On January 21, 1967, Berea College president Francis Hutchins was probably both apprehensive and amused as he addressed an intimate gathering of concerned activists in Berea, Kentucky. This particular group had assembled to discuss the problems or Appalachian Kentucky m the context of the not yet-three-year-old War on Poverty. After all, President Lyndon Johnson, when he announced his unconditional war on poverty in his State of the Union address on January 8,1964, had specified Appalachia in general, and, as revealed by his visit to Martin County, Kentucky, later that year, eastern Kentucky in particular, as a special area of concern. Now, as a member of the National Advisory Commission on Rural Poverty (NA CRP), created by Johnson\u27s ...
Fifty years ago, Lyndon Johnson declared war on poverty, prompting the creation of dozens of federal...
The images of poverty in Appalachia that John F. Kennedy used in his campaign for the presidency in ...
The decades immediately following World War II were prosperous but filled with great inequalities. M...
Fifty years ago, President Lyndon B. Johnson launched a War on Poverty while delivering his first ...
Our session will focus on how our ethnographic research seeking solutions to a sustainable education...
On August 20, X96U- the democratically-controlled Congress of the United States drafted a particular...
Fifty years ago, President Lyndon Johnson appointed a blue ribbon panel called the National Advisory...
Despite Lyndon Johnson’s impressive record as a congressman and senator, the ruthless legislative ef...
The paper analyses the power balance between the President of the United States and the Congress dur...
In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson declared unconditional war on poverty in the United States and now...
On May 7, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed a large crowd that filled the College Green on...
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson called for a Nationwide War on the Sources of Poverty to strik...
During 1966, the Republican Party launched a largely successful challenge to Lyndon Johnson’s “War o...
Poverty in the United States has long been recognized; although, only until recently have any steps ...
Pres. Lyndon Johnson in 1964, probably in Eastern Ky., b&w. This appears to be when Johnson was esta...
Fifty years ago, Lyndon Johnson declared war on poverty, prompting the creation of dozens of federal...
The images of poverty in Appalachia that John F. Kennedy used in his campaign for the presidency in ...
The decades immediately following World War II were prosperous but filled with great inequalities. M...
Fifty years ago, President Lyndon B. Johnson launched a War on Poverty while delivering his first ...
Our session will focus on how our ethnographic research seeking solutions to a sustainable education...
On August 20, X96U- the democratically-controlled Congress of the United States drafted a particular...
Fifty years ago, President Lyndon Johnson appointed a blue ribbon panel called the National Advisory...
Despite Lyndon Johnson’s impressive record as a congressman and senator, the ruthless legislative ef...
The paper analyses the power balance between the President of the United States and the Congress dur...
In 1964, President Lyndon Johnson declared unconditional war on poverty in the United States and now...
On May 7, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed a large crowd that filled the College Green on...
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson called for a Nationwide War on the Sources of Poverty to strik...
During 1966, the Republican Party launched a largely successful challenge to Lyndon Johnson’s “War o...
Poverty in the United States has long been recognized; although, only until recently have any steps ...
Pres. Lyndon Johnson in 1964, probably in Eastern Ky., b&w. This appears to be when Johnson was esta...
Fifty years ago, Lyndon Johnson declared war on poverty, prompting the creation of dozens of federal...
The images of poverty in Appalachia that John F. Kennedy used in his campaign for the presidency in ...
The decades immediately following World War II were prosperous but filled with great inequalities. M...