AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR Arthur L. Funk, Chairman Professor Emeritus of History University of Florida 3445 N.W. 30th Boulevard Gainesville, F10rida 32605 NEWSLETTER ISSN 0885-5668 No. 43 Perman,ent Directors - Charles F. Delzell Vanderbilt University H. Stuart Hughes University of California at San Diego Forrest C. Pogue Dwight D. Eisenhower Institute Terms expiring 1990 Dean C. Allard Naval Historical Center Stephen E. Ambrose University of New Orleans Harold C. Deutsch Army War College and University of Minnesota (emer.) David Kahn Great Neck, N.Y. Warren F. Kimball Rutgers University Telford Taylor New York City Hobert Wolfe National Archives Janet Ziegler University of California at Los Angeles Term.'J rxpiring 1991 Brig Gen. James L. Collins, Jr. Chief of Military History (ret.) John Lewis Gaddis (lhio University Rubin Higham Kansas State University D. Clayton James Virginia Military Institute Robert O. Paxton Columbia University Agne:s F. Peterson Hoover Institution David F. Trask Center of Military History (ret.) Russell F. Weigley Temple University Term . .· expirl.'1g /992 Martin Blumenson Washington. D.c'. William H. Cunliffe National Archives S~~LFill Office of Air Force History (ret.) Maurice Matloff Center of Military History (ret.) Ern••t R. May Harvard University Ronald H. Spector Naval Historical Center Gerhard L. Weinberg University of North Carolina t:arl F. Ziemke University of Georgia ISBN 0-89126-060-9 CONTENTS ----­ - Spring 1990 Donald S. Detwiler, Secretary and Newsletter Editor Department of History Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Carbondale, Illinois 62901 Robin Higham, Archiui.t Department of History Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas 66506 --­ General Information 2 The Newsletter 2 International Book Review Coordinatioll: Arth ur L. Funk 3445 N. W. 30th Boulevard Gainesville, Florida 32605 The ACHSWW is affiliated with: Annual Membership Dues and Support Committee Elections 1990-92 Term 1991-93 Term The 1989 Annual Meeting The Joint Session with the AHA The Annual Business Meeting 2 3 3 3 4 4 American Historical Association 400 A Street, S.E. Washington, D.C. 20003 Comitk International d'Hiswire de la Deuxi~me Guerre Mondiale A. Harry Paape, Secretary General and Treasurer Netherlands State Institute for War Documentation Herengracht 474 1017 CA Amsterdam The Netherlands Future Meetings and Conferences International Committee Meeting (Madrid, 1990) Projected Conferences (Washington, D.C., 1992 & 1994) Conference on the Pacific War (Waynen, N. J., 1991) Announcements and Communications Planned Exhibition on the Home Front in Albany (1991) USAFHRC Research Grants Date Change in Annual Meetings after 1993 Discontinuation by the American Historical Association of Recently Published Articles and Writings in American History 7 7 8 8 8 9 9 Archival and Bibliographical Resources The OSS Records at the National Archives: An Update Two Bibliographies 10 11 Membership Directory of the ACHSWW 13 Ballot for the 1991-1993 Term (following page 46) 12 ------- GENERAL INFORMATION Established in 1967 "to promote historical research in the period of World War II in all its aspects," the American Committee on the History of the Second World War is a pri­ vate organization supported by the dues and donations of its members. It is affiliated with the American Historical Asso­ ciation, with the International Committee for the History of the Second World War, and with corresponding national commit­ tees in other countries, including Austria, Belgium, Canada, Finland, France, East and West Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, the Soviet Union, Spain, and the United Kingdom. The ACHSWW meets annually with the American Historical Association. The 1990 annual meeting will be held in December in New York City. THE NEWSLETTER The ACHSWW issues a semiannual newsletter (assigned Interna­ tlonal Standard Serial Number [ISSN] 0885-5668 by the Nation­ al Serial Data Program of the Library of Congress). Back is­ sues of the newsletter are available through the ACHSWW Ar­ chivist (at the address on the letterhead) from Sunflower University Press. The first eighteen issues (1968-1978) are available as a spiral-bound, 360-page xerox paperback (ISBN 0-89126-060-9) for $36.00. Subsequent back numbers are available as single, unbound issues for $3.00 each. (The~e is no postal charge for prepaid orders to addresses in the United States; there is a $4.00 shipping charge for orders to foreign and Canadian addresses.) ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP DUES AND SUPPORT Membership in the ACHSWW is open to anyone interested in the era of the Second World War. Annual membership dues of $10.00 are payable at the beginning of each calendar year. (Students with U.S. addresses may, if their circumstances require it, pay annual dues of $2.00 for up to six years.) There is no surcharge for members abroad, but it is request­ ed that dues be remitted directly to the secretary of the committee (not through an agency or a subscription service) in U.S. dollars. (The newsletter, which is mailed at bulk rates within the United States, will be sent by surface mail to foreign addresses unless special arrangements are made to cover the cost of airmail postage.) A membership renewal form is regularly attached to the fall issue of the news­ letter. 2 COMMITTEE ELECTIONS Election Results for the 1990-1992 Term The eight directors listed in the lower left-hand margin of the first page of this newsletter have been reelected to three-year terms from January 1990 through December 1992. Nominations and Elections for the 1991-1993 Term The chairman of the ACHSWW is a vice president of the Inter­ national Committee for the History of the Second World War. He does not hold this office on an ex officio basis, but is elected to it by the representatives of the national commit­ tees constituting the assembly of the International Committee, which meets every five years in conjunction with the quinquen­ nial International Congress of Historical Sciences. By the same token, the secretary of the ACHSWW represents the Ameri­ can Committee as a member of the Executive Commission of the International Committee. The current five-year terms of the officers of the International Committee will end at the meet­ ing to be held at the end of August and beginning of Septem­ ber 1990 in Madrid, when new officers and Executive Commis­ sion members will be elected. \ Prof. Arthur L. Funk of the University of Florida has