AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE mSTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR "o~t C. "OI:UII. Cltci'""'ldA Georl'l' C. MtU"shall BClearch FoUDdatiott. s.~( -o.n4 Nn:;Ld.tn 1k.oa-ttm.ent .of Riito't'J' <l<ol'ge B.... ' NE~VSLETTER ~A\t:i~rC~ZCalitonda Albe~ A. <Blum . Michigan State u~tve",i't~ P. A. Uaur x.. !"...... Se"rotarT A: 14!-ncati Cotnmit.tee b ai 1Jiated with! .(;( Ql,i~ Inter~~tion:ll d'His~,,")ir~ Mart.ln 'Bhll'rtd'laon Naval Will' CoUe"1! <lharl.. U-dftrait7 of Flc:id.. G. iraesrlUe-. FJ,grida 3::tiOt • .!~ No.7 tl.!%OY VandecbiJt Univan:lt7 April 1972 p~ 1a. 2- Guerre ,MondillJe rue de Ltningrad ria VOI-, Fnnce Sal"Old ,C. Deutteh Uol.~nitJ' o[ 1rIIn.nelot.i. Stanl<7 L. Folk GENERAL Arthur L. Fl:mk ~. Induttrl:c.I Colleic of the Armed Forces UDlvt'nit7 of F14rida Ban. C&h:1Ie Yale tJ:siver:sit)' StanteJ" Boffrnp.n.n Barv,lu'u Unl'V.:raU.. B. Stuart HUi:hes ~rvt.rd Uc..i ver,dty Mauck- hJ:atJol! OlCh::. at the Chief of , ¥Ulta.r'7 Ri.t.tQr~ ~~r:;JdUI1IVOtiity Loul. Morton Dartmouth Col1~Q'c Coor.:~ L. MO!l5e UtIoive.1'9ity ot WI,coD.!lA Sa.lv:l.dorl Smith CoDt'l:e A reminder that the annual.assessment of $5.00 was due' as of January 1~ 1972. Payment by those who have not a1read) done so will be appreciated. Conference on World War II in 1973. A majority has agreec that a conference should be organized for 1973 and that June weu1d probably be the best time. With this Newsletter is enc10~ed a questionnaire which will enable preliminary organization to get under way. Joint Sessions with the AHA. The AHA is making an inquiry regarding joint sessions at the annual meeting. Your reaction (on the enclosed questionnaire) is requested. )lUi John L. Sneli UDivenity o[ North Carolina Loal., Sn;yder Cit)' CollcKe of New York W.mlll'r WUID'bruan Bibliography chairmanship making plans World War II Pro;ect. Miss Janet Ziegler has accepted the of the sub-committee on bibliography. She i~ for a survey of bibliographical needs in the area. Pit.lflr CoUta'o Oerhard L. w~rD.bIrrv Uo.lvcr.it;y 01 Michiwutl Cordon Wrltht Stantor4 UnlvanitJ" A consolidation of the bibliographical items which have so far appeared in the Newsletter is being prepared. This will cover many of the books, mostly in English, which have apreared from 1968 to the present. It will be sent to all members I and to a selected list of libraries, in the near future. < FUTURE MEETINGS International Committee on the History of the Second Wor1e W~r. The Executive Committee of the, International Committee wiJ1 meet, toward the end of May, at Belgrade. Among the items to bE dis­ cussed will be the program for the International Congress of Historical Sciences, scheduled for San Francisco in 1975. Later, in July, ICHS directors will meet, also in Belgrade, to d:scuss specific projects. Suggestions by members of the Americar Com­ mittee, both for session topics and for individual papers, are requested. The secretary would like to forward these to M. Michel in Paris before the end of May • .