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1942
JANUARY
DECLARATION
BY UNITED NATIONS
(Subscribing to the Principles of the Atlantic Charter,
January 1, 1942)
Mental Preparedness in Wartime
By ERIC P. MOSSE, M. D., Assistant Psychiatrist, New York State Psychiatric Institute and Hospital
Broadcast over Station WEVD, on January 2, 1942
Preserving the Roots of Liberty
DOES THE AVERAGE COLLEGE GRADUATE UNDERSTAND THE AMERICAN SYSTEM?
By H. W. PRENTIS, JR., President, Armstrong Cork Company, Lancaster, Pa. Past President, National Association of Manufacturers
Before the Joint Dinner of the Association of American Colleges and the American Association of Junior Colleges at Baltimore, Maryland, January 2, 1942
No Room for Complacency in Domestic Expenditures
GIVE CONGRESSMEN MORAL AND REALISTIC SUPPORT
By MORTON BODFISH, Executive Vice President, United States Savings and Loan League
Address before 49th Annual Convention of the League, Miami, Florida, December 5, 1941
THE ANNUAL MESSAGE TO CONGRESS
Delivered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January 6,
1942
THE LARGEST AND DEEPEST OF ALL OCEANS
By Dr. E. S. C. SMITH, Professor of Geology, Union College, Schenectady, N. Y.
Delivered on January 6, 1942, during the General Electric Science Forum program from Schenectady, N. Y., over WGY
By DR. D. F. FLEMING
Delivered over Station WSM, Nashville, Tennessee, January 7, 1942
THE FOUNDATION OF INDIVIDUAL FREEDOM
By ALBERT W. HAWKES, President, Chamber of Commerce of the United States
At Noon Meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, New York City, on January 8, 1942
MOLOTOV'S NOTE ON GERMAN ATROCITIES IN OCCUPIED
SOVIET TERRITORY
REMEDIES TO PREVENT ALL-OUT PRICE INCREASE
By ROBERT A. TAFT, United States Senator from Ohio
Before dinner of the Economists' National Committee on Monetary Policy, Hotel Commodore, New York, January 15, 1942
TEXT OF RESOLUTION ON GERMAN WAR CRIMES SIGNED
BY REPRESENTATIVES OF NINE OCCUPIED COUNTRIES
London,
January 12, 1942
130,000,000 Free People Working in Unison
By JOSEPH W. MARTIN, JR., of Massachusetts, Republican Leader of the House of Representatives and Chairman of the Republican National Committee
Over the National Radio Forum, National Broadcasting Company, January 12, 1942
The Price of Victory at Best Will Be High
By WENDELL L. WILLKIE
At the Annual Dinner of the United States Conference of Mayors, Washington, D. C, January 13, 1942
What Makes a Good Bomb Shelter?
STUDY THE PUBLICATIONS OF THE OFFICE OF CIVILIAN DEFENSE
By COLONEL GEORGE J. B. FISHER, Office Chief, Chemical Warfare Service, War Department, Washington, D. C.
Delivered on January 13, 1942, during the General Electric Science Forum Program from Schenectady, N. Y., over WGY
The Defense of American Influence
"IT HAS BEEN GOOD, BAD AND INDIFFERENT"
By RICHARD H. HEINDEL, Faculty, of Modern European History of University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Delivered in Philadelphia, January 13, 1942
WHY HAS OUR FREE SOCIETY BEEN LOSING GROUND?
By PAUL G. HOFFMAN, President, The Studebaker Corporation Delivered at the Annual Banquet of the Tulsa Chamber of Commerce at Tulsa, Oklahoma, on January 14, 1942
INTER-AMERICAN POLICY
(Under-Secretary of State Sumner Welles' Address at Rio de
Janeiro, January 15, 1942)
The Need for Civilian Protection
WE MUST RESPOND IN A UNITED FASHION
By DEAN JAMES M. LANDIS, Executive, Office of Civilian Defense
Over CBS, January 17, 1942
TODAY'S WASTE CAN ASSIST TOMORROW'S SUPPLY
By W. J. CAMERON, of Ford Motor Company
A Talk Given on the Ford Sunday Evening Hour Broadcast over Columbia Broadcasting System from Detroit on January 18, 1942
The Challenge to Our National Character
BEFORE THE WORLD AND BEFORE OURSELVES WE MUST MAKE GOOD OUR WORD
By FRANK MURPHY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, at St. Louis, Mo.
Before the Annual Banquet given by the Lawyers Association of Missouri in honor of the judges of the State and Federal Courts in that area, and broadcast over the Blue Network, January 23, 1942
The Universities and Their Activities During Time of War
"THOSE WHO DESERVE FREEDOM WILL FIGHT FOR IT"
By DR. MONROE E. DEUTSCH, Vice-President and Provost of the University of California
At the University Meeting, January 23, 1942, on the Campus of the University
ADDRESS BY SUMNER WELLES, UNDER SECRETARY OF
STATE AT THE THIRD MEETING OF MINISTERS OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE AMERICAN
REPUBLICS
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, January 24, 1942
By DEAN PAUL SHIPMAN ANDREWS, Syracuse University College of Law
Delivered at the Annual Dinner of the New York State Bar Association, New York City, January 24, 1942
"This War Is America's Vocation"
NATIONS HAVE DESTINIES AS WELL AS MEN
By IRVING T. McDONALD, Librarian of Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., and New England Radio War-Analyst
Delivered at the Annual Conference of the New England Home Loan Bankers' Association Parker House, Boston, January 24, 1942
MECHANISMS AND TECHNIQUES TO END INTERNATIONAL LAWLESSNESS
By ROBERT H. JACKSON, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
At the Annual Banquet of the New York State Bar Association, The Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, January 24, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL DEBATE IN THE
HOUSE OF COMMONS
January 27, 1942
"WE WANT FRANK AND TRUSTING LEADERSHIP"
By THOMAS I. PARKINSON, President of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U. S.
At the 139th dinner of the Economic Club of New York, at the Hotel Astor, New York, January 27, 1942
"WE ALL HAVE OUR OWN PRIVATE PEARL HARBOR"
By THOMAS E. DEWEY, Ex-District Attorney of New York County
At the 139th dinner of the Economic Club of New York, at the Hotel Astor, New York, January 27, 1942
Our Full-Out Aircraft Production
"OUR PLANES ARE NEEDED ON ALL FRONTS"
By COL. JOHN H. JOUETT, President, Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce of America, Inc. At the 139th dinner of the Economic Club of New York, at the Hotel Astor, New York, January 27, 1942
(IN SERIES, "WHAT FREEDOM MEANS")
By EDWIN G. CONKLIN, Professor Emeritus of Biology in Princeton University and Executive Vice-president of the American Philosophical Society
WCAU, Philadelphia, Tuesday, January 27, 1942
By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, President of Columbia University and President of the Pilgrims of the U. S.
At the Annual Meeting of the Pilgrims of the United States, Bankers Club, New York, January 28, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL SPEECH IN THE
HOUSE OF COMMONS (AND RESULT OF VOTE OF CONFIDENCE)
January 29, 1942
TEXT OF SPEECH BY CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER AT
BERLIN SPORTS PALACE
January 30, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S ADDRESS ON
HIS 60TH BIRTHDAY
January 30, 1942
FEBRUARY
Identification of Alien Enemies
LET US NOT PERSECUTE THESE PEOPLE
By FRANCIS BIDDLE, Attorney General of the United States, on Sunday, February 1, 1942
Over the Columbia Broadcasting System, Washington, D. C.
WE MUST PRODUCE GOOD MEN FOR DEMOCRACY
By ERNEST M. HOPKINS, President, Dartmouth College
Delivered at Taft School, February 6, 1942
By EDGAR EUGENE ROBINSON, Byrne Professor of American History in Stanford University, California
At the Stanford University Alumni Conference Dinner on February 8, 1942
By PAUL V. McNUTT, Federal Security Administrator
Broadcast over a Nation-Wide Network of the National Broadcasting Company, February 9, 1942
"THE COLORED PEOPLE ARE STILL WAITING, STILL WATCHFUL"
By PEARL BUCK, Author
At Book and Author Luncheon of the American Booksellers Association, Hotel Astor, New York City, February 10, 1942
"Win the War—Or Build the St. Lawrence?"
