Washington, Friday, February 15, 1946

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Washington, Friday, February 15, 1946 ' ‘ UTTEBA. y VOLUME 11 NUMBER 33 Washington, Friday, February 15, 1946 The President utmost of his ability in support of this CONTENTS indispensable humanitarian cause. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have THE PRESIDENT PROCLAMATION 2679 hereunto set my hand and caused the Proclamation : Page seal of the United States of America to Red Cross Month, 1946_______ 1667 Red Cross Month, 1946 be affixed. DONE at the City of Washington this REGULATIONS AND NOTICES BY THE PRESIDENT OP THE UNITED STATES fourteenth day of February, in the year Agriculture Department : OF AMERICA of our Lord nineteen hundred Apples (WFO 143, Am. 3)______ 1668 A PROCLAMATION [ seal] and forty-six, and of the Inde­ Milk, handling in New York pendence of the United States WHEREAS the American National of America the one hundred and seven­ metropolitan area_______ 1672 Red Cross, under the provisions of its tieth. Potatoes, Irish; public meeting Congressional charter, continues to fulfill relative to issuance of per­ Harry S. Truman missive U. S. consumer its manifold obligations to extend cheer By the President: and aid to our servicemen in distant standards_______________ 1672 areas overseas, to provide servicemen and J ames F. Byrnes, Tea, designation of qualified veterans, and wounded and sick in hos­ Secretary of State. distributors_____________ 1667 pitals, with solace and a link with home, Alien Property Custodian, Office [F. R. Doc. 46-2536; Filed, Feb. 14, 1946; of: and to maintain its traditional services 11:55 a. m.] of aiding victims of catastrophe, and of Vesting orders: training men and women of our nation Frenkel, Hermann___ ___ 1676 to combat sickness and accident and thus Regulations Kaiio, Inc________________ 1675 to reduce suffering and death; and Kreuzer, Mathias__________ 1674 WHEREAS new obligations have Lieberknecht, Karl, Inc_____ 1676 arisen to assist veterans and their fami­ TITLE 7—AGRICULTURE Mori, Teizo, and Manako Sato______ 1674 lies in the many difficult problems of re­ Chapter XI—Production and Marketing turn to civilian life and resumption of Riesenberg, Adolph________ 1677 long-interrupted normal peacetime rela­ Administration (War Food Distribution Rudolph, Ida___ ___________ 1677 tions, and to contribute to the care of Orders) Weyer, Margaret A________ 1677 peoples in areas devastated by military Tea Coast Guard: operations, whose distress appeals with DESIGNATION OF QUALIFIED DISTRIBUTORS Approval of equipment_______ 1690 utmost urgency to every source of help F ederal Power Commission: for months ahead; and The designation of qualified distribu­ Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line WHEREAS at this time when the tors of tea pursuant to War Food Order Co., hearing_____________ 1672 No. 21, as amended F.R. 2077; 9 FE. foundations of peace are being estab­ (8 I nterstate Commerce Commission: lished, the American National Red Cross 15, 1084, 4321, 4319, 9584; 10 F.R. 103, by its very nature and purpose, and by 10419), issued by the Director of Food Automobile parts at St. Louis, its long record of humanitarian service, Distribution on February 5, 144 (9 F.R. Mo., unloading__________ 1673 stands both as symbol and as tangible 1561), as amended, is further amended Office: of Price Administration: expression of the spirit of universal good by deleting therefrom the name “Joseph Adjustments and pricing orders: will, recognizing no barriers in the unity S. Toledano & J. M. Pinto, 90 Broad Aggressive Mfg. Co___ ____ 1687 of human welfare; and Street, New York, New York”, and insert­ Anderson, Elmer.