National Council of La Raza Records, 1968-1996

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

National Council of La Raza Records, 1968-1996 http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf858006dc No online items Guide to the National Council of La Raza Records, 1968-1996 Processed by Steven Mandeville-Gamble and student staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Steven Mandeville-Gamble Department of Special Collections Green Library Stanford University Libraries Stanford, CA 94305-6004 Phone: (650) 725-1022 Email: [email protected] URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc © 1998 The Board of Trustees of Stanford University. All rights reserved. Guide to the National Council of Special Collections M0744 1 La Raza Records, 1968-1996 Guide to the National Council of La Raza Records, 1968-1996 Collection number: M0744 Department of Special Collections and University Archives Stanford University Libraries Stanford, California Contact Information Department of Special Collections Green Library Stanford University Libraries Stanford, CA 94305-6004 Phone: (650) 725-1022 Email: [email protected] URL: http://library.stanford.edu/spc Processed by: Steven Mandeville-Gamble and student staff Date Completed: 1999 July 30 Encoded by: Steven Mandeville-Gamble © 1998 The Board of Trustees of Stanford University. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: National Council of La Raza Records, Date (inclusive): 1968-1996 Collection number: Special Collections M0744 Creator: Steven Mandeville-Gamble Extent: ca. 960 linear ft. Repository: Stanford University. Libraries. Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives. Language: English. Access Restrictions Personnel files are restricted until 2066. Contract information indicating amounts paid to contractors are likewise restricted until 2066. Videotape materials require at least a two-week waiting period between when they are requested and when they can be made available to allow for use copies to be made from the master tapes. Publication Rights Property rights reside with the repository. Literary rights reside with the creators of the documents or their heirs. To obtain permission to publish or reproduce, please contact the Public Services Librarian of the Dept. of Special Collections. Provenance Gift of National Council of La Raza, 1994 and 1997. Preferred Citation: [Identification of item] National Council of La Raza Records, M0744, Dept. of Special Collections, Stanford University Libraries, Stanford, Calif. Narrative History The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) was founded in February 1968 under the name of the Southwest Council of La Raza as a private, nonprofit, nonpartisan, tax-exempt organization established to reduce poverty and discrimination, and improve life opportunities for Hispanic Americans. Its Central Office was originally located in Phoenix, Arizona and in 1970 it opened its National Services Office in Washington, D.C. Its early efforts were focused primarily in the Southwestern states Guide to the National Council of Special Collections M0744 2 La Raza Records, 1968-1996 of Arizona, California, Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas. In 1973, the organization changed its name to the National Council of La Raza and moved its headquarters to Washington, D.C. to reflect its increasingly national focus. Henry Santiestevan served as the President and Executive Director of the Council from its inception through 1974, when Raul Yzaguirre, the current President and CEO of NCLR, came into office. NCLR focuses its efforts on two primary, complementary approaches: Capacity-building assistance to support and strengthen Hispanic community-based organizations: providing organizational assistance in management, governance, program operations, and resource development to Hispanic community-based organizations in urban and rural areas nationwide, especially those which serve low-income and disadvantaged Hispanics. Applied research, policy analysis, and advocacy: providing an Hispanic perspective on issues such as education, immigration, housing, health, employment and training, and civil rights enforcement, to increase policy-maker and public understanding of Hispanic needs, and to encourage the adoption of programs and policies which equitably serve Hispanics. NCLR also focuses its efforts on public information and media activities and special and international projects. These include innovative programs, catalytic