<p> Joseph C. Rheingold Collection</p><p>Box 1, 1929 - 1931</p><p>1) Legislative Documents – State of New York 1929 – 1932</p><p>Message of the Governor {F.D.R.} – Development of the State Reservation at Saratoga Springs. March 22, 1929.</p><p>Message of Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt to the Legislature. January 7, 1931</p><p>Message of the Governor {F.D.R.} Recommending Legislation for the Immediate Construction of Farm-To-Market Roads. January 20, 1932</p><p>2) “Disarmament” – A Review of the Acts of the League of Nations and the Governments, Parliamentary Debates and thee Trend of Public Opinion and Action relating to the World Disarmament Conference. 1932 (The Disarmament Information Committee at Geneva)</p><p>3) “National Defense” – A Study of the Origins, Results and Prevention of War. By: Kirby Page (Farrar & Rinehart, Inc. 1931)</p><p>4) The Newsletter, Fellowship of Reconciliation. July 1931, No. 3</p><p>5) “Shall I Renounce Compulsory Military Training?” – A Problem for Students. September 1, 1931 Committee on Militarism in Education, Bible House, Astor Place, New York City.</p><p>6) “Stop! Look! Listen!” – Shall We Disarm While Soviet “Peace Doves” Are Building Up An Army of 22,000,000 To Smash All Civilization? By: Ralph M. Easley (The National Civic Federation, October 19, 1931)</p><p>7) Platforms Adopted by the Democratic National Convention, 1932 – 1940 2</p><p>Platform Adopted by the Democratic National Convention. 1932</p><p>Platform Adopted by the Democratic National Convention. 1936</p><p>Platform Adopted by the Democratic National Convention. 1940</p><p>8) Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, Annual Report. 1933</p><p>9) 73rd Congress House of Representatives Documents </p><p>No. 5 – Relief of Agriculture – Message from the President of the United States. March 16, 1933</p><p>No. 42 – Suspend the Law Requiring the Governor of Hawaii to be an Actual Resident of the Islands. May 22, 1933</p><p>Address of the President of the United States, Delivered Before A Joint Session of Congress. January 3, 1934</p><p>No. 212 – Amend the Farm Credit Act, 1933 – Message of the President of the United States. January 10, 1934</p><p>10) Addresses by the Hon. Cordell Hull, Secretary of State, 1934 – 1943</p><p>The Department of State – “The Path to Recovery.” April 22, 1934</p><p>The Department of State – Commencement Address to the Graduating Class of the College of William and Mary. June 11, 1934 3</p><p>The Department of State – Commencement Address to the Graduating Class of the University of Michigan. June 17, 1935</p><p>The Department of State – “Our Foreign Relations and Our Foreign Policy”, {Given} Before the Good Neighbor League. New York City, September 15, 1936</p><p>The Department of State – “Order in International Relations.” University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada, October 22, 1937</p><p>The Department of State – “Our Foreign Policy.” The National Press Club, Washington, D.C., March 17, 1938</p><p>The Department of State – “The Spirit of International Law.” Bar Association of Tennessee, Nashville, Tenn., June 3, 1938</p><p>The Department of State – “Some Problems of Today.” Chicago Sunday Evening Club, Chicago, IL, May 28, 1939</p><p>The Department of State – “Our Foreign Policy In the Framework of Our National Interests.” Radio Address, September 12, 1943</p><p>The Department of State – “La Politique Exterieure Des Etats-Unis.” {French}, April 9, 1944</p><p>11) Executive Orders of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1935</p><p>Revocation of Executive Order No. 5172, of August 9, 1929, Withdrawing Public Lands (Montana). January 9, 1935</p><p>Transfer if Lands from the Uinta National Forest to the Wasatch National Forest (Utah). January 9, 1935</p><p>Amending Executive Order No. 6877 Providing Rules and Regulations for the Administration of Paragraph 2, of Section III, of the Wool Textile Code. February 1, 1935</p><p>Amendment of Executive Order No. 6917, of December 11, 1934, Creating Federal Prison Industries, Inc. February 4, 1935</p><p>Withdrawal of Public Lands for Classification and in Aid of Legislation (Alaska). February 4, 1935</p><p>Extension of Trust Periods