THE NAZI PLAN This Is a List of Intertitles As They Appear in Proper Chronological Order
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Hitler's Speech to the Reichstag, 1 September 1939
Hitler's Speech to the Reichstag, 1 September 1939 ...If I call the Wehrmacht, if I now demand the German people to sacrifice, and if necessary, I demand to sacrifice everything, I have the right to do so. Because I am ready today, as I did in the past, to bring any personal sacrifice, I do not demand of any German man to do anything I was not prepared to do myself for four years. There should be no deprivation in Germany that I will not share. My entire life belongs from this moment on to my people. I want nothing else now than to be the first soldier of the German Reich. I have now put on the same uniform that was once my dearest and holiest. I will only take it off after the victory, or else I will not live to see that end. Should something happen to me in this battle, my first successor will be party member Goering. Should something happen to party member Goering, the next in line will be party member Hess. You would then be bound by blind loyalty to them as Fuehrers , as you were to me. Should something happen to party member Hess, I will enact a law that the senate will then elect the worthiest, i.e. the bravest from their midst. As National Socialist and as a German soldier I am going into this battle with a brave heart. My whole life was nothing but one continuous battle for my people, for its renewal, for Germany. This battle was always backed by the faith in this people. -
SURVEY of CURRENT BUSINESS September 1934
SEPTEMBER 1934 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE WASHINGTON VOLUME 14 NUMBER 9 Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis SUMMARY OF CHANGES IN STATISTICAL SERIES SINCE PUBLICATION OF THE 1932 ANNUAL SUPPLEMENT For convenience there is listed below a tabulation of the changes which have been made in the past 2 years. If back data have been presented for the new series, a reference to the monthly issues in which such statistics appeared may be found in the footnotes which are included on pages 22 to 56, inclusive. NEW SERIES ADDED JUNE 1934 JUNE 1933 Agricultural loans outstanding (six series). Bond prices, domestic, United States Liberty (New DECEMBER 1932 Agricultural products, cash income received from marketings of. York Trust Co.). Brick, face, production (brick drawn from kilns). Auto accessories and parts, composite index of ship- Beverages: ments. Fermented malt liquors: Building costs, by types of construction (American Production, consumption, and stocks. Appraisal Co.). Canadian statistics, electric-power production index. Distilled spirits: Cotton textiles, production, shipments, stocks, etc. Chain-store sales index (Chain Store Age). Production, consumption, and stocks in bonded Farm products—price index of dairy and poultry Civil service employment, United States. warehouses. products (combined index). Convection type radiators, new orders. Cotton cloth (bleached, dyed, and printed), pro- Glass containers, net new orders. Department-store sales, Philadelphia. duction and stocks. Gold, held under earmark for foreign account. Factory employment (Bureau of Labor Statistics). Factory employment, Baltimore, Milwaukee, Mary- Hours of work per week in factories, nominal or land, and Massachusetts. -
SURVEY of CURRENT BUSINESS September 1935
SEPTEMBER 1935 OF CURRENT BUSINE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE WASHINGTON VOLUME 15 NUMBER 9 Digitized for FRASER http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/ Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis UNITED STATES BUREAU OF MINES MINERALS YEARBOOK 1935 The First Complete Official Record Issued in 1935 A LIBRARY OF CURRENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE MINERAL INDUSTRY (In One Volume) Survey of gold and silver mining and markets Detailed State mining reviews Current trends in coal and oil Analysis of the extent of business recovery for vari- ous mineral groups 75 Chapters ' 59 Contributors ' 129 Illustrations - about 1200 Pages THE STANDARD AUTHENTIC REFERENCE BOOK ON THE MINING INDUSTRY CO NT ENTS Part I—Survey of the mineral industries: Secondary metals Part m—Konmetals- Lime Review of the mineral industry Iron ore, pig iron, ferro'alloys, and steel Coal Clay Coke and byproducts Abrasive materials Statistical summary of mineral production Bauxite e,nd aluminum World production of minerals and economic Recent developments in coal preparation and Sulphur and pyrites Mercury utilization Salt, bromine, calcium chloride, and iodine aspects of international mineral policies Mangane.se and manganiferous ores Fuel briquets Phosphate rock Part 11—Metals: Molybdenum Peat Fuller's earth Gold and silver Crude petroleum and petroleum products Talc and ground soapstone Copper Tungsten Uses of petroleum fuels Fluorspar and cryolite Lead Tin Influences of petroleum technology upon com- Feldspar posite interest in oil Zinc ChroHHtt: Asbestos -