efforts, formation of and participation in coalitions, and other special activities which use the NCLR structure and credibility to create other entities or projects. NCLR is the largest constituency-based national Hispanic organization, serving all Hispanic nationality groups in all regions of the country. NCLR has over 200 formal affiliates who together serve 37 states, Puerto Rico, and the District of Columbia - and a broader network of more than 20,000 groups and individuals nationwide - reaching more than two million Hispanics annually. Capacity-building assistance to support and strengthen local Hispanic groups - provided from NCLR's Washington, D.C., headquarters and its field offices in Los Angeles, Phoenix, Chicago, and San Antonio - focuses on resource development, program operations, management, and governance. NCLR provides services not only to its own affiliates, but also to other local Hispanic organizations; unlike organizations which serve only their own 'chapters,' NCLR welcomes affiliation from independent Hispanic groups which share NCLR's goals and self-help philosophy. NCLR also assists Hispanic groups which are not formal affiliates through issue networks dealing with HIV/AIDS, for example, community health, the elderly, education, and leadership. NCLR's Policy Analysis Center is the pre-eminent Hispanic "think tank," serving as a voice for Hispanic Americans in Washington, D.C.; the Albuquerque Tribune has called NCLR "the leading Hispanic think tank in the country," and the Baltimore Sun routinely refers to NCLR as "the principal" Latino advocacy group. Its unique capacity to provide timely policy analyses, combined with its considerable advocacy expertise, a reputation for political independence, and an identifiable constituency, permits NCLR to play an important role in policy and advocacy efforts. Its policy-related documents command extensive press and policy-maker attention, and NCLR is consistently asked to testify and comment on public policy issues such as immigration and education, as well as other issues of broad concern, from free trade to affordable housing, health policy, and tax reform. NCLR works closely with the private sector and has a broad base of financial support. NCLR maintains a diverse revenue base; the organization receives two-thirds of its funding from corporations and foundations, and the rest from the government. Its Corporate Board of Advisors, which includes senior executives from 25 major corporations and their liaison staff, provides ongoing consultation and assistance on a variety of efforts, from education and community health projects to visibility and fund raising. NCLR believes in cooperation and collaboration. NCLR staff belong to many issue-focused coalitions and associations, cooperating with other nonprofit organizations and private-sector entities on issues ranging from welfare reform to energy. All of NCLR's national-emphasis projects, which sometimes include pass-through funding - health, housing and community development, employment and training, education, the elderly, volunteerism, and leadership - include efforts to educate mainstream organizations, public and private, about Hispanic needs, and help them develop partnerships with Hispanic community-based organizations. NCLR also carries out joint projects with other organizations; NCLR is a partner, for example, with the National Urban League Project PRISM (Partners for Reform in Science and Mathematics), a national education reform project funded by the Annenberg/CPB Project. Some of NCLR's major reports have included: Burden or Relief? The Impact of Taxes on Hispanic Working Families; the third in a series of statistical analyses on the status of Hispanic education, Hispanic Education: A Statistical Portrait 1990; a comprehensive analysis of the Immigration Reform and Control Act's objective-related performance, Unfinished Business: The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986; an analysis of the performance of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in serving Hispanics, The Empty Promise: EEOC and Hispanics; a statistical "snapshot" of the status of the Hispanic population, State of Hispanic America: 1991; an analysis of Hispanic participation in elderly-related federal programs, On the Sidelines: Hispanic Elderly and the Continuum of Care; a major analysis on Hispanic health status, Hispanic Health Status: A Disturbing Diagnosis; a report providing an empirical basis for comparing the magnitude