de­ clined nomination for reelection in Madrid to the internation­ al vice presidency because at the end of 1990 he is stepping down, after fifteen years, from the ACHSWW chairmanship, with which the International Committee office is linked. Prof. Donald S. Detwiler of Southern Illinois University, who suc­ ceeded Prof. Funk as ACHSWW secretary in 1976, has accepted nomination, by the board of directors of the American Commit­ tee, for the ACHSWW chairmanship. Prof. D. Clayton James of the Virginia Military Institute has accepted nomination to succeed him as secretary. With the ACHSWW election being held this spring, rather than in the fall, the future officers of the American Commit­ tee can be elected in Madrid this summer to their respective International Committee posts, the chairman-elect to the vice presidency and the secretary-elect to membership in the Execu­ tive Commission. Ballots for the election of ACHSWW officers and directors for the 1991-93 term are attached to this newsletter. Please return them for the tally at the end of May. THE 1989 ANNUAL MEETING The annual meeting of the ACHSWW was held during the last week of December 1989, in conjunction with that of the Amer­ ican Historical Association, at the San Francisco Hilton. 3 The Joint Session with the AHA Mrs. Agnes F. Peterson of the Hoover Institution chaired the joint session at 9:30 a.m., Thursday, 28 December, in Continen­ tal Ballroom 6. Prof. Norman Graebner of the University of Virginia read a paper on "Roosevelt, Chamberlain, and the Com­ ing of the War ll on which Professors Edward M. Bennett of Wash­ ington State University, Warren F. Kimball of Rutgers Univer­ sity at Newark, and Williamson Murray of Ohio State University commented. The well-attended session concluded with a discus­ sion in which several members of the audience participated. The Business Meeting The business meeting was convened at 5:00 p.m., Thursday, 28 December, in the Teakwood Room by the committee chairman, Prof. Arthur L. Funk of the University of Florida. As ACHSWW treasurer, the committee secretary, Prof. Donald S. Detwiler of Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, reported on the committee's income and expenses during the past budget year, from 1 December 1988 to 30 November 1989, at the end of which the committee had a bank balance of $113.57. Prof. Detwiler also acknowledged twenty-one members' donations totaling $263 to a dedicated grant-in-fund at Southern Illinois Unversity to help defray costs not borne by dues. The treasurer's report was accepted without objection. Prof. Funk thanked the members of the panel for the joint session earlier in the day. He went on to announce the tenta­ tive approval by the AHA Program Committee of the proposed joint session for the 1990 annual meeting, to be held at the New York Hilton at the end of December, IIDwight D. Eisenhower, 1890-1969: A Centenary Prospect. 1I The session is to be chaired by Forrest C. Pogue, who until his retirement was di­ rector of the Dwight D. Eisenhower Institute at the Smithson­ ian Institution's National Museum of American History. Papers will be given on Eisenhower and Churchill by Stephen E. Am­ brose, on Eisenhower and de Gaulle by Arthur L. Funk, and on Eisenhower, Eleanor Roosevelt, and human rights by Blanche Wiesen Cook. The two commentators will be Martin Blumenson, formerly with the Center of Military History, and John E. Wickman, the retiring director of the Eisenhower Library. Regarding the meeting of the International Committee for the History of the Second World War at the end of August and beginning of September in Madrid, Prof. Funk noted that final arrangements had not yet been confirmed, but that the planned symposium on liThe Road to war,1I focusing on public opinion, is to include contributions by two directors of the American Committee: 1) Robert Wolfe, Director of the Captured German Records Staff, National Archives, and a specialist on German-American relations, is scheduled to give a paper on American attitudes and policy toward Germany from the time of the Weimar Repub­ lic to the eve of the United States' entry into the war; and 4 2) Prof. Ronald H. Spector of the University of Alabama (to which he returned from the Naval Historical Center), au­ thor of Eagle Against the Sun: The American War with Japan (New York: Free Press, 1985; paperback repr., Vintage Books, 1985), is to present a corresponding paper on American-Japan­ ese relations, taking into account the impact on them of the Sino-Japanese War. Prof. Funk went on to announce that he and Robert Wolfe had recently met with the Archivist of the United States, Dr. Don Wilson, and proposed that the National Archives, in coop­ eration with the ACHSWW, conduct during the early 1990s one or more scholarly conferences focussed on significant aspects of the war being waged fifty years earlier. Dr. Wilson was receptive to the initiative, and it was agreed that the mat­ ter should be pursued. Turning to committee business, Prof. Funk announced that he would not seek reelection after his fifth term, which ends in December 1990. He also announced that Prof. Detwiler had agreed to stand for election as his successor and that, in response to a memorandum to the directors, one of them, Prof. D. Clayton James, a committee member since 1971, had volun­ teered to serve as secretary and newsletter editor. He men­ tioned Prof. James' having written that, if he were nominat­ ed and elected, it was understood at his institution that he would delegate much of the administrative work of the commit­ tee to his full-time administrative assistant and collabor­ ator, a former archivist and associate professor recruited with him from Mississippi by the Virginia Military Institute. At the invitation of the committee chairman, Prof. Theo­ dore A. Wilson of the University Kansas spoke of plans being made at Kansas to "create, over the next several years, hope­ fully working closely with the American Committee," an insti­ tute for studies on what he characterized as "the most import­ ant cultural event of the twentieth century," World War II. Prof. Harold C. Deutsch of the University of Minnesota and the Army War College announced the formation in the Twin Cities (Minneapolis and st. Paul) of a World War II Round Table. Since its establishment in 1987, it has attracted active support, involving veterans, and enjoyed wide pub­ lic interest, with participation of high school and college students and representatives of all ages and walks of life. Attendance at its monthly meetings has approached one hun­ dred. Prof. Deutsch predicts a comparable response to World War II Round Tables that could be set up throughout the coun­ try. The next step would be for the World War II Round Ta­ bles to become affiliated in a national federation that would facilitate sharing ideas for programs and other information of organizational and procedural interest. He invited anyone interested in starting a local round table to contact him or his friend and former student, the executive secretary of the Twin Cities World War II Round Table (of which Prof. Deutsch is adviser), Donald G. Patton, 7600 Parklawn Ave., Suite 200, Edina, MN 55435, (612) 835-7600. Prof. Deutsch's address is in the appended ACHSWW Membership Directory. 