By WALTER C. PLOESER, Congressman from Missouri
Over the Columbia Broadcasting System, Washington, D. C., February 10, 1942
THAT THE THINGS WE CHERISH SHALL NEVER PERISH
By GOVERNOR J. HOWARD McGRATH, of Rhode Island
Delivered at the Annual Dinner of the Providence Chamber of Commerce, February 11, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S ORATION AT THE
FUNERAL OF REICH MINISTER DR. FRITZ TODT
February 12,
1942
"Let Us Do More Proposing Than Opposing"
By WENDELL L. WILLKIE, Presidential Candidate in 1940
At the Lincoln birthday dinner of the Middlesex Club in Boston, February 12, 1942
By DR. STEWART W. McCLELLAND, President, Lincoln Memorial University
Delivered before the Lincoln Club of Los Angeles, February 12, 1942
A MAN WHO PUT FIRST THINGS FIRST
By THE VERY REVEREND ROBERT I. GANNON, S.J., President of Fordham University
At the Fifty-Sixth Annual Lincoln Day Dinner of The National Republican Club in the Waldorf-Astoria, February 12, 1942
American Finance and Business in Khaki
THE TIME TO TALK CONSTRUCTIVELY TO THE PUBLIC IS NOW
By MERRYLE STANLEY RUKEYSER
At
Mid-Winter Meeting of the Ohio Bankers Association, Columbus, Ohio, February 12,
1942
THE GOVERNMENT HAS FULL CONTROL OVER EVERY MANUFACTURING FACILITY
By DE WITT EMERY, Founder and Manager of the National Small Business Mens Association
Broadcast over the Mutual Network, February 14, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL'S BROADCAST ON THE STATE OF THE WAR
February 15, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST TO CANADIANS
February 15, 1942
By LEWIS H. BROWN, President, Johns-Manville Corporation
Before Founder's Day Convocation, Temple University, Philadelphia, Pa., February 16, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL'S REPORT TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ON THE WAR (regarding escape of Scharnhorst and Gneisenau)
February 17, 1942
"HANG ON BECAUSE WE ARE ON THE WAY WITH WHAT YOU NEED"
By CHARLES E. WILSON, President, General Electric Company
Given before the members of the Legislature of the State of New York, on the occasion of their inspection of Schenectady's war work, February 17, 1942
PRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL'S
SPEECH OF ACCEPTANCE OF A TRAILER CANTEEN PRESENTED BY AUSTRIANS IN BRITAIN TO
THE W. V. S. (WOMEN'S VOLUNTEER SERVICE)
February
18, 1942
FORMATION OF THE NEW
BRITISH WAR CABINET
February 19, 1942
A CONCEPT MORE POWERFUL THAN THOSE WHICH BOLSTER THE ENEMY EFFORT
By LIEUTENANT OREN ROOT, JR., United States Navy
At Banquet of Associated Industries of New York State, February 19, 1942
"Pearl Harbor Angered Business But It Did Not Frighten It"
LET US KEEP OUR THINKING STRAIGHT
By PERCY C. MAGNUS, President of New York State Chocolate and Confectionery Association
At the Hotel Pennsylvania, New York City, February 20, 1942
"MORE DOLLARS DO NOT MEAN MORE GOODS"
By LEON HENDERSON, Administrator, Office of Price Administration
Before the Chicago Better Business Bureau, Palmer House, Chicago, Ill., February 20, 1942
GENERALISSIMO CHIANG
KAI-SHEK'S MESSAGE TO THE INDIAN PEOPLE (Excerpt)
February 21, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST ON WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY
February 22, 1941
CHARACTERISTICS THAT GIVE IT MEANING AND PERMANENCE
By PROFESSOR E. G. WALKER, Hiram College
Delivered at Lecture Forum on "The Impact of War," at Hiram College, Hiram, Ohio, February 22, 1942
TEXT OF JOSEPH STALIN'S
ORDER OF THE DAY ON THE 24TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE RED ARMY
February 23, 1942
TEXT OF THE ANGLO-AMERICAN
MUTUAL AID AGREEMENT
Signed
in Washington on February 23, 1942, by Sumner Welles, Acting Secretary of State,
and Viscount Halifax, British Ambassador
THE BROAD OCEANS HAVE BECOME ENDLESS BATTLE FIELDS
By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
Over combined Radio Stations, from Washington, D. C., February 23, 1942
DEBATE IN THE HOUSE OF
COMMONS PRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL (WAR SITUATION, Ministerial Changes)
February 24, 1942
"IS THE BRITISH EMPIRE WORTH SAVING?"
By DR. D. F. FLEMING, Teacher and Author
Over radio station WSM, Nashville, Tennessee, February 25, 1942
"THE BATTLE OF LEARNING HAS NEVER BEEN LOST"
By C. T. FENG, Chinese Consul-General
At the Convention of the American Association of School Administrators, San Francisco, February 25, 1942
By MAXIM LITVINOFF, Russian Ambassador to the United States
Before the Overseas Press Club at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, February 26, 1942
WE MUST UNDERSTAND THE MINDS OF OUR FRIENDS
By LORD HALIFAX, British Ambassador to the United States
Before the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia, February 26, 1942
Present Problems of the Future
"IT IS THE SCHOOLS WHICH GIVES SUBSTANCE TO THE IDEALS OF DEMOCRACY"
By DR. ROBERT GORDON SPROUL, President, University of California, Berkeley, Cal
Delivered before the American Association of School Administrators, San Francisco, Cal., February 26, 1942
RELATIONS WITH THE FRENCH
GOVERNMENT AT VICHY
(Released to the press February
27.)
"THE PRESS HAS DUTIES AS WELL AS RIGHTS"
By EMANUEL CELLER, United States Representative from New York
Broadcast over the Red Network of the National Broadcasting Company, February 27, 1942
"DESTINY IS TRAMPLING UPON OUR HEELS"
By WATSON DAVIS, Director of Science Service, Washington
Before the annual luncheon of the General Science Association of New York, Hotel Astor, New York City, February 28, 1942
"WE MUST NOT HOARD OUR WEAPONS"
By WILLIAM L. BATT, Director of Materials, War Production Board
Delivered before the Foreign Policy Association, February 28, 1942, Hotel Astor, New York City
The Consumer's Interest in Farm Production
OUR DEPENDENCE UPON AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT
By GEORGE D. AIKEN, Senator from Vermont
Over the Columbia Network from the Studios of WJSV in Washington, February 28, 1942
MARCH
By DONALD M. NELSON, Chairman of the War Production Board
Over the Blue Network, from Washington, D. C., March 2, 1942
OVER 500,000 MEN IN UNIFORM — 8% OF POPULATION
By SIR HERBERT GEPP, Managing Director of Australian Paper Manufacturers, Ltd.
At Monthly Meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, March 5, 1942
WHAT ARE THE AMERICAN PEOPLE AIMING AT?
By ALF M. LANDON, Ex-Governor of Kansas,
Broadcast over the Blue Network from Kansas City, Mo., March 8, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST ON THE 9TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE NATIONAL FARM PROGRAM
March 9, 1942
"IT CALLS FOR COOPERATION AND RESTRAINT ON THE PART OF EVERY GROUP"
By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
Over combined Radio Stations, from Washington, D. C., March 9, 1942
"WE CAN'T WIN THE WAR BY DEFENSE METHODS"
By ELBERT D. THOMAS, United States Senator from Utah
Broadcast over the National Broadcasting Company, March 9, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL'S ANNOUNCEMENT TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS OF SIR STAFFORD CRIPPS' MISSION
TO INDIA
March 11, 1942.
The American Workers' Responsibility
ACTUALLY A SOLDIER IN OVERALLS
By GEORGE MEANY, Secretary-Treasurer of the American Federation of Labor
Delivered before the Detroit and Wayne County Federation of Labor, Detroit, Mich., March 12, 1942
GOVERNMENT BY LAWS AND NOT BY MEN
By OSCAR L. YOUNG, Chief Justice of the Superior Court of New Hampshire
Delivered at opening session of Boston University's annual Founders' Day observance, March 12, 1942
By PRIME MINISTER JOHN CURTIN of Australia
Broadcast, March 13, 1942
GUARDIANSHIP OVER ASIATIC PEOPLE HAS ENDED
By SIR SHANMUKHAM CHETTY, Director of Indian Government Purchasing Mission
Delivered at India-China Friendship Day Celebration given by the East and West Association at the Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, March 14, Broadcast over NBC and WMCA
By PEARL S. BUCK, Author
Delivered at India-China Friendship Day Celebration given by the East and West Association, Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, March 14, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S
"MEMORIAL DAY" ADDRESS
March 15, 1942
By MAXIM LITVINOFF, Russian Ambassador to the United States
Delivered at the Economics Club Dinner, Hotel Astor, New York City, March 16, 1942
Should the Wage-Hour Law Be Suspended?
LAW DOES NOT RESTRICT USE OF MACHINERY
By L. METCALFE WALLING, Administrator, Wage and Hour Division and Division of Public Contracts, U. S. Department of Labor
Over the Blue Network, March 18, 1942
THEIR RESOURCES MUST BE UTILIZED
By HALE BOGGS, United States Representative from Louisiana
Over the Blue Network, March 19, at 10:45 P.M., E.W.T.
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S STATEMENT ON "ARMY DAY"
March 20, 1942
The Wartime Treatment of Aliens
REQUIRES STATESMANSHIP AND COMMUNITY COOPERATION
By MARSHALL E. DIMOCK, Associate Commissioner, Immigration and Naturalization Service, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C.
