1943 Documents Relating to World War II

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United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States. The Conferences at Washington, 1941-1942, and Casablanca, 1943 (1941-1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, The Conferences at Cairo and Tehran, 1943 (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, 1943. General: Volume I (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, 1943. Europe: Volume II (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, 1943. The British Commonwealth, Eastern Europe, the Far East: Volume III (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, 1943. The Near East and Africa: Volume IV (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, 1943. The American Republics: Volume V (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States diplomatic papers, 1943. The American Republics: Volume VI (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States. Conferences at Washington and Quebec, 1943 (1943)

United States Department of State Foreign relations of the United States : diplomatic papers, 1943. China (1943)


Current and Postwar Reconstruction of China

MAN HAS ALWAYS FOUGHT ANY INVASION OF HUMAN RIGHTS

By C. T. FENG, Chinese Consul-General, San Francisco

Delivered at the Chinese National Reconstruction Forum at the University of California, Berkeley, January 3, 1943


Change Is the Essence of Progress

USING PRIVATE BUSINESS AGENCIES TO ACHIEVE PUBLIC GOALS IN THE POST-WAR WORLD

By LEWIS H. BROWN, President, Johns-Manville Corporation

Delivered before the Washington members of the American Economic Association, Washington, D. C., January 5, 1943


Post-War Goals

AMERICA'S ABILITY TO PRODUCE

By FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, President of the United States

Annual Message to Congress, Washington, D. C., January 7, 1943


World Affairs

A PROPOSAL OF A DEFINITE UNITED NATIONS GOVERNMENT

By HAROLD E. STASSEN, Governor of Minnesota

Delivered at a joint session of the Minneapolis and St. Paul Branches of the Foreign Policy Association, January 7, 1943


Today, We Produce to Destroy

TOMORROW WE MUST PRODUCE TO BUILD

By THEODORE G. JOSLIN, Director, Public Relations Department, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company

Delivered before the War-Time New England Sales Management Conference, Boston, January 8, 1943


Our War Effort to Date

PROBLEMS OF OFFENSIVE WARFARE

By VICE ADMIRAL J. W. GREENSLADE, U.S.N., Commandant, Twelfth Naval District

Delivered before the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco, Calif., January 8, 1943


Our Responsibilities As Citizens

"KEEP THE VIGIL ON THE HOME FRONT"

By HOWARD W. JACKSON, Mayor of Baltimore, Md.

Delivered at the Jackson Day Banquet, Baltimore, Maryland, January 9, 1943


Dangers of a Great Power Peace

THE ATLANTIC CHARTER IS NO GUARANTEE

By C. J. HAMBRO, President of the Norwegian Storting (Parliament)

Delivered on the Metropolitan Opera Coast to Coast Broadcast, New York City, January 9, 1943


The Fight for Liberty

IN PEACE AND WAR

By JAMES B. CONANT, President of Harvard University Valedictory address

Delivered to the Undergraduates of all classes in Harvard College, January 10, 1943


The Relation of News to Global Peace

FREEDOM OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNICATION

By DEAN CARL W. ACKERMAN of the Graduate School of Journalism of Columbia University

Delivered at Haverford College, Haverford, Pa., January 12, 1943


Education Determines Civilization

THE IMPORTANCE OF LIBERAL EDUCATION POLICIES

By WENDELL L. WILLKIE, Republican Presidential Candidate—1940 Delivered at Duke University, Durham, N. C., and Broadcast over the Mutual Broadcasting Company Network, January 14, 1943


Today's Challenge to American Life

ECONOMICS, POLITICS AND RELIGION

By CHARLES E. SHULMAN, Rabbi, North Shore Congregation Israel, Glencoe, Ill.

Delivered before the Illinois State Nurserymen's Association, January 14, 1943


American War Aims

THE ASPIRATIONS OF ALL PEOPLE

By CARLTON J. H. HAYES, Ambassador of the United States of America to Spain

Delivered before the Chiefs of Allied and friendly Missions and officials of the Spanish Government, at the Casa Americana, Madrid, January 15, 1943


Philippine Loyalty

"A RECORD OF HEROIC DEEDS"

By MANUEL L. QUEZON, President of the Philippines

Delivered before the members of the Maryland Bar Association, Baltimore, Maryland, January 16, 1943


The Future International Structure

THE BEVERIDGE PLAN—A GENERAL NATIONAL MINIMUM

By LORD HALIFAX, British Ambassador to the United States

Delivered at a Dinner of the Rochester Chamber of Commerce, Rochester, New York, January 18, 1943


CASABLANCA CONFERENCE COMMUNIQUÉ

(An excerpt dealing with plans for "Unconditional Surrender", January 24, 1943)

Students of Today—The Leaders and Builders of Tomorrow

THE WORLD WILL BE WHAT YOUR GENERATION MAKE IT

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States

Delivered to the youth of America during the OWI-produced Victory Hour program over the Blue Network, January 26, 1943


The Labor Front

"LABOR ACT CREATES CONDITION OF CONTINUAL TURMOIL"

By MAURICE R. FRANKS, National Business Agent and Editor of Railroad Yardmasters of America, Inc.

Delivered at luncheon of the Executives' Club of Chicago, January 29, 1943


Raw Materials Are the Fuels of Industry

"OUR STOCKPILES CANNOT BE TOO LARGE"

By JAMES E. MURRAY, Chairman of the Senate Special Committee on Small Business Problems

Delivered before the Mining War Council of the Colorado Mining Association, Denver, Colo., January 30, 1943


Commercial Policy

THE TRADE-AGREEMENTS PROGRAM

By CHARLES BUNN, Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of State and Consultant to the Division of Commercial Policy and Agreements, Department of State

Delivered before the Political Science Association, Washington, D. C., January 31, 1943


Research on Postwar Reconstruction

IMPORTANCE OF PUBLIC OPINION IN A DEMOCRATIC STATE

By DR. SUN FO, President of the Legislative Yuan, China

Delivered in the Committee on Postwar World Reconstruction, Chungking, January 31, 1943


February


Does Liberty Consist in Two Dollars a Day Extra?

UNIONS NO LONGER VOLUNTARY ASSOCIATIONS

By HENRY A. WRISTON, President, Brown University, Providence, R. I.