__________ 1687 WHEREAS this organization, which ing, in lieu thereof, the following: Avon Sole Co. (2 documents) _ 1681, represents the solicitude of our people Tao Tea Company, Inc.; 271 Church Street, 1682 for the care of its servicemen and its New York 13, New York. Barnes, Henry S., & Son____ 1679 lofty ideals for the prevention of suffer­ Borgerud Refrigerator Co___ 1685 ing, and which is entirely dependent on (E.O. 9280, 7 F.R. 10179; E.O. 9577, 10 F.R. 8087; WFO 21, 8 FE. 2077; 9 FJt. Bradley Coal Co. et al_______ 1682 voluntary contributions to carry out its Carbonic Gas Equipment Co_1686 purposes, is issuing its nation-wide ap­ 150, 1084, 4321, 4319, 9584; 10 F.R. 103, 10419) Chicago Electric Mfg. Co___ 1688 peal for the contribution of a minimum Chrysler Corp_____________ 1689 fund of $100,000,000; Issued this 13th day of February 1946. NOW, THEREFORE, I, HARRY S. Durite Products Co., Inc____ 1689 TRUMAN, President of the United [seal] ,C. W. Kitchen, Edwards and Co___________ 1688 States of America, and President of the Assistant Administrator, Empire Brush Works_______ 1680 American National Red Cross, do hereby Production and Marketing Firestone Industrial Products designate the month of March 1946 as ' Administration. Co___________________ 1685 Red Cross Month, and urge every citi­ [F. R. Doc. 46-2515; Filed, Feb. 14, 1946; Freezit Co______________ 1687 zen of this country to respond to the 11:16 a. m.] Frozen-Do Products Co_____ 1678 1667 1668 FEDERAL REGISTER, Friday, February 15, 1946 JS'0NAL«'lfc, CONTENTS—Continued 2. By deleting the provisions of § 1405.58 (c) and inserting, in lieu Office of Price Administration— thereof, the following: Continued. Page FEDERAiffîREGISTER Milk, turning evaporated (MPR .(c) Credits. In the event a handler \„ÜNITtO ,93*<ír ’ 586, Am. 1 to Supp. Storage sells to a governmental agency a quantity Reg. 4)________________ 1671 of apples of the fancy grade, or higher Paper«, kraft wrapping and bag, grades, of the Winesap or Newtown vari­ Published daily, except Sundays, Mondays, and certain bags (MPR 182, eties, of sizes other than those required and days following legal holidays, by the to be set aside by the provisions of this Division of the Federal Register, the National Am. 13) __________y_____ 1670 Archives, pursuant to the authority contained Regional and district office or­ order, he may, pursuant hereto, obtain in the Federal Register Act, approved July 26, ders: credit for such quantity against his re­ 1935 (49 Stat. 500, as amended; 44 U.S.C., Cream, fluid; Greater Boston spective set-aside quantity of apples of ch. 8B), under regulations prescribed by the area_________________ 1689 the Winesap or Newtown variety. The Administrative Committee, approved by the Fluid milk, Oelwein, Iowa___ 1690 credit provided for by the preceding sen­ President. Distribution is made only by the T reasury D epartment: tence may be obtained by such handler, Superintendent of Documents, Government subject to verification by the Deputy Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C. Treasury bonds, call for redemp­ The regulatory material appearing herein is tion: Order Administrator for the district keyed to the Code of Federal Regulations, 3%, 1946-48 _____ 1671 (Wenatchee-Okanogan or Yakima-Hood which is published, under 50 titles, pursuant 3y8%, 1946-49____________ 1672 River, as the case may be) where such to section 11 of the Federal Register Act, as War D epartment: apples were grown, by giving written no­ amended June 19, 1937. Recruiting and induction for tice to such Deputy Order Administrator The F ederal R egister will be furnished by of the date of the shipment, the purchase mail to subscribers, free of postage, for $1.50 Army of U. S.; enlistments order number, the car initials and num­ per month or $15.00 per year, payable in ad­ and reenlistments_______ 1668 ber, or other shipment identification ac­ vance. The charge for individual copies War Shipping Administration: ceptable to such Deputy Order Adminis­ (minimum 15tf) varies in proportion to the Contracts with vessel owners trator, ahd the number of the boxes of size of the issue. Remit check or money and rates of compensation; order, made payable to the Superintendent values and rates