Delivered at the General Evening Session of the California Conference of Social Work, San Francisco Civic Auditorium, April 20, 1942
Front Lines in the Battle of Production
WOMEN'S PART IN THE WAR EFFORT
By SIR GERALD CAMPBELL, British Minister at Washington, D.C.
Delivered at the Annual Luncheon of the National Consumers' League, New York City, March 21, 1942
A GRAVE PERIL CONFRONTS THIS NATION
By JOHN W. BOEHNE, JR., Congressman from Indiana
Delivered Before the Bronx Real Estate Board Dinner, March 21, 1942
AN INTERPRETER BETWEEN UNITED STATES AND BRITAIN
By BROOKE CLAXTON, K.C., M.P.
Delivered to the Conference on "A Grand Strategy for America" at Williams College, March 21, 1942
By ROBERT A. TAFT, U. S. Senator from Ohio
Delivered on the National Radio Forum, arranged by the Washington Star, and Broadcast over the Blue Network, March 23, 1942
CALL TO LABOR FOR FULL WAR EFFORT
By DONALD M. NELSON, Chairman of the War Production Board
Delivered before the emergency conference of Congress of Industrial Organizations leaders, Washington, D. C, March 23, 1942
FIGHTING MEN ARE POWERLESS WITHOUT PLANES
By HONORABLE FRANCIS B. SAYRE, U. S. High Commissioner to the Philippine Islands
At the dinner of the American Newspaper Publishers Association, Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, April 23, 1942
Federal Spending in the Emergency
DEPRESSION ACTIVITIES NO LONGER NEEDED
By WILLIAM B. MUNRO, Professor of History and Government, California Institute of Technology
Delivered at the Spring Meeting of the California Taxpayers Association, Los Angeles, California, March 25, 1942
By A. A. BERLE, JR., Assistant Secretary of State
Delivered at the Greek Independence Day Dinner of the American Friends of Greece, New York City, March 25, 1942
Research Laboratories and National Defense
NEW PRODUCTION METHODS FOR MATERIALS WE CANNOT BUY
By DR. HENRY G. KNIGHT, Chief, Bureau of Agricultural Chemistry and Engineering, United States Department of Agriculture
Delivered before the Eighth Annual Chemurgic Conference, Stevens Hotel, Chicago, Illinois, Wednesday, March 25, 1942
By GENERAL DOUGLAS MacARTHUR, Supreme Commander of the United Nations Forces in the Southern Pacific
Delivered at a dinner given in his honor at the Australian Parliament House, Canberra, Australia, March 26, 1942
What Are We Fighting for in the Orient?
A WAR BETWEEN THE WAY OF FREEDOM AND BONDAGE
By DR. KRISHNALAL SHRIDHARANI, a Native of India and Author of "My India, My America"
Delivered on America's Town Hall of the Air program, over independent radio stations associated with the Blue Network Company, from Town Hall, New York City, March 26, 1942
PRIME MINISTER CHURCHILL'S
ADDRESS TO THE CENTRAL COUNCIL OF THE CONSERVATIVE PARTY
March 27, 1942.
Youth Is an Age of Hero Worship
DON'T MAKE SLAVES OF FUTURE GENERATIONS
By IRVING T. McDONALD, Librarian, Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass.
Delivered at the Annual Conference of Directors of Physical Education of the Massachusetts Public Schools, Belmont, Mass., March 27, 1942
By SIR STAFFORD CRIPPS
Broadcast to the people of India from New Delhi, March 30, 1942
Will Our Southern Flank Become a Southern Front?
PERFORMANCE AND NOT PROPAGANDA COUNTS
By CARL W. ACKERMAN, Dean of the Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
Delivered before the Kiwanis Clubs of Lambertville, N. J. and Doylestown, Pa., at the Doylestown Inn, March 31, 1942
APRIL
Building for Victory and the Future
OPPORTUNITY AGAIN KNOCKS AT OUR DOOR
By THOMAS S. HOLDEN, President, F. W. Dodge Corporation
Delivered before the annual convention banquet of the Michigan Society of Architects, Lansing, Michigan, Friday, April 3, 1942
The Americas in the World Crisis
By RT. REV. MGR. DONALD A. MacLEAN, Associate Professor of Social and International Ethics, Catholic University, Washington, D. C.
Delivered at the "National Conference of the Catholic Association for International Peace, April 6, 1942
OUR GOVERNMENTS NEED CRITICISM
By COLONEL GEORGE A. DREW, K.C., Leader of the Conservative Party in the Province of Ontario
Delivered before the Cleveland Bar Association, April 6, 1942
By LORD HALIFAX, British Ambassador to the United States
Delivered at Town Hall, New York City, April 7, 1942
By MAXIM M. LITVINOFF, Russian Ambassador to the United States
Delivered Before the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia, Pa., April 10, 1942
By WILBUR S. HOWELL, Associate Professor of Public Speaking, Princeton University
Delivered before a meeting of the Eastern Public Speaking Conference, New York City, April 10, 1942
UNITED STATES POLICY TOWARD
FRANCE AND THE FRENCH PEOPLE
April 13, 1942
America's Ability to Bear War Debt
PRESERVE OUR SYSTEM OF PRIVATE ENTERPRISE
By EMIL SCHRAM, President of the New York Stock Exchange
Delivered Before the Nashville, Tenn., Chamber of Commerce, April 13, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S INFORMAL REMARKS TO MEMBERS OF THE GOVERNING BOARD OF THE PAN
AMERICAN UNION
April 14, 1942
The Influence of American Democracy on Europe
MATERIAL HELP AND MORAL LEADERSHIP
By JAN MASARYK, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czechoslovak Government in London
Delivered at City College, New York and broadcast over Station WNYC, April 16, 1942
By SIR GIRJA SHANKAR BAJPAI, Agent General for India
Delivered before the Metropolitan Club, New York and Broadcast over the Blue Network, April 16, 1942
World Outlook Needed for Americans
WE CANNOT KEEP FREEDOM TO OURSELVES
By WENDELL L. WILLKIE, Presidential Candidate in 1940
Delivered at Rochester University, April 23, 1942
Opportunity to Win War in 1942
A SECOND FRONT IN EUROPE TO AID RUSSIA
By LORD BEAVERBROOK, Britain's Lease-Lend Coordinator in Washington
Delivered before the Bureau of Advertising of the American Newspaper Publishers Association, April 23, 1942
EQUALITY OF EACH SOVEREIGN NATION FIRMLY ESTABLISHED
By PHILIP W. BONSAL, Chief, Division of American Republics, Department of State
Over the Blue Network, April 25, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER
RECEIVED ADDITIONAL POWER FROM THE REICHSTAG
April
26, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S
ADDRESS TO THE REICHSTAG
April 26, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO CONGRESS
April 27, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST TO THE NATION
April 28, 1942
THE SHORTAGE OF STORAGE CAPACITY
By CLAUDE R. WICKARD, Secretary of Agriculture
Delivered before a meeting of farmers at Enid, Oklahoma, April 28, 1942. Broadcast over the Blue Network
MAY
JOSEPH STALIN'S ORDER OF
THE DAY ON "MAY DAY"
May 1, 1942
Government in a Civilized State
POWER MACHINERY REPLACES THE SLAVE
By CLINTON H. CRANE, President, St. Joseph Lead Co., New York City
Delivered at the commencement exercises of the School of Mines and Metallurgy, University of Missouri, May 2, 1942
U.S. RESPONSE TO OCCUPATION
OF MADAGASCAR BY THE BRITISH
May 4, 1942
"Advertising As a Symbol of Freedom"
THE ART OF PERSUASION LOOKS TO THE SOVEREIGNTY OF THE INDIVIDUAL
By MERRYLE STANLEY RUKEYSER, Journalist
Delivered before 28th Annual Convention of the National Association of Better Business Bureaus Pittsburgh, Pa., May 5 1942
THE DANGERS OF YOUTH MOVEMENTS
By A. A. BERLE, JR., Assistant Secretary of State
Delivered before the Eighth Pan American Child Congress, at the White House, May 6, 1942
SALESMANSHIP AND FREE ENTERPRISE
By WALTER D. FULLER, Chairman of the Board, National Association of Manufacturers, President, The Curtis Publishing Company
Delivered before the National Association of Mutual Savings Banks, May 6, 1942
OBLIGATIONS OF THE LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE
By STRINGFELLOW BAAR, President, St. Johns College, Annapolis, Md.
Delivered Over the Network of the Columbia Broadcasting System, May 6, 1942
By DANIEL L. MARSH, President, Boston University
Delivered at dinner of the National Association of Mutual Savings, Hotel Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, May 7, 1942
VICE PRESIDENT HENRY G.
WALLACE'S ADDRESS BEFORE THE FREE WORLD ASSOCIATION
May 8, 1942
The Price of Free World Victory
By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States
Delivered at a dinner of the Free World Association, Hotel Commodore, New York City, May 8, 1942. Broadcast nationally by the Columbia Broadcasting System
VICHY VERSION OF TEXTS OF
WEST INDIES NOTES and THE FRENCH REPLY
May 9, 1942.