Delivered at Class Day Exercises, Brown University, February 2, 1943


The Pay-As-You-Go Tax Plan

CASH MONEY IN TILL AND NO TAX DEBT

By BENNETT CHAMP CLARK, Senator from Missouri

Delivered on The Washington Star Forum—WMAL—Blue Network of National Broadcasting Company, February 3, 1943


Food Will Win the War

IMPORTANCE OF LEND-LEASE POLICY

By CLAUDE R. WICKARD, Secretary of Agriculture

Statement made before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, February 4, 1943


Alaska in the War

THE JAPS RIDE THE CLEAR SKIES

By FATHER BERNARD HUBBARD, Famous Jesuit Explorer, Geologist and Scientist

Delivered at Luncheon of the Executives' Club of Chicago. February 5, 1943


Frustration Equals Aggression

WE CAN'T HAVE THE LUXURY OF HATE OR THE STUPIDITY OF CONTEMPT

By CHARLES P. TAFT, Assistant Director, Office of Defense Health and Welfare Services

Delivered at Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa., February 7, 1943


Next Steps Against Inflation

WAGES AND PRICES MUST BE CONTROLLED

By JAMES F. BYRNES, Economic Stabilization Director

Radio address delivered over WABC, February 9, 1943


America in the Post-War Air World

BE PRACTICAL—RATION GLOBALONEY

By CLARE BOOTHE LUCE, Congresswoman from Connecticut

Delivered in the House of Representatives, Washington, D. C., February 9, 1943


Coming Allied Offensive

THE CASABLANCA DISCUSSIONS

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered to the House of Commons, February 11, 1943


CASABLANCA CONFERENCE

Feb. 12, 1943

(The Public Papers of F. D. Roosevelt, Vol. 12, p. 71)


North Africa Strategy

"WE ARE WHOLLY ONE UNTIL COMPLETE VICTORY"

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Delivered at the dinner of the White House Correspondents Association, Washington, D. C., February 12, 1943


Two Whigs and the Whirligig

WHEN ENEMIES CEASE FIGHTING—FRIENDSHIPS ARE IMPORTANT

By STEWART W. McCLELLAND, President, Lincoln Memorial University

Delivered before Lincoln Club of Jersey City, February 12, 1943


Post-War Thinking

THE BOAT ROCKING MUST STOP

By L. E. FAULKNER, Vice-President, Mississippi Central Railroad Company

Delivered before the Hattiesburg Rotary Club, Hattiesburg, Miss., February 16, 1943


The Future of Western Europe

ECONOMIC COLLABORATION AND PERMANENT PEACE

By M. P. L. STEENBERGHE, Chairman of the Economic, Financial and Shipping Mission of the Kingdom of The Netherlands

Delivered before the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Phila., Pa., February 13, 1943


Implementing the Atlantic Charter

CONGRESS MUST BE PREPARED TO ACT

By JOSEPH CLARK BALDWIN, Congressman from New York

Delivered before The Foreign Policy Association of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa., February 13, 1943


Lessons from the League of Nations

FAULTS THAT MUST BE AVOIDED

By FELIX MORLEY, President, Haverford College, Haverford, Pa.

Delivered at the Institute for Religious Studies, sponsored by the Jewish Theological Seminary, New York City, February 16, 1943


Japan IS First U. S. Foe

MORE AID TO CHINA

By MADAME CHIANG KAI-SHEK, Wife of the Generalissimo of China

Delivered in House of Representatives, Washington, D. C., February 18, 1943


Fighting For Same Cause

WE MUST ACT TO IMPLEMENT OUR IDEALS

By MADAME CHIANG KAI-SHEK, Wife of the Generalissimo of China

Delivered before United States Senate, February 18, 1943


Science and Society in the Post-War World

INTERCHANGE OF IDEAS AND DISCOVERIES NECESSARY

By JAMES BRYANT CONANT, President, Harvard University

Delivered at the Annual Dinner of the New York Academy of Public Education on the occasion of receiving the award of the Academy's Medal for Services to Education, Hotel Waldorf-Astoria, New York City, February 18, 1943


America Enters the Scene

A "LIVE AND HELP LIVE" WORLD ECONOMY

By GUY STANTON FORD, President Emeritus of the University of Minnesota

Delivered before the American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Pa., February 20, 1943


The Truths That Inspired Washington

SKEPTICS CONTINUE TO CARP

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Delivered at the George Washington Dinner given under the auspices of the Democratic National Committee, Washington, D. C., February 22, 1943


A Job to Finish

"THIS WAR FOR FREEDOM SHALL BE WON"

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States

Delivered at the George Washington Dinner given under the auspices of the Democratic National Committee, Washington. D. C., February 22, 1943


There IS No Absenteeism on the Battle Front

OUR DOUBLE STANDARD OF JUSTICE AND PUBLIC DECENCY

By CAPT. EDDIE RICKENBACKER, President of the Eastern Air Lines

Delivered at a joint session of the Legislature, Albany, N. Y., February 22, 1943


The Victory of Peace

FORMULATE A UNITED NATIONS PEACE PLAN NOW

By SUMNER WELLES, Under Secretary of State

Delivered at the Convocation of the University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada, February 26, 1943


March


Victory Without Hate

ASSOCIATION BY CHOICE

By MADAME CHIANG KAI-SHEK, Wife of the Generalissimo of China

Delivered at the Madison Square Garden Mass Tribute meeting and broadcast over the Columbia and Mutual Networks, New York City, March 2, 1943


Looking Forward Through the Eyes of Research

NATURE VS. PEOPLE

By CHARLES F. KETTERING, Vice-President of General Motors in Charge of Research

Delivered before a joint meeting of the Greater Lafayette Chamber of Commerce and manufacturers of the region, at Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana, March 4, 1943


Logistics on Home Front and in War

POST-WAR SALES PROGRAMS

By FREDERICK W. NICHOL, Vice President and General Manager, International Business Machines Corp., New York

Delivered before the Sales Managers' Bureau of the St. Louis Chamber of Commerce, St. Louis, Mo., March 5, 1943


The Capital Levy and the Colleges

TAX PROGRAM SHOULD BE REALISTIC AND FEARLESS

By EVERETT NEEDHAM CASE, President, Colgate University

Delivered before the Executives Club of Chicago, March 5, 1943


World Philosophies and Results

AVOID A THIRD WORLD WAR

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice President of the United States

Delivered before the Conference on Christian Bases of World Order, Delaware, Ohio, March 8, 1943


Unity Imperative

FRENCH SPIRIT WILL BE VICTORIOUS

By GENERAL HENRI HONORE GIRAUD, Commander of French Forces in North Africa

Delivered in Algiers and recorded and translated by the Federal Communications Commission, March 14, 1943


Six Pillars of Peace

CEMENT UNITY NOW WITH ORGANIZED WORLD COLLABORATION

By JOHN FOSTER DULLES, Chairman of the Commission to Study the Bases of a Just and Durable Peace

Delivered at a Luncheon Meeting of Financial, Labor, Religious and Educational Leaders, New York City, March 18, 1943


The British Home Front Compared with Ours

"IF DEMOCRACY IS WORTH FIGHTING FOR, IT IS WORTH FIGHTING WITH"