5 Reporting on plans for the continuing series of U.S.­ Soviet symposia on the history of the Second World War, Prof. Warren F. Kimball of Rutgers University at Newark said that funding had been unavailable for a fourth symposium in fall 1989, but that if funding becomes available, a fourth sympo­ sium will be held, probably at Rutgers or in its environs, in October of 1990. Prof. Kimball reported also on a tripartite project, with American, British, and Soviet participation, to prepare on a cooperative basis a book of essays on the Second World War. Four scholars from each country are to provide es­ says covering the home front, the military, the economy, and diplomacy in their own country. In addition to these three sets of four essays, there are to be six further essays in the book, jointly written, providing more general coverage at the international level, with consideration of the countries' perceptions of each other. Plans are also being made for the publication of a collection of translated and annotated docu­ ments selected from the official sixteen-volume Russian publi­ cation on Soviet foreign relations during the war. Once the documents are selected, Prof. Kimball stressed, the Soviet historians will have to arrange for their responsible Western counterparts to consult the originals from the Soviet Archives. Prof. Deutsch commented that it is possible, under the present Soviet leadership, that there may well be, in the next year or two, considerable opening up for research. But one should bear in mind, in dealing with the Russians, that they need to be told how sorry we are that the Fulbright grants to the Soviet Union only deal with teaching. They do not have any kind of research appointments. If they really do want to open things up, there will have to be support for research, as well. Prof. Weinberg added that there is anoth­ er, very grave dimension to the problem: unless the holdings in the Soviet and East European archives are made accessible for microfilming and are filmed in the next few years, it will be too late. The quality of the paper of the documents is so poor that much of the information on them already is in serious jeopardy, if not lost. "East European scholars have to realize that if they do not insist on these films," Prof. Weinberg stressed, "those countries are all cutting them­ selves off--permanently--from their own past. 1I Prof. Funk announced that the University of Texas, in co­ operation with the Battle of Normandy Museum in Caen, is con­ ducting in spring 1990 a special study program on World War II with some thirty-five students. They will first study in Austin under Prof. Martin Blumenson (on a visiting appoint­ ment), Prof. Robert Divine, and others. After a month they move to Caen for several weeks' work. Toward the end of the term they return to Austin for the conclusion of the program. Prof. Detwiler introduced the chairman of the Finnish Committee on the History of the Second World War, Prof. Olli Vehvilainen of the University of Tampere, who attended the business meeting as a member of the International Committee, and was giving a paper the next day on the Finnish Winter War. The meeting was adjourned shortly before 7:00 p.m. 6 FUTURE MEETINGS AND CONFERENCES International Committee Meeting in Madrid (Summer 1990) According to the most recent information received from the In­ ternational Committee for the History of the Second World War, the quinquennial meeting is to be held during the latter part of the week of the International Congress (26 August - 2 Sep­ tember); it is to begin with a symposium lasting a day and a half (Friday, 31 August, and Saturday morning, 1 September) and to conclude with the general meeting of the representa­ ives of the national committees on Saturday afternoon. The draft program for the symposium on liThe Road to War" tentatively lists sixteen contributions, about half dealing with liThe Future War and Public Opinion . . . " in Britain, Denmark, France, Norway, etc. Prof. Juergen Rohwer of the Federal Republic of Germany will present a paper on liThe Vi­ sions on the Future War amongst the Military Theoreticians." The special perspective of post-Civil War Spain will be re­ flected in the paper by Prof. Antonio Marquina of Madrid, "public Opinion, Propaganda, and Spanish Neutrality, 1939­ 1940." At a planning session of the International Committee Board (i.e., the executive committee), Secretary General Har­ ry Paape reportedly expressed his regret that time would not be available for the participants to do more than read summa­ ries of their papers. He was also concerned that it was of­ ten impossible for participants and other interested parties to obtain copies after the meeting. He therefore proposed that arrangements should be made to obtain copies of all the papers, so that they might be made available in book form. If such arrangements are made, they will be announced in this newsletter. The International Committee's meeting in Madrid is being held in conjunction with the International Congress of Histor­ ical Sciences (CISH), much as the ACHSWW meets with the AHA. Bethesda Travel Service, (800) 441-1670 or (301) 656-1670, has information on AHA's arrangements for discounted air fare. Information regarding arrangements in Spain may be solicited from the Madrid convention bureau: SIASA Congresos, S.A. Po. de la Habana, 134 28036 Madrid, Spain Projected National Archives Conferences (1992 and 1994) Preliminary planning will soon begin for two major conferenc­ es on World War II to be held at the National Archives with the cooperation of the ACHSWW: one in 1992 and a second in 1994. Mr. George C. Chalou, Interagency Liaison Officer of 7 the National Archives, will meet this spring with two senior directors of the ACHSWW, Robert Wolfe and D. Clayton