-­ -2­ Fifth Military History Symposium·, Air Force Academy, October 5-6, 1972. The theme for the next Symposium at the Air Force Academy is "The Hilitary and Society. Among the sessions will be one on "The Study of Militat:y Affairs on College Campuses," and one on "The Writing and Pub­ lication of Military History." Participants include Barbara Tuchman, Ftari~.Vandiver, Cyril Black; Alvin Coax, Edward Coffman, W. Bruce White, }lorr"is F'.acGregor, Lou is Horton, Gunther Ro thenberg, Theodore Rop?, Robin Higham, John Loosbrock, and James E. O'Neill. For further infor­ mation wTite Major Ronald Fogleman, Dept. of History, USAF Academy, Colorado 81840. Polish Conference on Forced }ligrations, October 17-20, 1972. The Polish Committee has confirmed that a conference on "Population Transfers carried out by the Third Reich in occupied areas" will take place October 17-20, 1972 at Zamo~t ( the birthplace of Rosa Luxemburg ), about 150 miles southeast of Warsaw, between Lublin and Lvov. The meeting is being organized by the Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences with the cooperation of the ~arie Curie-Sklodowska University in Lublin. For further information, interested persons can write to the Polish Committee (address on page 5 ). AN~ODNCEMENTS Of t~e various program suggestions presented to the 1972 AHA Program Committee, the one on the North African landings has been accepted as a jotnt session for the meeting at New Orleans in December 1972. As presently set up the session will be as follows: OPER\TlON "TORCH" REVISITED: ASPECTS OF THE NORTH AFRICAN LANDINGS THIR[Y YEARS LATER Chairman: Forrest C. Pogue, George C. Harshall Fourtdation William A. Hoisington, Illinois at Chicago Circle: "Jacques Lemaigre Dubreuil and the North African Landings." Martin Blumenson, Naval War College: "Patton and the Landings in North Africa" Arthur L. Funk, Florida: "The Deal with Darlan: A Reappraisal" Discussan ts: General l1ark W. Clark General Andre Beaufre (General Beaufre was General Giraud's aide at the time of the landings.) The paper read by James E. O'Neill, deputy archivist of the United States, haS been pUblished in the National Archives' journal Prologue (Sprtns, 1972). The title: "The Accessibility of Sources for the His t Jry of the Second World War: The Archivis t' s Viewpoint." -3­ The National Archives has announced some interesting additions in the field of World War II studies. These are itemized in detail in the Spring, 1972, issue of Prologue, pp. 39-42, 48-49, and also in the Ma~ch 1972 AHA Newsletter, pp. 35-38. Among the items: microfilm rolls with a substantially complete record of the German Navy in "'InI; records 0:' German research in atomic energy; the Stettinius Diaries, 1944-~5;. over 2000 reels of Russian, German, Japanese, and Italian films, both documentary and propaganda. The RooseveltLibrary has made available ~he Morgenthau Diary, covering mos tly 1938-45; the HarryHopkins papers u.sed by Robert Sherwood; a considerable amount of the FDR Map Room Paper~. As of January 21, 1972, the Department of State declassified alm"st all of its foreign policy records for the years 1942-1945. This poli~y coincides with a decision recently made by the British Government and enables researchers to obtain access to some British records which rna:' be among the State Department materials. Most of these papers are located physically in the National Archives building in Washington. The first volume of sources relating to the Italian resistance (in the