of charter each variety. of Documents, directly to the Government hire, dry cargo vessels_____ 1671 It is hereby further ordered that all Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C. apples of the Delicious variety which There are no restrictions on the republica­ CODIFICATION GUIDE tion of material appearing in the F ederal have been set aside-pursuant to the pro­ R egister. A numerical list of the parts of the Code visions of the said War Food Order No. of Federal Regulations affected by docu­ 143, as amended, but not sold or con­ ments published in this issue. Documents tracted to ’ be sold to a governmental NOTICE carried in the Cumulative Supplement by agency (as defined in the said order), uncodified tabulation only are not included at the effective time of this amendment The 1944 Supplement to the Code within the purview of this list. are released from all restrictions of the of the Federal Regulations may be said War Food Order No. 143, as Title 3—The P resident : Page amended. obtained from the Superintendent Chapter I—Proclamations: The provisions of this amendment of Documents, Government Print­ 2679____________________ 1667 shall be effective as of 12:01 a. m., p. s. t., ing Office, at $3 per book. Title 10—Army: War D epartment: February 15, 1946. With respect to vio­ Chapter VII—Personnel: lations, rights accrued, liabilities in­ Book 1: Titles 1-10, including Part 701—Recruiting and in­ curred, or appeals taken under the said Presidential documents in full text. duction for Army of U. S- 1668 War Food Order No. 143, as amended, Book 2: Titles 11-32. T itle 46—Shipping: prior to the effective time of this amend­ Book 3: Titles 33-50, including a Chapter III—War Shipping Ad­ ment, all provisions of the said War Food ministration: general index and ancillary tables. Order No. 143, as amended, in effect Part 302—Contracts with ves­ prior to the effective time of the pro­ sel owners and rates of visions of this amendment shall be compensation relating deemed to continue in full force and ef­ CONTENTS—Continued thereto___________ ___ 1671 fect for the purpose of sustaining any proper suit, action, or other proceeding Office of P rice Administration— Pa§e with regard to any such violation, right, Continued.
Recommended publications
  • 'After Churchill's Speech' from Le Monde (9 March 1946)
    ‘After Churchill's speech' from Le Monde (9 March 1946) Caption: On 9 March 1946, the French daily newspaper Le Monde analyses the international reaction to the address given by Winston Churchill at Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri, four days earlier. Source: Le Monde. dir. de publ. Beuve-Méry, Hubert. 09.03.1946, n° 377; 3e année. Paris: Le Monde. "Après le discours de M. Churchill", p. 1. Copyright: (c) Translation CVCE.EU by UNI.LU All rights of reproduction, of public communication, of adaptation, of distribution or of dissemination via Internet, internal network or any other means are strictly reserved in all countries. Consult the legal notice and the terms and conditions of use regarding this site. URL: http://www.cvce.eu/obj/after_churchill_s_speech_from_le_monde_9_march_1946- en-77fe34ae-4976-408f-aba7-fe5bff88dfc7.html Last updated: 05/07/2016 1/2 After Churchill’s speech As should have been expected, Mr Churchill’s speech met with strong reaction, notably in Britain and the United States. First of all, we should look at those reactions that are based on too little information or on too superficial an impression. Some showed signs of indignation because Mr Churchill suggested military agreements (he avoided the word alliance) between Great Britain and the United States. But the New York Times and the Daily Mail report today that the British-American HQ has always been stationed in Washington since the end of the war. Its meetings are said to be almost as frequent as during the hostilities. Great Britain is represented there by Field Marshal Wilson, the United States by General Eisenhower.