James, to develop a proposed agenda for review at the Archives and by the Committee. The outcome of the initial talks will be reported in the next newsletter. Conference on the Pacific War and Modern Memory (1991) Inquiries and suggestions are being solicited for an inter­ disciplinary conference, "The Pacific War and Modern Memory: War, Culture, and Society," planned for December 1991. The conference will seek to develop themes covering all belliger­ ents in the Second World War in Asia, with special emphasis on Japan and the United States. Please direct correspondence to Theodore F. Cook, Jr., Pacific War Conference Co-Chair, Department of History, The William Paterson College of New Jersey, Waynen, NJ 07470. Phone: (201) 595-2319. ANNOUNCEMENTS AND COMMUNICATIONS Planned Exhibition on the World War II Home Front (1991) Dr. Joseph F. Meany, Jr., Senior Historian, New York State Mu­ seum (Room 3097, C.E.C., Albany, New York 12230), writes that his museum is engaged in planning a major temporary exhibi­ tion to open on 7 December 1991 to be entitled "The Home Front Experience: New York, State and City, in World War II." U.S. Air Force Historical Research Center Research Grants The USAF Historical Research Center (USAFHRC) announces re­ search grants to encourage scholars to study the history of air power through the use of the USAF historical document col­ lection at the Center. The Center will make several awards up to $2,500 each to individuals who meet the criteria in this announcement and are willing to visit the Center for re­ search during fiscal year 1991 (ending 30 September 1991). Recipients will be designated "Research Associates of the USAF Historical Research Center." Criteria.--Applicants must have a graduate degree in his­ tory or related fields, or equivalent scholarly achievements. Their specialty or professional experience must be in aero­ 8 ----------_. _._----- - ----~_._.- -- ... __ ._.­ nautics, astronautics, or military-related subjects. They must not be in residence at Maxwell AFB, Alabama, and must be willing to visit the USAF Historical Research Center at Max­ well for a sufficient time to use the research materials at the Center ~or their proposed projects. Topics of Research.--Proposed topics of research may in­ clude, but are not restricted to, Air Force history, military operations, education, training, administration, strategy, tactics, logistics, weaponry, technology, organization, pol­ icy, activities, and institutions. Broader subjects suitable for a grant include military history, civil-military rela­ tions, the history of aeronautics or astronautics, relations among U.S. branches of service, military biographies, and in­ ternational military relations. Preference will be given to those proposals that involve the use of primary sources held at the Center. Proposals for research of classified subjects cannot be considered for research grants. As a general rule, records before 1955 are largely unclassified, while many la­ ter records remain classified. Examples of classified sub­ jects include nuclear weapons and war planning, weapon sys­ tems now in the Air Force inventory, and Air Force operations during the Vietnam War. Application Deadline.--Applicants may request an appli­ cation from the Commander, USAF Historical Research Center, Maxwell AFB, Alabama 36112-6678. They must return the com­ pleted applications by 31 October 1990. Annual Meetings in January after 1993 Responding to the preference of 51% percent of those who re­ sponded to a November 1989 poll of the membership of the Amer­ ican Historical Association, the AHA Council resolved, at the 1989 meeting in San Francisco, to schedule the annual meeting, after 1993, during the first week of January. The AHA will continue to meet in December in 1990 (New York City), 1991 (Chicago), 1992, and 1993. Thereafter, the annual meeting will be scheduled for the first Thursday through Sunday of January after New Year's Day. The dates of the meeting will fluctuate fr(@ 2-5 January at the earliest (in 1997) to as late as 8-11 January. Discontinuation of Two AHA Bibliographical Publications At its 1989 meeting, the Council also resolved to discontinue, by the end of 1990, publication by the American Historical As­ sociation of two major bibliographical tools, Recently Pub­ lished Articles, which appears in spring, summer, and fall, 9 and Writings in American History, a volume appearing annually. The AHA Council voted to establish a task force "to review on an urgent basis the coverage of the bibliographic tools avail­ able to the profession" (Perspectives: American Historical Association Newsletter, Vol. 28, No.2 [February 1990], p. 3). The report of the AHA Council meeting in which these interest­ ing tidings were buried also includes the news that the Coun­ cil accepted the AHA Finance Committee's report: "Finding that the gap between revenue and expenses seemed to be widen­ ing, the Committee recommended the development of a package of revenue enhancement measures" (ibid.). Since the Rundell Report recommending an AHA Bibliograph­ ical Center decades ago, studies of this sort have been peri­ odically initiated in order to at least keep tabs on the growth of the problem of bibliographical control, even though there is no prospect for a comprehensive solution. (Consider­ ing the nature of history, there never can be.) Until now, however, the American Historical Association, chartered by Congress, has accepted as a mandate the responsibility to pro­ vide the basic coverage in its three indispensable publica­ tions: The American Historical Review, Writings in American History, and Recently Published Articles. It would be ironic if the latter two--no matter how "outmoded and uneconomic" (ibid.) they may seem to those with electronic access by mo­ dem to a choice of databases--should be discontinued just as millions in countries where an electric typewriter is a lux­ ury may finally have an opportunity to use them freely. Bibliographical coverage, to be complete, requires a con­ tinuing collection effort. The American Historical Associa­ tion, which has been handling the two serials from its Wash­ ington office, must--notwithstanding its straitened circum­ stances--provide for the continuing collection of materials. Otherwise, a unique scholarly enterprise that has flourished for decades will die on the vine. Anyone wishing to express concern to the American Histor­ ical Association regarding the discontinuation of these two publications--and the implied decision to abandon the biblio­ graphical collection effort--may write to the vice president in charge of the AHA Research Division, Prof. Richard T. Vann, Department of History, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Con­ necticut 06457. ARCHIVAL AND BIBLIOGAPHICAL RESOURCES Because of the length of the ACHSWW Membership Directory in this issue of the newsletter, the archival and bibliographi­ cal coverage is limited to an update on the OSS Collection at the National Archives and brief notes on two bibliographies. 