of the effects of alternative anti-poverty strategies on Hispanics, An Emerging Latino Anti-Poverty Agenda; and a report Guide to the National Council of Special Collections M0744 3 La Raza Records, 1968-1996 documenting the negative portrayal of Hispanics in the media and entertainment industry, and its effects on Hispanic and non-Hispanic public opinion, Out of the Picture: Hispanics in the Media. NCLR publishes a quarterly newsletter, Agenda, as well as other issue-specific newsletters on education, poverty, HIV/AIDS, and the elderly. NCLR's extensive series of policy reports and training modules are briefly described in its Publications Guide. early 1960'sHerman Gallegos and Paul Ylvisaker, of the Ford Foundation, meet 1966 Ford Foundation appoints
Recommended publications
  • Program Year Americorps Program Director Handbook
    2017- Program Year 2018 AmeriCorps Program Director Handbook Program Director Handbook 2017-2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW 1 CORPORATION FOR NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE 1 AMERICORPS 1 AMERICORPS STATE AND NATIONAL DIRECT 1 AMERICORPS VISTA (VOLUNTEERS IN SERVICE TO AMERICA) 2 AMERICORPS NCCC (NATIONAL CIVILIAN COMMUNITY CORPS) 2 THE MASSACHUSETTS SERVICE ALLIANCE 2 NATIONAL SERVICE 2 AMERICORPS IN MASSACHUSETTS 3 MSA STAFF 3 AMERICORPS RULES AND REGULATIONS 4 OTHER REQUIREMENTS 4 AMERICORPS PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES 4 AMERICORPS ELIGIBILITY 5 CITIZENSHIP OR ALLOWABLE LEGAL STATUS REQUIREMENT 6 PRIMARY DOCUMENTATION OF STATUS AS A UNITED STATES’ CITIZEN OR NATIONAL 6 PRIMARY DOCUMENTATION OF STATUS AS A UNITED STATES’ LAWFUL PERMANENT RESIDENT ALIEN 6 EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT 7 HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA/GED 7 GED AGREEMENT LETTER 7 CRIMINAL HISTORY CHECK REQUIREMENTS 7 NATIONAL SEX OFFENDER PUBLIC WEBSITE (NSOPW) 9 STATEWIDE CRIMINAL REGISTRY 9 FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (FBI) 9 ACCOMPANIMENT 10 CRIMINAL HISTORY CHECK POLICIES AND PROCEDURES 11 CRIMINAL HISTORY CHECK RESOURCES 11 ALTERNATIVE SEARCH PROCEDURES 11 USE OF AMERICORPS NAME AND LOGO 12 IDENTIFICATION AS AN AMERICORPS PROGRAM OR MEMBER 13 AMERICORPS RECRUITMENT, SELECTION, AND ORIENTATION 13 AMERICORPS MEMBER POSITION DESCRIPTION 13 MY AMERICORPS PORTAL 15 AMERICORPS MEMBER ENROLLMENT 15 SERVICE LOCATION DESIGNATION 15 MEMBER FORMS 16 ENROLLMENT POLICY 16 REFILL POLICY 16 AMERICORPS MEMBER SUPERVISION 16 PERFORMANCE REVIEWS 17 SERVICE OBJECTIVES 17 AMERICORPS MEMBER
    [Show full text]
  • For Student Success
    TRANSFORMING School Environments OUR VISION For Student Success Weaving SKILLS ROPES Relationships 2018 Annual Report Practices to Help All Students Our Vision for Student Success City Year has always been about nurturing and developing young people, from the talented students we serve to our dedicated AmeriCorps members. We put this commitment to work through service in schools across the country. Every day, our AmeriCorps members help students to develop the skills and mindsets needed to thrive in school and in life, while they themselves acquire valuable professional experience that prepares them to be leaders in their careers and communities. We believe that all students can succeed. Supporting the success of our students goes far beyond just making sure they know how to add fractions or write a persuasive essay—students also need to know how to work in teams, how to problem solve and how to work toward a goal. City Year AmeriCorps members model these behaviors and mindsets for students while partnering with teachers and schools to create supportive learning environments where students feel a sense of belonging and agency as they develop the social, emotional and academic skills that will help them succeed in and out of school. When our children succeed, we all benefit. From Our Leadership Table of Contents At City Year, we are committed to partnering Our 2018 Annual Report tells the story of how 2 What We Do 25 Campaign Feature: with teachers, parents, schools and school City Year AmeriCorps members help students 4 How Students Learn Jeannie & Jonathan Lavine districts, and communities to ensure that all build a wide range of academic and social- 26 National Corporate Partners children have access to a quality education that emotional skills to help them succeed in school 6 Alumni Profile: Andrea Encarnacao Martin 28 enables them to reach their potential, develop and beyond.