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945
Records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1891-1957, Record Group 85 New Orleans, Louisiana Crew Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, LA, 1910-1945. T939. 311 rolls. (~A complete list of rolls has been added.) Roll Volumes Dates 1 1-3 January-June, 1910 2 4-5 July-October, 1910 3 6-7 November, 1910-February, 1911 4 8-9 March-June, 1911 5 10-11 July-October, 1911 6 12-13 November, 1911-February, 1912 7 14-15 March-June, 1912 8 16-17 July-October, 1912 9 18-19 November, 1912-February, 1913 10 20-21 March-June, 1913 11 22-23 July-October, 1913 12 24-25 November, 1913-February, 1914 13 26 March-April, 1914 14 27 May-June, 1914 15 28-29 July-October, 1914 16 30-31 November, 1914-February, 1915 17 32 March-April, 1915 18 33 May-June, 1915 19 34-35 July-October, 1915 20 36-37 November, 1915-February, 1916 21 38-39 March-June, 1916 22 40-41 July-October, 1916 23 42-43 November, 1916-February, 1917 24 44 March-April, 1917 25 45 May-June, 1917 26 46 July-August, 1917 27 47 September-October, 1917 28 48 November-December, 1917 29 49-50 Jan. 1-Mar. 15, 1918 30 51-53 Mar. 16-Apr. 30, 1918 31 56-59 June 1-Aug. 15, 1918 32 60-64 Aug. 16-0ct. 31, 1918 33 65-69 Nov. 1', 1918-Jan. 15, 1919 34 70-73 Jan. 16-Mar. 31, 1919 35 74-77 April-May, 1919 36 78-79 June-July, 1919 37 80-81 August-September, 1919 38 82-83 October-November, 1919 39 84-85 December, 1919-January, 1920 40 86-87 February-March, 1920 41 88-89 April-May, 1920 42 90 June, 1920 43 91 July, 1920 44 92 August, 1920 45 93 September, 1920 46 94 October, 1920 47 95-96 November, 1920 48 97-98 December, 1920 49 99-100 Jan. -
Taylor University Bulletin (April 1938)
Taylor University Pillars at Taylor University Taylor University Bulletin Ringenberg Archives & Special Collections 4-1-1938 Taylor University Bulletin (April 1938) Taylor University Follow this and additional works at: https://pillars.taylor.edu/tu-bulletin Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Taylor University, "Taylor University Bulletin (April 1938)" (1938). Taylor University Bulletin. 316. https://pillars.taylor.edu/tu-bulletin/316 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Ringenberg Archives & Special Collections at Pillars at Taylor University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Taylor University Bulletin by an authorized administrator of Pillars at Taylor University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. TA YLOR UNIVERSITY BULLETIN Entered as second class matter at Upland, Ind., April 8, 1900, under Act of Congress, July 16, 1894. Vol. XXX, No. I APRIL 1938 Issued Monthly Tai/l OK is DijjjjeKent "AN EFFECTIVE CHRISTIAN COLLEGE" That does not mean that midst of an ideal spiritual Taylor is different when it atmosphere. Students are comes to her beautiful taught to think and to face campus, splendid buildings the facts of life. and equipment, although Education and religion many educators who visit are God's surpassing gifts our campus say it is one of to the youth of today. the most beautiful cam Everything that education puses and well equipped has to offer is welcomed plants of the smaller col and used in the reaching of leges of the State. A college the objective, but always should have the very best with the thought that it buildings and equipment must be controlled and and surroundings possible directed by the Spirit of so that it may be an ideal Christ. -
Friendly Endeavor, September 1937
Digital Commons @ George Fox University Northwest Yearly Meeting of Friends Church Friendly Endeavor (Quakers) 9-1937 Friendly Endeavor, September 1937 George Fox University Archives Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/nwym_endeavor Recommended Citation George Fox University Archives, "Friendly Endeavor, September 1937" (1937). Friendly Endeavor. 