    [Show full text]
  • The London Gazette, 8 March, 1946
    I2Q2 THE LONDON GAZETTE, 8 MARCH, 1946 Admiralty, zoth February, 1946. Admiralty, 2jth February, 1946. R.M. R.M. Tempy. Lt. P. W. HUTCHINS to be Actg. Tempy. Lt.-Col. (Actg. Col. Comd. (Tempy. Brig.)) S. G. B. Capt. aoth Feb. 1946. PAINE, O.B.E., to relinquish the rank of Actg. Maj. (Actg. Lt.-Col.) P. G. SOLBE to relinquish the Col. Comd. (Tempy. Brig.). 26th Mar. 1946. rank of Actg. Lt.-Col. 2Oth Feb. 1946. Capt. R. D. CROMBIE to be Actg. Maj. 2gth Aug. Lt. (Actg. Capt.) K. C. BRICKWOOD to be Actg. 1945- Maj. ist Nov. 1945. Admiralty, 28th February, 1946. R.M. Admiralty, 2ist February, 1946. Lt. B. H. SIMPSON to be Actg. Capt. 28th Feb. R.M. 1946. Lt. F. C. E. BYE to be Actg. Capt. 28th Feb. 1946.' Tempy. Lt. A. PUNCHARD to be Actg. Tempy. Capt. Proby. Tempy. Lt. A. P. CROSBIE, R.M. Engrs., iSth Feb. 1946- Tempy. Lt. R. R. NEVILLE is Cashiered and sen- to be Tempy. Lt. 27th Feb. 1946. tenced to be Imprisoned with Hard Labour for 6 months by Order of General Court Martial, Admiralty, ist March, 1946. ist Dec. 1945. R.M. Lt. (Actg. Capt.) D. G. R. SILLARS to relinquish the rank of Actg. Capt. 25th Feb. 1942. Tempy. Lt. (Actg. Tempy. Maj.) J. P. TRIPP Capt. G. P. D. PEASE to be Actg. Maj. 3ist Jan. granted the War Sub. rank of Tempy. Capt. and 1946. to retain the .rank of Actg. Tempy. Maj. ist Tempy. Lt. H. P. BOREHAM to be Actg.
    [Show full text]
  • Henry S. Smith World War Ii Letters, 1943-1946
    Collection # M 0939 HENRY S. SMITH WORLD WORLD WAR II LETTERS, 1943–1946 Collection Information Biographical Sketch Scope and Content Note Series Contents Cataloging Information Processed by Tyler Nowell September 2007 Manuscript and Visual Collections Department William Henry Smith Memorial Library Indiana Historical Society 450 West Ohio Street Indianapolis, IN 46202-3269 www.indianahistory.org COLLECTION INFORMATION VOLUME OF Manuscript Materials: 1 document case COLLECTION: Visual Materials: 8 folders of photographs COLLECTION 1943–1946 (bulk 1944–1946) DATES: PROVENANCE: Charles, Kritsch, Indianapolis, Indiana, August 1999 RESTRICTIONS: None COPYRIGHT: REPRODUCTION Permission to reproduce or publish material in this collection RIGHTS: must be obtained from the Indiana Historical Society. ALTERNATE None FORMATS: RELATED HOLDINGS: ACCESSION 1999.0589 NUMBER: NOTES: BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH Henry S. Smith was born on February 20, 1914 in Indiana. He married Alice Kritsch sometime in the late 1930s. Smith enlisted in the Unites States Army on March 3, 1944 to fight in World War II. When he enlisted he stated he had four years of high school and that his occupation was as a physical therapy technician or chain store manager. Smith served as a truck driver in C Company of the 136th Ordnance Maintenance Battalion, which was later changed to an Armored Ordnance Maintenance Battalion in April 1945. The battalion was in the 14th Armored Division, which was in the 7th Army for much of the war under General Alexander M. Patch. Late in the war the division was moved to the 3rd Army under General George Patton. Henry Smith was a private until early November 1944. At this time he was promoted to Technician Fifth (T/5), which is equal to a corporal.