    [Show full text]
  • THE POLITICS of REPRODUCTION FORMATIONS: ADOPTION, KINSHIP, and CULTURE Emily Hipchen and John Mcleod, Series Editors the Politics of Reproduction
    THE POLITICS OF REPRODUCTION FORMATIONS: ADOPTION, KINSHIP, AND CULTURE Emily Hipchen and John McLeod, Series Editors The Politics of Reproduction Adoption, Abortion, and Surrogacy in the Age of Neoliberalism Edited by Modhumita Roy and Mary Thompson THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS COLUMBUS Copyright © 2019 by Th e Ohio State University. Th is edition licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available online at catalog.loc.gov. Cover design by Nathan Putens Text design by Juliet Williams Type set in Adobe Minion Pro Th e paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48-1992. We dedicate this volume to the memory of our fathers, Richard E. Thompson Jr. (1924–2011) and Birendra Narayan Roy (1926–2011), and to our mothers, Barbara J. Thompson and Pranati Roy, with love and thanks. CONTENTS Acknowledgments ix INTRODUCTION MODHUMITA ROY AND MARY THOMPSON 1 CHAPTER 1 Precarity and Disaster in Jesmyn Ward’s Salvage the Bones: A Reproductive Justice Reading MARY THOMPSON 25 CHAPTER 2 Privileging God the Father: The Neoliberal Theology of the Evangelical Orphan Care Movement VALERIE A. STEIN 42 CHAPTER 3 White Futures: Reproduction and Labor in Neoliberal Times HEATHER MOONEY 61 CHAPTER 4 One Woman’s Choice Is Another Woman’s Disobedience: Seguro Popular and Threats to Midwifery in Mexico ROSALYNN VEGA 82 CHAPTER 5 The Work/Life
    [Show full text]
  • 1994Winter Vol3.Pdf
    § THE PROGRESSIVE WOMAN'S QUARTERLY IIVTER 1994 $3.95 ••* Jtg CANADA $4.50 a o THE 0 POLITICS 0 74470 78532 It adream: Is it an omen? _t Jit^ifciiTlity did everything they could to stop her from singing. Everything included threatening her, stalking her, slashing her and imprisoning her, on two continents. They wanted her to live as a traditional Berber woman. She had other plans. ADVENTURES IN AFROPEA 2: THE BEST OF Of silence HER BEST WORK. COMPILED BY DAVID BYRNE. On Luaka Bop Cassettes and Compact D.scs. Available in record stores, or direct by calling I. 800. 959. 4327 Ruth Frankenbera Larry Gross Lisa Bloom WHITE WOMEN, RACE MATTERS CONTESTED CLOSETS GENDER ON ICE The Social Construction of Whiteness The Politics and Ethics of Outing American Ideologies of Polar Expeditions "Frankenberg's impressive study of the "Combines a powerfully argued essay Bloom focuses on the conquest of the social geography of whiteness inaugu- with a comprehensive anthology of arti- North Pole as she reveals how popular rates a whole new, exciting, and neces- cles to create an invaluable document on print and visual media defined and sary direction in feminist studies: the 'outing.' Gross's fearless and fascinating shaped American national ideologies exploration of the categories of racial- book calls persuasively for ending a from the early twentieth century to the ized gender, and of genderized race in code of silence that has long served present. "Bloom's beautifully written the construction of white identity. ... An hyprocrisy and double-standard morality and incisively argued book works with a essential pedagogical and analytic text at the expense of truth." wealth of cultural artifacts and historical for 'the third Wave' of U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, an Act to Reauthorize and [H.R
    PUBLIC LAW 111–13—APR. 21, 2009 SERVE AMERICA ACT VerDate Nov 24 2008 16:49 May 08, 2009 Jkt 079139 PO 00000 Frm 00001 Fmt 6579 Sfmt 6579 E:\PUBLAW\PUBL013.111 GPO1 PsN: PUBL013 ebenthall on POQ96SHH1 with PUBLAW 123 STAT. 1460 PUBLIC LAW 111–13—APR. 21, 2009 Public Law 111–13 111th Congress An Act Apr. 21, 2009 Entitled The Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, an Act to reauthorize and [H.R. 1388] reform the national service laws. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of Serve America the United States of America in Congress assembled, Act. SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE; TABLE OF CONTENTS. 42 USC 12501 (a) SHORT TITLE.—This Act may be cited as the ‘‘Serve America note. Act’’. (b) TABLE OF CONTENTS.