on Allotments Made to Indians of the Colville Reservation. Washington, February 4, 1935</p><p>Veterans Regulation No. 10(d), Miscellaneous Provisions. February 5, 1935 4</p><p>Extension of Trust Period on Allotments Made to Indians of the Crow Creek Band of Sioux (South Dakota). February 9, 1935</p><p>Amendment of Schedule A, Subdivision III, Paragraph 7, of the Civil-Service Rules. February 15, 1935</p><p>Modifying Executive Order No. 2295, of January 1, 1916, Withdrawing Public Lands in Arizona for Rifle Range. February 19, 1935</p><p>Exemption of Harry O. Bailey from Compulsory Retirement for Age. March 30, 1935</p><p>Amending Code of Fair Competition for the Distilled Spirits Industry. April 5, 1935</p><p>Extension of Trust Periods on Allotments Made to Indians of the Crow Reservation, Montana. April 5, 1935</p><p>Authorizing the Appointment of Mrs. Mattie Lowe Sartor in the Post Office Department Without Regard to Civil-Service Rules. April 5, 1935</p><p>Changing Location of the Land Office for the Linkton Land District (Oregon). April 10, 1935</p><p>Revocation of Executive Order No. 6832 of August 23, 1934, Making Funds Available for Expenses of the National Railroad Adjustment Board. April 10, 1935.</p><p>Appointment of Frank C. Walker as Executive Director of the National Emergency Council. April 24, 1935</p><p>Appointment of Charles Edison as a Member of the National Industrial Recovery Board. April 29, 1935</p><p>Withdrawal of Public Land for Lookout Station (California). April 30, 1935</p><p>Changing the Name of Luquillo National Forest (Puerto Rico). June 4, 1935</p><p>12) Declaration of Principles, Adopted at Chicago Conference. September 11, 1936 (Progressive National Committee supporting Franklin D. Roosevelt for President)</p><p>13) “Two Men and Two Records.” (Republican National Committee, 1936)</p><p>14) “What the President Thinks.” By: Ernest K. Lindley, Today, August 15, 1936</p><p>15) Addresses by the Hon. Francis B. Sayre, Assistant Secretary of State, 1936 – 1939 5</p><p>The Department of State – Education and International Relations, University of Chattanooga, Chattanooga, Tenn. April 18, 1936</p><p>The Department of State – “How Trade Agreements Are Made, World Trade Dinner,” Cleveland, Ohio. November 4, 1937</p><p>The Department of State – “The Stake of the South in the Trade-Agreements Program,” Texas Cotton Association, Dallas, Tex. March 18, 1838</p><p>The Department of State – “The Effect of the Trade-Agreements Program Upon New England Industries and New England Labor,” Manufacturers Association of Connecticut, Hartford, Conn. April 25, 1938</p><p>The Department of State – “The Challenge Which International Law Faces Today,” American Society of International Law, Washington. April 30, 1938</p><p>The Department of State – “American Foreign Policy.” Radio Address, Washington, D.C., June 6, 1938.</p><p>The Department of State – “Democracy in Action,” Fourth Conference of the Woman’s National Democratic Club. Washington, March 22, 1939.</p><p>16) The Associated Country Women of the World, Proceedings of the Third Triennial Conference, Held at Washington, D.C., May 31 – June 11, 1936 (The Department of State, Publication 1092, Conference Series 34, 1937)</p><p>17) Bulletin of the Pan American Union, President Roosevelt in South America. January 1937</p><p>18) The International Consultative Group (for Peace & Disarmament) Its Origin, Aims & Development. Palais Wilson, Geneva, Switzerland, April 1937</p><p>19) “Let’s Keep Out of War!” Emergency Peace Campaign 1937</p><p>20) Proceedings: Fifty-First Annual Convention Association of Land-Grant Colleges and Universities, Seventy-Fifth Anniversary of the First Morrill Act and of the Establishment of the United States Department of Agriculture, Fiftieth Anniversary of The Hatch Act. Washington, D.C., November 14 – 17, 1937 6</p><p>21) Committee on Federal Legislation of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York – Amendment (in the nature of a substitute) to Senate Bill 1392 to Reorganize the Judicial Branch of the Government. 1937</p><p>22) 75th Congress – Senate Document – Second Inaugural Address of Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States, Delivered at the Capitol, Washington, D.C., January 20, 1937.