    [Show full text]
  • Law Reports of Trial of War Criminals, Volume V, English Edition
    REPORTS OF TRIALS OF WAR CRIMINALS Selected and prepared by THE UNITED NATIONS WAR CRIMES COMMISSION, VOLUME V LONDON PUBLISHED FOR THE UNITED NATIONS WAR CRIMES COMMISSION BY HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE 1948 Price 5S. od. net. ------~-----~-----~----~--_._-----_.- Oficial PublicatiolJs on THE TRIAL OF GERMAN 11AJOR WAR CRIMINALS AT NUREMBERG H JUDGMENT Judgment of the International Military Tribunal for the Trial of German Major War Criminals: September 30 and October 1, 1946 (Cmd. 6964) 25. 6d. (2s. 3d.) Errata Gratis SPEECHES Opening speeches of the Chief Prosecutors 2s. 6d. (2s. 9d.) Speeches of the Chief Prosecutors at the Close of the Case against the Individual Defendants 35. (3s. 4d.) Speeches of the Prosecutors at the Close of the Case against the Indicted Organisations 25. 6d. (2s. 9d.) PRICES IN BRACKETS INCLUDE POSTAGE II CONTINUED ON PAGE iii OF COVER i: i: __________..-n ----.:; ~__.._ IL LAW REPORTS OF TRIALS OF WAR CRIMINALS Selected and prepared by the UNITED NATIONS WAR CRIMES COMMISSION Volume V LONDON: PUBLISHED FOR . THE UNITED NATIONS WAR CRIMES COMMISSION BY HIS MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE 1948 CONTENTS PAGE FOREWORD BY THE RT. HON. THE LORD WRIGHT OF DURLEY vii THE CASES: 25. TRIAL OF LIEUTENANT - GENERAL SmGERU SAWADA AND THREE OTHERS. United States Military Commission, Shanghai (27th February, 1946-15th April, 1946) 1 A. OUTLINE OF THE PROCEEDINGS 1 1. THE CHARGES 1 2. THE EVIDENCE .. 2 3. THE VERDICT AND SENTENCES 6 B. NOTES ON THE CASE.. 8 1. A PLEA TO THE JURISDICTION OF THE COURT 8 2. DENIAL OF A FAIR TRIAL 10 3".
    [Show full text]
  • February, 1946 Old Way ••• CURING RICKETS in the CLEFT of an ASH TREE
    · . February, 1946 Old Way ••• CURING RICKETS in the CLEFT of an ASH TREE OR many centuries,-and apparently down to the F presenc time, even in this country- ricketic chil­ dren have been passed through a cleft ash cccc to cure them of their rickets, and thenceforth a sympathetic reladonship was supposed to exist between them and the tree. Frazer· States mat the ordinary mode of effecting the cure is [0 split a young ash sapling longi­ tudinally for a few feet and pass the child, naked, either three times or three times three through the fis sure at sunrise. In the West of England, jt is said ;:fii~~ ;,~ the passage must be "against the sun." As soon as !? the ceremony is performed, the tree is bound tightly up and the fi ssure plastered over with mud or clay. I \I~~~~~ The belief is that just as the dcft in the ttee will be t healed, so the child's body will be healed, but that if the rift in the tree remains open, the deformity in I the child will remain, too, and if the tree were to die, -:,::;:;-;;~~... & the death of the child would surely follow. It ;$ iro nia,ltbatthe praClice o f auempI;nl ~. J . G .: 'no. Gelden Reach, -'. I. NewY ...~ , .......IlI ... O"'._ 10 cure ricke1$ b)' holdin$: Ihe ch ild in Ihl clefl oC ao a$b tree wu usociued Wifh fhl ri.sinlt ofthe .sun, 1he Jil(hl of which we no. New Way ••• know 15 in iuel( one o f Nalure's speci6c1 Preventing and Curing Rickets with MEAD'S OLEUM PERCOMORPHUM OWADAYS, the physician has at his command, Mead's Oleum Perco N morphum, a Council-Accepted vitamin D product which actually prevenl and cures rickets, when given in proper dosage.
