Antinuclear movement -- United States; Catholic Worker Movement; Civil defense drills -- United States; Day, Dorothy, 1897-1980; Pacifism -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church; Peace -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church; Radicals -- United...
Dorothy Day picketing at City Hall Park, New York City, April 17, 1959. prior to her arrest for protesting the mandatory "Operation Alert" civil defense drill. It was her fifth and final arrest for refusing to participate in the annual event.
Antinuclear movement -- United States; Catholic Worker Movement; Civil defense drills -- United States; Day, Dorothy, 1897-1980; Hennacy, Ammon, 1893-1970; Pacifism -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church; Peace -- Religious aspects -- Catholic...
Dorothy Day (far right), Deane Mowrer (to her right), Ammon Hennacy (fourth from left), and others seated on a park bench at Washington Square Park, New York City, on July 20, 1956, in protest of the mandatory "Operation Alert" civil defense drill....
Antinuclear movement -- United States; Catholic Worker Movement; Civil defense drills -- United States; Day, Dorothy, 1897-1980; Hennacy, Ammon, 1893-1970; Pacifism -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church; Pacifists -- United States; Peace --...
Two letters written by Dorothy Day, from jail, to her fellow Catholic Worker, Charles McCormack. Day had been arrested for protesting the mandatory 'Operation Alert' civil defense drill in New York City on July 12, 1957.
Anti-communist movements -- United States -- History; Lincoln Day addresses; McCarthy, Joseph, 1908-1957;
Senator McCarthy recites a favorite quotation from Abraham Lincoln, in which Lincoln asserted that the United States could only be destroyed from within and never by a foreign army. He follows the quotation by suggesting that the United States is...
Automobiles -- South Dakota -- 1950-1960; Cemeteries -- South Dakota; Flags -- United States; Flowers; Memorial Day; Oglala Indians -- Kinship; Indian children -- South Dakota; Indian women -- South Dakota; Older Indians -- South Dakota; Oglala...
Families in cemetery decorating graves Note by Archivist: Memorial Day, originally called "Decoration Day" was a day when families decorated graves of deceased loved ones, especially those who had served in the U.S. Armed Forces. The inclusion...
Acheson, Dean, 1893-1971; Anti-communist movements -- United States -- History; Congress of Industrial Organizations (U.S.); Democratic Party (U.S.); Korean War, 1950-1953; McCarthy, Joseph, 1908-1957; Presidents -- United States -- Election --...
Senator McCarthy denounces the slogan -- "You ain't ever had it so good" -- used by the Adlai Stevenson presidential campaign. He argues that the Democrats are celebrating a wartime prosperity that is being purchased at a high cost in American...
Acheson, Dean, 1893-1971; Anti-communist movements -- United States -- History; Lattimore, Owen, 1900-1989; McCarthy, Joseph, 1908-1957; World War, 1939-1945
Senator McCarthy tells a story from his military service in the Pacific during World War II. McCarthy served with a Marine dive bombing squadron. One of his duties was to write letters home to the families of deceased pilots and gunners. McCarthy...
Picture-writing; Horses; Wars; War bonnets -- North Dakota; War bonnets -- South Dakota; Firearms;
Verso caption: Neg No. 3284-0 Tribe: Hunkpapa Dakota Pictorial autobiography of Running Antelope. Drawn at Grand River, Dakota, 1873. Redrawn and reproduced in Garrick Mallery, “Pictographs of the North American Indians,” Fourth Annual Report...
Antinuclear movement -- United States; Catholic Worker Movement; Civil defense drills -- United States; Day, Dorothy, 1897-1980; Hennacy, Ammon, 1893-1970; Pacifism -- Religious aspects -- Catholic Church; Pacifists -- United States; Peace --...
Front page article in the Catholic Worker newspaper about the arrest of Catholic Workers protesting the mandatory 'Operation Alert' civil defense drill in New York City on July 12, 1957.
Marquette University -- History; College presidents -- Inauguration; Magee, William M. -- Inauguration, 1928;
Lux Ignatiana: an inaugural ode composed for and recited at the ceremonies on the occasion of the inauguration of William M. Magee, S.J., as president of Marquette University, 23 April, 1928