series "Collana di Fonti") is scheduled for publication in April.' These include the records of the headquarters of the CLV (Corpo volontari della liberta), and have been edited by Professor Rochat, secretary-general of the InternatiOnal Committee. A meeting on "Europe and the 1941 insurrection in Yugoslavia" . took place in Belgrade on October 24-26, 1971. Thirty-t,,,o papers and communications were given, among which: Marjanovic, "Rela tions betwei,n Mihailovich and the British in 1941;" Deakin, "Great Britain a;1.d the Serbian insurrection 'in 1941;" Auty, "Some aspects of Anglo-Yugoslavi<.n relations in 1941." Information as to the. future availability of the papers has not been recieved. (As a captain in WI.JII, Professor Deakir" formerly warden of St. Antony's College in Oxford and current chairmaL of the British Committee on the History of the Second World War, served as a liaison officer with Tito. His book The Embattled ~lounta:.n has recently appeared.) ­ An Anglo-French meeting was held last OctOber in which British and French historians debated several themes related to the ,;-ar. It likely that a similar meeting will be held in France next October. MEMBERS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CO}lliITTEE FOR THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD WAR :.S SECO~D Honorary President: :1r. Ferruccio Parri, Former President of the I ta:.ian Council, Permanent Member of the Senate, President of the Na tional In"ti­ tute for the History of the Liberation Movement in Italy - Piazza Duarto 14 20122 Milano, Italy. President: Mr. Henri Michel, Research Director National Scientific Research Centre, Secretary-General, French Committee for the History of the Second World War - 32 Rue Leningrad - Paris VIII, France. ------- - - - - - -4­ Yice-President: General P. Zhilin, Director, Institute for Military Eistor:', 11 Dzerjinski Street - Moscow, USSR. Vice-P::esident: Mr. Marjanovic, President, Yugoslavian Committee for the History of the Second World War - Trg Marxa i Engelsa 11 - Belgrade, Yugoslilvia. Treasu':er: Mr. Louis de Jong, Director Netherlands State Institute for \,'2r DO"l~enta tion, Herengracht 474 - Ams terdam-C, the Netherlands. Secretary-General: Mr. Rochat, Professor, Hilano University, Piazza Duomo 14 - 20122 Milano, Italy. Delega:es of the National Committees: AUSTRL, Xr. Steiner, Secretary-General Dokumentations­ archiv des Oesterreichischen Widerstandes ­ 1010 Vienna I, Wipplingerstrasse 8. BELGIUH Mr. Willequet, Professor, Free University Brussels, avo F. D. Roosevelt 82, Brussels. Mr. Vanwelkenhuyzen, Director, Centre de Recherches et d'Etudes Historiques de la Deuxieme Guerre Mondiale, 4, place de Louvain, B-lOOO Brussels. BULGAR:A Mr. Elazar, President, National Committee for the History of the Second World War, Historical Institute of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, DI. Benkovska 3, Sofia. CA.'