Note verbale of 5 August 1968 from Syria. plementation of Declaration on Granting of Inde- S/8736. Note verbale of 31 July 1968 from USSR. pendence to Colonial Countries and Peoples, meet- S/8738. Note verbale of 7 August 1968 from Byelo- ings 580-582, 584-590. russian SSR. A/7200/Rev.l. Report of Special Committee, Chapter S/8740. Letter of 26 July 1968 from Chile. VI. S/8743. Note verbale of 8 August 1968 from Ukrain- ian SSR. CONSIDERATION BY S/8744. Note verbale of 7 August 1968 from New GENERAL ASSEMBLY Zealand (concerning action by Western Samoa). S/8751. Note verbale of 5 August 1968 from Poland. GENERAL ASSEMBLY——23RD SESSION S/8752. Letter of 12 August 1968 from Senegal. Fourth Committee, meetings 1758-1760, 1762-1772, S/8754. Note verbale of 15 August 1968 from Singa- 1775-1779. pore. Plenary Meetings 1707, 1710. S/8757. Letter of 20 August 1968 from Brazil. S/8775. Note verbale of 13 August 1968 from Israel. A/7200/Rev.l. Report of Special Committee on Situ- S/8776. Note verbale of 23 August 1968 from Canada. ation with regard to Implementation of Declaration S/8779. Letter of 27 August 1968 from Belgium. on Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries S/8786 and Add.1-4. -
UNITED NATIONS Distr
UNITED NATIONS Distr. GENERAL GENERAL A/7753 ASSEMBLY 7 November 1969 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH THenty-fourth session Agenda item 63 INFORMJ;TION FROM NON-SELF-GOVERNING TERRITORIES TRANSMITTED UNDER !IRTICLE 73 e OF THE CHAR·TER Report of the Secretary-General l. Under the terms oi' Article 73 e of the Charter of the United Nacions, Member States vhich have or assume responsibilities for the ac1:ninistration of Territories whose peoples have no,; yet attained a full meocsure of self -government cmdertake to transmit regularly to the Secretary-Geners.l infol~mation relatine; to economic, social and educationsl conditions ifl the TerJ.."itories for 1.;hich they are reS)Otlsible, other than those Territories to which che International Trusteeship SJcscem applies. In addition, the General Assembly in several r·esolutions, the most recent of which was resolution 2L,22 (XXIII) of' 18 Dece c;;:.er 1968, urged the e.dministerin:o Pm<ers concerned nto transn1it, or continue to transmit, to the Secretary-Genel.... e.l the information p:!:"escribed in Article 73 e of the Charter, as well as the f'J.ll_est possible inforw.ation on political and constitutional developments in -~he 11 Territories concerned .. 2. The table annexed to the present report sh()';IS the dates on \·lhich information called for in Article 73 e was transmitted to the Secretary-General in respect of the years 1967 and 1958 up to 3 November 1969. 3. The information transmitted under Article 73 e of the Charter follows in general the standard form approved b:r the General Assembly and incLudes information on geography, history, population, economic, social and educational conditions. -
International Review of the Red Cross, November 1968, Eighth Year
JAN 2 I 19£9 'P- I NOVEMBER EIGHTH YEAR - No. 92 International Review of the Red Cross I,uer arma carita! GENEVA 1968 INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE OF THE RED ca:oss .'QUNDED IN 1863 INTERNATIONAL fOMMITTEE OF THE RED CROSS SAMUEL A. GONARD, former Army Corps Commander, former Professor at the Graduate Institute of International Studies, University of Geneva, President (membersince.1961) JACQUES CHENEVIERE, Hon. Doctor of Literature, Honorary Vice·President (1919) MARTIN BODMER, Hon. Doctor of Philosophy (1940) PAUL RUEGGER, former Swiss Minister to Italy and the United Kingdom, Member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague (1948) RODOLFO OLGIATI, Hon. Doctor of Medicine, former Director of the Don Suisse (1949) MARGUERITE GAUTIER-VAN BERCHEM, former Head of Section, Central Prisoners of War Agency (1951) FREDERIC SIORDET. Lawyer, Counsellor to the International Committee of the Red Cross from 1943 to 1951, Vice-Pf'esident (1951) GUILLAUME BORDIER, Certificated Engineer E.P.F., M.B.A. Harvard, Banker (1955) HANS BACHMANN, Doctor of Laws, Assistant Secretary-General to the International Committee of the Red Cross from 1944 to 1946, Vice-Pmident (1958) JACQUES FREYMOND, Doctor of Literature, Director of the Graduate Institute of International Studies, Professor at the University of Geneva (1959) DIETRICH SCHINDLER, Doctor of Laws, Professor at the University of Zurich (1961) HANS MEULI, Doctor of Medicine, Brigade Colonel, former Director of the Swiss Army Medical Service (1961) MARJORIE DUVILLARD, Directress of .. Le Bon Secours .. Nursing School (1961) MAX PETITPIERRE. Doctor of Laws, former President of the Swiss Confederation (1961) ADOLPHE GRAEDEL, former member of the Swiss National Council; Secretary-General of the International Metal Workers Federation (1965) DENISE BINDSCHEDLER·ROBERT, Doctor of Laws, Professor at the Graduate Institute of International Studies (1967) MARCEL NAVILLE, Master of Arts, bank manager (1967) JACQUES F. -
Writing at the Point of Traumatic Need