By MRS. EUGENE MEYER, Journalist

Delivered before The Commonwealth Club of California, San Francisco, Cal., March 19, 1943


Post-War Councils on World Problems

A FOUR YEAR PLAN FOR ENGLAND

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain,

Broadcast from London over BBC, March 21, 1943


Avoiding Post-War Disputes

EUROPEAN JEALOUSIES MUST BE SETTLED

By JAMES W. GERARD, Diplomat and Lawyer

Delivered over WINS, March 21, 1943


Nationalism in Europe

AN ECONOMIC UNIT—CULTURALLY DIVIDED

By HERBERT PELL, Former American Minister to Portugal and Hungary

Delivered at the New York University Pan-European Conference, New York City, March 25, 1943


Unilateral Infraction of Treaties Must End

INTERNATIONAL AUTHORITY MUST HAVE SUFFICIENT STRENGTH

By ANTHONY EDEN, British Foreign Secretary

Delivered before the joint session of the General Assembly, Annapolis, Md., March 26, 1943


Has Small Business a Future?

WHAT DO WE MEAN BY PRESERVING SMALL BUSINESS?

By JAMES E. MURRAY, Senator from Montana

Delivered before Greater Cleveland Council, Smaller Business of America, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio, March 26, 1943


How Can You Help to Make a Better Peace Next Time?

THE IMPORTANCE OF COLLECTIVE ASSISTANCE

By SIR NORMAN ANGELL, Author and Lecturer

Delivered at the Middle Atlantic Division of the Unitarian Laymen's League, Tarrytown, New York March 27, 1943


April


The Army—It Is America

ABSENTEEISM NOT CONFINED TO FACTORIES

By LIEUT. GENERAL BEN LEAR, Commander of the Second Army

Delivered at Army Day Luncheon, Cincinnati, Ohio, April 6, 1943


Retailing—An Essential Industry

CIVILIAN REQUIREMENTS IN WAR TIME

By DAVID R. CRAIG, President, American Retail Federation, Washington, D. C.

Delivered before the Canadian Retail Federation, Toronto, Ontario, April 6, 1943


War and the Family

THE UNIT FOR "A BETTER WORLD"

By MARGARET CULKIN BANNING, Novelist and Specialist in American Women's Activities

Delivered at the National Women's Conference, under the Auspices of the New York Times, April 7, 1943


A Crisis in the History of Women

LET US HAVE ACTION INSTEAD OF LIP-SERVICE

By FANNIE HURST, Novelist

Delivered at the National Women's Conference, under the Auspices of the New York Times, April 7, 1943


What Kind of World Do We Want?

CONTRIBUTIONS BY SOCIAL SCIENCE AND BY WOMEN

By DR. MARGARET MEAD, Associate Curator of Anthropology, American Museum of Natural History

Delivered at the National Women's Conference—New York Times Forum, April 7, 1943


Democracy in the Conflict of Ideologies

A SECURE BASIS IS HUMAN VALUE

By REV. THOMAS E. HILL, Ph.D. (Edinburgh), Professor of Bible, Southwestern College, Memphis, Tenn.

Delivered before the fourth Southwestern College Public Forum on a "Just Peace and World Reconstruction," Memphis, Tenn., April 8, 1943


The Essence of America

INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS MUST BE SAFEGUARDED

By THOMAS E. DEWEY, Governor of New York

Delivered at a Regional Meeting of the Council of State Governments, New York City, April 9, 1943


This Is a Peoples War

ARE DOLLARS WORTH MORE THAN LIVES?

By HENRY MORGENTHAU, Secretary of the Treasury

Delivered at Rally at Opening of the Second War Loan Drive, Carnegie Hall, New York City, April 12, 1943


Reciprocal Trade Agreements

"STABLE PEACE AND ECONOMIC WARFARE WILL NOT MIX"

By CORDELL HULL, Secretary of State

Statement made to House Ways and Means Committee, Washington, D. C., April 12, 1943


This Time We Must Win the Peace

THE BARRIERS TO AMERICAN LEADERSHIP FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE

By WILLIAM G. CARLETON, Member of Faculty of the University of Florida, Gainsville, Fla.

Delivered at the Annual District Conference of Rotary International, 167th District, comprising the State of Florida Jacksonville, Fla., April 12, 1943


Our Places in the Pattern of the Future

THE FIRST STEP TO WORLD PEACE

By LAWRENCE HUNT, Lawyer and author of "A Letter to the American People"

Delivered before the Canadian Club of Montreal, April 12, 1943


Jobs, Freedom, Opportunity

THE FOUR ELEMENTS OF INDUSTRY

By F. C. CRAWFORD, President, National Association of Manufacturers; President, Thompson Products, Inc.

Delivered before the Fifth Annual Northern California Industrial Conference, San Francisco, Cal., April 13, 1943


Shall Industry or Bureaucracy Plan Our Economic Environment?

A FOURTH "HOUSE" IN DEMOCRACY

By ARTHUR A. HOOD, Director of Dealer Relations, Johns-Manville Corporation, New York City

Delivered before the Cleveland Sales Executive Club, Cleveland, Ohio, April 19, 1943


United Effort For a Better World

INTERDEPENDENCE OF ALL NATIONS

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Broadcast from Monterrey, Mexico, April 20, 1943


Good Neighbors—Good Friends

MEXICO THE BRIDGE BETWEEN LATIN AND SAXON CULTURES

By MANUEL AVILA CAMACHO, President of the Republic of Mexico

Broadcast from Monterrey, Mexico, April 20, 1943


America and the World Crisis

"SHALL THE HULL METHOD OF TARIFF MAKING BE ENDED?"

By DR. D. F. FLEMING, Teacher and Author

Broadcast over Station WSM, Nashville, Tenn., April 21, 1943


The Horn's of Labor's Dilemma

PRICES ON FOOD STAPLES MUST BE ROLLED BACK

By GEORGE MEANY, Secretary-Treasurer, American Federation of Labor

Broadcast over Mutual System, April 23, 1943


Labor and Management

THE FREEDOM OF ENTERPRISE

By WILLIAM GREEN, President, American Federation of Labor

Delivered at the "Unity Luncheon" of the annual meeting of the United States Chamber of Commerce, New York City, April 27, 1943


Parity for the Industrialist, Laborer and Farmer

"THE STAKE IS VERY GREAT"

By EDWARD A. O'NEAL, President, American Farm Bureau Federation, Washington, D. C.

Delivered before War Council of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, 31st Annual Meeting Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, April 27, 1943


Voluntary Cooperation of Manpower

PROGRESS IN MANPOWER UTILIZATION

By PAUL V. McNUTT, Chairman, War Manpower Commission, Washington, D. C.