    [Show full text]
  • THE ELEANOR ROOSEVELT PAPERS: VOLUME 1 1945–1948 Vii Erpfm 9/25/06 3:28 PM Page Viii
    ERPfm 9/25/06 3:28 PM Page vii Contents Acknowledgments ..... XXV Foreword ..... XXXI Introduction ..... XXXV Editorial Principles and Practices ..... XLV Chronology ..... LI Abbreviations ..... LIX 1945: April–December Introduction: “We have to start again under our own momentum and wonder what we can achieve.” ..... 1 Leaving the White House 1. Eleanor Roosevelt to Lorena Hickok 19 April 1945 ..... 13 On Starting Over 2. My Day 19 April 1945 ..... 15 On FDR and the Founding of the United Nations 3. My Day 25 April 1945 ..... 18 On Germans and the Holocaust 4. My Day 28 April 1945 ..... 21 On the Dangers of Racial Superiority 5. My Day 30 April 1945 ..... 23 6. If You Ask Me May 1945 ..... 25 On Churchill, Stalin, and the German Surrender 7. Harry Truman to Eleanor Roosevelt 10 May 1945 ..... 27 8. Eleanor Roosevelt to Harry Truman 14 May 1945 ..... 28 On the Bretton Woods Accords 9. My Day 21 May 1945 ..... 33 On ER’s Political Future 10. Harold Ickes to Eleanor Roosevelt 21 May 1945 ..... 35 11. Eleanor Roosevelt to Harold Ickes 26 May 1945 ..... 36 On the Importance of Unions 12. My Day 26 May 1945 ..... 39 THE ELEANOR ROOSEVELT PAPERS: VOLUME 1 1945–1948 vii ERPfm 9/25/06 3:28 PM Page viii CONTENTS On Stettinius and the San Francisco Conference 13. My Day 31 May 1945 ..... 41 14. My Day 1 June 1945 ..... 42 Eleanor Roosevelt and Democratic Party Politics 15. Eleanor Roosevelt to Harry Truman 3 June 1945 ..... 46 16. Eleanor Roosevelt to Robert Hannegan 3 June 1945 ..... 47 17.
    [Show full text]
  • NUREMBERG) Judgment of 1 October 1946
    INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL (NUREMBERG) Judgment of 1 October 1946 Page numbers in braces refer to IMT, judgment of 1 October 1946, in The Trial of German Major War Criminals. Proceedings of the International Military Tribunal sitting at Nuremberg, Germany , Part 22 (22nd August ,1946 to 1st October, 1946) 1 {iii} THE INTERNATIONAL MILITARY TRIBUNAL IN SESSOIN AT NUREMBERG, GERMANY Before: THE RT. HON. SIR GEOFFREY LAWRENCE (member for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) President THE HON. SIR WILLIAM NORMAN BIRKETT (alternate member for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) MR. FRANCIS BIDDLE (member for the United States of America) JUDGE JOHN J. PARKER (alternate member for the United States of America) M. LE PROFESSEUR DONNEDIEU DE VABRES (member for the French Republic) M. LE CONSEILER FLACO (alternate member for the French Republic) MAJOR-GENERAL I. T. NIKITCHENKO (member for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) LT.-COLONEL A. F. VOLCHKOV (alternate member for the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) {iv} THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, THE FRENCH REPUBLIC, THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND, AND THE UNION OF SOVIET SOCIALIST REPUBLICS Against: Hermann Wilhelm Göring, Rudolf Hess, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Robert Ley, Wilhelm Keitel, Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Alfred Rosenberg, Hans Frank, Wilhelm Frick, Julius Streicher, Walter Funk, Hjalmar Schacht, Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach, Karl Dönitz, Erich Raeder, Baldur von Schirach, Fritz Sauckel, Alfred Jodl, Martin
    [Show full text]
  • "Fascist Criminals to the Gallows!": the Holocaust and Soviet War Crimes Trials, December 1945-February 1946
    "Fascist Criminals to the Gallows!": The Holocaust and Soviet War Crimes Trials, December 1945-February 1946 Alexander Victor Prusin Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Volume 17, Number 1, Spring 2003, pp. 1-30 (Article) Published by Oxford University Press For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/43136 [ This content has been declared free to read by the pubisher during the COVID-19 pandemic. ] “Fascist Criminals to the Gallows!”: The Holocaust and Soviet War Crimes Trials, December 1945–February 1946 Alexander Victor Prusin New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology While the Nuremberg trials are synonymous with the punishment of war criminals, until recently little was known about the Soviet Union’s own con- current war crimes tribunals. These proceedings have been under-studied