THE POWER OF OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM
By THOMAS E. DEWEY, Ex-District Attorney of New York County
Delivered at a luncheon in his honor by the Republican Women of Greater New York, at Hotel Astor, May 9, 1942. Broadcast on a nation-wide hookup by the Columbia Broadcasting System
The New Zealand Government in War and Peace
By THE HONOURABLE WALTER NASH, Minister of New Zealand
Radio address delivered May 9, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL'S BROADCAST REPORT ON THE WAR
May 10, 1942
The Fifth Column of Civilization
THE DANGERS OF LUXURY AND COMFORT
By GEORGE BARTON CUTTEN, President Colgate University
Delivered at Colgate University Commencement, Sunday, May 10, 1942, as the last official address as Colgate's president.
Individualism, Christian and American
By DR. ROLAND H. BAINTON, Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Yale University Divinity School
Baccalaureate Address delivered at the 82nd Annual Commencement Ceremonies of The Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa., May 10, 1942
Isolation Policies and The League of Nations
CHOOSE LEADERS WITH PRINCIPLES NOT POLL WOBBLERS
By WENDELL WILLKIE, Presidential Candidate in 1940
Delivered at the 147th Commencement of Union College, May 11, 1942
ELIMINATE COMMUNISTS, RACKETEERS AND TOTALITARIANS
By REV. DR. JOHN P. BOLAND, Chairman, New York State Labor Relations Board
Delivered at special war convention of the Building Service International Union, A, F. of L., Minneapolis, Minn., May 11, 1942
Tide of Cynicism is Definitely Ebbing
MORALE DETERMINES THE EFFECTIVENESS OF MANPOWER
By JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR.
Delivered at the opening of the USO Campaign, Chicago, May 11, 1942
THE IDEAL OF THE UNITED NATIONS
By DOROTHY THOMPSON, Newspaper Columnist
Delivered at Forum on the Future World Order, Hotel Plaza, New York City, May 11, 1942
By LIEUTENANT GENERAL HENRY H. ARNOLD
Delivered at Dinner Inaugurating the Greater New York - USO - Joint War Appeal, Hotel Astor, May 11, 1942
By JAMES B. CONANT, President Harvard University
Delivered at the opening session of the newly formed National Council for Books in Wartime, New York Times Hall, Tuesday, May 12, 1942
By POPE PIUS XII
Delivered over radio to the world on the occasion of His Episcopal Jubilee, May 13, 1942
War Financing and the American Economy
FAITH AND CONFIDENCE IN OUR DESTINY
By PAUL F. CADMAN, Economist for the American Bankers Association
Delivered at the Annual Convention of the New Jersey Bankers Association at Atlantic City, New Jersey, May 15, 1942
"Property Ownership and Human Relations"
EMPLOYER - EMPLOYEE COOPERATION
By ALBERT W. HAWKES, President, Congoleum-Nairn, Inc.
Delivered before the New Jersey Bankers Association at Atlantic City, New Jersey, May 15, 1942
Interdependency and Interrelationship of Common Man
A FIRM STRUCTURE MUST HAVE SOUND FOUNDATIONS
By ALBERT N. WILLIAMS, President, Western Union Telegraph Company
Delivered at the 117th commencement exercises at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. Y., May 17, 1942
The Scholar, Scholarship, and the War
THE CAUSE OF TRUTH AND FREEDOM
By MAURICE BAUM, Professor of Philosophy, Kent State University
Scholarship Day Address, Kent State University, May 19, 1942
FIELD MARSHAL HERMANN
GOERING'S SPEECH
May 20, 1942
The Limitations on Freedom in War
By FORMER PRESIDENT HERBERT HOOVER
Delivered before the National Industrial Conference Board, New York City, May 20, 1942
DEMOCRACY PROTECTS BASIC RIGHTS OF EVACUEES
By COLONEL KARL R. BENDETSEN, G. S. C.
United States Army Assistant Chief of Staff, Western Defense Command and Fourth Army
Delivered before the Commonwealth Club, San Francisco, May 20, 1942
By RAYMOND H. GEIST, Chief of the Division of Commercial Affairs, Department of State
Delivered before the National Conference of Christians and Jews, Washington, D. C., May 22, 1942
By MARY LATIMER GAMBRELL, Ph.D., Department of History, Hunter College of the City of New York
Delivered at the commencement exercises of New Haven State Teachers College, May 22, 1942
Supporting and Competing Loyalties
By EDMUND EZRA DAY, President, Cornell University
Delivered at Commencement of Cornell University, May 25, 1942
By MILO PERKINS, Executive Director, Board of Economic Warfare
Before the Graduating Class of Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, May 25, 1942
TWENTY-YEAR MUTUAL
ASSISTANCE AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND THE UNION OF SOVIET
SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
May 26, 1942
ADDRESS BY HIDEKI TOJO,
PREMIER OF JAPAN, AT THE OPENING OF THE IMPERIAL DIET
Tokyo, May 27, 1942
By CHARLES W. ELIOT, Director, National Resources Planning Board
Radio Statement "World Peaceways and CBS", Indianapolis, Ind., May 27, 1942
PRESIDENT MANUEL AVILA
CAMACHO'S WAR MESSAGE TO THE EXTRAORDINARY SESSION OF THE MEXICAN CONGRESS
Mexico City, D. F. May 28, 1942
INITIATIVE AND ENTERPRISE PROTECT REAL SECURITY
By EUGENE E. WILSON, President, United Aircraft Corporation
Delivered at the Sixty-Second Annual Meeting of the Union League Club of Chicago, May 28, 1942
SUMNER WELLES, UNDER
SECRETARY OF STATE MEMORIAL DAY ADDRESS AT THE ARLINGTON NATIONAL AMPHITHEATER
May 30, 1942
JUNE
DECLARATION OF
WAR BY MEXICO ON GERMANY, ITALY AND JAPAN
June 1,
1942
RECOGNITION OF
STATE OF WAR BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE GOVERNMENTS OF BULGARIA, HUNGARY,
AND RUMANIA
June 2, 1942
PRIME MINISTER
WINSTON CHURCHILL DEBATE IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS (LIBYAN OPERATIONS AND BOMBING
OF GERMANY)
June 2, 1942
The American Plan to Prevent War
COMBINE WORLD NAVIES TO PRESERVE PEACE
By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, President, Columbia University
Delivered at the 188th Commencement of Columbia University, June 2, 1942
IMPORTANCE OF EFFICIENCY IN PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION
By THURMAN W. ARNOLD, Assistant Attorney General of the United States
Before the Illinois State Bar Association, Chicago, Ill., June 3, 1942
Confidence in Family Physician
A REPRESENTATIVE OF INTERNATIONALISM
By WILLIAM ELLIOTT, President and Publisher of The State
Delivered at the Commencement Exercises of the Medical College of South Carolina, Charleston, S. C., June 4, 1942
JOINT
DECLARATIONS BY THE (U.S.) CONGRESS
June 5, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S STATEMENT ON THE USE OF POISON GAS
June 5, 1942
By LEON HENDERSON, Administrator, Office of Price Administration
Radio address delivered over Station WOL and the Mutual Network, June 5, 1942
CONTROL INFLATIONARY FACTORS NOW
By JAMES SCOTT KEMPER, President, Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company of Chicago
Delivered before Bar Association of Tennessee, Chattanooga, Tenn., June 5, 1942. Broadcast over Station WSOD (C.B.S.)
LABOR'S CHARTER IN POST WAR WORLD
By WENDELL LUND, Director of Labor Production Division, War Production Board
Delivered at "Labor in the War" Conference, University of California, Berkeley, Calif., June 6, 1942
By EUGENE MEYER, Publisher of the Washington Post
Delivered at the Commencement Exercises of Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, N. Y., June 6, 1942
"WHAT IS MAN THAT THOU ART MINDFUL OF HIM?"
By DR. JAMES B. CONANT, President, Harvard University
Baccalaureate Address, June 7, 1942
CONFERENCE ON
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
(A Declaration of the United
Nations Conference on Food and Agriculture, June 8, 1942
By LIEUTENANT-GENERAL HENRY H. ARNOLD, Chief of United States Army Air Forces
Commencement address delivered at Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, in celebration of Iowa-Wesley an College's Centennial Anniversary, June 8, 1942
POLITICAL FREEDOM AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE
By DR. T. V. SOONG, Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs
Delivered at Alumni Luncheon, Yale University, June 9, 1942
MUTUAL AID
AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
Washington, D.C., June 11, 1942
Pact Between England and Russia
By ANTHONY EDEN, Foreign Secretary
Statement delivered in the House of Commons, June 11, 1942
By J. EDGAR HOOVER, Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Delivered at the Commencement Exercises, St. Johns University Law School, Brooklyn, N. Y., June 11, 1942
A WEAPON OF DESTRUCTION AND A TOOL OF PEACE
By CHESTER H. LANG, Vice-President, General Electric Company
Delivered before the Annual Meeting of the Edison Electric Institute, Biltmore Hotel, New York City, Thursday, June 11, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST TO THE NATION ON RUBBER
June 12, 1942
Who Seeks to Commit Us to World Revolution?