Delivered before War Council of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, 31st Annual Meeting Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, April 27, 1943


Mobilization of Manpower

NATIONAL WAR SERVICE LEGISLATION

By JAMES W. WADSWORTH, Jr., Member of Congress from the State of New York, Washington, D. C.

Delivered before War Council of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, 31st Annual Meeting Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, April 27, 1943


America Unlimited

POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC FREEDOMS INSEPARABLE

By ERIC A. JOHNSTON, President of Chamber of Commerce of the United States

Before the Chamber's War Council and Thirty-first Annual Meeting Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, April 27, 1943


Foreign Commercial Policy

ALIEN PROPERTY RIGHTS

By EUGENE P. THOMAS, President, National Foreign Trade Council

Delivered Before the Thirty-First Annual Meeting of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, New York City, April 27, 1943


Taxation of Business Income

CAPITAL AND LABOR NEED ECONOMIC SECURITY

By MATTHEW WOLL, Vice President, American Federation of Labor

Delivered at Special Luncheon—Government Finance, War Council of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States,
31st Annual Meeting, Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, April 28, 1943


The Problem of Post-War Monetary Stabilization

POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC ASPECTS

By WINTHROP W. ALDRICH, Chairman, Board of Directors, The Chase National Bank of the City of New York

Delivered at a Luncheon Meeting of the American Section International Chamber of Commerce, Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, New York City, April 29, 1943


May


Supra-National Law

FUNDAMENTAL REQUIREMENTS FOR WORLD PEACE

By OWEN J. ROBERTS, Associate Justice of United States Supreme Court

Delivered at dinner of the American Society of International Law, Washington, D. C., May 1, 1943


The Production of Coal Will Not Be Stopped

NO FACTION SHALL INTERRUPT OUR FORWARD MARCH TO VICTORY

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Broadcast, May 2, 1943


Can the United States Support a 300 Billion Dollar Debt?

NO EASY ROAD OUT OF DEBT

By OLIN GLENN SAXON, Professor of Economics, Yale University

Delivered Before Pittsburgh Real Estate Board, Pittsburgh, Pa., May 4, 1943


Australia in the Post-War World

CLEAR THE SKY SO WE MAY SET OUR COURSE

By DR. H. C. COOMBS, Director General of Post-War Reconstruction in Australia

Delivered Before the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York, New York City, May 6, 1943


The Challenge of the Future World

WE MUST BE FIRM AND JUST

By DR. GEORGE N. SHUSTER, President, Hunter College, New York, N. Y.

Delivered before meeting of Association of the Junior Leagues of America, New York City, May 7, 1943


Society and the Graduate

WILL SECURITY BE SUBSTITUTED FOR OPPORTUNITY?

By ROBERT H. JACKSON, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States

Delivered at the Commencement Exercises of Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y., May 9, 1943


Foreign Exchange Stabilization

KEYNES AND MORGENTHAU PLANS

By BENJAMIN M. ANDERSON, Ph.D., Professor of Economics, University of California at Los Angeles

Delivered at a Dinner Given by the Officers and Directors of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, May 11, 1943


A Universal Currency

FACILITATING INTERNATIONAL TRADE

By LORD KEYNES, Member of the Chancellor of the Exchequers Consultative Council

Delivered Before the House of Lords, London, May 18, 1943


Full Aid to United States Against Japan

WEIGHT OFF RUSSIA THIS YEAR

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered before Congress, Washington, D. C., May 19, 1943


The Future of Europe

COLLABORATION MUST REPLACE SUSPICION

By DR. EDUARD BENES, President of the Czechoslovaks Government in Exile

Dithered before the Council on Foreign Relations, New York City, May 19, 1943


American Progress After the War

THE ISSUE IN THE NEXT ELECTION

By ROBERT A. TAFT, Senator from Ohio

Delivered before the Fifty-fourth Annual Congress of the Sons of the American Revolution, New York City, May 19, 1943


 The Man Hitler Couldn't Kill

NO SACRIFICE TOO GREAT

By CAPTAIN ERNST WINKLER, Former Officer of the German Luftwaffe

Delivered before the Executives Club, Chicago, Ill., May 21, 1943


Effect of Good Management on Employer and Employee Relationships

WHO IS THE MASTER?

By T. C. HANNAH, General Attorney for the Mississippi Central Railroad Company

Delivered Before the Hattiesburg Rotary Club, Hattiesburg, Miss., May 25, 1943


A Horizontal and Vertical Peace

THE GOLDEN AGE BROUGHT UP TO DATE

By EDWARD J. MEEMAN, Editor, Memphis Press-Scimitar

Delivered to Graduates of Delta State Teachers College, Cleveland, Miss., May 27, 1943


What Will the Decision Be?

THE DUTIES OF CITIZENSHIP ARE DIFFICULT

By ARCHIBALD MacLEISH, Librarian, Congressional Library, Washington, D. C.

Delivered at Commencement of Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, New York, May 28, 1943


Can the Liberal Arts Tradition Survive?

BROADLY EDUCATED PEOPLE NECESSARY IN YEARS TO COME

By COLONEL H. F. HARDING, CAC

Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Association of Hawaii at Honolulu, May 28, 1943


Search Out and Know the Truth

THE BASIS OF ANY EDUCATION

By LORD HALIFAX, British Ambassador to the United States

Delivered at Laval University, Quebec, Canada, on the occasion of his receiving an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws, May 29, 1943, Broadcast by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation


Future Fundamentals

SOVEREIGNTY IS A RELATIVE TERM

By AMOS J. PEASLEE, Lawyer

Delivered before the Phi Beta Kappa Association, Swarthmore College, May 30, 1943


Our Achievements So Far

WE MUST ALL WORK TOGETHER

By JAMES F. BYRNES, Director of War Mobilization

Delivered at Rally of Cotton Textile Workers, Spartanburg, S. C., May 31, 1943


The Long Road Ahead

GHOSTS OF OUR GENERATION

By RAYMOND MOLEY, Professor of Public Law, Columbia University

Delivered at the Annual Commencement of Baldwin-Wallace College, Berea, Ohio, May 31, 1943


June


High Noon

"LIFE HAS ITS MEANINGFUL HOURS"

By CHARLES L. ANSPACH, President, Central Michigan College of Education

Delivered at the Senior Swingout, Central Michigan College, Mount Pleasant, Michigan, June 2, 1943


The World's Commencement

WOMEN'S UNIQUE CAPACITY TO INSPIRE THE BEST

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States

Delivered at Commencement of Connecticut College for Women, New London, Conn., June 6, 1943 and Broadcast Nationally over Mutual Broadcasting System


Our Primary Responsibility

THE ULTIMATE OBJECTIVE

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Delivered to the delegates to the United Nations Food Conference, Washington, D. C., June 7, 1943


Amphibious Operations Approach

"NOTHING WILL TURN US FROM OUR ENDEAVOR"

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered to the House of Commons, London, June 8, 1943


The Food Front

SECOND IN WAR, FIRST IN PEACE

By HERBERT HOOVER, Former President of the United States

Delivered before the American Farm Bureau Federation, New York City, June 8, 1943


We Took the Easiest Way

"IN OUR KEEPING LIES THE FUTURE OF MANKIND"

By WALTER LIPPMANN, Journalist

Delivered at Commencement of University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, June 8, 1943


The Human Family, Inc.