</p><p>23) “This is My Story.” By: Eleanor Roosevelt (Ladies Home Journal, April 1937)</p><p>24) Addresses by Hon. Sumner Welles, Under Secretary of State, 1939 – 1940</p><p>The Department of State – “The Accomplishments of the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Peace.” February 4, 1937</p><p>The Department of State – Address Before the Presbyterian Social Union, Baltimore, MD. May 24, 1938</p><p>The Department of State – “Our Foreign Policy and National Defense.” Cleveland, OH September 28, 1940</p><p>25) “Is President Roosevelt A Well Man Today?” By: Ernest K. Lindley, Liberty, pp. 12 – 13, October 29, 1938</p><p>26) “Jobs, Machines and Unemployment”– Reprinted from Report on Progress of the WPA. June 30, 1938, U.S. Government Printing Office</p><p>27) “Press Propaganda and International Relations.” International Consultative Group for Peace and Disarmament, Geneva, Switzerland, Jully 11, 1938 7</p><p>28) United States Department of Labor, Children’s Bureau – Conference on Children in a Democracy – Papers and Discussions at the Initial Session. April 26, 1939</p><p>Box 2, 1939 – 1941</p><p>1) “Hitler Could Not Stop.” By: Herman Rauschning, Excerpted from Foreign Affairs, October 1939</p><p>2) Hon. Charles A. Sunderlin of California Replying to Hon. Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States on the Federal Deficit. 1939</p><p>3) “How to Keep Out of War.” By: Kirby Page, American Friends Service Committee, Peace Section 1939</p><p>4) Peace Action for the National Council for Prevention of War. Vol. V, No. 7, Washington, D.C. January 1939</p><p>5) “Questions and Answers on the WPA.” Federal Works Agency, 1939</p><p>6) “Speech Delivered in the Reichstag.” By: Adolf Hitler, April 28, 1939 8</p><p>7) “Why Europe Went to War.” By: Vera Micheles Dean, World Affairs Pamphlets, Foreign Affairs Association, December 1939</p><p>8) First Annual Report of the Archivist of the United States as to the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library. 1939 – 1940</p><p>9) “The Fundamental Issue – A Brief Against the Third Term.” By: Thomas H. Reed, No- Third Term Association, October, 1940</p><p>10) Indispensable Principles, An Address Delivered September 17, 1940 in the “America, Wake Up!” Crusade of the Union League Club of Chicago. By: Raymond Moley. 1940</p><p>11) “A Letter to A Man Who is Thinking of Registering as a Conscientious Objector.” By: Ernest Hatch Wilkins, President of Oberlin College, 1940</p><p>12) National Defense. By: President Franklin D. Roosevelt 1940</p><p>13) Peace and Disarmament Committee Comprising Eleven International Organizations of Women Calls an Intercontinental Conference to Discuss “How Can War Be Avoided? How Can Security Be Retrieved?” Washington, D.C. January 26th to January 28th, 1940</p><p>14) “National Defense”. By: President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Introduction by Senator Morris Sheppard, 1940</p><p>15) Proceedings of the White House Conference on Children in a Democracy. Washington, D.C., Department of Labor, Children’s Bureau Publication No. 266, 1940 9</p><p>16) “Seven Years of Progress Under the New Deal Farm Program.” Radio Address By: Hon. Frank E. Hook of Michigan, April 8, 1940 Congressional Record</p><p>17) Thirty-First Annual Report of the Boy Scouts of America. 1940</p><p>18) “Unpatriotic and Fraught with Peril” By: Walter S. Steele (National Republic) 1940</p><p>19) “Which Way to Lasting Peace?” By: Clarence K. Streit, Inter-democracy Federal Union, March 16th, 1940</p><p>20) “Why A Third Term?” By: Hon. Nate Comm 1940</p><p>21) Addresses by Breckinridge Long, Assistant Secretary of State, 1940 – 1944.</p><p>“Foreign Policy” {Given} Before the Forum on Foreign Policy and National Defense at the National Institute of Government, Washington, D.C., May 2, 1940 (Government Printing Office)</p><p>“Foreign Affairs of the United States in Wartime and After.” {Given} Before the American Federation of Labor Forum on Labor and the Post-War World, New York, NY, April 12, 1944</p><p>22) The Atlantic Charter: The 8-Point Declaration of President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill. August 14, 1941 (Commission to Study the Organization of Peace) 10</p><p>“The Atlantic Charter.” Some notes on background and on United Nations Agreements and Resolutions including reference to the statements; also extracts from relevant speeches by United Nations leaders. (typescript)</p><p>23) Thirty-Second Annual Report of the Boy Scouts of America. 