—The table of contents of this Act is as follows: Sec. 1. Short title; table of contents. TITLE I—AMENDMENTS TO NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE ACT OF 1990 Sec. 1001. References. Subtitle A—Amendments to Subtitle A (General Provisions) Sec. 1101. Purposes. Sec. 1102. Definitions. Subtitle B—Amendments to Subtitle B (Learn and Serve America) Sec. 1201. School-based allotments. Sec. 1202. Higher education provisions. Sec. 1203. Campuses of Service. Sec. 1204. Innovative programs and research. Sec. 1205. Service-learning impact study. Subtitle C—Amendments to Subtitle C (National Service Trust Program) Sec. 1301. Prohibition on grants to Federal agencies; limits on Corporation costs. Sec. 1302. Eligible national service programs. Sec. 1303. Types of positions. Sec. 1304. Conforming repeal relating to training and technical assistance. Sec. 1305.
    [Show full text]
  • Race, Migration, and Chinese and Irish Domestic Servants in the United States, 1850-1920
    An Intimate World: Race, Migration, and Chinese and Irish Domestic Servants in the United States, 1850-1920 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA BY Andrew Theodore Urban IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Advised by Donna Gabaccia and Erika Lee June 2009 © Andrew Urban, 2009 Acknowledgements While I rarely discussed the specifics of my dissertation with my fellow graduate students and friends at the University of Minnesota – I talked about basically everything else with them. No question or topic was too large or small for conversations that often carried on into the wee hours of the morning. Caley Horan, Eric Richtmyer, Tim Smit, and Aaron Windel will undoubtedly be lifelong friends, mahjong and euchre partners, fantasy football opponents, kindred spirits at the CC Club and Mortimer’s, and so on. I am especially grateful for the hospitality that Eric and Tim (and Tank the cat) offered during the fall of 2008, as I moved back and forth between Syracuse and Minneapolis. Aaron and I had the fortune of living in New York City at the same time in our graduate careers, and I have fond memories of our walks around Stuyvesant Park in the East Village and Prospect Park in Brooklyn, and our time spent with the folks of Tuesday night. Although we did not solve all of the world’s problems, we certainly tried. Living in Brooklyn, I also had the opportunity to participate in the short-lived yet productive “Brooklyn Scholars of Domestic Service” (AKA the BSDS crew) reading group with Vanessa May and Lara Vapnek.
    [Show full text]
  • Toward a Global Critical Feminist Vision: Domestic Work and the Nanny Tax Debate
    University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law DigitalCommons@UM Carey Law Faculty Scholarship Francis King Carey School of Law Faculty 1999 Toward a Global Critical Feminist Vision: Domestic Work and the Nanny Tax Debate Taunya Lovell Banks University of Maryland School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/fac_pubs Part of the Labor and Employment Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, and the Law and Race Commons Digital Commons Citation Banks, Taunya Lovell, "Toward a Global Critical Feminist Vision: Domestic Work and the Nanny Tax Debate" (1999). Faculty Scholarship. 220. https://digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/fac_pubs/220 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Francis King Carey School of Law Faculty at DigitalCommons@UM Carey Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UM Carey Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Toward a Global Critical Feminist Vision: Domestic Work and the Nanny Tax Debate Taunya Lovell Banks* I. INTRODUCTION ll. THE UNDER REGULATION OF DOMESTIC LABOR A. Domestic Work Is Not Real Work B. Domestic Work Is a Private Matter C. Domestic Work as Women's Work ill. LEGISLATIVE NARRATIVE: FRAMING THE PUBLIC POLICY DEBATE A. The Legislative Debates About Employees B. The Legislative Debates About Employers C. Public Debates: What's in a Name-Racial Markers IV. COMPETINGGENDEREDNARRATIVESABOUTDOMESTICWORK:AFFLUENT WORKING WOMEN AND BLACK FEMINISTS A. Affluent Women: Zoe Baird, Not One of Us? B. Black Feminists: Zoe Baird, Not One of Us-Black Women as Domestic Workers, Myth or Reality C.
