Box DG 047: Series A: 54
Contains 164 Results:
College Park Association of Friends (San Jose, California) to President Kennedy commending his masterful address before the United Nations on September 25, 1961
Kennedy’s address included seeking to enlist the nations of the world in a “peace race.”
Issues Conference at Marina Jr. High School, October 28, 1961
Pearlonna Briggs (Wichita, Kansas) to President Kennedy expressing opposition to further involvement in Cuba, 1961
Edmund C. Berkeley to President Kennedy urging setting of China in the UN, 1961
Lewis E. Berry (Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization) regarding civil defense programs, 1961
Quotes Mr. Ellis, “As a God-fearing nation, we should accept the fact that it is our responsibility to survive…” “To that let me add only that a strong, protected nation, not a weak, unarmed one, is our best assurance of peace.”
Dryden L. Phelps to Theodore C. Corensen (General Counsel, White House), 1961
Urges arms free zone in Central Europe. “More and more American citizens are becoming convinced of the fallacy of civil defense shelters.”
Iona S. Fitzgerald writes Sorensen against resuming atmospheric tests and criticizing our military spending, 1961
Charlotte Winnemore (Columbus) opposing nuclear testing, 1961
Pleading for the use of the United Nations in making the world right.
Ruthanna M. Simms (Richmond, Indiana) to President Kennedy regarding nuclear testing, 1961
Alice Shoemaker (Azusa, California) to President Kennedy against civil defense fallout shelters, 1961
“I urge that instead you bend every effort to the prevention of war through adequately implementing the new Arms Control and Disarmament Agency, increasing economic aid to underdeveloped countries, engaging wholeheartedly in disarmament negotiations, and working out a solution to the Berlin impasse through negotiation.”