for two reasons: lack of access to Soviet archives, and the fact that the tri- bunals tended to function as political propaganda vehicles. Yet examina- tion of the court documents yields valuable information about not only So- viet legal practice, but also the genocide of Jews in the German-occupied Soviet territories. On January 16, 1946, the Belorussian Communist Party daily published an article en- titled “The time of reckoning has come!” It highlighted the commencement of the mil- itary tribunal in the Belorussian capital, Minsk, where eighteen Germans, from gener- als to low-ranking enlisted men, faced war crimes charges.1 The Minsk trial was but one in a series of similar proceedings that took place in several cities of the Soviet Union between December 1945 and February 1946. The trials were regularly reported in the press and on the radio, and attended by large numbers of spectators.
    [Show full text]
  • Inventory Dep.288 BBC Scottish
    Inventory Dep.288 BBC Scottish National Library of Scotland Manuscripts Division George IV Bridge Edinburgh EH1 1EW Tel: 0131-466 2812 Fax: 0131-466 2811 E-mail: [email protected] © Trustees of the National Library of Scotland Typescript records of programmes, 1935-54, broadcast by the BBC Scottish Region (later Scottish Home Service). 1. February-March, 1935. 2. May-August, 1935. 3. September-December, 1935. 4. January-April, 1936. 5. May-August, 1936. 6. September-December, 1936. 7. January-February, 1937. 8. March-April, 1937. 9. May-June, 1937. 10. July-August, 1937. 11. September-October, 1937. 12. November-December, 1937. 13. January-February, 1938. 14. March-April, 1938. 15. May-June, 1938. 16. July-August, 1938. 17. September-October, 1938. 18. November-December, 1938. 19. January, 1939. 20. February, 1939. 21. March, 1939. 22. April, 1939. 23. May, 1939. 24. June, 1939. 25. July, 1939. 26. August, 1939. 27. January, 1940. 28. February, 1940. 29. March, 1940. 30. April, 1940. 31. May, 1940. 32. June, 1940. 33. July, 1940. 34. August, 1940. 35. September, 1940. 36. October, 1940. 37. November, 1940. 38. December, 1940. 39. January, 1941. 40. February, 1941. 41. March, 1941. 42. April, 1941. 43. May, 1941. 44. June, 1941. 45. July, 1941. 46. August, 1941. 47. September, 1941. 48. October, 1941. 49. November, 1941. 50. December, 1941. 51. January, 1942. 52. February, 1942. 53. March, 1942. 54. April, 1942. 55. May, 1942. 56. June, 1942. 57. July, 1942. 58. August, 1942. 59. September, 1942. 60. October, 1942. 61. November, 1942. 62. December, 1942. 63. January, 1943.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter VIII. Maintenance of International Peace and Security At
    302 Chapter VIII. Maintenance of international peace and security At the same meeting, the President withdrew his At the 17th meeting on 12 February 1946, the repre- statement in favour of the following text of a statement sentative of Egypt submitted a draft resolutionzT to de- ,to be made by the President, prepared by the representa- clare that it was clearly understood that British troops tives of the USSR and the United States:“O would not be used in any circumstances against the “I feel we should take note of the declarations Indonesian national movement and that they would be made before the Security Council by the representa withdrawn after the completion of their duties. The tives of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the Council would also express its will to be informed in United Kingdom and Greece, and also the views ex- a short time .of the results of the negotiations going on pressed by the representatives of the following mem- between the Netherlands and the Indonesian leaders bers of the Security Council: The United States of and reserve to itself the right to take such further ac- America, France, China, Australia, Poland, the tion as it thought proper. Netherlands, Egypt and Brazil, in regard to the ques- At the 18th meeting on 13 February, the representa- tion of the presence of British troops in Greece, as tive of the USSR submitted an amendment2s to the recorded in the proceedings of the Council, and con- Egyptian proposal to add a provision to set up a com- sider the matter as closed.” mission to clarify the Indonesian situation and hasten The President statedzl that it was his understanding the re-establishment of normal conditions.
