Farewell Address to the American People. Statement of Policy by the National Security Counc Observations on Massive Retaliation. Special Message to the Congress on the situation i Report to the American People Regarding the Situat Report to President Kennedy on South Vietnam. Minutes of the Meeting of the Special Group Augme Memorandum for Discussion During the Cuban Missile Soviet Reactions to Certain U.
Courses of Action Proclamation authorizing the naval quarantin Remarks in the Rudolph Wilde Platz, Berlin. Limited Test Ban Treaty. Special Message to the Congress on U. Policy in Joint Resolution of Congress, H. RES Gulf Cutting Our Losses in South Viet-nam. Statement on the War in Vietnam. Black Power: The Politics of Liberation.
Address on the Vietnam War. Telephone Conversation about Chile. Letter to President Nguyen Van Thieu. Address to the Nation Announcing Conclusion of an The Paris Accords. On Detente. Meeting on Cuba.
Address at Commencement Exercises at the Universit President Carter's News Conference. Address to the Nation on the Soviet Invasion of Af Address to the Nation on the Rescue Attempt for Am Speech to the House of Commons.
Speech At Westminster. Address to the Nation on Defense and National Secu Remarks at a Ceremony Commemorating the 40th Anniv Remarks on East-West Relations at the Brandenburg Telephone Conversation. Speech to the Republican National Convention Chapter Internal Security and Civil Liberties.
House Debate on the 22nd Amendment. Platform of the States Rights Democratic Party. Whistlestop Speech. Campaign Speech in St. Louis, Missouri. Memorandum Regarding Relations with Pendergast Mac The President's Duties. Inaugural Address Statement on Cuba. Notes on Meeting with President Kennedy During the Great Society Speech.
Acceptance Speech. Speech at Madison Square Garden. Minority View on the Direct Popular Election of th Mandate for Reform on Party Structure and Delegate McGovern—Fraser Commission Report.
United States v. First Inaugural Address. Remarks at the Annual Convention of the National A Debate on the Civil Rights Act. Port Huron Statement. Voting Rights Act of Buckley v. Statement on the Electoral College. Internal Security. Speech on the Veto of the Internal Security Act. Executive Order The Internal Security Act. Sentencing of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg.
Organized Evacuation of Civilian Populations in Ci Testimony before the House Committee on Un-America Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School Address to Congress. Speech on the Constitutionality of Korean War. New York Times Co. United States. Several advisors, including Attorney General Tom Clark, urged Truman to form a loyalty program to safeguard against communist infiltration in the government. Initially, Truman was reluctant to form such a program, fearing it could threaten civil liberties of government workers.
However, several factors shaped his decision to institute such a policy. Fear of communism was growing rapidly at home, and in the midterm election, Republicans gained control of Congress for the first time since The Loyalty Program has been criticized as a weapon of hysteria attacking law-abiding citizens.
As the Cold War intensified, investigations grew more frequent and far-reaching. Truman, edited by Richard S. Many Americans agreed with him and applauded his stand against communism and subversion. The historical context of this event is important, for every investigation, every loyalty oath and every questionnaire took place under a backdrop of fear in an uncertain post-war world.
Yet this hardly was the first time the federal government restricted civil liberties in the name of national security. On March 22, , 43 people die when a portion of a hill suddenly collapses and buries a neighborhood in the small community of Oso, Washington, some 55 miles northeast of Seattle.
It was one of the deadliest mudslides in U. The collapse occurred shortly after Although once friends, Decatur sat on the court-martial that suspended Barron from the Navy for five years in and Senate and sent to the states for ratification. Formed to foster economic growth in the region, resolve disputes between its members, and coordinate Sign up now to learn about This Day in History straight from your inbox.
The legislation levied a direct tax on all materials printed for The Stanley Cup has since become one of the most cherished and recognized trophies in sport. On March 22, , President Franklin D.
Roosevelt signs the Beer and Wine Revenue Act. This law levies a federal tax on all alcoholic beverages to raise revenue for the federal government and gives individual states the option to further regulate the sale and distribution of
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