186. https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/nwym_endeavor/186 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Northwest Yearly Meeting of Friends Church (Quakers) at Digital Commons @ George Fox University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Friendly Endeavor by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ George Fox University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ) ( THE FRIENDLY ENDEAVOR JOURNAL. FOR FRIENDS IN THE NORTHWEST Volume 16, No. 9 PORTLAND, OREGON September, 1937 NEW CHART BIDS HIGH IN ALONE H I - L i G H T S O F INTEREST FOR 1937-38 B y PA U L C A M M A C K The new chart entitled "Circling the Globe You admire the one who has grit to do things alone; you like him because he TWIN ROCKS with Christian Endeavor" created much in terest at the semi-armual business meeting first flew the Atlantic and alone. You held during Twin Rocks Conference when admire Jesus because He, though forsaken CONFERENCE presented by Miss Ruth Gulley. of friends and Father, T'his year's chart was revealed to be a trip went alone to bear your around the world visiting enroute our Bolivian contemptible guilt. TOLD missionaries, the Chilsons and Choate in Both man and God Africa, Carrie Wood in India, Esther Gulley will admire you, if you and John and Laura Trachsel in China. -
8Th Annual Report of the Bank for International Settlements
BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT 1st APRIL 1937 —.. 31st MARCH 1938 BASLE 9th May 1938 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page I. Introduction 5 II. Exchange Rates, Price Movements and Foreign Trade , 19 III. From Dehoarding to renewed Hoarding of Gold 37 IV. Capital Movements and International Indebtedness 61 V. Trend of Interest Rates 74 VI. Developments in Central and Commercial Banking 100 VII. Current Activities of the Bank: (1) Operations of the Banking Department . 106 (2) Trustee and agency functions of the Bank 109 (3) Net profits and distribution . 111 (4) Changes in Board of Directors and Executive Officers 112 VIII. Conclusion 114 ANNEXES I. Central banks or other banking institutions possessing right of representation and of voting at the General Meeting of the Bank. II. Balance sheet as at 31st March 1938. III. Profit and Loss Account and Appropriation Account for the financial year ended 31st March 1938. IV. Trustee for the Austrian Government International Loan 1930: (a) Statement of receipts and payments for the seventh loan year (1st July 1936 to 30th June 1937). (b) Statement of funds in the hands of depositaries as at 30th June 1937. V. Trustee for the Austrian Government International Loan 1930 — Interim statement of receipts and payments for the half-year ended 31st December 1937. VI. International Loans for which the Bank is Trustee or Fiscal Agent for the Trustees — Funds on hand as at 31st March 1938. EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT TO THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING OF THE BANK FOR INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS Basle, 9th May 1938. Gentlemen : I have the honour to submit to you the Annual Report of the Bank for International Settlements for the eighth financial year, beginning 1st April 1937 and ending 31st March 1938. -
University Archives Inventory
University Archives Inventory Record Group Number: UR001.03 Title: Burney Lynch Parkinson Presidential Records Date: 1926-1969 Bulk Date: 1932-1952 Extent: 42 boxes Creator: Burney Lynch Parkinson Administrative/Biographical Notes: Burney Lynch Parkinson (1887-1972) was an educator from Lincoln, Tennessee. He received his B.S. from Erskine College in 1909, and rose up the administrative ranks from English teacher in Laurens, South Carolina public schools. He received his M.A. from Peabody College in 1920, and Ph.D. from Peabody in 1926, after which he became president of Presbyterian College in Clinton, SC in 1927. He was employed as Director of Teacher Training, Certification, and Elementary Education at the Alabama Dept. of Education just before coming to MSCW to become president in 1932. In December 1932, the university was re-accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, ending the crisis brought on the purge of faculty under Governor Theodore Bilbo, but appropriations to the university were cut by 54 percent, and faculty and staff were reduced by 33 percent, as enrollment had declined from 1410 in 1929 to 804 in 1932. Parkinson authorized a study of MSCW by Peabody college, ultimately pursuing its recommendations to focus on liberal arts at the cost of its traditional role in industrial, vocational, and technical education. Building projects were kept to a minimum during the Parkinson years. Old Main was restored and named for Mary Calloway in 1938. Franklin Hall was converted to a dorm, and the Whitfield Gymnasium into a student center with the Golden Goose Tearoom inside. Parkinson Hall was constructed in 1951 and named for Dr. -
Stagflation in the 1930S: Why Did the French New Deal Fail?