THE FUTURE MUST PROTECT INDIVIDUAL INITIATIVE AND HUMAN DIGNITY

By RAY LYMAN WILBUR, President, Stanford University

Delivered at Commencement of Stanford University, Stanford University, Cal., June 13, 1943


We Must Work Together

"OUR OPPORTUNITY IS HERE"

By WILLIAM GREEN, President of the American Federation of Labor

Delivered before the Economic Club, New York City, June 8, 1943


The Post War Outlook for Young Business Men

"ETERNAL VIGILANCE IS THE PRICE OF LIBERTY"

By DeWITT EMERY, President, National Small Business Mens Association, Inc.

Delivered before the Annual Meeting of the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce, Chicago, Ill., June 14, 1943.


Our Flag

PROGRESS THROUGH COMPETITION

By LT. COL. BERNARD A. BROWN, Assistant Judge Advocate

Delivered at Flag Day Exercises, Sioux City, Iowa, June 14, 1943


The "Rule of Law"

DEMOCRACY VS. OCHLOCRACY

By MADAME CHIANG KAI-SHEK, Wife of the Generalissimo of China

Delivered at a joint session of the Canadian Parliament, Ottawa, Can., June 16, 1943


Relief and Rehabilitation

THE SUPREME TEST FOR PERMANENT STABILITY

By HERBERT H. LEHMAN, Director of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations

Delivered at the Dinner of the Foreign Polity Association, New York City, June 17, 1943


A Fruitful Approach to a Prolonged Peace

National-Self-Interest Requirements

By Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., Senator from Massachusetts

Delivered in Senate of the United States, June 18, 1943


The Agricultural Engineer's World

PRODUCTION FOR PEACE

By WHEELER McMILLEN, Editor-in-Chief of Farm Journal and Farmers Wife

Delivered before the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers, Purdue University, Lafayette, Indiana, June 21, 1943


Russia Today

OUTSTANDING IMPRESSIONS OF MY TRIP

By JOSEPH E. DAVIES, former United States Ambassador to the U.S.S.R.

Delivered before the Governors' Conference, Columbus, Ohio, June 21, 1943


We Have Seized the Initiative

THE PATTERN FOR VICTORY IS CLEAR

By GENERAL GEORGE C. MARSHALL, Chief of Staff of the United States Army

Delivered before Conference of Governors, Columbus, Ohio, June 21, 1943


Our Manpower Problem

PRELIMINARY TRAINING OF INDUCTEES AT HOME STATIONS

By BRIG. GEN. ALBERT L. COX, Commanding General, District of Columbia National Guard

Delivered before the Adjutants General Association, Columbus, Ohio, June 22, 1943


"The Law Is a Rule for Men to Live By"

BASIC CREED OF A MODERN LIBERAL

By ROBERT H. JACKSON, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States

Delivered at the Brandeis Memorial Colony Dinner, New York City, June 23, 1943


The State of this Country's Affairs

DOMESTIC POLICY CONTRADICTS FOREIGN POLICY

By JOHN W. BRICKER, Governor of Ohio

Delivered before the Wisconsin Bar Association, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, June 25, 1943


Air Transportation

NEW HOPE OF FREE ENTERPRISE

By CARLETON PUTNAM, President, Chicago and Southern Air Lines

Delivered at the Company's 10th Anniversary Dinner, sponsored by the National Aeronautic Association, Washington, D. C., June 25, 1943


"We Seek No Profit"

"THE HARD, COLD, VINDICTIVE TRUTH"

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered in the Guildhall, London, June 30, 1943


July


"This is the Fourth of July

"JEFFERSON STILL LIVES"

By ALBEN W. BARKLEY, Senator from Kentucky

Delivered at the Jefferson Day Celebration, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., July 4, 1943


"Oh! Say, Can You See . . ."

"WE WILL KEEP THE FLAG FLYING"

By DR. FRANK KINGDON, Educator and Author

Broadcast over Station WOR, New York City, July 4, 1943


Hostages for the Guilty

OUR FUTURE POLITICAL POLICY

By WILLIAM GREEN, President, American Federation of Labor

Delivered before Quadrennial Convention, International Longshoremen's Association, New York City, July 12, 1943


The Right to Vote

PRIVILEGE MUST BE MADE AVAILABLE TO ALL QUALIFIED VOTERS

By SCOTT LUCAS, Senator from Illinois

Delivered at the National Radio Forum, conducted by Washington Evening Star, WMAL, Blue Network, July 14, 1943


Wages and the Cost of Living

A STRUGGLE BETWEEN PRESSURE GROUPS

By PRENTISS M. BROWN, Administrator, Office of Price Administration

Delivered at a Members' Luncheon of the Boston Chamber of Commerce, Boston, Mass., July 16, 1943


Some Wrong Roads to Peace

"THE SYMBOL OF DOMESTIC PEACE IS NOT A POLICEMAN'S CLUB"

By NORMAN THOMAS, Chairman, Executive Committee, Post War World Council

Delivered over Columbia Network, July 22, 1943


"America Tomorrow"

COMMON MAN ECONOMICS

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States

Delivered at Mass Meeting of Labor and Civic Organizations, Detroit, Mich., July 25, 1943


"The Money Flood"

WHAT IT IS DOING TO YOU AND WHAT YOU CAN DO ABOUT IT

By SAMUEL B. PETTENGILL, former Congressman from Indiana

Delivered before the Rotary Club of Chicago, July 20, 1943


Let Youth Tell Us

The Scepticism Of Fighting Youth

By J. B. PRIESTLEY, English Writer and Commentator

Broadcast over British Broadcasting Corporation System, July 26, 1943


Developments in Italy

LET THEM "STEW IN THEIR OWN JUICE"

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered in House of Commons, London, July 27, 1943


"The First Crack in the Axis"

MUSTERING-OUT PLANS FOR ARMED FORCES

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Broadcast, July 28, 1943


August


The Expansion of Social Security

IMPORTANT INFLUENCE ON WAR AND PEACE

By GEORGE E. BIGGE, Member, Social Security Board

Delivered at the Convention of Massachusetts State Federation of Labor, Boston, Massachusetts, August 4, 1943


Thrift—Now

PRODUCTION DEPENDS ON BUYING-POWER

By CHARLES R. HOOK, President, The American Rolling Mill Co.

