Same as (CPHS 141/12.06).
Same as (CPHS 141/12.07)
"It is always a great pleasure to return to one's native state and while I am formally based in Indiana, I have never forgotten that I am at heart a New Yorker."
Annotated and corrected copy of speech. Also suggested for publication.
Same as (CPHS 141/16.04) and (CPHS 143/01.04) and (UDIS H1/39.01) except the first 2 pages.
Same as (CPHS 141/16.07)
Same as (CPHS 141/16.08)
Thermofax copy. Enclosed with the address "Thoughts for our Times": a printed booklet including three commencement addresses delivered by Father Hesburgh: "Science and Technology in Modern Perspective" dated 8 June 1962, "Science and Man" dated 16 November 1962, and "Change and the Changeless" dated 15 December 1961.
Same as (CPHS 141/16.04) and (CPHS 143/01.04). Same as (UDIS H1/38.02) except the first 2 pages.
Dated 6 February 1962, but encloses speech from April 1961.
"One day, Dr. Julius Stratton President of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a fellow member of the National Science Board, called to ask a favor."
2 copies
Same as (CPHS 141/18.02) except the first 2 pages.
"This talk, a year later, was another attempt to lay some theological foundations for the enterprise of Catholic education."
Same as (CPHS 141/20.01) except the first page.
2 copies
Same as (CPHS 141/20.03)
Same as (CPHS 141/21.02).
With the address a booklet titled "More Thoughts for our Times": three printed addresses by Father Hesburgh, foreword written by Father Hesburgh.
Same as (CPHS 141/21.03).
Same as (CPHS 141/21.09).
Same as (CPHS 141/23.02), (CPHS 141/24.04), and (CPHS 141/24.05)
"I am most pleased to have this opportunity to participate in these important hearings."
"During Detlev Bronk's tenure as Chairman of the National Science Board, he asked me to chair a committee of the Board to resolve what was then a troublesome question: whether or not the National Science Foundation should support the Social Sciences."
Same as (CPHS 141/24.02) except the first 2 pages.
With the address a printed booklet: "Still More Thoughts for Our Times."
Same as (CPHS 142/01.09) except the last 2 pages.
Dated 9 September 1968.
Same as (CPHS 141/26.01) except the first 2 pages.
Same as (CPHS 141/26.03).
Address encloses clippings from various newspapers about Father Hesburgh's Valparaiso University speech on Martin Luther's Reformation. With the address a printed booklet: "The Idea of the Catholic University"
Same as (CPHS 141/26.05) except the first 2 pages and the last sentence.
With the speech a printed booklet: "Thoughts IV", which includes a group of 5 addresses, all delivered by Father Hesburgh during 1967.
"What do you want from life?"
With the address a sermon(?) in the original 1964-1965 speech file, possibly in (CPHS 141/21.04).
" ... With me today I have Dr. John Cooper, who is the president of the Association of American Medical Colleges; Mr. Frank Erwin, who is Chairman of the Board of Regents of the State Universities of Texas; and Dr. Felix Robb, who is the Director of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools."
Effect of the Proposed Legislation on Foundation Beneficiaries.
"For many years I have been concerned and involved with the pressing problems of social change here in the United States."
Draft. Not clear if Father Hesburgh delivered a speech based on this text.
"Every university, worthy of note, has its own proper spirit, tradition, potentialities, and accomplishments ... The University of Notre Dame has its proper and, in many ways, unique place among American universities by any of these standards."
Remarks of Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., University of Notre Dame. Not clear if Father Hesburgh delivered an actual speech based on this text.
Dated 6 February 1968, but encloses article from 21 January 1968, reprinted from The New York Times Magazine: "Rebels Without a Program," by George F. Kennan, 3 .
"One of the great and persisting scandals of our day is the sad fact that in the most affluent nation of the world there are millions of people, Negros, Spanish-speaking Americans, whites, and others - such as American Indians - who are perennially, almost institutionally, condemned to a life of poverty."
Statement released on 24 April 1968.
"Our honored guest and speaker this evening is a most remarkable man."
"Speaking to the Spartans of the University of Southern California, our old rivals, it seemed appropriate to begin by quoting a couple of Greeks."
"I would like to begin with a quotation from a famous author: "What is happening to our young people?""
3 copies.
Same as "In Defense of the Younger Generation" in (CPHS 142/01.08) and in (CPHS 142/01.13) except the Introduction.
With the address a printed booklet: "Thoughts for Our Time, V, On University Education and Human Rights" which encloses four addresses delivered during 1968, including "In Defense of the Younger Generation", speech delivered at the University of Southern California's Commencement on June 6, 1968, a few hours after Senator Robert Kennedy died in Los Angeles.
"I believe that all of us are well aware of the increasing growth and complexity of the university today, here and elsewhere."
Memorandum dated 12 June 1968, not clear if it is a delivered speech.
"On behalf of the University community, I should like to thank personally Mr. Philip Faccenda, Dean William Lawless, and the other member of the University administration for their attempts to prevent disturbance and maintain a spirit of civility, rationality, and good will in the University community during the past few troubled days."
The text was used for immediate release by Department of Public Information of Notre Dame, James Murphy, Director, not clear if it was a speech.
"I am Theodore M. Hesburgh, president, since 1952, of the University of Notre Dame. During more than seventeen years in that office one of my great preoccupations has been the financing of the University's educational, research and service programs."
Father Hesburgh refers to sections of the proposed law, H.R. 13270, expressing concern about the disastrous consequences of introducing 7.5 % foundation tax on private philanthropy.
Same as (CPHS 142/02.04) except the first paragraph.