    [Show full text]
  • Domestic Violence Paradigms and Combating On-The-Job Violence Against Household Workers in the United States
    Michigan Journal of Gender & Law Volume 9 Issue 1 2002 "Just Like One of the Family": Domestic Violence Paradigms and Combating On-The-Job Violence Against Household Workers in the United States Kristi L. Graunke U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjgl Part of the Civil Rights and Discrimination Commons, Labor and Employment Law Commons, Law and Gender Commons, Law and Race Commons, and the Legal History Commons Recommended Citation Kristi L. Graunke, "Just Like One of the Family": Domestic Violence Paradigms and Combating On-The-Job Violence Against Household Workers in the United States, 9 MICH. J. GENDER & L. 131 (2002). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjgl/vol9/iss1/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Journal of Gender & Law by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. "JUST LIKE ONE OF THE FAMILY": DOMESTIC VIOLENCE PARADIGMS AND COMBATING ON-THE- JOB VIOLENCE AGAINST HOUSEHOLD WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES Iristi.C.raunke* INTRODUCTION 132 I. "SYNONYMOUS WITH THE WORST DEGRADATION THAT COMES TO WOMEN:" HOUSEHOLD WORK AND ABUSE FROM COLONIZATION TO THE PRESENT • 135 A. Pre-Civil War Accounts of Servitude and Abuse • 136 B. Domestic Workers'Experiences Post-Civil War to 1920 • 138 1. Domestic Workers in the North 138 2. Domestic Workers in the South 140 C.
    [Show full text]
  • True Spies Episode 45 - the Profiler
    True Spies Episode 45 - The Profiler NARRATOR Welcome ... to True Spies. ​ ​ Week by week, mission by mission, you’ll hear the true stories behind the world’s greatest espionage operations. You’ll meet the people who navigate this secret world. What do they know? What are their skills? And what would YOU do in their position? This is True Spies. ​ ​ NARRATOR CLEMENTE: With any equivocal death investigation, you have no idea where the investigation is going to take you, but in this particular investigation, it starts at the White House. That makes it incredibly difficult to conduct an investigation, when you know that two of the people that are intimately involved in it are the First Lady and the President of the United States. NARRATOR This is True Spies, Episode 45, The Profiler. ​ ​ This story begins with an ending. CLEMENTE: On the evening of January 20th, 1993, Vince Foster was found dead of by gunshot wound at the top of an earthen berm in Fort Marcy Park. NARRATOR A life cut short in a picturesque, wooded park 10 minutes outside of the US capital. He was found by someone walking through the park who then called the US park police. The park police and EMTs responded to the scene and the coroner then arrived and pronounced Foster dead. And his body was removed. NARRATOR A body, anonymous – housed in an expensive woolen suit, a crisp white dress shirt. A vivid bloodstain on the right shoulder. When they then searched his car that was in the parking lot they found a pass to the White House.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    The Nineties in America Table of Contents A Abortion Academy Awards Advertising Africa and the United States African Americans Agassi, Andre Agriculture in Canada Agriculture in the United States AIDS epidemic Air pollution Airline industry Albee, Edward Albert, Marv Albright, Madeleine Allen, Woody Ally McBeal Alternative rock Alvarez, Julia Alzheimer's disease Amazon.com America Online Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 AmeriCorps Angelou, Maya Angels in America Antidepressants Apple Computer Archaeology Archer Daniels Midland scandal Architecture Armey, Dick Armstrong, Lance Arnett, Peter Art movements Asian Americans Astronomy Attention-deficit disorder Audiobooks Autism Auto racing Automobile industry B Bailey, Donovan Baker, James Baker v. Vermont Balanced Budget Act of 1997 Ballet Bank mergers Barkley, Charles Barry, Dave Barry, Marion Baseball Baseball realignment Baseball strike of 1994 Basic Instinct Basketball Baywatch Beanie Babies Beauty and the Beast Beauty Myth, The Beavis and Butt-Head Bernadin, Joseph Cardinal Beverly Hills, 90210 Bezos, Jeff Biosphere 2 Blair, Bonnie Blair Witch Project, The Blended families Bloc Québécois Blogs Bobbitt mutilation case Bondar, Roberta Bono, Sonny Book clubs Bosnia conflict Bowl Championship Series (BCS) Boxing Boy bands Broadway musicals Brooks, Garth Brown, Ron Browning, Kurt Buchanan, Pat Buffett, Warren Burning Man festivals Bush, George H. W. Business and the economy in Canada Business and the economy in the United States Byrd murder case C Cable television Cammermeyer, Margarethe