Delivered at the Wartime Conference of the American Legion, Department of Ohio, Cincinnati, Ohio, August 8th, 1943


The Battle on the Home Front

PROTECTION FOR HOME AND THE HEARTH SIDE

By J. EDGAR HOOVER, Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation

Delivered before the Annual Convention of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, Detroit, Mich., August 9, 1943. Broadcast over National Broadcasting Company Network


Stabilizing Costs

THOSE PROFITING FROM WAR CONDITIONS MUST PAY COSTS OF WAR

By JAMES F. BYRNES, War Mobilization Director

Broadcast over WEAF, August 16, 1943


The International Challenge

LAW OF MALTHUS REPEALED BY LAW OF HITLER

By LEO M. CHERNE, Executive Secretary, Research Institute of America, Inc.

Delivered at luncheon of the Export Managers Club, New York City, August 17, 1943


A Local World

BRITISH-AMERICAN COOPERATION

By ERIC A. JOHNSTON, President, Chamber of Commerce of the United States

Delivered at luncheon of the British Chamber of Commerce, London, August 18, 1943


American Relations With Africa

EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY IN TRADE

By HENRY S. VILLARD, Assistant Chief of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs of the Department of State

Delivered at the Chautauqua Institute, Chautauqua, New York, August 19, 1943


Labor-Management Committees

COOPERATION ENHANCES CONFIDENCE

By COLONEL HERMAN W. STEINKRAUS, President and General Manager of Bridgeport Brass Company, Bridgeport, Conn.

Delivered before the Kiwanis Club of Bridgeport, August 19, 1943


This Troubled Age

UNITY THROUGH COMMON CULTURE NECESSARY

By J. O. BOYD, President, Board of Trustees, Culver-Stockton College, Keokuk, Iowa

Delivered at Culver-Stockton College, Canton, Missouri, August 23, 1943


Fraternities and Democracy

THE BROTHERHOOD OF MAN

By LIONEL CROCKER, Faculty Adviser for Ohio Mu Chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Denison University, Granville, Ohio

Delivered at the Ninth Annual Leadership School of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Evanston, Ill., August 24, 1943


Warning to Hitler

BETTER WORLD COMING

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Delivered before the Canadian Parliament, Ottawa, Can., August 25, 1943


"The Zones of Safety"

AMERICA'S CONTRIBUTION TO WORLD PEACE

By CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLAND, Republican National Committeeman for Arizona

Delivered before the National Republican Club, New York City, August 25, 1943


Economic Aspects of Relief and Rehabilitation

WE MUST HELP DEVASTATED NATIONS TO HELP THEMSELVES

By EUGENE STALEY, Technical Program Rupert (Economic) of the Office of Foreign Relief and Rehabilitation Operations

Delivered before the Canadian Institute on Public Affairs at Lake Couchiching, Ontario, Canada, August 26, 1943


How Did We Get This Way?

"CHRISTIANITY HAS BEEN FOUND DIFFICULT AND NOT TRIED"

By ENNIS P. WHITLEY, General Sales Manager, American Seating Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.

Delivered before the Engineers' Club, Grand Rapids, Mich., August 26, 1943


Troops Will Cross Channel

SIGNIFICANT EVENTS ARE TAKING PLACE

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Broadcast from Quebec, Can., August 31, 1943


September


Peace Plan Must Be Worthy and Just

"REAL STRENGTH NEED NOT FEAR BEING GENEROUS"

By POPE PIUS XII

Broadcast from Vatican City September 1, 1943


New Approaches to Peace

COMMON GROUND

By HERBERT HOOVER, Former President of the United States

Delivered before Joint Session of the St. Paul-Minneapolis branches of the Foreign Policy Association and University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn., September 3, 1943


What Does Freedom Mean?

THE AMERICAN CONCEPTION

By NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, President, Columbia University

Delivered at the Parrish Memorial Art Museum, Southampton, Long Island, September 5, 1943


Alliance With U. S. After War

COMMON TONGUE A BASIS FOR COMMON CITIZENSHIP

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered at Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass., September 6, 1943


War Bonds for Victory

NATION'S NEEDS GREATER THAN EVER

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Broadcast at opening of Third Victory Loan Drive, September 8, 1943


A Challenge to Our Age

"LIBERTIES CANNOT BE FORCED UPON PEOPLE"

By WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS, Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court

Delivered before the Commonwealth Club, San Francisco, California, September 10, 1943


What We fight For

"EACH AGE DEMANDS A NEW FREEDOM"

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice President of the United States

Delivered before a meeting sponsored by the Chicago United Nations Committee to Win the Peace, Chicago, Illinois, September 11, 1943


Our Foreign Policy in the Framework of Our National Interests

THE RECORD AND AIMS OF AMERICAN DIPLOMACY

By CORDELL HULL, Secretary of State

Broadcast over the Network of the National Broadcasting Company, September 12, 1943


The Power to Maintain Peace

RESPONSIBILITIES MUST BE ACCEPTED

By DOROTHY THOMPSON, Newspaper Columnist

Delivered at a "Win the Peace" Rally, Carnegie Hall, N. Y., September 12, 1943


Freedom from Fear

REMOVE THE ROOT CAUSE OF WAR

By HOWARD J. McMURRAY, Congressman from Wisconsin

Delivered at a "Win the Peace" Rally, Carnegie Hall, New York City, September 12, 1943


What Makes America Great?

THE SPARK THAT FIRES INITIATIVE

BY COLONEL WILLARD CHEVALIER, Publisher, "Business Week"

Delivered at Carrier Institute of Business, Syracuse, N. Y., September 13, 1943


Savings and Economic Security

THE IMPORTANCE OF GOVERNMENT FINANCIAL STABILITY

By HAROLD G. MOULTON, President, The Brookings Institution

Delivered before The American Bankers Association, New York, September 13, 1943


Saving on Time

MAKING SAVERS OF PROSPECTIVE HOME OWNERS

By CHARLES W. GREEN, Franklin Square National Bank, Franklin Square, N. Y.