    [Show full text]
  • Yugoslav-United States Relations, 1946-1947, Stemming from The
    RICE UNIVERSITY YUGOSLAV-UNITED STATES RELATIONS, 1946-1947 STEMMING FROM THE SHOOTING OF U.S. PLANES OVER YUGOSLAVIA, AUGUST 9 AND 19, 1946 by Dorothy Elizabeth Wooldridge A THESIS SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS Thesis Director’s signature: Houston, Texas May 1971 Abstract YUGOSLAV-UNITED STATES RELATIONS, 1946-1947 STEMMING FROM THE SHOOTING OF U.S. PLANES OVER YUGOSLAVIA, AUGUST 9 AND 19, 1946 Dorothy Elizabeth Wooldridge From 1945 to 1950, the era of the early cold war, most of the nations of the world were in one of two political groups: the pro-West headed by the United States, or the pro-East, headed by Soviet Union. One country which did not fall into this pattern, however, was Yugo¬ slavia. She wanted to break completely with Moscow and to establish her own brand of national Communism, thus enabling her leaders to steer an individualist course in world affairs. Yugoslavia sought not only to free her¬ self from Soviet domination but also to show her total opposition to the Western Allies, especially the United States. The latter part of this objective became a unique area of conflict in the cold war. In 1945 Yugoslavia offered stiff opposition to Italian boundary settlements proposed by the Council of Foreign Ministers. Yugoslavia claimed the area of the Istrian peninsula, including the city of Trieste, as rightfully hers. While the diplomats discussed potential settlements, Yugoslav and Allied troops coexisted uneasily on the peninsula. Tension between the U.S. and Yugoslavia rapidly reached a breaking point.
    [Show full text]
  • MARCH 1946 NATIONAL GALLERY of ART Smithsonian Institution 6Th Street and Constitution Avenue Washington 25, D
    NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART WASHINGTON 25, D. C. MARCH 1946 NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART Smithsonian Institution 6th Street and Constitution Avenue Washington 25, D. C. March 1946 EXHIBITIONS The exhibition of prints by Hogarth and Rowlandson from the Rosenwald Collection will continue on view through March 24. "Medicine in Prints," continuing through March 24, is an exhibi­ tion of the history of medicine as illustrated by artists from the 15th century to the present time. These prints have been lent by Dr. Clements C. Fry of Yale University. LECTURES On the Fifth Anniversary of the opening of the National Gallery of Art John Walker, the Chief Curator, will speak on the origins of the Gallery and the development of the collections since March, 1941. CONCERTS The Gallery's Third Annual American Music Festival, featuring works by American composers, will take place during the month of March. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART March 1946 EXHIBITIONS PRINTS BY HOGARTH AND ROWLANDSON FROM THE ROSENWALD COLLECTION through March 24 MEDICINE IN PRINTS through March 24 LECTURES at 4 p.m. in the Lecture Hall MARCH 3 Animals in Painting ......... Lois A. Bingham MARCH 10 Portraits of Venice .......... Jane Armstrong MARCH 17 The National Gallery of Art after Five Years .......... John Walker MARCH 24 The Cleveland Museum of Art .... William M. Milliken, Director, Cleveland Museum of Art MARCH 31 The Bentivoglio, Lords of Bologna .... Mary C. Udall PICTURE OF THE \VEEK. A ten-minute talk on one painting Weekdays at 12:40 and 1:40 p.m. Sundays at 2:15 and 6:15 p.m.
    [Show full text]