Bureaucracy
Found in 27 Collections and/or Records:
Letter from the American Consulate General in Berlin, Germany, 1938 December 31
Letter from the American General Consulate in Berlin to Max Loewenstein assigning the family reserve numbers. The reserve numbers were their place on the waiting list to apply for admission to the United States. Reserve numbers 8960, 8961, and 8962 meant they would be allowed to apply for a visa sometime in 1943 or 1944.
Letter from the Reich Association of Jews in Germany, 1940 August 1
Maria Loewenstein's Temporary Identification Papers, 1946 February 11
Max Loewenstein's Report to the Police, 1942 May 14
Max Loewenstein's Temporary Identification Papers, 1946 February 12
Postponement of Eviction, 1942 February 24
Ration Reclassification Request, 1945 October 10
Replacement Workbook, 1944 December 7
Report from Washington. Centralization, 1962 June 2
Congressman Peter H. Dominick (R-Colo.) delivers his weekly radio address, Report from Washington, on [June 2?], 1962. Rep. Dominick discusses topics including the over-reaching power of the federal government, concentration of power in the executive branch, and the use of checks and balances in the government.
Report from Washington. Govt. inefficiency, 1962 June 9
Congressman Peter H. Dominick (R-Colo.) delivers his weekly radio address, Report from Washington, on June 7, 1962. Rep. Dominick discusses inefficiency in the U.S. government, illustrated by examples of wasteful spending by HEW, the Forest Service, the White House, the Dept. of Defense, and the House of Representatives.