\ADA Mr. \.Jise, Directorate of History, Canadian Forces Headquarters, Ottawa 4, Ontario. CZECHO:';LOVAKIA Hr. Janacek, Czechoslovakian Committee for the History of the Antifascist Resistance - Prague 1, Rytirska Ulice 31. Hr. Bagge, Udgiverselskab for Denmarks Nyeste Historie, Nielsjuels Gate 11, 1059 Copenhagen K. FINLA.'O Mr. Puntila, Professor, Pohjolankatu 64, Helsinki 60. Hr. Michel, see G. D.L Presiden~ above. Hr. Schumann, German I\cademy of Sciences, Historical Institute, Clara Zetkinstrasse 26, 108 Berlin. Mr. Krausnick, Director Institute for Contemporary History, Leonrodstrasse 46B, 8 Munich 19. -5­ GREAT-BRITAIN Mr. F. W. Deakin, President, British Committee fer the History of the Second World War, Le Castellet (83), France. HUNGARY Mr. Vass, Director, Institute for the History of the Party, Uri Utca 51/53, Budapest. INDIA Mr. Pandey, Director, Xinistry of Defence, Historical Section, West Block VIII Wing no. 1. R. K. Puram, 22 New-Delhi. ISRAEL Mr. Tartakower, President Israelian Committee for the History of the Second World War, Yad Vashem, Har Hazikaron, Jerusalem. ITALY Mr. Rochat, See Secretary-Genral above. JAPAN Mr. Takashi Saito, Professor Gakushuin University, Faculty of Law, 1-5-1 ~lejiro Toshima-ku, Tokyo. THE NETHERLANDS Mr. L. de Jong, see Treasurer above. NORWAY Mr. Skodvin, Professor, Faculty of Literature, University of Oslo, Oslo. POLAND Mr. Jedruszczak, Director, Institute for ~ilitary History, 33 ul. Micdzynarodowa 37A, ~I. 7, Warsaw. RUMANIA Mr. Zaharia, Director, Institute for Historical, Social and Political Studies, Strada Ministerului 4, Bucarest. SOUTH KOREA Mr. Lee Chong Hak, Professor, Kong-Gun, SWEDEN Mr. Landberg, Docent, Research Director, Stockholn University, Historiska Institutionen, Ferkans GrMnd III 30 Stockholm. TURKEY Mr. Enver Ziya Karal, Professor of Contemporary History, University of Ankara - Turk Tarih Kurumu, Ankara. U. s. S. R. T~-Hak, Gen. 2hilin, see Vice-President above. UNITED STATES Mr. Forrest Pogue, George C. Marshall Research. Foundation, The River House, 1111 Army Drive, Arlington, Virginia, 22202. YUGOSLAVIA Mr. Marjanovic, see Vice-President above. S=oul. 1: .. , .\., ', ' -6­ Great 3ri~~i" Robin, eJ. );igt~n. TIle Second World ~ar; a guide to 1C'ndcn, H.'I,.S.O., 1972. Fublic Record Office. in the P:.:blic Record O::nce. doc~~ents A bUide to the sources of British military histor;. . Berkeley, Ln~v.· cf California, 1971. Cclli0-:-, 3t..si:.. ~.';:::-l:;)G. 7:'i~ ::cw lit:'n a.nd the eagle: York, ;Utno.;u, 1972 . Dri~Sh and Anglo-American strategy, ' V. and ~. K~takov. Dip1crr.acy of aggression; Berlin-Rome-Tokyo ~xis, its usc and fall. ~~scow, Pr0grc~s ~blishcrs, 1970. spa,.f., Rlul-::e:-.ri. The continuir.g battle; memoirs of a European, 1936-1966. !;c. York, ;:'ittlc, Bro...n & Co., 1972. !s~~el~ar:. TIlc str~tc~J of nppc~sc~ent; tnc British Governmcnt and 1937-1939. Cleveland, QuadranGl~ Books, 1972. Cn'i~:, ~;ils. 'Inc decline of neutralit~', 1914-1941. With special reference tc t~e ~nited States ~nd tne nOTt~ern ncutrnls. 2nd. ed. London, Cass, 1971. ,:;;-.cn:i, F..:ge:- L. 'I'.'lrs :lnd n;;::CTs of ".:aTS. ):as:'1V:lle, f,binr;ic:J. Press, 1972 . :·~dd:c~as, Keith. Gerc.a~y, =:!. ........ l"'(~ .. ~ ......" .. ' ............ \ J Joan 3. ~£t~£y, Tr.. e i~ncr circ~c; n v~ew of ~~r &t the tcp. Eoston, Little, 3rc~n, ~971 ~l~~ . A~~r . ed.) . E\:,..."t.':"~l' l·:ic:-I1.c:l. Gr~'":~ strct~GY. Vol. IV; Auguzt 1942-Au,s't:.st ;:. >f. S. C., 1972. (Uni t(;j, Ki:1gciom :'filit3.:i-~r scri€ : s, 1943. London, History of the Second '.\~ :-:i ·.:~,r). ?:..~.:;,~ ....:., Gc.:roc 3. ::,;.'.': Ycr~, The ?a.ttc~ ~~I.;:cru, 1335-1940; cd. 