Delivered before the Savings Division, American Bankers Association War Service Meeting, New York City, September 13, 1943


What Is Ahead in the Americas

COMMERCIAL RELATIONSHIPS

By J. C. ROVENSKY, Vice President, Chase National Bank of New York

Delivered at the War Service Meeting of the American Bankers Association, New York, September 14, 1943


First Steps in Peacemaking

THE SENATE RIGHT MUST BE RECOGNIZED

By HENRY M. WRISTON, President of Brown University

Delivered at the War Service Meeting of the American Bankers Association, New York City, September 15, 1943


PROGRESS OF THE WAR

MESSAGE from THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES transmitting A REPORT TO CONGRESS ON THE SUBJECT OF THE PROGRESS OF THE WAR

September 17, 1943.—Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union, and ordered to be printed


Africa: Maps and Man

"FOCUS ON FACTS, NOT FEARS"

By MR. S. W. BOGGS, Geographer, Department of State

Delivered at a Meeting of the Association of American Geographers, Washington, D. C, September 17, 1943


THE FULBRIGHT RESOLUTION

(House Concurrent Resolution 25, Seventy-Eighth Congress. September 21, 1943)

Recent War Developments

CAMPAIGNS AND POLICIES SKILLFULLY MANAGED

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered before Parliament, London, September 21, 1943


We Are Now Prepared to Fight

BETTER TO HAVE ABUNDANCE THAN DEFICIENCIES

By GENERAL GEORGE C. MARSHALL, Chief of Staff of the United States Army

Delivered before the American Legion Convention, Omaha, Neb., September 21, 1943


America and the World Crisis

"A WORD TO CONJURE WITH"

By DR. D. F. FLEMING, Author and Commentator

Delivered over radio station WSM, Nashville, Tennessee, September 21, 1943


What Shall We Do With Germany?

ANY PLAN MUST BE STERN AND DRASTIC

By BERNADOTTE E. SCHMITT, Professor of Modern History, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Delivered before the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, Chicago, September 24, 1943


Women's Part in the Struggle

"NO FEAR OF THE FUTURE"

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered at the National Conference of Women, Albert Hall, London, September 28, 1943


Let's Plan Now for Our Returning Soldier

OUR MORAL RESPONSIBILITY

By HONORABLE ELBERT D. THOMAS, Senior United States Senator from Utah

Delivered at The Evening Star National Radio Forum over NBC's Station WMAL, Washington, D. C., September 29, 1943


October


MOSCOW CONFERENCE

JOINT FOUR-NATION DECLARATION

October, 1943


The Dawn of a New Day

COLLECTIVE SECURITY NOT POWER POLITICS OR ALLIANCES

By WILLIAM G. CARLETON, Prof, of History and Political Science, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida

Delivered before a Win the Peace Mass Meeting Sponsored by the Peace Aims Committee of the Tampa Rotary Club, Tampa, Fla., October 5, 1943.


The First Amendment

ALLOW NO FREEDOM TO BE FLANKED

By ROBERT G. SPROUL, President, University of California

Radio broadcast, American Newspaper Week, National Broadcasting Company, San Francisco, October 8, 1943


Our Task

PROBLEMS FACING THE REPUBLICAN PARTY

By WENDELL WILLKIE, Lawyer and Author

Broadcast over National Broadcasting Co. network from St. Louis, Mo., October 15, 1943


Moral Perspectives

HATE OFFERS NOTHING

By HENRY T. MOORE, President, Skid more College

Convocation Address, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, N. Y., (undated, assigned October 15), 1943


Financing Post War Prosperity

CONTROLLING BOOMS AND DEPRESSIONS

By BEARDSLEY RUML, Chairman, New York Federal Reserve Bank

Delivered over the NBC network on the "For This We Fight" program sponsored by the NBC Inter-American University of the Air in cooperation with "The Commission to Study the Organization of Peace" and "The Twentieth Century Fund"

(Undated, assigned date of Oct. 15, 1943.)


Post-War Executive Talent

INDUSTRY'S MOST IMPORTANT PROBLEM IS MARKETING

By THOMAS B. McCABE, President, Scott Paper Company, Chester, Pa.

Delivered at the Management Education Conference conducted by The Society for the Advancement of Management in cooperation with the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, October 15, 1943


Safeguarding Our Interests

WORLD ORDER MUST BE MAINTAINED

By SUMNER WELLES, Former Under Secretary of State

Delivered before the Twenty-fifth Anniversary Luncheon of the Foreign Policy Association, New York City, October 16, 1943


Transportation Costs Stifle Fair Competition

RAILROAD RATE-MAKING PROCEDURES

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice President of the United States

Delivered before Civic and Labor Groups, Dallas, Tex., October 20, 1943


The State Department

DUTIES, DEPARTMENTS AND PROBLEMS

By HONORABLE G. HOWLAND SHAW, Assistant Secretary of State

Delivered at the World Trade Dinner of the 30th National Foreign Trade Convention, New York, October 26, 1943


The United States and Latin America

ECONOMIC LIFE AND MILITARY SAFETY OF THE HEMISPHERE

By V. M. SCANLAN, Chairman, Executive Committee, First National Bank, Hattiesburg, Miss.

Delivered before the Hattiesburg Rotary Club, October 26, 1943


"With Liberty and Justice for All"

THE TORCH BEARERS TODAY

By THE HONORABLE JOSEPH C. GREW, Special Assistant to the Secretary of State

Delivered on the anniversary of the birthday of Theodore Roosevelt, New York City, October 27, 1943


The Tripartite Conference in Moscow

ANGLO-SOVIET-AMERICAN COMMUNIQUE

October 19-30, 1943.


Russia's War Achievements

THE TASK OF RESTORATION AND ORGANIZATION AHEAD

By JOSEPH STALIN, Premier of U.S.S.R.

Delivered before a meeting of Moscow workers on the eve of the twenty-sixth anniversary of the Socialist revolution, October 31, 1943.


November


The Food Problem

MEASURES NEEDED TO MEET OUR NEEDS

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Message to Congress, November 1, 1943


THE CONNALLY RESOLUTION

Senate Resolution 192-Seventy-Eighth Congress. November 5, 1943

The Qualities of the Early Americans

HAS OUR PHILOSOPHY CHANGED

By GEORGE W. MAXEY, Chief Justice of Pennsylvania

Delivered at the Commemoration of the Three Hundredth Anniversary of the Swedish Settlement on the Delaware, Philadelphia, Pa., November 5, 1943


Germany Will Never Capitulate"

FANATICAL CONFIDENCE NECESSARY IN THESE BAD TIMES

By ADOLF HITLER, Fuehrer of Germany

Following is an English Translation of Hitler's Speech at Munich, Germany, Broadcast in German by the Greater German Radio, November 8, 1943


AGREEMENT FOR UNRRA

Agreement for United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, November 9, 1943

Milestones of Our Journey

THIS IS NO TIME FOR RELAXATION

By WINSTON CHURCHILL, Prime Minister of Great Britain

Delivered at the Lord Mayor's Luncheon in London, November 9, 1943


Another Link in the Chain

"THE NATIONS HAVE COMMON OBJECTIVES"

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Delivered to the Relief Conferees, following the signing of an agreement creating the United Nations' Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, November 9, 1943


Equal Treatment of China

AMERICA'S FUTURE MUST LIE LARGELY IN ORIENT

By DR. WALTER H. JUDD, Congressman from Minnesota

Delivered at the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 16, 1943


World Currency

A DOLLAR-STERLING STANDARD

By LEON FRASER, President, First National Bank of New York

Delivered at the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 16, 1943


A Common Language

'POCKET' TONGUE WILL BE A NECESSITY

By PROFESSOR IVOR ARMSTRONG RICHARDS, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass

Delivered at the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 16, 1943


"Rediscovery" of Alaska

"CROSSROADS OF AMERICA"

By DR. RUTH GRUBER, Field Representative, Department of the Interior, Washington, D. C.

