Browse Items (6 total)
- Tags: letters
Sort by:
Wouldn’t It Be Nice?
The staff at Guam Times Weekly express their reader’s interest into writing letters through mock letter submissions of problems and solutions
Tags: Agana, letters, Monte, Naval Air Station, Wouldn’t It Be Nice
Speak Out Your Minds!
Speak Out Your Minds is a series of letters submitted to the Guam Times Weekly staff and published for their content that strongly relates to the peoples of Guam: On Citizenship; On Sewers; and More on Hart Putnam; and Putnam’s reply
Speak Out Your Minds!
An assortment letters from Josef Beyer, Winifred Lipiko, Charles E. Knittle
Speak Out Your Minds
Speak Out Your Minds features letters from the public expressing concerns about current events: two letters are from Violet Sweet to Patricia Jane Dungca and Ruth G. Van Cleve
Public Pulse
This week’s Public Pulse, May 16th, 1964, has letters to the Guam Times Weekly staff.
Jose Herrero Dungca writes to praise the staff for their diligence towards their endeavors of writing current events related to Guam, the Trust Territory, and…
Jose Herrero Dungca writes to praise the staff for their diligence towards their endeavors of writing current events related to Guam, the Trust Territory, and…
Public Pulse
A series of letter submitted to the Guam Times Weekly staff; these letters reflect the opinion of the senders in response to past issues produced by the GTW staff.
A letter from Adlai E. Stevenson, one of the Untied States Representatives to the…
A letter from Adlai E. Stevenson, one of the Untied States Representatives to the…
Tags: 15 State Western Governor’s Conference, Adlai E. Stevenson, April 18 1964, Assistant Secretary Rudolph Sablan, California, community post, Congressman Jesus C. Okiyama, Editor Manuel L. Jose, Editor Marjorie E. Smith, Governor Manuel F.L. Guerrero, Law of Multiple Misplacement, letters, May 9 1964, Michael F. Catson, Oberdorfer, Public Pulse, Ralph J. Rivers, San Francisco, Special Assistant Ed Engeldow, uam Times Weekly, volume 1 number 13
Featured Item
Hafa Na Kulot - Betde

An educational resource to teach children the color green using the CHamoru language and examples associated with the color.