'by ~:o.rtin Blu:ocnson, ;-U;"flir.. , 1972. :IOl~::h~c:l :~J:c=, ~/~~.~~11 J. S~crus ~~d plowsn~res; Ci,,2..:rlc~) :'.;.r~c:-.. , ~c~oir. ~C~ York, Norto~, 1972. ~:«". i r;~'..t ~~cw York, 3. " S., 1971. ',';orld ~,,r~r :!I. Dell, 1971, 4 v. ICl:s, Rebert J. Fa..~c'U.G ~o.nk b~ttle'J) UCw Yor:::', DOt.:.blcd.~y, 1972. ;·~cc:c s~:~Z"J, ~,:Cr...rc. Tc~ch and the 'r..:~lfth Air Force. Nc·~" ~crk, Rosen) 1971. ~'~~ci:S(:r, K~:.t:cth. ':'ar.:.-: """o.rfn.:"c; ~ hi~torj of tar;.ks in battle. !:C\.· York) stein 0...1.1 JJ.y, 1972. S':,:lZ~_~ ..;~c.'; !·~:-tin. l"orcc:J.st for Ovcrlord, J'lUi.C 6th, 1944. LOnuon t A1IM) 1971. (l<il.-:;~:..;~cn·, 1~'?.itin W.. 1915-1:;61+_ 7hc r,~iddle. E.'1.st Supply Ccntr,"". Alb~"iY , Zt.a'tc 'L":livl:ro"iit:r of New York rrccs, 1971. Hal. Cc::.c:-:..;:-~, G:.-CC~. .:c:l, ::..~c Ern.dl(;J~. a Yc>rk, fullE..:,,,tinc ~ok~, 1971 (Bnllantincts ~ llustr::tcd hL:tcr.r of the vio1c...t CC:1tlL.-Y •• ',.:::.r .1c~d.er tock no. 5). (:1.it::.:,;, cd.. i:i:'1-ia.-:.. trco~s. Ccr:.bu:~~: Augsbcrg cnglc; the :;tOI"j' of the :-!esserschmidt 109. Xc.,; 'fork, :: .~ ';:;:. c.2:!.~·, 1 ')72 • Hcllc~'J I.n~, Jr. !dc~~ and U. s. dur~:-'5 ·"erlc. .....3.r II. of the 1953 ed'). of the ~crial wc~pon by the H=dcn, Conn., Shce string Press, 1971 (Reprint ~e~pcn~; cx~loitation -7­ A:r c~c~~tic~~ (cont'u) c. the 357th ~iG~~cr G~CU? en csc(rt over Acro ~b~i~~cr~, 1971. P:-icc, Ali':"c.i. Ce:-::;~n Jiir ?orcc b('1LJb~r:3 of 1';crll1 ..,;;:..Z' II. ·Vo~. JI... :;C\II( York, ~u~le~~r, 1972 (Co:lbat plaDcG of ~Qrl~ ~~r II Ser.); C~stcl, ~cr:c Th~ Yoxford Loy~; ~c~c ~d ~Y$~i~. Fal1brcc~, C~lif., S":1crcs, C"':rit)tci;~C::a, F. 2nd TJ..I .. TIC':ldir..{;, C~:prcj,r, ~970. Si~s, ~w~rj H. F:bhtc: t~Ctic8 ~nd ztr~teZj': 1914-1970. ~!.1riJ~:' .& Ro".;, 1972 . ·&lIth, Peter Xcw York The stt:Jm at \.":J.r. XCW York, Areo, 1971­ ci.) cd. Ec~bs ~~~y! Tr~c stories cf Gtrategic nirpower :·;crld. "':lor enc to the ,:resent. .'cw York, Doub1cd.:q, 1971. Ch~rlcs. tr~0f~, st.~11cy :frC:"Jl ~.ker, .Jc~·.;i. B. A::.~~~l\~, Hc:rt, the \161:," duckliGg of" ~-crld t\"':;.r I~:. Frees, 1972. cf Lcytc GuJ.f; the dCG.th %nc11 0:: the Ju;"J.rl.csc The Liberty 1~.,~~~:~1 r. ':he Slli~: In~titutc b:;.t~lc X~W ~CT~, V:l.\"id :~~::':':l C(J., ;';.:i:"b flc~t. ?ach, J.W.C. Xight action o~f Cape 1972. ~~tn~,n. &~napoli3, V~., ~:;.,~1 I~stitutc 1972. Polir.g, Jo.::les. All battle stations manned; the U.S. l'i:lvJ in World ~~~ Yc~k, GrOG set & ~u.~l3-p, 1971. ?res~, II. \-~r Purd.on, £:ric. :91:l.ck ccr:.r-w-.y; thc cto:y of S"..:.bchascr 1264. ·i;:l.shir...;~.cn, R.B. Luee, 1972. MV:1.:1, Alo.."1, ::J..l'd Jehn :?obcrts. British ;,-::.rGhips of Scccna i';(Jrld 1\:l.1". ~;c;.r Ycr~, Areo, 1972 (J~c). Zchoficld, D.B. The loss of the Press, 1972. Bism~rck. Anr~polis, Mi., K~v~l Ir.stitute The diaries of Alexander Cadeganj ed. by D:l.viv DeL~s. New 1972. ~~erican pcli~y ~~d the divisicn of Cc~~ny; the c:a~h ~l~h Cajc~~n, A:cx~ndcr. Ycrk, ~u~n~~, Kuklic~, Br~ce. ::::'~.:~i[l Pc~ce ~or l:.:cucd. en t;,c hi~herto 1972 (:':arch). ~c r:n.vy ;;"'''1d the industrial Da Capo Press, 1972, c1951­ Con.r.cr"J'", nC';Jc::-t I:C'",c, ~~r II, Ithnc~, 'New "1'c::-r~) Co,:",ncll U.'1iV"~ fr e ..;!) , 1972. cur t~=c; 1hh1ich to fr~Lkirk, the i~~id~ ~tc=y secret Eriti:;h cc.binet· p:l.pcrs. I.c·..