10 ass Records at the National Archives: An Update Since the spring 1988 issue of this newsletter, with a de­ tailed report on ass holdings at the National Archives kind­ ly provided by Dr. Lawrence H. McDonald, the Archives have accessioned an additional 248 cubic feet of textual records from the Central Intelligence Agency, which has had custody of these ass records. Recent shipments, according to Dr. McDonald, consist largely of ass Secret Intelligence Branch and Counterintelligence (X-2) Branch records. It is under­ stood that the CIA plans to transfer to the National Ar­ chives at least another two hundred to three hundred feet of these records in the coming months. A group of volunteers (now numbering nineteen), work­ ing under Dr. McDonald's supervision, has written descrip­ tive lists for most ass records accessioned by spring 1988, and these lists have been entered into a computerized data­ base. This has made it possible to generate nine different printouts that sort the ass records in detail: in order of entry, by point of origin, by ass branch or unit, by type of file, by associated location, by area, by names of persons, by subject, and by code-name or mission-name. The labeling, listing, and entering of all these lists in a single database for computerized retrieval has done more than restore the original arrangement of these records, which was changed through years of use since they were compiled. It has facilitated research, by making it possible to identi­ fy and access individual files in a once inaccessible mass of material--and to d,o so right down to the level of an individ­ ual manila folder.' It is therefore hardly surprising that the ass ~ecords, with the detailed finding aids now available, are more called for than any other twentieth-century records. Among publications based largely or in part on material in the ass Collection, two recent books may be of particular interest: Barry M. Katz, Foreign Intelligence: Research and Analy.­ sis in the affice of Strategic Services, 1942-1945 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1989, ix & 251 pp., $27.50), is an academic study of how scholars in the Research and Ana­ lysis Branch of ass adapted their academic methods and experi­ ence to the work of the ass during the war and then, after­ wards, as ass veterans, resumed their scholarship--but often in a way that reflected their wartime experience. Max Corvo, The ass in Italy, 1942-1945: A Personal Memoir (New York, Westport, and London: Praeger, 1990, x & 324 pp., $29.95), is a sophisticated memoir by a Connecticut newspaper publisher who served in the ass Secret Intelligence Branch in Caserta. He has drawn heavily on the ass collec­ tion, illuminated by his own perspective, and has thereby made a significant--and readable--contribution to the liter­ ature in the field. 1 1 Two Bibliographies A. G. S. Enser, A Subject Bibliography of the Second World War, and Aftermath: Books in English 1975-1987 (Brookfield, Vermont: Gower, 1990, xii & 287 pp., $69.95), is an expanded edition of Enser's earlier volume that listed books in Eng­ lish published between 1975 and 1983. The unannotated, un­ numbered entries are listed alphabetically under alphabetized subject headings (Abyssinia, Africa, Afrika Korps, Aftermath [general], . . ;. Yalta, Yugoslavia, Zipper Operation). The au­ thor index (pp: 245-282) lists the names of the authors fol­ lowed by the titles of their books. An "Index of Titled Books Only" (pp. 283-84) lists books without authors. The subject index (pp. 285-287) can be used as a detailed table of contents. The author notes in the preface that "in gen­ eral,~ works of less than thirty pages, poetry, fiction, juvenile literature, humour, and the publications of the War Graves Commission have been omitted." John J. Sbrega, The War Against Japan, 1941-1945: An Annotat­ ed Bibliography, Wars of the United States (Richard L. Blanco, General Editor), vol. 10; Garland Reference Library of Social Science, vol. 258 (New York and London: Garland Publishing, 1989, xxv & 1,050 pp., $95.00), is a helpfully annotated, se­ lective bibliography with over 5,200 sequentially numbered en­ tries "drawn from books, journals, magazines, and official documen~s related to the participation of the United States in the 'liar against Japan, 1941-1945," published in English through 1987. Coverage is not provided on controversies such as the "loss" of China, but there is material on such issues as the plight of the Nisei in America (entries 4740-4992, pp. 865-916). As outlined in the detailed table of contents (with four levels of subheadings), the volume has six main sections: I. References and general works; II. Diplomatic-political aspects of the war; III. Economic and legal aspects (including war crimes and postwar trials, entries 1550-1626, pp. 317-332); IV. Military aspects (including, under "Special \ri1eapons," extensive coverage of the development of the atomic bomb, the decision to use it, its use, and its phys­ iological impact, as reflected in subsequent medical literature, entries 3852-4157 under subheadings , I V. J . 2 . a - I V. J . 2 . b . ii, pp . 