1941 (77th Congress, 2nd Session, House Document No. 517)</p><p>24) Department of State, “Defense of Iceland by the United States Forces.” – Agreement Between the United States of America and Iceland, July 10, 1941 (Executive Agreement Series 232)</p><p>25) Third Inaugural Address of Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States. Delivered at the Capitol, Washington, D.C., January 20, 1941</p><p>Box 3, 1942 – 1947</p><p>1) “Instead of a Christmas Carol.” Including the text of President Roosevelt’s United Flag Day address which concludes with a prayer by Stephen Benet (The Oriole Press)</p><p>2) “Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy 1931 – 1941.” Department of State, 1943</p><p>3) 77th Congress – “Development of United States Foreign Policy – Addresses and Messages of Franklin D. Roosevelt” – Compiled from official sources, intended to present the chronological development of the foreign policy of the United States from the announcement of the Good Neighbor Policy in 1933, including the war declarations. 1942</p><p>4) Carta de America. September 1943 (Spanish language document, Department of State) 11</p><p>5) “L’Amerique en Guerre.” December 1942, No. 19 (French language documents, Department of State) and January 1943, No. 29</p><p>6) Address of Donald M. Nelson, former Chairman of the War Production Board. Radio Address, Washington, D.C., October 26, 1944</p><p>7) Address of Helen Gahagan Douglas, National Committeewoman from the State of California, before the Democratic National Convention. Chicago, Illinois, July 20, 1944</p><p>8) “For What the Hell Should We Apologize?” Speech delivered by Mark Etheridge, Publisher: The Courier-Journal and the Louisville (Ky.) Times before the Oklahoma Democratic State Convention, May 15, 1944 (Democratic National Committee)</p><p>9) “National Political Campaign of 1944, Part II” – Proceedings of the Democratic National Convention held a Chicago, July 19 – 21, including full texts of addresses and platform (United States News) 1944</p><p>10) Politica. (Spanish language document – Issue devoted to policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt Administration) Havana, Cuba, May 1944</p><p>11) “The Ships and Sailors That Licked Hitler…Planned That Way by the Democratic Administration.” Democratic National Committee 1944</p><p>12) “The Bible and the Nations: Excerpts from Letters and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt.” Presented by the American Bible Society to the Delegates of the United Nations Conference on International Organization, San Francisco, May 1945 (2 copies in English and Russian, 1 copy in English only) 12</p><p>“Mr. Roosevelt and the Bible.” (Pamphlet) American Bible Society 1945</p><p>13) “The End of the War in the Pacific: Documents in Facsimile.” The National Archives 1945</p><p>14) “Germany Surrenders Unconditionally: Facsimiles of the Documents.” The National Archives, 1945</p><p>15) “In Memoriam – Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1882 – 1945.” Tributes paid to the late president on April 12, 1946 by the American Institute and the City of Praha, (Prague) Czechoslovakia 1946</p><p>16) Jefferson Day, 1945. (Democratic Party leaflet, 4 copies)</p><p>17) “The Maple’s Praise of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1882 – 1945.” Canadian tributes to the late president. (Tower Books, Ottawa, Canada 1945)</p><p>18) “Positive Approach to an Enduring Peace.” By: Henry S. Villard, Chief, Division of African Affairs Office of New Eastern and African Affairs, The Department of State, {Given} Before the American Mission to Lepers, January 22, 1945</p><p>19) Fourth Inaugural Address of Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States, Delivered on the Portico of the White House, Washington, D.C., January 20, 1945.