LEASE-LEND FINANCING A WORLD NEW DEAL
By MERWIN K. HART, President, New York State Economic Council
Delivered before County Men, an Organization of Native Born Citizens of Dutchess County, N. Y., Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June 12, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S "FLAG DAY" ADDRESS
June 13,
1942
CONVERSATIONS
BETWEEN THE PRESIDENT AND MR. MOLOTOV
June 13, 1942
DO NOT SUBSTITUTE POLITICAL POWER FOR ECONOMIC POWER
By DR. HAROLD W. DODDS, President, Princeton University
Baccalaureate Address delivered at Princeton University, June 14, 1942
The Preservation of the University
LEARNING DETERMINES COUNTRY'S PLACE IN HISTORY
By DR. MONROE E. DEUTSCH, Vice-President and Provost of the University of California
Delivered at the Commencement Exercises of Stanford University, June 14, 1942
KING GEORGE II
ADDRESSES THE U. S. CONGRESS
June 15, 1942.
SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES OF MASS PRODUCTION
By ERIC A. JOHNSTON, President, Chamber of Commerce of the United States
Delivered before Baltimore Association of Commerce, June 15, 1942
By JOSEPH C. O'MAHONEY, United States Senator from Wyoming
Delivered over the Red Network, June 17, 1942
MOLOTOV'S
REPORT ON RATIFICATION OF THE ANGLO-SOVIET TREATY TO THE SUPREME SOVIET OF THE
UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
June 19, 1942
THE DANGERS OF CENTRALIZATION IN GOVERNMENT
By FRANK M. DIXON, Governor of Alabama
Delivered at Governors' Conference, Asheville, N. C., June 21, 1942
PRIME MINISTER
WINSTON CHURCHILL'S MESSAGE TO JOSEPH STALIN ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE GERMAN
ATTACK UPON THE SOVIET UNION
June 23, 1942.
Organized Labor and the Post-War World
COOPERATIVE ENTERPRISE OR COLLECTIVISM
By RAYMOND L. BUELL, Round Table Editor, Fortune Magazine
Before Massachusetts Federation of Labor, Annual Institute, North Andover, Mass., June 26, 1942
THE REVOLT OF MAN AGAINST HIMSELF
By ARCHIBALD MacLEISH, Director of the Office of Facts and Figures
Delivered before the American Library Association, Milwaukee, June 26, 1942
JOINT
STATEMENT BY PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT AND PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL AFTER CONFERENCE IN WASHINGTON, D. C.
June
27, 1941
THE PRESIDENT'S SEVEN-POINT PROGRAM
By HAROLD D. SMITH, Director of the Bureau of the Budget
Delivered over the Mutual Broadcasting System, July 1, 1942
PRIME MINISTER
CHURCHILL DEBATE IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS (and results of Vote of Censure)
July 2, 1942
THE DANGERS OF UNBRIDLED CRITICISM
By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain
Most Important Passages of Speech in House of Commons, July 2, 1942
(As released for publication in the U.S.)
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S "INDEPENDENCE DAY" STATEMENT
July 4, 1942
PRINCIPLES OF THE LEND-LEASE PLAN
By DEAN ACHESON, Assistant Secretary of State
Before the Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia, July 6, 1942
Military Implications of German Geopolitics
THE GEOGRAPHICAL PATTERN OF THE WAR
By H. W. WEIGERT, Professor of International Relations, Trinity College
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 6, 1942
America Converts to a War Economy
THE PEOPLE'S WAR—THE PEOPLE'S PEACE
By SIR CLIVE BAILLIEU, British Representative on the Combined Raw Materials Board and Head, British Raw Materials Mission, Washington, D. C.
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 6, 1942
Manpower Problems and the War Effort
MOBILIZATION OF HUMAN RESOURCES FOR THE WAR EFFORT
By BRIGADIER GENERAL FRANK J. McSHERRY, Director of Operations, War Manpower Commission
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 7, 1942
The New Strategy-Nature of this War
THE EMERGING PATTERN OF MODERN WAR
By BRIGADIER G. K. BOURNE, British Joint Staff Mission, Washington, D. C.
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 8, 1942
World Population and World Resources
"THAT THE CHILDREN OF TOMORROW MAY BE FED"
By JOHN D. BLACK, Professor of Economics, Harvard University
Delivered at New England Conference on Tomorrow's Children, Harvard University, July 8, 1942
JOINT
STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT AND THE KING OF GREECE
July 9, 1942
Inflation and Its Consequences
THE PEOPLE NOT INDUSTRY WILL PAY FOR WAGE INCREASES
By WALTER D. FULLER, Chairman of the Board of the National Association of Manufacturers
Radio address delivered over NBC Network, July 9, 1942
Wartime Relations with Britain
PROGRESSIVE THINKING AND SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES
By PAUL H. APPLEBY, Under-Secretary of Agriculture
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, at Charlottesville, Va., July 10, 1942
DECEIT AND TREACHERY OF NAZISM
By LOUIS LOCHNER, Foreign Correspondent, Chief of the Berlin Bureau of the Associated Press, 1928-41; reported campaigns in Poland, Holland, Belgium, France, Jugoslavia, Greece and Russia 1939-41
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 10, 1942
ATTITUDE TOWARD AMERICAN MASS PRODUCTION HAS CHANGED
By PAUL GARRETT, Chairman, Public Relations Committee, Automotive Council for War Production
Delivered at the Annual Meeting, Automotive Council for War Production, Detroit, Mich., July 10, 1942
Religion and Education as Keys to Family and Community Living
WARTIME RESTRICTIONS UNITE THE HOME
By THE REV. JOHN LaFARGE, S.J., Executive Editor, America
Delivered at the New England Conference on Tomorrow's Children, Harvard University, July 10, 1942
Organization of Power in the Post-War World
By FREDERICK L. SCHUMAN, Woodrow Wilson Professor of Government, Williams College, Williamstown, Mass.
Delivered before the Institute of Public Affairs, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 11, 1942
JAPANESE
PREMIER HIDEKI TOJO REMARKS IN CABINET MEETING
July
14, 1942
STATUS OF
FRENCH SHIPS AT ALEXANDRIA, EGYPT, SUMNER WELLES, UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE, IN
PRESS CONFERENCE
July 14, 1942
THE ATTITUDE OF THE AMERICAN PUBLIC
By MARK EISNER, Member of the New York Bar and former Collector of Internal Revenue
Radio address delivered over the facilities of the Municipal Broadcasting System, WNYC., July 16, 1942
OUR PRESENT AGENCIES HAVE FUMBLED AND FAILED
By GUY M. GILLETTE, United States Senator from Iowa
Radio address over the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company, July 21, 1942
CORDELL HULL,
SECRETARY OF STATE BROADCAST TO THE WORLD
Washington, D. C., July 23, 1942
By GEORGE GALLUP, Director, American Institute of Public Opinion
Radio Broadcast, July 24, 1942
SIR STAFFORD
CRIPPS REVIEW OF NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE ALL-INDIA CONGRESS
July 26, 1942
CORDELL HULL,
SECRETARY OF STATE, STATUS OF AUSTRIA
July 27, 1942
JAPANESE
PREMIER, HIDEKI TOJO'S BROADCAST ON THE CONSOLIDATION OF THE NATION'S TOTAL
EFFORT IN THE PROSECUTION OF THE GREATER EAST ASIA WAR
Osaka, July 27, 1942
FEDERAL TAXATION AND THE STATES
By HARLEY L. LUTZ, Professor of Public Finance, Princeton University
Delivered over Station WABC and C.B.S. Network, July 30, 1942
JAPANESE PREMIER, HIDEKI
TOJO BROADCAST TO THE JAPANESE EMPIRE
Tokyo, August 5, 1942
SIR STAFFORD CRIPPS
STATEMENT ON INDIA
London, August 5, 1942
WILHELMINA, QUEEN OF THE
NETHERLANDS ADDRESS TO CONGRESS
August 5, 1942
ALL WAR REQUIREMENTS MUST BE IN BALANCE
By E. A. LOCKE, JR., Assistant to the Chairman, War Production Board
Delivered before the Maryland Academy of Sciences, Baltimore, Md., August 5, 1942
Democracy Our Most Precious Heritage
AN ANCIENT PARTNERSHIP REVIVED
By QUEEN WILHEMINA, of the Netherlands
Delivered before Congress of the United States, August 6, 1942
By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT
August 6, 1942
MOHANDAS K. GANDHI'S SPEECH
(EXCERPTS) TO THE ALL-INDIA CONGRESS
Bombay, August
7, 1942
Can Democracy Survive the War?
