Congressional Record
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Record, Congressional: Miscellaneous Addresses and Articles From the Congressional Record and Records of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, Congressional Record 1944 ; Schutzumschlag / dust cover ISBN: B000RRDAQ2
B000RRDAQ2 Very Good
VG/None. Black cloth hardcover in very good condition. Gilt lettering on spine. Marbled page edges. Minimal shelf wear. Corners bumped. Previous owner's name inside front cover; otherwise pages clean and unmarked. Selected articles, speeches, and records entered into the Congressional Recordor the Records of the Committee on Foreign Affairs from 1939 to 1944; including:"THE EGREGIOUS GENTILE CALLED TO ACCOUNT".This editorial by Grover Hall in the Montgomery Advertiser, Dec.4, 1938. Entered in the Congressional record of Jan. 17, 1939. Fascinating Holocaust-era Philosemitic tract from 1939 Alabama calling on fellow Gentiles to rise to the levels of accomplishment of the Jews.Several records, articles and speaches condemning Lindbergh's attack on Jewsand his claim that Jews endanger the United States by control of mediums molding thought. Entered in the Congressional Record in September 1941.An address by Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler on The American Plan to Prevent War,printed in the Congressional record June 3, 1942.And much more... Extremely interesting reading, and quite enlightening as to themoods, feelings, and moral tone of the time period. No Jacket Hardcover
Gales, Joseph [and others]: Annals of Congress of the United States. 42 Vols. plus DVD (1834-1856) 2003
[United States Congress]. Gales, Joseph [and Others], Editor. Annals of the Congress of the United States. Washington, D.C.: Gales and Seaton, 1834-1856. Reprint. Buffalo: W.S. Hein, Inc., 2003. 42 volumes. Complete set. [with] DVD. Maroon textured cloth, red and black lettering pieces and gilt fillets to spines. New. * Bindings match those of the original set. Formerly known as The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States, the Annals of Congress cover the First Congress through the first session of the Eighteenth Congress (1789-1824). It used the best records available, primarily newspaper accounts. Speeches are paraphrased rather than presented verbatim, but the record of debate is nonetheless fuller than that available from the House and Senate Journals. The Annals demonstrated the importance of having a record of what ensued in Congress. It inspired, and was subsequently succeeded by, the Register of Debates, which led eventually to the creation of the Congressional Globe and today's foremost source of Congressional information, the Congressional Record.
McCarroll, Jean: (Compiled and Annotated}: THE NEGRO IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD: 1824 - 1827: VOLUME 9, New York Bergman Publishers/Subsidiary of Lyle Stuart 1971 ; fester Einband / hard cover; 1. Ed. ISBN: 0875030335
0875030335 Near Fine
HISTORY: 6 3/4 x 10 1/8 inches, 268 pages including index of the pricipal debates in the House of Representatives in connection with the Negro problem and an index of the Debaters in the Senate. THE NEGRO IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD: VOLUME 9, Eighteenth (Seconf Session) and Nineteenth congress: 1824-1827, Extracts from the Debates in Congress of the United States pubished in the years 1825-1829 under the title: Gales & Seaton's Register of Debates in Congress, together with an Appendix, Containing Important State Papers and Public Documents, and the Laws Enacted, Comprising the period from December 6, 1824 to March 3, 1827. //Previous owner placed a blue slash mark across the top edge, else in fine condition. Maroon cloth over boards with silver lettering on spine. See Description No Dust Jacket Hard Cover; See Description
[SW: History, The Negro in the Congrressional Record,1824-1837. Compiled and Annotated By Jean McCarroll]
Woodruff, Roy O. [1949 attack on "world government] Congressional Record. Proceedings And Debates Of The 81st Congress, First Session. "Un-American Internationalism" Extension Of Remarks Of Hon. Roy O. Woodruff Of Michigan In The House Of Representatives. Tuesday June 14, 1949. Washington, 1949.
9 x 11 1/2 in. "Not printed at Government expense." Woodruff's speech printed alonein 3 columns on a sheet both sides with Congressional Record banner. Probably to be sent for home-constituent consumption. Pencil note at bottom margin "From American Coalition, July 1949." Reports to HR on a Hearst newspaper article with the title "Un-American Internationalism." This article was written in answer to an H.R. resolution in which the majority (partic. Democrats) favored a world government as a fundamental objective of U.S. foreign policy. Woodruff's strongly opposes this resolution gives his reasons at length, stating there is a crawling movement to de-nationalize the U.S. and submerge its sovereignty and independence to a visionary world government, etc. etc. Such a world government would be dominated by the vast populations of Asia in alliance with Russia.
2pp. 4to. Folded in thirds. Gd. - VG.
[SW: General AmericanaPolitical historyCold WarCommunismAnti-communismDiplomacyU.S. House of RepresentativesMichiganMcCarthyismForeign policySoviet UnionUnited Nations]