</p><p>20) Three Addresses by Herbert Hoover. (Booklet) 1945 13</p><p>21) Three Stepping Stones to Lasting Peace – The Atlantic Charter, Dumbarton Oaks Proposals, Yalta Conference Communique. (Booklet) 1945</p><p>22) “A Tone Poem In Memoriam.” By: Antonio Perrotta. Dedicated to the memory of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 1945</p><p>23) Books, Pamphlets, Autographs and Allied Material Relating to Franklin Delano Roosevelt and His Times. By: John Valentine and Ralph G. Newman (Bibliographies, Lists 1 – 9) Abraham Book Shop, Chicago, Illinois 1946</p><p>24) “Kdo Je – F.D. Roosevelt.” By: Eduard Maska (Orbis-Praha) Czechoslovakia 1946</p><p>25) Memorial Ceremony In Honor of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Campobello, New Brunswick, August 1, 1946. By: H.G. Block</p><p>26) Discursos Pronunciados en la Inauguarcion de la Exposicion de Maquetas del Monumento a la Politica del Buen Vicino. Que Sera Erigido en Monterrey, Mexico 1946</p><p>27) “Marshall Plan”. Address by the Hon. George C. Marshall, Secretary of State – Grand Ballroom, Palmer House, November 18, 1947 (The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, 1947)</p><p>28) “The Roosevelt Death: A Super Mystery.” By: Mr. X 1947</p><p>29) “The Roosevelt Story.” (Publicity material, posters) 1947</p><p>Box 4, 1948 – 1982 14</p><p>1) The Department of State – “American Peace Policy” – Address by the President, June 12, 1949.</p><p>2) 80th Congress, 2d Session – Countries Participating in the European Recovery Program – The Role of ERP Countries in European Recovery and their Need for United States Assistance, February 16, 1948.</p><p>3) “The Battle for World Peace and Stability.” (Congressional Record). Speech by Hon. Arthur H. Vandenberg. March 1, 1948</p><p>4) The Problem of Sovereignty Reconsidered. By: Hans J. Morganthau (Columbia Law Review, April 1948)</p><p>5) The Franklin D. Roosevelt Collector. November 1948</p><p>The Franklin D. Roosevelt Collector. May 1949</p><p>The Franklin D. Roosevelt Collector. May 1952</p><p>6) Collecting First Editions of Franklin Roosevelt. Forward, Introduction, and 8 of 192 Pages of Entries from an FDR Bibliography, 1949</p><p>7) The Department of State – Compulsory Jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice. 1949</p><p>8) Franklin D. Roosevelt’s International Speeches, 1939 – 1941. By: Earnest Brandenburg (Speech Monographs. 1948) 15</p><p>9) Mark Twain Quarterly. Winter-Spring, 1948. {Contains My Visit with Franklin Roosevelt, by Cyril Clemens, p. 11}</p><p>10) “Observations on Roosevelt’s Literary Style.” By: Joseph Schiffman (The Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1949)</p><p>“How Are Your Senators Going to Vote?” – Facts About the World Court. [1949]</p><p>11) The Preparation of Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Speeches. By: Earnest Brandenburg (The Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1949)</p><p>12) Annual Roosevelt Day Dinner, January 27, 1950. (Americans for Democratic Action)</p><p>13) Exhibition and Sale of the Collection of the Late President, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, November 12 to December 3, 1951. (Hammer Galleries, New York, NY)</p><p>14) The University Teaching of International Relations. Edited by Geoffrey L. Goodwin, 1951</p><p>15) “Twenty Years of Teamwork.” The Story of What the American People Have Accomplished Since 1932. By: Senator Clinton P. Anderson, 1952</p><p>16) U.E. Steward – F.D.R. Anniversary Issue. April 1953 (United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America)</p><p>17) The Department of State – “Evolution of Foreign Policy.” Address by Hon. John Foster Dulles, 1954 16</p><p>18) Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats. By: Waldo W. Braden and Earnest Brandenburg (Speech Monographs, November 1955)</p><p>19) The Lock Haven Bulletin. Series 1, No. 3, 1961 {Contains The Hoover-Roosevelt Relationship by Daniel P. Showan, p. 24</p><p>20) “The Hammarskjold Forums – Disarmament” A Series of Case Studies on the Role of Law in the Settlement of International Disputes. 