I. The Select Commission on Western Hemisphere Immigration_. II. Report of the Select Commission on Western Hemisphere Immigration. III. Immigration by Country, for Decades 1820-1966. United States De- IV. Immigrants Admitted by Classes Under the Immigration Laws and Country or Region of Birth. Fiscal Years 1965, 1966, 1967. United States Department of Justice.. V. Aliens Admitted or Adjusted to Immigrant Status by Classes Under VI. Immigrants Admitted From Western Hemisphere Countries. Calendar Years 1921-50. Fiscal Years 1951-67. United States Department VII. Immigrants Admitted From the Western Hemisphere. Calendar Years 1957-66 and Graph. United States Department of Justice... VIII. Immigrants Admitted From the Western Hemisphere. Calendar Years 1965-66 and Graph. United States Department of Justice.. IX. Immigrants Admitted From Western Hemisphere Countries by Country or Region of Birth and Major Occupation Group, Calendar Years 1965, 1966; No Reported Occupation, Calendar Year 1966; Sex and Age, Calendar Year 1966. United States Department of Justice____ X. Immigrant Visa Issuance, Western and Eastern Hemispheres. Fiscal Year 1965; Fiscal Year 1967; Estimated Fiscal Year 1969. United XI. The Labor Certification: Its Requirements, Its Procedures, and Its Results in the First Year of Operation. United States Department XII. Certification of Immigrants Approved for Permanent Employment by Occupation, Region, and Country of Birth. Fiscal Year 1967. United States Department of Labor. XIII. Occupations of Western Hemisphere Immigrants and Percentage Reporting an Occupation, Calendar Years 1961-66. United States XIV. Labor Certification Schedules A, B, and C. United States Department XVII. Commuters: Historical Background, Legal Challenges, and Issues. United States Department of Justice.. XVIII. The "Commuter" Problem and Low Wages and Unemployment in American Cities on the Mexican Border. United States Department XIX. Parole of Cuban Refugees. United States Department of Justice XX. Adjustment of Status of Cuban Refugees. Act of November 2, 1966. XXI. Adjustment of Status to Lawful Permanent Resident Under Section 245, Immigration and Nationality Act, as Amended: Natives of the Western Hemisphere. United States Department of Justice.____ XXII. Suspension of Deportation: Natives of Contiguous Territory or Adjacent Islands. United States Department of Justice__ XXIII. Political Sovereignty and Immigration in the Caribbean. United XXIV. The Migration of Highly Trained Persons From Latin America to the United States. Prepared by Dr. Charles V. Kidd, Office of Science and Technology, Executive Office of the President... XXV. Population Growth in Mexico. Prepared by Dr. Nathan L. Whetten, Dean of the Graduate School, University of Connecticut.. XXVI. The Growth of Population in Central and South America, 1940–70. IV SELECT COMMISSION ON WESTERN HEMISPHERE IMMIGRATION Presidential Appointees: Richard M. Scammon, Chairman, Vice President of the Governmental Affairs Institute, and former director of the Bureau of the Census; Leo Cherne, Executive Director of the Research Institute of America, and Chairman of the Executive Committee of Freedom House, New York City; Covey T. Oliver, Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, and former U.S. Ambassador to Colombia;* Stanley Ruttenberg, Assistant Secretary and Manpower Administrator, U.S. Department of Labor; Raymond F. Farrell, Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, U.S. Department of Justice. Senate Appointees: Senator Everett M. Dirksen, Illinois; Senator James O. Eastland, Mississippi; Senator Roman L. Hruska, Nebraska; and House Appointees: Staff: Congressman Emanuel Celler, New York; Congressman Arch A. Moore, Jr., West Virginia; and Donald G. Herzberg, Staff Director Thomas G. McHale, Deputy Staff Director Frances D. Hull, Administrative Officer Margie W. Barnes, Assistant Administrative Officer Linda P. Sutherland, Research Assistant Earlene G. Owens, Secretary Liaison Officials: Tobia Bressler, Supervisory Statistician, Population Division, Bureau of the Robert E. Cartwright, Consultant, Bureau of Inter-American Affairs (ARA), *Replaced Lincoln Gordon who resigned on June 15, 1967. Helen Eckerson, Chief, Statistics Branch, Immigration and Naturalization Service, U.S. Department of Justice; Robert Lindsey, Supervisory Immigrant Inspector (Adjudications Officer), Immigration and Naturalization Service, U.S. Department of Justice; Bradley C. Reardon, Assistant to the Acting Assistant to the Administrator for Equal Opportunity, Bureau of Employment Security, U.S. Department of Labor; Lawrence W. Rogers, Assistant to the Administrator, Bureau of Employment Security, U.S. Department of Labor; Edward B. Rosenthal, Foreign Service Officer, Bureau of Inter-American Affairs, Bureau for Latin America (ARA/LA), U.S. Department of State; and Henry Sheldon, Supervisory Statistician, Population Division, Bureau of the Census, U.S. Department of Commerce. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE SELECT COMMISSION ON WESTERN HEMISPHERE IMMIGRATION Section 21 of Public Law 89-236 of October 3, 1965 (79 Stat. 920), reads as follows: (a) There is hereby established a Select Commission on Western Hemisphere Immigration (hereinafter referred to as the "Commission") to be composed of fifteen members. The President shall appoint the Chairman of the Commission and four other members thereof. The President of the Senate, with the approval of the majority and minority leaders of the Senate, shall appoint five members from the membership of the Senate. The Speaker of the House of Representatives, with the approval of the majority and minority leaders of the House, shall appoint five members from the membership of the House. Not more than three members appointed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, respectively, shall be members of the same political party. A vacancy in the membership of the Commission shall be filled in the same manner as the original designation and appointment. (b) The Commission shall study the following matters: (1) Prevailing and projected demographic, technological, and economic trends, particularly as they pertain to Western Hemisphere nations; (2) Present and projected unemployment in the United States, by occupations, industries, geographic areas and other factors, in relation to immigration from the Western Hemisphere; (3) The interrelationships between immigration, present and future, and existing and contemplated national and international programs and projects of Western Hemisphere nations, including programs and projects for economic and social development; (4) The operation of the immigration laws of the United States as they pertain to Western Hemisphere nations, including the adjustment of status for Cuban refugees, with emphasis on the adequacy of such laws from the standpoint of fairness and from the standpoint of the impact of such laws on employment and working conditions within the United States; (5) The implications of the foregoing with respect to the security and international relations of Western Hemisphere nations; and (6) Any other matters which the Commission believes to be germane to the purposes for which it was established. (c) On or before July 1, 1967, the Commission shall make a first report to the President and the Congress and on or before January 15, 1968, the Commission shall |