725 - 78 6 ) ; V. Religious aspects (entries 4241-4279, pp. 807-813); VI. Social and cultural aspects (including unannotated fictional accounts [entries 4363-4609, pp. 829-844] and poetry [entries 4610-4635, pp. 844-45]). Published from camera-ready typescript, the volume con­ cludes with an author index (pp. 993-1037) and a subject in­ dex (pp. 1039-1050). There is no title index, but given the well-conceived structure of the book, that should not detract greatly from the usefulness of this carefully prepared biblio­ graphy. It is a valuable contribution to the study and teach­ ing of the Second World War. 12 I -------- MEMBERSHIP DIRECTORY Members of the American Committee on the History of the Second World War are listed below in alphabetical order. The entries reflect the information provided, through March 1990, on the an­ nual membership renewal form--in some cases the individual or institutional name and address only, in others, the member's academic, military, or other rank or title and affiliation, as well as any particular area[s] of interest or specialization. FREDRICK AANDAHL 232 SHADY BROOK LANE PRINCETON, NJ 08540 United States, Western Europe PROF. HENRY M. ADAMS 1221 LAS CANOAS LANE SANTA BARBARA, CA 93105 Modern European and German history, World Wars I & II ALAN C. AIMONE 4 CORONATION PATH NEWBURGH, NY 12550 Bibliography PROF. KANJI AKAGI 1-23-4-106, SHINMACHI SETAGAYA-KU, TOKYO 154 JAPAN The Second World War--Asia and the Pacific. policy & strategy Intelligence, DEAN C. ALLARD 2701 NORTH QUINCY ST. ARLINGTON, VA 22207 U.S. naval history JACK R. ALLEN 1109 LAKE BLVD. BEMIDJI, MN 56601 Modern Germany, World War I, World War II PROF. STEPHEN E. AMBROSE HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF NEW ORLEANS NEW ORLEANS, LA 70148 Eisenhower STEVE E. ANDEREGGEN' P. O. BOX 2093 JUNEAU, AK 99803 WWII Pacific, Guadalcanal, naval battles, Pacific 13 i PROF. DR. K. O. FRHR. v. ARETIN DIREKTOR, INSTITUT FUER EUROP. GESCHICHTE ALTE UNIVERSITAETSSTR. 19 D-6500 MAINZ FED. REP. OF GERMANY CHIEF HISTORIAN CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY, D.A. WASHINGTON, DC 20314 MILITARY HISTORY INSTITUTE DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY CARLISLE BARRACKS, PA 17013 MRS. HELEN M. BAILEY 9451 LEE HIGHWAY, APT. 815 FAIRFAX, VA 22031-1810 National security policy RICHARD A. BAKER HISTORIAN, U. S. SENATE WASHINGTON, DC 20510 DANIEL W. BARTHELL 4136 S. 36th ST. ARLINGTON, VA 22206 United States on the home front, 1941-1945. movements Resistance WILLIAM H. BARTSCH CASE POSTALE 500 CH-1211 GENEVA 22 SWITZERLAND Philippines campaign, 1941-42; Pacific War 1937-45 ERIC BAUER BOX 1000 LONG BEACH, NY 11561 German politics prior to and during war, European Theater of Operations, Holocaust PROF. HENRY,S. BAUSUM EDITOR, JOURNAL OF MILITARY HISTORY VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE LEXINGTON, VA 24450 ROGER A. BEAUMONT HIST. DEPT., TEXAS' A & M UNIV. COLLEGE STATION, TX 77843 Commmand-and-control; military thought; organization; air power; special operations and elites MRS. HELEN P. ("SKY PHILLIPS") BEAVEN 6018 MAYFAIR LANE ALEXANDRIA, VA 22310 U. S. Army Air Corps and Philippines 14 .--­ - - - - _ __. _ - - _ . _ - _ . _ - - _.._ - - - - _ . _ - - _ _ - •... .. - - ­ PROF. EARL R. BECK HIST. DEPT., FLORIDA STATE UNIV. TALLAHASSEE, FL 32306 German home front PROF. WARREN A. BECK HIST. DEPT., CAL. STATE UNIV. FULLERTON, CA 92634 ERNEST L. BELL, III 54 SCHOOL STREET (BOX F) KEENE, NH 03431 ULTRAi MAGICi World War II intelligence activities REAGAN J. BELL 3410 SOUTH WOODLAND PLACE SANTA ANA, CA 92707 WWlli evacuation Japanese-Americans MR. TRISTAN E. BEPLAT ONE HASLET AVENUE PRINCETON, NJ 08540 Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Philippines, China PROF. ALAN BEYERCHEN HIST. DEPT., OHIO STATE UNIV. COLUMBUS, OH 43210-1367 German history, application of science to warfare, postwar German occupation, gas warfare in WWI and implications for WWII CHANAN BIEDERMANN 3 MIVZA KADESH ST., P.O. BOX 4098 JERUSALEM 91040 ISRAEL German Army, the conflict between Germany & Russia PROF. RICHARD L. BLANCO, SR. 31 LANCET WAY BROCKPORT, NY 14420-2508 LARRY I. BLAND 502 PICKETT ST. LEXINGTON, VA 24450 George C. Marshall MARTIN BLUMENSON 3900 WATSON PLACE, N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20016 WWII (Europe) COL. MARK M. BOATNER III 208 W. MAIN STREET NEW ROADS, LA 70760 WWII biography - 1500 leading personalities 15 CHARLES H. BOGART 201 PIN OAK PLACE FRANKFORT, KY 40601-4250 Coast artillery, naval warfare, Philippines 41-42 EDWARD J. BOONE, Jr. MacARTHUR MEMORIAL, MacARTHUR SQUARE NORFOLK, VA 23510 Douglas MacArthur and his associates; WWII in SWPA; Philippines; guerrilla warfare; Korean War; 20th-century Russian history CARL BOYD HIST. DEPT., OLD DOMINION UNIV. NORFOLK, VA 23529-0091 German-Japanese relations, 1934-45; WWII intelligence PROF. HENDERSON B. BRADDICK DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BETHELEHEM, PA 18015 Inter-war international politics ROBERT L. BRANDFON 26 HILLSIDE TERRAC& BELMONT, MA 02178 National defense, 1938-1941; World War I & II FREDERICK J. BREIT 105 W. TIETAN WALLA WALLA, WA 99362 20th-century Germany, Soviet Union GEORGE C. BROWDER HIST. DEPT., SUNY FREDONIA FREDONIA, NY 14063 Police & security agencies, esp. Germany PROF. CHARLES BURDICK 15994 Stetson Road Los Gatos, CA 95030 Germany--WWI/WWII OTTO B. BURIANEK Jr. 115 PINE LAKE DR. NW ATLANTA, GA 30327 Displaced persons, history of U.S. military government, oc­ cupied Germany, United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Ad~ ministration (UNRRA) PROF. RICHARD D. BURNS CENTER, STUDY OF ARMAMENT & DISARMAMENT CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY LOS ANGELES, CA 90032 16 LORINDA T. BUTLER 46 COLLEGE STREET POLAND, OH 44514 ARTHUR R. BUTZ 2214 CENTRAL STREET EVANSTON, IL 60201 Jewish "Holocaust" MARTHA H. BYRD P.O. BOX 1659 DAVIDSON, NC 28036-1659 Ch ina, 1 9 37 - 41 PROF. JOHN C. CAIRNS HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF TORONTO TORONTO, CANADA M5S 1A1 France, Britain PROF. RAYMOND CALLAHAN HIST. DEPT., 401 EWG, UNIV. OF DEL. NEWARK, DE 19716 British military leadership, 20th century; Indian Army (to 1947); Churchill DIANN CAMPBELL HIST. DEPT., INDIANA UNIV. BLOOMINGTON, IN 47401 Women, social, WWII, American history MR. RALPH CARLSON CARLSON PUBLISHING INC. P.O. BOX 023350 BROOKLYN, NY 11202-0067 JAMES A. CHAPPELL 5818 VIKING DRIVE HOUSTON, TX 77092 Guadalcanal & fast carrier warfare CHARLES W. CHAPPIUS 400 PARK AVE., UNIT 400 CALUMET CITY, IL 60409 German history; 20th-century diplomatic history JIAN CHEN RIST. DEPT., SIUC CARBONDALE, IL 62901 Origins of the war; Sino-American relations during wartime 17 SHI CHEN HIST. DEPT., SIMON FRASER UNIV. BARNABY, B.C., CANADA V5A IS6 Origins of the Second World War; Britain's and France's foreign policies in the 1930s PROF. CALVIN L. CHRISTMAN CEDAR VALLEY COLLEGE 3030 N. DALLAS AVE. LANCASTER, TX 75134-3799 Historiography; U. S. economic mobilization for war DR. ROBERT W. COAKLEY 3610 DANNY'S LANE ALEXANDRIA, VA 22311 U. S. Army in WWII, logistics and strategy, Pacific War LOUIS R. COATNEY P.O. BOX 6069 MACOMB, IL 61455 Great Patriotic War; Red Army OIB on 22 Jun 41; Katyn & Khatyn; Guadalcanal; boardgame design; naval miniatures & gaming ALEXANDER S.,COCHRAN, Jr. P.O. Box 1649 Washington, DC 20013 Intelligence, strategy and operations WAYNE S. COLE HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF MARYLAND COLLEGE PARK, MD 20742-7315 American diplomatic history; American entry into World War II; Franklin D. Roosevelt and the isolationists; diplomatic relations between Norway and the U.S., 1905-1955 BRIG. GEN. JAMES L. GOLLINS, Jr. (Ret) ZULLA VINEYARDS ' MIDDLEBURG, VA 22117-1331 WWII - Vietnam MARY ELLEN CONDON-RALL 3508 BERET LANE WHEATON, MD 20906 U.S. Army, WWII, medical 18th century, modern Britain; British Navy THEODORE F. COOK 3775-F MIRAMAR ST. LA JOLLA, CA 92037-1347 Japanese military history; intelligence history of the Second World War 18 MICHAEL K. COX 304 W. 51ST STREET DAVENPORT, IA 52806 Military hist. (World War II emphasis) WILLIAM H. CUNLIFFE 6601 OXHORN COURT COLUMBIA, MD 21044 Archives PROF. ROBERT DALLEK HIST. DEPT., UCLA LOS ANGELES, CA 90024 American diplomatic & political history DR. MILTON DANK 1022 SERPENTINE LANE WYNCOTE, PA 19095 Airborne operations in WWII, particularly glider missions. German occupation of France (WWII). Problems in writing the history of WWII, including closed archives, missing documents, etc. DON DAUDELIN 121 DOVE AVENUE MACOMB, IL 61455 WWII Pacific JENNIFER L. DAVIS 155 WESTWAY ROAD, #204 GREENBELT, MD 20770 (Archivist, Military Reference Branch, National Archives) World War II U.S. Army records PROF. CHARLES F. DELZELL HIST. DEPT., VANDERBILT UNIV. NASHVILLE, TN 37235 Modern Italy; anti-Fascism; resistance DR. DONALD S. DETWILER 201 TRAVELSTEAD LANE CARBONDALE, IL 62901 (Prof. of Hist., SIUC; ACHSWW Secretary & Newsletter Editor) German history; World War II, 1937-1945; historiography HAROLD C. DEUTSCH 843 WESTWIND DRIVE ST. PAUL, MN 55109 The two World Wars, notably intelligence, military affairs, and internal resistance (the latter for World War II) [N.B. Prof. Deutsch's address from April through September: Star Route, Garrison, MN 56450] 19 RICHARD DiNARDO 2316 E. 3RD ST. BROOKLYN, NY 11223 The German Army! 1933-1945 LAURENCE J. DiSTEFANO, Jr. 4098 DANTE AVENUE VINELAND, NJ 08360 Japanese war crimes, war crimes generally, rules of war and military law WILLIAM DONATI 3627 BAGLEY #205 LOS ANGELES, CA 90034 CPT WILLIAM J. DOUGHERTY 10402 100TH ST. SW TACOMA, WA 98498 Soviet military history/military development, history of intelligence HENRY L. DuRANT P. O. BOX 2044 COLUMBIA, SC 29202 Military intelligence; Allied use of signals intelligence (1942-45); Army counterintelligence (U.S.); special opera­ tions; use of signals intelligence in Operation TORCH PROF. DR. MILAN S. DURICA VIA SANTUARIO, 130 ITALY 1-35030 ABANO TERME., PADOVA Prof. of East European Hist.; German-Slovak relations, Slovak diplomatic history PROF. M. K. DZIEWANOWSKI 3352 N. HACKETT AVENUE MILWAUKEE, WI 53211 Underground movements, intelligence, propaganda DR. FRANK T. EDWARDS 121 PENNSYLVANIA AVE. CALIFORNIA, PA 15419 U.S. WWII: operations, ETO ROBERT H. ELLIOTT HIST. DEPT., JERSEY CITY STATE COLLEGE JERSEY CITY, NJ 07305 Twentieth-century American, political - World War II DONALD E. EMERSON 5303 146th AVE., S.E. BELLEVUE, WA 98006 German history 1890-1945, intelligence operations 1890-1945, escape & evasion 1939-1945 20 DEBORAH ESTES NAVAL INSTITUTE PRESS ANNAPOLIS, MD 21402 Publishing KENNETH W. ESTES 102 SIMMS DRIVE ANNAPOLIS, MD 21401 European volunteers in German Army/SS; amphibious operations; tactical doctrine; naval operations DR. STANLEY L. FALK 2310 KIMBRO STREET ALEXANDRIA, VA 22307 World War II, particularly in the Pacific; prisoners of war; arms control; national security affairs PROF. WILLARD ALLEN FLETCHER HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF DELAWARE NEWARK, DE 19716 Modern Germany GEORGE Q. FLYNN HIST. DEPT., TEXAS TECH UNIV. LUBBOCK, TX 79409 U.S. draft, WWII: home front - USA JOHN F. FLYNN SPO BOX 1243, UNIV. OF THE SOUTH SEWANEE, TN 37375 Founding of the Federal Republic of Germany; European unity movement 1945ff.; U.S. & war debts; Belgium 1919-1935 GERALD B. FORRETTE 6142 ARCTIC WAY EDINA, MN 55436 World War II intelligence operations PROF. WILLARD C. FRANK, Jr. HIST. DEPT., OLD DOMINION UNIV. NORFOLK, VA 23529-0091 Spanish Civil War; strategy & policy in WWII; naval history of above PROF. PAUL G. FRIED 18 WEST 12TH STREET HOLLAND, MI 49423 Modern Germany & Austria, Nuernberg trials HENRY FRIEDLANDER JUDAIC STUDIES BROOKLYN COLLEGE, CUNY BROOKLYN, NY 11210 Nazi Germany & Holocaust; postwar war crimes trials 21 DR. ARTHUR L. FUNK 3445 N.W. 30TH BLVD. GAINESVILLE, FL 32605 (Prof. of Hist., emer., Univ. of Fla.; Chairman, ACHSWW, and Vice-Presid~nt, International Committee) Political history of World War II, particularly France ROBERT FYNE ENGLISH DEPT., KEAN COLLEGE MORRIS AVENUE UNION, NJ 07083-9982 World War II propaganda films RROF. JOHN LEWIS GADDIS HIST. DEPT., OHIO UNIV. ATHENS, OH 45701-2979 Soviet-American relations; strategy and policy T. C. SCOTT GARRETT BOX 248 . BROOKPORT, IL 62910 20th-century European military-diplomatic history DR. ROBERT A. GELWICK 1708 BERWICK LANE MIDDLETOWN, OH 45042 Waffen-SS, German military, modern German history, modern Europe, English history, East Asian history ROWLAND P. GILL 610 EASTLAND AVE. RUSTON, LA 71270 DR. JOHN GH1BEL HIST. DEPT., HUMBOLDT STATE UNIV. ARCATA, CA 95521 WWII, Germany and postwar, U.S. GEORGE RICHARD GOLD B26 CAROLINA APTS. HWY 54 BY-PASS CARRBORO, NC 27510 WWII, particularly the diplomatic and military roles of Germany and the U.S. RAY GOLD B26 CAROLINA APTS. HWY 54 BY-PASS ' CARBORO, NC 27510 U.S. history, military history 22 ~-~-~-~-------- -­ ALFRED GOLDBERG 3842 N. 26TH ST. ARLINGTON, VA 222q7 Mil~tary history; foreign policy HUGH GOLWAY 42857 DEEP FOREST DR. COARSEGOLD, CA 93614 Studies in command; POWs GRANT K. GOODMAN HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KS 66045-2130 Japan, Philippines, U.S.