1963</p><p>21) “The Church and the Spanish War.” By: Luis Aguirre Prado (Historical Documents 1 – Spanish Information Service, 1965)</p><p>22) “The Rule of Law in an Unruly World.” Delivered by Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg (The First Adlai E. Stevenson Memorial Lecture, May 18, 1966)</p><p>23) “A Conference to Plan A Strategy for Peace.” Report of the eighth Conference, Arlie House, October 5 – 8, 1967 </p><p>24) “Approaches to the Study of International and Intercultural Relations.” Edited by Mary B. Humphreys, ( North Central Association of Colleges and Schools Foreign Relations Project, March 1968</p><p>25) “I Remember Pa.” By: Derek Gill (Modern Maturity, December 1981 – January 1982)</p><p>Box 5, No Date</p><p>1) “Two Presidents.” Autograph Letters, Manuscripts and Documents of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Theodore Roosevelt, No Date 17</p><p>2) “Christians, Awaken!” F.D.R. Orders Bible Changes – Boake Carter’s Anti-Christ “Bible”. By: Elizabeth Dilling, No Date</p><p>3) Clippings File</p><p>4) “A Corner-Stone of Quality.” (Personal investments of F.D.R.)</p><p>5) “Die Vier Vryhede.” (Dutch) {“The Four Freedoms”)</p><p>6) “Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Dutch” (3 copies)</p><p>7) General and Miscellaneous Information</p><p>8) Press Releases</p><p>Francis B. Sayre, Assist. Sec’y. of State. Apr. 30, 1938</p><p>Report on Crimea Conference. February 12, 1945 (Release by the White House)</p><p>President’s Message to Congress. March 1, 1945</p><p>[Potsdam Communique.] August 2, 1945</p><p>[President’s Speech Re Potsdam] August 9, 1945</p><p>9) “Spiritual Ascension of Franklin D. Roosevelt.” By: David Kohn (1945?)</p><p>10) “Yalta and You.” Hansard’s Revelations (Published by Independent Labour Party, London, UK) (1945?)</p><p>Box 6, U.N. Materials [United Nations] 18</p><p>1) U.S.A.I.D. Materials (1964 and 1969)</p><p>2) United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Materials</p><p>3) United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (1943 – 1949)</p><p>4) United Nations – General Information (1949 – 1967)</p><p>5) United Nations – Miscellaneous Conferences/Conventions</p><p>“United Nations of the Next Decade” (1981)</p><p>“United Nations of the Next Decade” (1983)</p><p>“The Crime of Genocide – A United Nations Convention” (1959)</p><p>“Techniques for Tomorrow’s World.” The United Nations conference on the Application of Science and Technology for the Benefit of the Less Developed Areas [1962?]</p><p>6) United Nations – Miscellaneous Programs (1945 – 1963)</p><p>The United Nations and Narcotic Drugs, 1959</p><p>Helping Economic Development in Asia and the Far East, 1960</p><p>The Congo, An Account of United Nations Action and A Look Ahead, 1963</p><p>The United Nations and the Congo, Some Salient Facts, 1963</p><p>South East Asia to Help Itself, 1957</p><p>Teaching Human Rights, A Handbook for Teachers, 1963</p><p>The International Court of the United Nations Organization, 1945</p><p>Cooperation for Economic Progress, 1960 19</p><p>The Expanded Programme of Technical Assistance for Economic Development of Under- Developed Countries, 1963</p><p>7) United Nations – Secretary-General’s Annual Reports</p><p>Toward a System of True International Cooperation, 1954</p><p>The Tenth Year, 1955</p><p>Toward the Goals of the United Nations Charter, 1958</p><p>The Developing Role of the United Nations, 1959</p><p>8) The United Nations – Special Fund</p><p>The United Nations Special Fund, 1959</p><p>Target: An Expanding World Economy, 1963</p><p>9) United Nations – Weather Information</p><p>World Meteorological Organization, [1960?]</p><p>World Weather Watch, 1966</p><p>Meterology – A Key to Economic Progress, [1960]</p><p>International Telecommunication Union – 1865 – 1965, A Hundred Years of International Cooperation, 1965</p><p>10) The United Nations – UNESCO</p><p>UNESCO Headquarters, 1958</p><p>What is UNESCO?, 1946</p><p>East and West – Towards Mutual Understanding, 1959</p><p>Encounters and Celebrations, 1963</p><p>UNESCO and the National Commission – Basic Documents, [1948] 20</p><p>You and UNESCO, [1960?]</p><p>UNESCO In A Decisive Decade, 1963</p><p>The UNESCO Coupon, [1960?]</p><p>International Aid for Progress, [1960?]</p><p>The Program of UNESCO, 1947</p><p>UNESCO and You, 1947</p><p>What is UNESCO?, 1969</p>
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