Stagflation in the 1930s: Why did the French New Deal Fail? Jeremie Cohen-Setton, Joshua K. Hausman, and Johannes F. Wieland∗ August 15, 2014 VERSION 1.0. VERY PRELIMINARY. DO NOT CITE WITHOUT PERMISSION. The latest version is available here. Abstract Most countries started to recover from the Great Depression when they left the Gold Stan- dard. France did not. In 1936, France both left the Gold Standard and enacted New- Deal-style policies, in particular wage increases and a 40-hour week law. The result was stagflation; prices rose rapidly from 1936 to 1938 while output stagnated. Using panel data on sectoral output, we show that the 40-hour week restriction had strong negative effects on production. Absent this law, France would likely have followed the usual pattern of rapid recovery after leaving the Gold Standard. We construct a model to show how supply-side policies could have prevented output growth despite excess capacity and a large real interest rate decline. ∗Cohen-Setton: University of California, Berkeley. 530 Evans Hall #3880, Berkeley, CA 94720. Email: [email protected]. Phone: (510) 277-6413. Hausman: Ford School of Public Policy, Uni- versity of Michigan. 735 S. State St. #3309, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. Email: [email protected]. Phone: (734) 763-3479. Wieland: Department of Economics, University of California, San Diego. 9500 Gilman Dr. #0508, La Jolla, CA 92093-0508. Email: [email protected]. Phone: (510) 388-2785. We thank Walid Badawi and Matthew Haarer for superb research assistance. “CABINETS, in France, may come and Cabinets may go, but the economic crisis seems to go on for ever.” - The Economist, 2/5/1938, p. -
Special Libraries, September 1933
San Jose State University SJSU ScholarWorks Special Libraries, 1933 Special Libraries, 1930s 9-1-1933 Special Libraries, September 1933 Special Libraries Association Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1933 Part of the Cataloging and Metadata Commons, Collection Development and Management Commons, Information Literacy Commons, and the Scholarly Communication Commons Recommended Citation Special Libraries Association, "Special Libraries, September 1933" (1933). Special Libraries, 1933. 8. https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1933/8 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Libraries, 1930s at SJSU ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Special Libraries, 1933 by an authorized administrator of SJSU ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. - -- --- ---- "PUTTING KNOWLEDGE TO WORK" VOLUME44 SEPTEMBER, 1933 NUMBER8 The Methods Clinic-What It Was and What It Will Mean By MARGUERITEBURNETT. .................... 159 I President's Page. Tentative Program-S.L.A. Convention ............ 164 Introducing Col. Frank Knox .................... 165 Group Programs in the Making. ................165 Snips and Snipes ............................167 I Events and Publications. ....................... 168 SP€CIAL LIBRARIES published monthly March to October, wrth bi-monthly issues January- February and November-December, by The Special Librar~esAssociation at 10 Ferry Street, Concord, N. H. Editorial, Advertising and Subscription Offices at 345 Hudson Street, New York, N. Y. Subscript~on price: $5.00 a year, fore~gn55.50, single copier, 50 cents. Entered ar second-clasr matter at the Post Ohce at Concord, N. H,under the act of March 3, 1879 SPECIAL LIBRARIES September, 1933 Volume 24 *++ Number 8 The Methods Clinic What It Was and What It Wdl Mean By MARGUERITE BURNETT, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Briarcliff Manor Conference, June 17,1933 N UNEXPECTED and tremendously important challenge came to the New York Chapter this last year. -
The Olimpiada Popular: Barcelona 1936, Sport and Politics in an Age of War, Dictatorship and Revolution
Article The Olimpiada Popular: Barcelona 1936, Sport and Politics in an Age of War, Dictatorship and Revolution Physick, Ray Available at http://clok.uclan.ac.uk/19183/ Physick, Ray (2016) The Olimpiada Popular: Barcelona 1936, Sport and Politics in an Age of War, Dictatorship and Revolution. Sport in History, 37 (1). pp. 51-75. ISSN 1746-0263 It is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from the work. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17460263.2016.1246380 For more information about UCLan’s research in this area go to http://www.uclan.ac.uk/researchgroups/ and search for <name of research Group>. For information about Research generally at UCLan please go to http://www.uclan.ac.uk/research/ All outputs in CLoK are protected by Intellectual Property Rights law, including Copyright law. Copyright, IPR and Moral Rights for the works on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. Terms and conditions for use of this material are defined in the policies page. CLoK Central Lancashire online Knowledge www.clok.uclan.ac.uk The Olimpiada Popular: Barcelona 1936 Sport and Politics in an age of War, Dictatorship and Revolution In an attempt to undermine the IOC Games of 1936, organisations linked to the international worker sport movement responded to an invitation from the Comité Organizador de la Olimpiada Popular (COOP) to take part in an alternative Olympics, the Olimpiada Popular, in Barcelona in July 1936. It is estimated that some 10,000 athletes and 25,000 visitors were in Barcelona to celebrate the Olimpiada. -
Power Distribution in the Weimar Reichstag in 1919-1933
Power Distribution in the Weimar Reichstag in 1919-1933 Fuad Aleskerov1, Manfred J. Holler2 and Rita Kamalova3 Abstract: ................................................................................................................................................2 1. Introduction .......................................................................................................................................2 2. The Weimar Germany 1919-1933: A brief history of socio-economic performance .......................3 3. Political system..................................................................................................................................4 3.2 Electoral system for the Reichstag ..................................................................................................6 3.3 Political parties ................................................................................................................................6 3.3.1 The Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).....................................................................7 3.3.2 The Communist Party of Germany (Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands – KPD)...............8 3.3.3 The German Democratic Party (Deutsche Demokratische Partei – DDP)...............................9 3.3.4 The Centre Party (Deutsche Zentrumspartei – Zentrum) .......................................................10 3.3.5 The German People's Party (Deutsche Volkspartei – DVP) ..................................................10 3.3.6 German-National People's Party (Deutsche