WRITING AT THE POINT OF TRAUMATIC NEED by Geoffrey Sirc CyberText Yearbook 2013 I’ve been reading some data from an experimental program underway at Temple University, under the direCtion of Dr. Alfred Bové, a telemediCine program for the early deteCtion and treatment of acute COPD (ChroniC obstruCtive pulmonary disease). COPD patients with a history of prior hospitalization were recruited into this program and asked to report daily their respiratory symptoms and peak flow using either phone or internet. Specially trained nurses were on hand, constantly monitoring the reports. 90% of the patients in the test group report in every day, an unheard-of figure in this kind of study. The patients, it’s estimated, should have been dead four times already. One patient reported he’d been hospitalized twenty times before he entered the program but had been hospital-free since. I’m interested in the data beCause of my interest in short texts generated through the use of Contemporary teChnology, partiCularly as they allow traCes of the AmeriCan vernaCular.1 I was particularly interested to see these texts, ordinary people writing under suCh extraordinary CirCumstanCes, the vernaCular under pressure, put in high relief. So, death Comes staring you in the faCe, and you write a certain way. What is it? First, the obvious, what one might Call the ordinary or praCtiCal Content: I am not feeling good at all, glad I have appointment tommorrow, coughing alot up at night and have pain in both lungs in back, and can not sleep to long at night, these are signs that something is going on in lungs headache slept w/oxygen on last night (sat)took cough med from prev illness. -
HUBERT H. HUMPHREY PAPERS an Inventory of His 1968 Presidential Campaign Files
MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY Manuscript Collections HUBERT H. HUMPHREY PAPERS An Inventory of His 1968 Presidential Campaign Files OVERVIEW Creator: Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978. Title: 1968 Presidential campaign files. Dates: 1949-1969 (bulk 1968). Abstract: Files created by and/or relating to the organization and administration of Humphrey's 1968 campaign for the Presidency of the United States. They are an amalgam of files produced by many individuals and organizations, on the local, state, and national levels. Quantity: 122.0 cu. ft. Location: See Detailed Description section for box locations. HISTORICAL SKETCH Nineteen sixty-eight was not a normal election year. Ordinarily, an incumbent president would have an easy path to his party's nomination for a second term, and much better than even odds at re-election Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey had won the 1964 election in a landslide. By 1968, however, opposition to the war in Vietnam was growing, racial tensions building, the economy stalling, and a desire for real change brewing. While many discontented voters listened to independent candidate George Wallace, and Republican Richard Nixon returned from political exile, most young people looked to the Democratic Party as offering the best chance for significant change in 1968. That meant that Johnson would receive more than token challenges to his re-nomination. Minnesota senator Eugene McCarthy became the first candidate to question the morality and legality of the Vietnam War as well as its military and political objectives. College students flocked to his campaign and canvassed door to door in his behalf in the first Democratic presidential primary on March 12 in New Hampshire. -
The Daily Egyptian, November 16, 1968
Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC November 1968 Daily Egyptian 1968 11-16-1968 The aiD ly Egyptian, November 16, 1968 Daily Egyptian Staff Follow this and additional works at: http://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/de_November1968 Volume 50 Recommended Citation , . "The aiD ly Egyptian, November 16, 1968." (Nov 1968). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Daily Egyptian 1968 at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in November 1968 by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 1 / j '- tOUGh Europe comes fo SJU - of, ~d\ -\ \ Son8' and dance • .",e •• nt a glimpie into peasant life Jr '. ,an unu.ual way to put your ..,U Ihroulh Kbool~ P"'rlor_ncu of Sbvsc dance. and folk mualc. 1M". how tbe l1uqueanc: UnJver a u )' Tamburttz.an.- cSo II . Duqueane gives 30 full acbolarahlp.a annually \ (o t he: mualc lanJl on the: Tlrn bJrlu-ana croupe. _bleh tra.vel. lhrough -au&! (he wo rld a1fllU. tn over a dozen Eu,ropc:an la,.ualca, dotng the: dances and tolk eona. ot .a many COUN n ea, llnd dlapl.yt,. more lhan 1.000 au lhcnc tc .natiVe costume. tn each per- lorma nc.c . One .how II like a tr1p through EurOpe on .hI C~ r fR:, [OUE'IP' aces noc lhe cOOl lneoea l .!)O'W c,~. bw the lubele an 01 lhe peopif In .'11 III o1mplictlY aDd true bel"'),. He ) ,Oel Into Uny v1I11,<1 Ihroulh IPlPnl,. P"'ua ... dance, Ind Intp lhe hllla 11Ir""l!!.)"'" bllh leaps •.nd ac.r-.Oball ca ~ European mountain people. -
Antimodernism and Genre from Country-Rock to Alt.Country, 1968-98
Antimodernism and Genre from Country-Rock to Alt.Country, 1968-98 Jason Bianchi Kirby San Jose, California B.A. Sociology and Literature, University of California—Santa Cruz, 2002 M.A. American Culture Studies, Bowling Green State University, 2006 A dissertation presented to the Graduate Faculty of the University of Virginia in Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Music University of Virginia August 2016 Abstract This dissertation is a cultural history exploring expressions of and responses to antimodernism within country-rock and “alternative country” music, drawing on reception history, intellectual history of underground and mainstream left-wing American political movements, interview discourse with artists, and close readings of songs. In this dissertation I argue that despite styling itself as a type of purer root or “folk” form of contemporary country music, in terms of its ideologies, studio production techniques, fan and critical discourse, and business practices, alt.country is a type of rock music. It embodies some of rock’s core beliefs, particularly rock’s critique of the more bureaucratic and “rationalized” dimensions of postindustrial capitalism, particularly as this relates to the everyday impact of new technologies. I argue that this anti-modernism, emerging here from the American political left, has been different in different eras, from the back-to-the-land movement of the late 1960s, to late- ‘80s/early-‘90s expressions of left populist punk’s longing for “folk” community. In this project I look beyond contemporary scholarly understandings of alt.country as mostly ironic, as ultimately I suggest that this music illustrates what Keir Keightley calls rock’s aesthetic of “seriousness,” more precisely than it does an understanding of country music ideology. -