    [Show full text]
  • Remarks to a Joint Session of the Arkansas State Legislature in Little Rock, Arkansas January 17, 2001
    Administration of William J. Clinton, 2001 / Jan. 17 But I grew up in a national park, and I have Steve. never forgotten that progress uprooted from har- mony with nature is a fool’s errand. The more NOTE: The President spoke at 10:15 a.m. in the perfect Union of our Founders’ dreams will al- East Room at the White House. In his remarks, ways include the Earth that sustains us in body he referred to historian and author Stephen E. and spirit. Today we have honored three who Ambrose; Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan, who made it so. Thank you very much. wrote and produced the documentary ‘‘Lewis and Now I would like to ask Stephen Ambrose Clark: The Journey of the Corps of Discovery’’; to come to the podium. But as I do, I would and Amy Mossett and James J. Holmberg, board like to thank him for many things: for teaching members, National Lewis and Clark Bicentennial America about World War II; for, most recently, Council. The proclamations on the Buck Island making sure we know how the railroad was built Reef National Monument, Carrizo Plain National across the country; and for all the works in Monument, Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National between. But I rather suspect, having heard him Monument, Minidoka Internment National talk about it, that nothing has quite captured Monument, Pompeys Pillar National Monument, his personal passion and the story of his family Sonoran Desert National Monument, Upper Mis- life like the odyssey of Lewis and Clark and souri River Breaks National Monument, and Vir- the beauties that they found—that he and his gin Islands Coral Reef National Monument are family later discovered for themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • A Coalition to Protect and Grow National Service
    A Coalition to Protect and Grow National Service Membership Overview About Voices for National Service PARTNERING TO PROTECT AND EXPAND NATIONAL SERVICE Voices for National Service is a coalition of national, state and local service organizations working together to build bipartisan support for national service, develop policies to expand and strengthen service opportunities for all Americans, and to ensure a robust federal investment in the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS). Voices for National Service was founded in 2003 in the wake of a successful campaign to save AmeriCorps from sudden and significant proposed cuts. The national service field organized and launched a successful “Save AmeriCorps” campaign that ultimately restored--and in fact increased--federal funding for CNCS and AmeriCorps within one year. Following the successful 2003 Save AmeriCorps campaign, the national service community established Voices for National Service, a permanent field-based coalition dedicated to protecting and growing the federal investment in national service. City Year serves as the organizational and operational host of Voices for National Service and the coalition’s work is guided by a Steering Committee of CEOs of service organizations and leaders of state service commissions. The work of Voices for National Service is made possible through membership dues, philanthropic grants and gifts, and annual support from co- chairs and members of Voices for National Service’s Business Council and Champions Circle. Voices for National
    [Show full text]