By EDGAR EUGENE ROBINSON, Byrne Professor of American History, Stanford University
Delivered before The Commonwealth Club of California, San Francisco, August 7, 1942
The War Aims Are the Peace Terms
"BY THEIR ACTIONS, LET MEN SPEAK"
By HONORABLE FRANK C. WALKER, Postmaster General of the United States
Delivered at the States Dinner of the annual convention of the Knights of Columbus, Memphis, Tennessee, and broadcast over the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company, August 18, 1942
LEOPOLD S. AMERY, BRITISH
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR INDIA BROADCAST
London,
August 9, 1942
ORDERS TO AMERICAN MILITARY
FORCES IN INDIA
August 12, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT MESSAGE TO CONGRESS (Regarding Panama)
August 13, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL ON THE FIRST ANNIVERSARY
OF THE SIGNING OF THE ATLANTIC CHARTER
August 14,
1942
By ROY F. HENDRICKSON, Administrator, Agricultural Marketing Administration
Delivered before the National Association of Retail Meat Dealers, Inc., Chicago, Ill., August 17, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S "LABOR DAY" STATEMENT
August 19, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S STATEMENT ON PUNISHMENT OF WAR CRIMES
August 21, 1942
By AMOS J. PEASLEE, Lawyer
Delivered before the International Law Section of the American Bar Association, Detroit, Mich., August 25, 1942
By WHEELER McMILLEN, Editor-in-Chief of Farm Journal and Farmers Wife
Delivered before the North Eastern Poultry Producer's Council, New York City, August 26, 1942
WITH ABUNDANCE WE SHALL HAVE FREEDOM
By FRANK E. MULLEN, Vice-President and General Manager, National Broadcasting Company
Delivered at the Annual Convention of Alpha Gamma Rho Fraternity, Chicago Towers Club, August 28, 1942
After the Price of War, the Price of Peace
SOVEREIGNTY IS WHAT WE MAKE IT
By ROBERT M. MacIVER, Department of Sociology, Columbia University
Delivered at Third Conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, New York City, August 29, 1942
FORMER UNITED STATES
AMBASSADOR JOSEPH C. GREW RADIO BROADCAST FROM WASHINGTON
August 30, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER
BROADCAST PLEA FOR WINTER AID
August 30, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT'S DEDICATORY ADDRESS AT THE NAVAL MEDICAL CENTER, BETHESDA,
MARYLAND
August 31, 1942
By BISHOP MIGUEL DE ANDREA of Buenos Aires, Argentine
Delivered at a dinner for the sixteen Latin-American Delegates to the Inter-American Seminar, Chicago, Ill., September 2, 1942
PROPAGANDA TO DESTROY CONFIDENCE
By HONORABLE JOHN J. McCLOY, Assistant Secretary of War
Delivered at Encampment Veterans of Foreign Wars, Cincinnati, Ohio, September 2, 1942
HIGH SCHOOL AND COLLEGE CURRICULA
By JOHN W. STUDEBAKER, U. S. Commissioner of Education
Delivered over WMAL on the Washington Star Forum Program, September 2, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT BROADCAST TO INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSEMBLY
September 3, 1942
THE DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION OF THE FEDERAL PRINCIPLE
By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER
Delivered at the Parrish Memorial Art Museum, Southampton, Long Island, September 6, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT MESSAGE TO CONGRESS
September
7, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D.
ROOSEVELT BROADCAST TO THE NATION
September 7, 1943
SEVERE MEASURES MUST BE TAKEN TO PREVENT INFLATION
By WILLIAM GREEN, President, American Federation of Labor
Labor Day address delivered before an overflow audience in Vennylist Park, Omaha, Neb., and broadcast over the Blue Network, September 7, 1942
HISTORY'S OVER-ALL COURSE IS FORWARD
By DR. CHARLES M. A. STINE, Vice-President, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Inc.), Advisor on Research and Development
Delivered before The American Chemical Society, Buffalo, N. Y., September 7, 1942
ANNOUNCEMENT OF A
CONFERENCE BETWEEN BRITISH AND AMERICAN OFFICIALS IN LONDON
September 8, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL ADDRESSED THE HOUSE OF COMMONS IN A REVIEW OF THE WAR
September 8, 1942
AMERICAN REPLY TO FRENCH
PROTEST AGAINST BOMBINGS IN FRANCE
September 8, 1942
OUR FULL SHARE OF RESPONSIBILITY
By LEON HENDERSON, Administrator, Office of Price Administration
Delivered before the Research Institute of America and the Sales Executive Club of New York, Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, and broadcast over National Broadcasting System, September 8, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL'S TRIBUTE TO THE LATE DUKE OF KENT
September 9, 1942
The Churchill-Stalin Conference
By W. AVERELL HARRIMAN, President Roosevelt's Representative to Russia
Delivered at Russian War Relief Society Dinner, Hotel Commodore, New York City, September 9, 1942
THE FATE OF PARLIAMENTARY GOVERNMENT
By RT. HON. ARTHUR MEIGHEN, Leader of Opposition in Dominion of Canada
Delivered on "The Hundredth Anniversary" of St. Mary's, Ontario, September 13, 1942
The Moral Challenge of Post-War Planning
THE FUNDAMENTAL IDEAS OF DEMOCRACY
By DR. HARRY GIDEONSE, President, Brooklyn College
Delivered over CBS Network, September 15, 1942
THE RADIO A VITAL FACTOR IN WAR
By ROBERT E. SHERWOOD, Director of the overseas branch of the Office of War Information
Delivered at dedication of new 100-kilowatt transmitter for WGEO, General Electric international short-wave radio broadcasting station, Schenectady, September 21, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON
CHURCHILL'S REPORT TO THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ON THE POLICY OF THE BRITISH
GOVERNMENT IN INDIA
September 10, 1942
JAPAN IS A FORMIDABLE MILITARY AND ECONOMIC MACHINE
By THE HONORABLE JOSEPH C. GREW, former Ambassador to Japan
Delivered to the Remington Arms Company, Bridgeport, Conn., and broadcast by The National Broadcasting Company, September 14, 1942
Mexican Independence and New World Ideals
By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States
Approximate English translation of address delivered in Spanish on the occasion of the celebration of Mexico's Independence Day at Los Angeles, Cal., September 16, 1942
Our Freedom and the Economics of It
PROTECTION FOR THE RIGHTS OF PERSON AND PROPERTY
By WALTER E. SPAHR, Professor of Economics, New York University
Delivered at the Braman Forum, Town Hall, September 16, 1942
Manpower for the Production Front
By RICHARD C. BROCKWAY, New York State Director, U. S. Employment Service
Delivered before the New York Chapter of the Society for the Advancement of Management, September 17, 1942
Moral Law Is the Only Sovereign
PEACE TO BE PERMANENT NEEDS PROTECTION
By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, President, Columbia University Delivered at the Opening of the 189th Year of Columbia University, September 23, 1942
By RALPH A. BARD, Assistant Secretary of the Navy
Delivered before the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding sWorkers of America, New York City, September 24, 1942
JAPANESE PREMIER HIDEKI
TOJO'S GRADUATION ADDRESS IMPERIAL UNIVERSITY, MANCHUKUO
September 25, 1942
By ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY
Delivered at mass meeting held under the auspices of the Industrial Christian Fellowship, London, September 26, 1942
Are We Drafting a Larger Army Than We Can Supply?
CHAOTIC DRAFT SITUATION IMPERILLING PRODUCTION—ALLOCATION OF MEN
By DR. HARVEY N. DAVIS, President of Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N. J.
Delivered at Opening of 71st Year of the College, September 28, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S
ADDRESS AT THE OPENING OF THE WINTER RELIEF CAMPAIGN
Berlin, September 30, 1942
The Double Challenge to the College
By EVERETT CASE, President, Colgate University, Hamilton, N. Y.
Delivered over the Columbia Broadcasting System, October 1, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S EXECUTIVE ORDER PROVIDING FOR THE STABILIZING OF THE
NATIONAL ECONOMY
October 3, 1942
TWO LETTERS
FROM PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT TO LEON D. HENDERSON, ADMINISTRATOR, OFFICE
OF PRICE ADMINISTRATION
October 3, 1942
LETTER FROM
JOSEPH STALIN TO JOSEPH C. CASSIDY, ASSOCIATED PRESS REPRESENTATIVE
Moscow, October 3, 1942
Challenge to Democratic Institutions
By HON. JOSEPH CLARK BALDWIN, Congressman from the 17th District, New York
Delivered at the Annual Forum of the Foreign Policy Association, New York City, October 3, 1942
The Senate's Share in Formulation of Foreign Policy
WE MUST HAVE A PEACE PLAN READY
By HON. WARREN R. AUSTIN, Senator of Vermont
Address delivered at the Annual Forum of the Foreign Policy Association, New York City, October 3, 1942
FIELD MARSHAL
HERMANN GOERING'S BROADCAST (EXCERPTS)
Berlin,
October 4, 1942
Wealth and the "Capitalistic System"
INFLATION A THREAT TO THE THRIFTY
By JAMES W. GERARD, Diplomat and Lawyer
Broadcast over WINS, October 4, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, MOBILIZATION OF COMMUNITY NEEDS
October 5, 1942
Trade and Friendship with Latin America
THEY ASK FOR SERVICE, NOT ADVICE
By DAVID E. GRANT, Foreign Counsel, Pan American Airways System
Delivered at the Fourteenth Boston Conference on Distribution, October 5, 1942
Distribution and Purchasing Power
CAN PRIVATE ENTERPRISE PROVIDE THE MECHANISM?