• Yerk, :·:ci(::.y, over Tep::..ruticns. ?~rkin~c~, Rc~cr. ~Ch ~or~, Elli:;, Chris. ~'U.li"'~;:.r:r transp~rt of '\oJarlci Lcndcn, Bl~~dfo~d Press) 1971. ~~i~chcusc, ;~ch. The Ycr~, Dcu~1cday, Secret ~ilitnry ~::J.r II, including post lo""T airplane, 1972. ~crviccs: prop~~~nd~tand infol~tion Cccia-id;;e, E.H. ~cbili2St:Gu media CehL:Ln; sP"J of tr.e century, Nr'J'.l Ycrk, Random, 1972. in ~crld vchic:'cs. -8. Secret s~rvices, \ propaganda, and information media. (cont'd) Delmer, Sefton. The counterfeit spy. New York, Harper, 1971. Dreux. William B. No bridges bl~Kn. Univ. of Notre Dame Press, 1971. Fa.ra~o, Ladislas. The Rume of the Foxes; the untold story of German espi)nage in the United States and Great Britain during World War II. toev York, McKay, 1971. Gehlen, Reinh3rd. The service; the memoirs of GeneraY Reinhard Gehlen. Tran3. by David Irving. 'Xew York, World, 1972. Goldsrnit~, John. Accidental ugent. N~ York, Scribner, 1971. Hohne, Heinz. Codeword DIREh.'TOR: the story of the Red orchestra. New York, Coward, McCann and Geoghegan, 1972. Hohne, Heinz artd Herrr,an Zolling. The general was a spy; the true story of Genc~a1 Ceh1en and his spy ring.New York. Coward, ¥ocCann and~eoghegan, 1972. Lund, Erik. A girdle of truth; the underground ne'ofS service information, 1943­ 194~: th~ press and Inf'ormation Department of Ministry of Foreign Af'f'airs of r ~n:;l3.rk., Kpbenhavn, Udgi veren, 1970. Masterma:'l, John Cecil, The double-cross system in the war ot 1839 to 1945, New Haven, Yale University, ~972. Roskill, Stephen. Hankey; man of secrets. vol. II. New York, St. Yartin's Press, 1972 (forthcOCling Y.:ly 1972). ~ith, R. Harris. OSS; the secret history or fuToerica's first Central Intelligenee Agency. Berkeley, Univ. of Calif. Press, 1972(June). Strong, Kenneth. Men of intelligence; a study of the roles and decisions or chiefs of intelligence from World War I to the present day. New York, St. Martin's Press, 1972. War Cri~esl rcf~geer.. minorities, persecutions Birenbal~, }ialina. Ho~e is the last to die; a personal documentation Of Terror. New York, ~~yne, 1972. Conrnt, ~isie anJ Richard. ExecutIve order 9066; the interr~ent of 115,000 Americans. San Francir.co, California Historical Society, 1972. Daniels, Roger. C~ncentration camps USA: Japanese Americans and World War II. Nev YorK, Hol t, Rinehart & Winston, 1972. Green, Julius M. From Colditz in code. London, Hale, 1971. Julitte, Pierre, Block 26: sabotage at Buchenwald. Tr. from French / by Francis Price. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1971. Senesh. Hannah. Hanna Seneshj her lite and diary. New York, Schocken Books; 1972. Tute, Warren. Escape Route Green. 'London, Dent, 1971. ~&zi 'N. OPT:u.TIONS BY COilllTRY AND AREA Arora nne Pnciric Theatre; Japan Adams, Eruce. Battleground South Pacific. Photos. by Bruce Adams. Text by. Ro!:)(·rt Howlett. Sydney, Reed, 1970. Anders or. , Benedict R. Java. in a time of revolution: occ:.upation and resistance, l~;L_l946. Ithaca, New York, Cornell Univ. Press, 1972. Fellows.Gordon, Inn. The Burma war. New York, Scribner; 1972. Kent, Gnu:me. Guadalcanal: island ordeal. New York, Ballantine Books, 1971. )'./" ',l -9­ Asia and ~cific Theatre; Japan (cont'd) The PrJ.cific War Research Society. The day man lost: Hiroshima, 6 Al,gllst 1945. Palo Alto, Cali~., Kodanshe International USA, 1972. Parkin, Ray. Into the smother; a journal of" the Burma-Siam railway. Sydney, Pacific Books. 