Delivered at the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 16, 1943


The Next Step

"HUMAN VALUES RATHER THAN POWER VALUES"

By WENDELL L. WILLKIE, Lawyer and Author

Delivered at The New York Herald Tribune Forum, New York City, November 17, 1943


Japan's Military System Must Be Crushed

DOMESTIC AND ECONOMIC REFORMS NECESSARY

By JOHN F. AISO, Lawyer

Delivered at the New York Herald Tribune Forum, New York City, November 17, 1943


"Dynograph" of World Industry

RUSSIA MAY OUTDO UNITED STATES

By DR. GRIFFITH TAYLOR, Professor of Geography, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Delivered at the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 17, 1943


The Magic of Production

THE REALITIES OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

By HENRY A. WALLACE, Vice-President of the United States

Delivered at the New York Herald-Tribune Forum, New York City, November 17, 1943


Cause of Small Nations Upheld

MUTUAL AID TO OVERCOME FEAR, IGNORANCE AND WANT

By ANTHONY EDEN, British Foreign Secretarys

Delivered at The New York Herald-Tribune Forum, November 17, 1943


Food as an Implement of War

THE RESPONSIBILITIES OF FARMERS

By JOSEPH S. DAVIS, Director, Food Research Institute, Stanford University, Cal.

Delivered before the annual meeting of the California Farm Bureau Federation, Santa Cruz, Cal, November 17 1943


Moscow Pact a Basis for World Organization

OBVIATES NECESSITY FOR ALLIANCES OR SPHERES OF INFLUENCE

By CORDELL HULL, Secretary of State

Delivered before U. S. Congress, Washington, D. C, November 18, 1943


The Four Policemen

WHAT WILL HOLD THEM TOGETHER?

By WALTER LIPPMANN, Journalist

Delivered before the Second War Conference of the New England Council, Boston, Mass., November 18, 1943


"Must We Have Inflation?

SUBSIDIES NEEDED TO HOLD DOWN COST OF FOOD

By DR. D. F. FLEMING, Professor of Political Science, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.

Broadcast Over Radio Station WSM, Nashville, Tenn., November 23, 1943


Both Dreamers and Diplomats Are Needed

STATESMEN MUST FACE THE FACTS

By HONORABLE A. A. BERLE, JR., Assistant Secretary of State

Delivered Before the Rotary Club, Knoxville, Tenn., November 23, 1943


Economic Problems at War's End

KEY TO POST-WAR PROSPERITY

By EMERSON P. SCHMIDT, Economist, Chamber of Commerce of the United States of America

Substance of speech delivered extemporaneously before Research Bureau for Post-War Economics, New York City, November 24, 1943


December


CAIRO CONFERENCE

November, 1943

(Dept. of State Bulletin, Vol. IX, p. 393)

Released December 1, 1943


THE CAIRO CONFERENCE

(United States, China and United Kingdom)
A statement regarding War against Japan. Released Decemcer 1, 1943

THE TEHERAN CONFERENCE

(United States, United Kingdom, Soviet Union)
 Agreements on War and Peace. December 1, 1943)

Forecasting the Management Problems of 1944

FRICTIONS MUST BE DISSOLVED, BASIC ISSUES EXAMINED

By LEO M. CHERNE, Executive Secretary, Research Institute of America

Delivered before the Society for the Advancement of Management, National Conference, New York City, December 4, 1943


Freedom Is Not Enough

INTELLIGENCE AND GOODNESS MUST RULE

By KENNETH IRVING BROWN, President, Denison University

Delivered at the Elks Memorial Service, Newark, Ohio, December 5, 1943


Industry Has a Program

PRODUCTION THE ONLY SOURCE OF JOBS

By WALTER WEISENBURGER, Executive Vice President, National Association of Manufacturers

Delivered at the National Association of Manufacturers Second Congress of American Industry, New York City, December 9, 1943


The Greater Conquest

KEEP YOUR VISION CLEAR

By FRANK J. LAUSCHE, Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio

Delivered before the graduating class of Case School of Applied Science, December 9, 1943


Management's Job

A REBIRTH OF COURAGE

By H. W. PRENTIS, JR., President, Armstrong Cork Company, Lancaster, Pa. and Chairman, Legislative Policies Commission of N.A.M.

Delivered before the Annual Convention of the National Association of Manufacturers, New York City, December 9, 1943


We Must Have Unity

DANGEROUS TRENDS

By SAM RAYBURN, Congressman from Texas

Delivered in the House of Representatives, Washington, D. C., December 9, 1943


The New Significance of Latin America

FUTURE TRADE RELATIONS

By JOHN B. GLENN, President, Pan American Trust Co.

Delivered at Forum of the New York Credit Men's Association in collaboration with the Robert Morris Associates, New York, N. Y., December 9, 1943


The Real Meaning of Free Enterprise

"ONLY THE INDIVIDUAL IS ENTITLED TO FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS"

By HENRY W. WRISTON, President, Brown University

Delivered before the National Association of Manufacturers Second War Congress of American Industry, New York City December 10, 1943


The "Climate of Opinion"

BILL OF RIGHTS MUST BE PROTECTED

By PEIRSON M. HALL, U. S. District Court Judge, Los Angeles, Calif.

Delivered before Los Angeles Bar Ass'n., December 15, 1943


Big-Four Powers to Enforce Peace After Victory

EISENHOWER TO LEAD NEW ATTACK

By PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

Broadcast from Hyde Park, December 24, 1943


Be Ye Enlightened

DUTIES OF CHRISTIANS TODAY

By POPE PIUS XII

Translation of Christmas Address broadcast over the Vatican as recorded and transcribed by The Associated Press, December 25, 1943


The Big Four

CO-OPERATION MAY BUILD UP A COMMON UNDERSTANDING

By JAN CHRISTIAN SMUTS, Premier of South Africa

Broadcast from South Africa on the N.B.C. network on the occasion of the award to him of the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Medal, December 28, 1943


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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