By LEO M. CHERNE, Executive Secretary, Research Institute of America
Delivered before Boston Conference on Distribution, October 6, 1942
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S STATEMENT OF WAR CRIMES
October 7, 194:
The Export-Import Bank and the War
MAINTAINING THE ESSENTIALS OF FOREIGN TRADE
By WARREN LEE PIERSON, President, Export-Import Bank of Washington
Delivered before the Twenty-ninth Convention of the National Foreign Trade Council, Inc., Boston, Mass., October 7, 1942
World's Future Economic Prosperity
ACCESS TO RAW MATERIALS AND TRADE
By HONORABLE SUMNER WELLES, Acting Secretary of State
Delivered at the World Trade Dinner of the 29th National Foreign Trade Convention, Boston, Mass. October 8, 1942, and Broadcast by the Blue Network
PRESIDENT
FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST TO THE NATION
October 12, 1942
PRIME MINISTER
WINSTON CHURCHILL SPEECH AT EDINBURGH, SCOTLAND
October 12, 1942
INFLATION AND EQUITABLE TAXATION
By MARK EISNER, member of the New York Bar, former Collector of Internal Revenue
Delivered over the facilities of the Municipal Radio Station (WNYC), October 14, 1942
OUR SOCIAL ASPIRATIONS AND OUR ECONOMIC PROCEDURES
By MERRYLE STANLEY RUKEYSER, Journalist
Delivered before the Washington Athletic Club, Seattle, Washington, October 14, 1942
The Realist Base of American Foreign Policy
RESERVE BANKING IN INTERNATIONAL FIELD
By A. A. BERLE, JR., Assistant Secretary of State
Delivered at the Fifth Annual Meeting of the Alabama State Chamber of Commerce, Birmingham, Ala., October 15, 1942
The Effect of Modern Taxation on Real Estate Ownership
By MYERS Y. COOPER, Former Governor of Ohio
Delivered before the Annual Convention of the Pennsylvania Real Estate Association, Harrisburg, Pa., October 15, 1942
CAPACITY AND INGENUITY TO PRODUCE
By ELMER A. CLARK, Vice-President, Budd Wheel Company; Member, Board of Directors of Automotive Council for War Production
Delivered at War Production Conference, American Society of Tool Engineers, Springfield, Mass., October 17, 1942
COLLECTIVE SECURITY ONLY GUARANTY AGAINST AGGRESSION
By HON. WALTER NASH, Minister of New Zealand
Delivered before the Foreign Policy Association, Boston, Mass., October 17, 1942
After Peace: Competition Or Cooperation?
THE POST-WAR STRUGGLE FOR POWER
By COLBY DORR DAM, Psychologist, Editor, Economist
Delivered before the National Womans' Party, Washington, D. C., October 18, 1942
FREEDOM OF SPEECH BUT NOT FREEDOM TO SPEAK
By CARL W. ACKERMAN, Dean of the Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
Delivered at the Fourth Accounting Institute Banquet, Hotel Pennsylvania, New York City, October 20, 1942
MARSHAL JAN
CHRISTIAAN SMUTS'S ADDRESS BEFORE MEMBERS OF THE TWO HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT
October 21, 1942
"OUR COMMONWEALTH STANDS UNSHAKEN"
By JAN CHRISTIAAN SMUTS, Premier of South Africa
Delivered to the Joint Session of the British Houses of Parliament, October 21, 1942
LEADERSHIP THAT INSPIRES CONFIDENCE
By HUGO A. BEDAU, San Francisco Sales Manager, Marchant Calculating Machine Co.
Delivered before the Conference of The Pacific Coast Electrical Association Annual Meeting Fresno, Cal., October 23, 1942
Our Reservoir of World Respect and Hope
DELIVER THE MATERIALS OF WAR—DEFINE OUR PEACE AIMS
By WENDELL L. WILLKIE, Republican Presidential Candidate—1940
Delivered over the radio, October 26, 1942
BEVERIDGE HAS A PLAN, WE HAVE THE ACTUALITY
By HON. WALTER NASH, Minister of New Zealand
Delivered before the Bond Club, New York City, October 27, 1942
By G. W. COTTIS, M.D., President, Medical Society of the State of New York
Delivered before the Second District Branch Medical Society, Garden City, L. I., October 28, 1942
DEALS WITH FACTUAL INFORMATION NOT OPINION
By BYRON PRICE, Director of Censorship
Delivered at the New York Times forum on "News Dissemination in Wartime," and broadcast over Station WMCA, October 28, 1942
GANDHI'S
LATEST MESSAGE TO AMERICA
October 31, 1942
TEXT OF SOVIET INVASION DECREE
Moscow, November 1, 1942
FAITH IN ESSENTIAL RIGHTEOUSNESS OF THE CAUSE
By J. HILLIS MILLER, Associate Commissioner, State Education Department, Albany, N. Y.
Delivered at the Town Meeting of the Air, Schenectady, N. Y., November 1, 1942
THE COLLEGE HAS THREE IMPORTANT ELEMENTS
By WALTER A. LUNDEN, President, Gustavus Adolphus College
Inaugural Address, November 4, 1942
Selling the Private Enterprise System
BUSINESS NEEDS TO STUDY PUBLIC RELATIONS
By JAMES P. SELVAGE, Public Relations Counsel, Lee & Selvage, New York City
Delivered before the Advertising Club of Worcester, Mass., November 4, 1942
THE RIGHT TO DEVELOP PRODUCTIVE ABILITIES
By WALTER B. FRENCH, Deputy Manager of the American Bankers Association, New York City
Delivered before the Jersey City Kiwanis Club, Jersey City, N. J., November 5, 1942
MESSAGE FROM PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT TO
MIKHAIL KALININ, PRESIDENT, PRESIDIUM OF THE SUPREME SOVIET OF THE UNION OF
SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS
Washington, November 6,
1942
JOSEPH STALIN, PREMIER OF THE U.S.S.R. REPORT ON
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Moscow, November 6, 1942
JOSEPH STALIN, PREMIER OF THE U.S.S.R. ORDER OF THE
DAY
Moscow, November 7, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S STATEMENT
ANNOUNCING THE OPENING OF A SECOND FRONT IN FRENCH NORTH AND WEST AFRICA
Washington, November 7, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO THE
FRENCH PEOPLE
Washington, D. C., November 7, 1942
LIEUT. GENERAL DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER'S PROCLAMATION
TO THE FRENCH (English Translation)
Washington, D.
C., November 7, 1942
CORDELL HULL, SECRETARY OF STATE STATEMENT COVERING
BACKGROUND OF FRANCO-AMERICAN RELATIONS SINCE MAY, 1940
Washington, D. C., November 8, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT MESSAGE TO MARSHAL
HENRI PETAIN
Washington, D. C., November 8, 1942
MARSHAL HENRI PETAIN'S REPLY TO PRESIDENT
ROOSEVELT'S NOTE OF NOVEMBER 8, 1942
White House
news release.
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO
GENERAL FRANCISCO FRANCO BAHAMONDE, HEAD OF THE SPANISH STATE
Washington, D. C., November 8, 1942
VICE-PRESIDENT HENRY C. WALLACE ADDRESS BEFORE
CONGRESS OF AMERICAN SOVIET FRIENDSHIP
New York,
November 8, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER SPEECH ON THE 19TH
ANNIVERSARY OF THE "BEER HALL PUTSCH"
Munich,
November 8, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO HIS
HIGHNESS SIDI MONCEF PACHA BEY OF TUNIS
Washington,
D.C., November 9, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO
ADMIRAL JEAN PIERRE ESTEVA, RESIDENT GENERAL AT TUNIS, NORTH AFRICA
Washington, D. C., November 9, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S STATEMENT UPON
TERMINATION OF DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH THE VICHY GOVERNMENT
Washington, D. C., November 9, 1942
HIS MAJESTY, KING GEORGE VI SPEECH TO
PARLIAMENT
London, November 10, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL SPEECH AT THE
MANSION HOUSE
London, November 10, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S APPEAL TO THE FRENCH ON
THE ENTRY OF GERMAN TROOPS INTO UNOCCUPIED FRANCE
November 10, 1942
"POTENTIALLY THE STRONGEST POWER IN THE WORLD"
By THE HONORABLE JOSEPH C. GREW, Former Ambassador to Japan
Delivered Before the Academy of Political Science, New York City, November 10, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S LETTER TO MARSHAL PETAIN
ANNOUNCING COMPLETE GERMAN OCCUPATION OF FRANCE
November 11, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S "ARMISTICE DAY"
ADDRESS
Arlington National Cemetery, November 11,
1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL DEBATE IN THE
HOUSE OF COMMONS
November 11, 1942
THE IMPORTANCE OF TRAINING AND PERSONNEL
By LIEUTENANT GENERAL LESLEY J. McNAIR, U. S. ARMY, Commanding General, Army Ground Forces
Armistice Day Address to Troops of the Army Ground Forces, Over Blue Network from Washington, D. C., November 11, 1942
Let It Be Victory, Not Armistice
THE NEED FOR UNIVERSAL MILITARY TRAINING
By STEPHEN F. CHADWICK, Former National Commander of the American Legion
Delivered before Seattle Rotary Club, November 11, 1942
Air Transport, Today and Tomorrow
By V. P. CONROY, Vice President of traffic, Transcontinental & Western Air Lines, Inc.