1970,clS'63. ' .' ' Pusat Tenaga Rakjat. The Putera reports; problems 'in'Indonesian-Jar~nese ~"!I.rtime cooperation. Ithaca, N.Y. Modern Indonesia Project, Cornell University, 1971. Trager, Frank N. compo Burma: Japanese military administration, selected documents. 1~1-1945. Thiladelphia; Univ. of Penn. Press, 1971. Yass', Marion. Hiroshimo.. London, Wnyland, 1971­ Ygay, Venaneio M. World War II incidents in Pinamungajan and Cebu City. Manila, Soriano Press, 1969. Watts, A.J. and B.G. Gordon. The Imperial Japanese Navy. New York, Doubleday, 1972. Bulgaria Oliver, Khaim D. We were saved; how the Jews in Bulgaria were kept from the death camps, by H.D. Oliver. With a f"orward by Petko S. Stainov. Translated by V. Izmirl1ev. SOfia, Foreign Languages Press, 1967. ~ Boyle, John Hunter. China and Jnpan at war, 1937-1945. the politics of collaboration. Sthnford, Stanford Univ. Press, 1972. Cardwell, Olive G. A secret war. Americans in China, 1944-1945. Carbondale, Illinois, Southern Ill. Univ. Press, 1972. Gillin, Donald. ~arlord; Yen Hsi-shan in Shansi province 1911-1949. Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1967. Heife~an, Ron. Flying tigers: Cnennault in China. New York" Ballrntine Books, 1971. Pye, Lucian. Warlord politics; conf"lict and coalition in the moderrization of Republican China. New York, Praeger, 1971. Griffiths, Richard. Petain; a biography of Marshal Philippe Petain of Vichy. ~e~ York, Doubleday, 1972. Joseph, ~~urice, Saved f"rom the wolf's jaws,by Mone8tier~ Translated from the French by sara Landau. n.p., 197-1 Germany and Austria Heibel', He~ut. Goebbels. Trans. by John K. Dickinson. New York, Hawthorne , Books, 1972. Leibholz-Bonhoeffer, Sabine. The Bonhoeffers. portrait ot a family. New York, st. ~~rtin's Press, 1972 (May). Nicholls, Anthony and Erich Matthias, eds. Germany democracy and the triumph of Hitler. New York, St. Martin's Press, 1972. Whiting, Charles. Hitler's werewolves. New York, Stein & Day, 19T~ (May). -10­ Great Britain and the Commonwealth Dennis, Peter. Decision by default; peacetime conscription and British de:ense 1919-1939. Durham, Duke Univ. Press, 1972. Hess, Gs.ry R. America. encounters India. 1941-1947. John Hopkins Univ. Pres 5, 1971. Lee, Raymond. The London journal of Gerera1 Raymond E. 'Lee, 1940-1941. Ed. by James Leutze. Boston, Little, Brown, 1971. Long:-oa te, ~orman, Ho., '\(6 lived then:, a history of everyday life during the Second World War. London, Hutchinson, 1971. Mansergh, ~;icholas, ed. The transfer of power, 1942-7, ";01. 3 London, H. M. S·. 0. 1971­ F'a."lter-Do"..r,es, Mollie. London war notes. 1939-1945. Ed: by William Shawn. New York, Farrar, 1971­ Yass, Marion. The home front: Britain, 1939-45. London, Wayland, 1971. ,!ta1y Infield, Glenn B. millan, 1971. Disaster at Bari by Glenn B•. Infield. New York, Mac­ Soviet Union Fadeev, Aleksander. Leningrad in the days of the blockade, by A. Fadeyev. Tr. fr(~ Russian by R.D. Charques. Westport, Conn., Greenwood Pr, 1971. Hoeffding, 01eg. 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