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localId
1489990
label
Women - Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
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doc
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document
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1
Source metadata
id
1489990
contentType
document
title
Women - Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
collections
Sheila R. Weidenfeld Files (Ford Administration)
Sheila Weidenfeld's General Subject Files
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1489990
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1975-12-31
month
12
year
1975
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1975-12-01
month
12
year
1975
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nara-archive
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1849e2357c1e2a77
ocrText
The original documents are located in Box 48, folder "Women - Women's International League for Peace and Freedom" of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. WOMEN'S INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE FOR PEACE AND FREEDOM LIGUE INTERNATIONALE DE FEMMES POUR LA PAIX ET LA LIBERTÉ INTERNATIONALE FRAUENLIGA FÜR FRIEDEN UND FREIHEIT PAX Consultative Status with United Nations ECOSOC (category II) and UNESCO (category B): Special Consultative Relations with FAO, ILO. UNICEF. INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS: 1, RUE DE VAREMBÉ, CP 28, 1211 GENEVA 20, SWITZERLAND Telephone (022) 33 75 - Cables: WILLIF, Geneva - Société de Banque Suisse, rue de Varembé, Geneva, Account C8-766-173. Postal checking account 12-1869. 1213 Race Street Please reply to: Philadelphia, PA 19107 FIRST INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENT Jane Addems Nobel Peace Prize 1931 FIRST INTERNATIONAL SECRETARY Emily Greene Baich December 198RD 10 1975 Nobel Peace Prize 1946 INTERNATIONAL OFFICERS PRESIDENT: Katherine L Camp, USA Mrs. Betty Ford VICE-PRESIDENTS: Washington, D.C. LIBRARY Mary Nuttali, UK Ratan Prabha Rai, India RECORDING SECRETARY: Dear Mrs. Ford: Marguerite Lorée, France TREASURER: Ragnhild Simonsen, Denmark I want to thank you for. your response of May 5th to our INTERNATIONAL HEADQUARTERS SECRETARY GENERAL AND EDITOR prior invitation, but regret that you were unable to bring Edith Ballantyne greetings or participate in the International Women's Year INTERNATIONAL REPRESENTATIVES UNITED NATIONS: Seminar, "Women of the World United For Peace: Disarmament Mary Hornadey, New York Lillian Brandon, New York and Its Social Consequences", held at the United Nations. Edith Ballantyna, Geneve Organized by the Women's International League for Peace UNESCO: Yvonne Sée and Freedom, the Seminar proved to be the major event of Hélène Berthoz ILO: IWY to emphasize the third part of the Year's theme, Marguerite Thibert "Equality, Development, Peace." FAO Marina Della Sets Together with follow-up community seminars in 37 cities across the United States, the numbers of women involved reached well into the millions. Participants in the May Disarmament Seminars, the June United Nations Tribune at Mexico City, and the October World Congress for IWY at East Berlin, endorsed plans to press the Member States of the United Nations for the set- ting of an early date for a World Disarmament Conference. We U.S. women would like to see our country play a leading role in the calling of such a conference. Unfortunately, the United States has not yet supported the proposal in the General Assembly, and China has been dragging its feet. But the consciousness of the women's movement throughout the world is being raised to the fact that the annual ex- penditure for "defense" is a criminal waste of resources-- human and financial-- that the world can no longer afford. On this Human Rights Day, 1975, may I express our confi- dence that you will join in spirit with these and other millions of women around the world, who see the most basic human right, --the right to live-- threatened and cheapened by the anachronistic, costly and still escalating arms race, and that you will exert your influence for a more feminized and less violent society where life will be en- hanced by concrete steps to a permanent peace. With appreciation for your womanly forthrightness, we extend our best wishes. Digitized from Box 48 of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files Yours sincerely, at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library Kar, Came