Delivered before student body of Iowa Wesleyan College, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa, November 12, 1942
LETTER FROM JOSEPH STALIN, PREMIER OF THE U.S.S.R.,
TO HENRY CASSIDY, ASSOCIATED PRESS REPRESENTATIVE
Moscow, November 13, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S ADDRESS ON THE
SEVENTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE GOVERNMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES
November 15, 1942
PESSIMISM FOR POST WAR ERA ASSAILED
By HENRY J. KAISER, Industrialist
Delivered before the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 16, 1942
Workers' Post-War Responsibility
LABOR TO HELP BUILD A LASTING PEACE
By ROBERT J. WATT, International Representative of the American Federation of Labor
Delivered at session on "Responsibility of Labor for Economic Stability in the Post-War World," New York City, November 16, 1942
ONLY COMPLETE HARMONY CAN ACHIEVE WORLD ECONOMIC FREEDOM
By WILLIAM MARTIN JEFFERS, National Rubber Director
Delivered before the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, News York City, November 16, 1942
The Democratic Nations of Central-Eastern Europe
PROBLEMS FACED BY CONQUERED NATIONS
By DR. HENRYK STRASBURGER, Polish Minister of Finance
Delivered at the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Philadelphia, Pa., November 16, 1942
DANGERS OF PLANNING ON GLOBAL SCALE
By SIR STAFFORD CRIPPS, Leader of the House of Commons
Broadcast from England to the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 16, 1942
GENERALISSIMO CHIANG KAI-SHEK MESSAGE TO THE FOURTH
SESSION OF THE NEW YORK HERALD-TRIBUNE FORUM ON CURRENT PROBLEMS
November 17, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S ADDRESS TO THE
CLOSING SESSION OF THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE FORUM ON CURRENT PROBLEMS
November 17, 1942
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE FOUR FREEDOMS
By HONORABLE SUMNER WELLES, Under Secretary of State
Delivered before the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 17, 1942
MERE DECLARATIONS OF POLICY CANNOT FILL NEED
By WENDELL L. WILLKIE, Republican Presidential Candidate—1940
Delivered before the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 17, 1942
ADMIRAL JEAN DARLAN'S ADDRESS TO ALL FRENCH AT HOME
AND ABROAD
Algiers, North Africa, November 20, 1942
SABURO KURUSU, FORMER SPECIAL AMBASSADOR TO THE
UNITED STATES
Tokyo, November 26, 1942
CHANCELLOR ADOLF HITLER'S LETTER TO MARSHAL PETAIN
ANNOUNCING DECISION TO OCCUPY TOULON
November 27,
1942
By JOHN W. VANDERCOOK, News Commentator
Broadcast over N.B.C., November 27, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL BROADCAST
November 29, 1942
BENITO MUSSOLINI, PREMIER OF ITALY SPEECH TO THE
CHAMBER OF FASCI AND CORPORATIONS
Rome, December 2,
1942
Prospective Agricultural Production
EFFICIENCY AT HOME AND FIGHTING EFFICIENCY OF THE ALLIES IMPERILED
By HATTON W. SUMNERS, Congressman from Texas
Delivered in House of Representatives, Washington, D. C., December 2, 1942
World Order Based on Human Rights
CANADA'S CO-OPERATION IN WAR AND PEACE
By PRIME MINISTER W. L. MacKENZIE KING of Canada
Delivered before the Pilgrims of the United States at the Hotel Plaza, New York City, December 2, 1942
The Democracy For Which We Fight
NO MISUSE OF POWER BY GOVERNMENT, CORPORATIONS OR LABOR UNIONS
By FRANCIS BIDDLE, Attorney General of the United States William H. White Foundation Lecture, Delivered at the University of Virginia,
Charlottesville, Virginia, December 4, 1942
The Post-War America That America Does Not Want
A FAIR TRADE ACT NEEDED FOR IDEAS
By DR. RUTH ALEXANDER, Economist and Lecturer
Delivered at the War Congress of American Industry, under auspices of National Association of Manufacturers, Waldorf-Astoria, New York, December 4, 1942
Economic Stabilization—A Management View
THE PEOPLE WILL DECIDE WHAT THEY WANT
By T. F. JOYCE, Vice President R.C.A. Manufacturing Co.
Delivered before the Society for the Advancement of Management, New York City, December 4, 1942
By CHARLES P. TAFT, Assistant Director, ODHWS
Delivered at annual meeting of the Board of Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist Church, Cleveland, Ohio, December 4, 1942
STATEMENT BY THE NAVY DEPARTMENT ON THE
ATTACK AT PEARL HARBOR ON DECEMBER 7, 1941
Washington, D. C., December 5, 1942
DEFEND OUR FIGHTING MEN'S BIRTHRIGHTS ON THE HOME FRONT
By ROANE WARING, National Commander of the American Legion
Delivered before the families of "Freeport Fighting Men" under the auspices of the William Clinton Story Post 343 of The American Legion, Freeport, N. Y., December 5, 1942
PRIME MINISTER WINSTON CHURCHILL SPEECH AT BRADFORD
TOWN HALL
Bradford, England, December 6, 1942
HAS IT PROVED TO BE ADVANTAGEOUS TO AMERICAN CITIZENS?
By SUMNER WELLES, Under Secretary of State
Delivered at the Dedication of the Sara Delano Roosevelt Memorial at Historic St. Paul's Church, Eastchester, Mount Vernon, New York, December 6, 1942, Broadcast by National Broadcasting Company
By GEORGE T. HUNT, Head of the History Department, Cleveland College of Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
Delivered at a University Convocation, December 7, 1942
GENERALISSIMO FRANCISCO FRANCO'S SPEECH TO
FALANGIST PARTY COUNCIL PRAISING GERMAN, ITALIAN, AND SPANISH FASCISM
Madrid, December 8, 1942
"WE LOVE HONOR MORE THAN WE FEAR DEATH"
By NICK AARON FORD, Professor of English, Langston University, Langston, Okla.
Delivered before a special assembly of students and teachers of Langston University, in commemoration of Pearl Harbor Day, December 8, 1942
By GEORGE ROMNEY, Managing Director, Automotive Council for War Production
Delivered at the annual meeting of The Mortgage Bankers Association, Detroit, Mich., December 10, 1942
CONCENTRATION OF POWER IS DANGEROUS
By FRANK M. DIXON, Governor of Alabama
Delivered before The Southern Society of New York, and broadcast over WABC, December 11, 1942
AVOID THE WHIRLPOOL OF INTRIGUE
By HERBERT HOOVER, Former President of the United States
Delivered before the Executive Club of Chicago, December 16, 1942
The Place of the Humanities in a World of War
By DR. JOHN W. DODDS, Dean of the School of Humanities, Stanford University
Delivered before the Western College Association, Los Angeles, Cal., December 19, 1942
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT'S CHRISTMAS
MESSAGE
December 24, 1942
International Relations and Internal Order
FUNDAMENTAL POINTS FOR ORDER AND PACIFICATION OF HUMAN SOCIETY
By POPE PIUS XII
Official Translation of Christmas Address broadcast over the Vatican Radio Station HUJ, December 24, 1942 as recorded and transcribed by the New York Times
The Achievements of the Empire
PROBLEMS AHEAD LIGHTENED BY HELP OF UNITED STATES
By KING GEORGE VI
Christmas Broadcast to the British Empire, London, December 25, 1942
Science, Common Sense and Decency
SCIENTIFIC METHODS CANNOT CONTROL HUMAN AFFAIRS
By IRVING LANGMUIR, Associate Director, General Electric Research Laboratories, Retiring President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Delivered on Science Service's "Adventures in Science" over the Columbia Broadcasting System, December 26, 1942
VICE PRESIDENT HENRY A. WALLACE ADDRESS ON WOODROW
WILSON'S BIRTHDAY
Washington, D. C., December 28,
1942
Labor and Economic Construction After the War
GOODS CANNOT BE SOLD WITHOUT BUYERS
By RT. REV. JOHN A. RYAN, D.D., Director, Social Action Department, National Catholic Welfare Conference, Washington, D. C.
Delivered at the Annual Convention of the American Catholic Sociological Society, Cleveland, December 29, 1942