1968 Nothing Was Delivered
NOTHING WAS DELIVERED BOB DYLAN 1968 by Olof Björner A SUMMARY OF RECORDING & CONCERT ACTIVITIES, RELEASES, TAPES & BOOKS. © 2001 by Olof Björner All Rights Reserved. This text may be reproduced, re-transmitted, redistributed and otherwise propagated at will, provided that this notice remains intact and in place. Nothing Was Delivered — Bob Dylan 1968 page 1 CONTENTS: 1 INTRODUCTION................................................................................................................2 2 CALENDAR .........................................................................................................................2 3 RECORDINGS ....................................................................................................................2 4 SONGS 1968.........................................................................................................................2 5 SOURCES.............................................................................................................................3 6 SUGGESTED READINGS .................................................................................................3 6.1 GENERAL BACKGROUND .................................................................................................3 6.2 ARTICLE COMPILATIONS .................................................................................................3 6.3 SELECTED ARTICLES .......................................................................................................4 Nothing Was Delivered — Bob Dylan -
Bob Dylan's Song Lyrics
BobBob Dylan’sDylan’s SongSong LLLyricsyrics Bob Dylan’s Song Lyrics Introduction I’ve often had a bit of a Dylan lyric running through my head, and failed to identify the song it was from, or how the next line went. This is a response to that need in the belief others may find it useful to have them handy as an ebook too. These are the lyrics to all Bob Dylan’s songs, from 51 albums. If I have left any out, please tell me and I’ll rectify it. It is organised alphabetically, all titles beginning with each letter are grouped together, and individually bookmarked to aid fast access. You can also do a search if the line doesn’t summon up the song title immediately, type the words in and see where it finds them. DISCOGRAPHY 1. Bob Dylan 27. Infidels 2. The Freewheelin' 28. Real Live 3. The Times They Are A-Changin' 29. Empire Burlesque 4. Another Side Of Bob Dylan 30. Biograph 5. Bringing It All Back Home 31. Knocked Out Loaded 6. Highway 61 Revisited 32. Dylan And The Dead 7. Blonde On Blonde 33. Down In The Groove 8. Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits 34. Oh Mercy 9. John Wesley Harding 35. Under The Red Sky 10. Nashville Skyline 36. The Bootleg Series Vols.1-3 11. Self-Portrait 37. Good As I Been To You 12. New Morning 38. The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration 13. Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Vol.2 39. World Gone Wrong 14. Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid 40. -
Month Calendar 1968 & Holidays 1968
January 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 New Year's Day 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 2 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 3 Martin Luther King Day 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 4 28 29 30 31 5 January 1968 Calendar February 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 5 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 7 Lincoln's Birthday Valentine's Day 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 8 Presidents Day and Washington's Birthday 25 26 27 28 29 9 Mardi Gras Carnival February 1968 Calendar March 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 9 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 11 Daylight Saving 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 12 St. Patrick's Day 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 13 31 14 March 1968 Calendar April 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 4 5 6 14 April Fool's Day 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 15 Good Friday 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 16 Easter Easter Monday 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 17 28 29 30 18 April 1968 Calendar May 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 4 18 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 19 Cinco de Mayo 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 20 Mother's Day Armed Forces Day 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 21 26 27 28 29 30 31 22 Memorial Day May 1968 Calendar June 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 22 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 23 Pentecost Pentecost Monday 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 24 Flag Day 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 25 Father's Day 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 26 30 27 June 1968 Calendar July 1968 Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 4 5 6 27 Independence Day 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 28 14 15 16