-East Asian relations PROF. GABRIEL GORODETSKY RUSSIAN AND EAST EUROPEAN CENTER TEL AVIV UNIVERSITY RAMAT AVIV, TEL AVIV 69978 ISRAEL Anglo-Soviet relations; Grand Alliance: strategy & politics JOHN G. GOTZEN 4422 FIELDGREEN RD. BALTIMORE, MD 21236 WWII--various facets of intelligence; European land operations; armor & artillery PROF. LLOYD J. GRAYBAR HIST. DEPT., EASTERN KENTUCKY UNIV. RICHMOND, KY 40475 WWII, navy, A-bomb PROF. HANS KARL GUNTHER HIST. DEPT., BLOOMSBURG UNIV. BLOOMSBURG, PA 17815 WWII, Third Reich, guerrilla warfare FRANKLIN LOUIS GURLEY 1626 ROMANENS SWITZERLAND Western Europe campaign 1944-45, Gen. Jacob L. Devers (CG, 6th Army Group) DR. MILTON O. GUSTAFSON 2706 SHAWN COURT FT. WASHINGTON, MD 20744 Administrative history, State Department; UNRRA KEVIN JACK HAGOPIAN RICHARDSON HALL 390 C SUNY ALBANY, NY 12222 Social history of the home front; fiction and documentary film­ making; aerospace history (Eighth Air Force heavy bombers and bases) 23 DR. CHARLES R. HALSTEAD HIST. DEPT., WASHINGTON COLLEGE CHESTERTOWN, MD 21620 Spain, Portugal, Morocco during World War II DR. JOSEPH P. HARAHAN 8209 DABNEY AVENUE SPRINGFIELD, VA 22152 Air history, combined air-land warfare JARVIS M. HARPER, COL. USAF Ret. 1301 S. SCOTT ST., APT. 705 ARLINGTON, VA 22204 Western Europe, the Balkans, North Africa and the Near East, 1939-1943 inclusive DR. JOHN HENRY HATCHER 15736 EDGEWOOD DRIVE DUMFRIES, VA 22026 German cultural PROF. WALDO HEINRICHS 903 WINDING LANE MEDIA, PA 19063 U.S. foreign relations, especially 20th century PROF. THOMAS T. HELDE HIST. DEPT., GEORGETOWN UNIV. WASHINGTON, DC 20057-0001 War aims and peace planning DR. KATHERINE L. HERBIG DEPT. OF NAT. SECURITY AFFAIRS NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY, CA 93943 Military history, history of intelligence, American history PROF. ROBERT E. HERZSTEIN 510 N. TRENHOLM ROAD COLUMBIA, SC 29206 German Army intelligence; Nazi propaganda; Balkans in WWWII PROF. EDMUND HICKS 427 EDGEWOOD LANE MOREHEAD, KY 40351 Aviation, European-African Theater PROF. TRUMBULL HIGGINS 250 MERCER STREET NEW YORK, NY 10012 Twentieth-century war 24 PROF. ROBIN HIGHAM 2961 NEVADA STREET MANHATTAN, KS 66502 Air, official histories, British, bibliography DR. G. NORMAN HILLMER DIRECTORATE OF HISTORY NATIONAL DEFENCE HEADQUARTERS OTTAWA, ONT., CANADA K1A OK2 GARY HOAG 108 N. PATRICK ST. #2 ALEXANDRIA, VA 22314 Intelligence (e~p. Office of Strategic Services) ROBERT J. HOBBS 6207 FOX CHAPEL DR. COLUMBUS, GA 31904 World War II - Germany and Japan WILLIAM A. HOISINGTON, Jr. HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF ILL. AT CHICAGO CHICAGO, IL 60680 France & North Africa PROF. I. B. HOLLEY, Jr. HIST. DEPT., DUKE UNIV. DURHAM, NC 27706 Military doctrine, technology & weaponry EDWARD L. HOMZE HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF NEBRASKA LINCOLN, NE 68588-0327 Germany, Luftwaffe, military history DAVID K. HOUCK 37 CARLETON DRIVE PITTSBURGH, PA 15243 Civil War; World Wars I & II; Korea IRA C. HOUCK, Jr. 37 CARELETON DRIVE PITTSBURGH, PA 1524~ THOMAS M. HUBER 709A S. 20th STREET LEAVENWORTH, KS 66048 Pacific War PROF. H. STUART HUGHES 8531 AVENIDA DE LAS ONDAS LA JOLLA, CA 92037 25 ALAN S. HUlv1ASON DIRECTOR, SPECIAL PROJECTS - HISTORICAL TIMES, INC. 2245 KOHN ROAD/BOX 8200 HARRISBURG, PA 17105 Publishing history, related periodicals and books ALFRED F. HURLEY 828 SKYLARK DRIVE DENTON, TX 76205 Military aviation history FRANK HUYETTE 403 SACRAMENTO STREET AUBURN, CA 95603 Propaganda and youth during war PROF. IRWIN HYATT HIST. DEPT., EMORY UNIV. ATLANTA, GA 30322 Pacific War MR. MORTON P. ILER 855 THIRD AVE., SUITE 112 SANTA MONICA, CA 90403 World War II bibliography STANLEY ITKIN 215 ADAMS ST. BROOKLYN, NY 11201 Normandy; Philippines 1942 PROF. HISAO IWASHIMA 6-23-4 OKUSAWA SETAGAYA-KU TOKYO JAPAN 158 International security issues, intelligence and strategic decision-making, U.S.-Japan relations D. CLAYTON JAMES DEPT. OF HIST. AND POLITICS VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE LEXINGTON, VA 24450 Pacific War; MacArthur; strategy & command - U.S. PROF. HARRY P. JEFFREY HIST. DEPT., CAL. STATE UNIV. FULLERTON, CA 92634 American political history of WWII 26 BENTLEY M. JESSEE 17 CATARACT AVE. DOVER, NH 03820 WWII naval history, naval and Marine Corps casualty research, personnel and casualty locator service, oral history of naval veterans or families of KIA or deceased personnel DR. VINCENT C. JONES 7706 MEADOW LANE CHEVY CHASE, MD 20815 20th-century military history; history of atomic energy DR. DAVID KAHN 120 WOOLEYS LANE GREAT NECK, NY 11023 Military intelligence, cryptology RICHARD F. KEHRBERG BOX 5111, HUMANITIES BLDG. UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN MADISON, WI 53706 U.S. Army ground forces, German Army in Russia GEORGE H. KELLING 4223 DAUPHINE DR. SAN ANTONIO, TX 78218 Modern Europe, British Empire PROF. GEORGE O. KENT HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF MD. COLLEGE PARK, MD 20742 Modern Europe, modern Germany, European dipl. centuries) (19th & 20th YOICHI KIBATA 9TH BLDG., DEPT. OF ARTS & SCIENCES UNIVERSITY OF TOKYO 3-8-1 KOMABA, MEGURO-KU TOKYO 153 JAPAN PROF. WARREN F. KIMBALL HIST. DEPT., RUTGERS UNIV. NEWARK, NJ 07102 WWII diplomacy PROF. GERALD R. KLEINFELD HIST. DEPT., ARIZONA STATE UNIV. TEMPE, AZ 85287-2501 Germany i TED M. KLUZ COMMAND & LEADERSHIP, AIR WAR COLLEGE MAXWELL AFB, AL 36112-5522 WWII - biographies, strategic bombing, air doctrine 27 RICHARD H. KOHN 1058 ROCKY RUN ROAD McLEAN, VA 22102 Air power, civil-military relations PAUL KOISTINEN 9016 FORBES AVENUE SEPULVEDA, CA 91343 U. S., political, economic, military; specialty political economy of warfare PROF. ARNOLD KRAMMER HIST. DEPT., TEXAS A & M UNIV. COLLEGE STATION, TX 77843 German POWs during WWII; social history of Nazi Germany; German technology, esp. synthetic fuel industry JOHN A. KREBS, Jr. 943 JANET AVENUE LANCASTER, PA 17601 German High Command, Waffen-SS LAWRENCE W. LAMB, Jr. 6383 OLD ALLEGAN ROAD, R.R.#2 HAMILTON, MI 49419 COL. FEDERICO G. LANDABURU JOSE HERNANDEZ 2162 - 7A 1426 BUENOS AIRES ARGENTINA European land warfare DR. KARL G. LAREW HIST. DEPT., TOWSON STATE UNIV. TOWSON, MD 21204 Battle of Britain - Operation Sea Lion; Battle of France; Pearl Harbor; U.S. Army; Grand Strategy; cryptology PROF. LOYD E. LEE 27 MAPLE AVENUE HIGHLAND, NY 12528 Social, comparative, German DAVID J. LEES 10 HAMILTON ROAD, ROMFORD ESSEX, RM2 5SB ENGLAND German naval command structure 1933-1945; reassessment of U-boat sinkings DR. LORRAINE M. LEES HIST. DEPT., OLD DOMINION UNIV. NORFOLK, VA 23508 U. S. foreign policy, 1940s (WWII - Cold War); U.S.-Eastern Europe, 1940s 28 MELVYN P. LEFFLER HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF VA. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA 22903 u.S. national security, 1941 to present; U.S. foreign economic policy, 20th century TOM LEWIS 28 POINT OF WOODS ALBANY, NY 12203 WILLIAM G. LEWIS 1223 G STREET, N.E. WASHINGTON, DC 20002 BRIAN M. LINN HIST. DEPT., OLD DOMINION UNIV. NORFOLK, VA 23508 Southwest Pacific, Philippines, esp. guerrilla war DR. F. H. LITTELL P.O.B. 172 MERION STATION, PA 19066 Church struggle/Nazi religious politics, Holocaust WALTER LORD 116 EAST 68TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10021 Dunkirk, Pearl Harbor, Midway, Solomons JOHN A. LUKACS VALLEY PARK ROAD PHOENIXVILLE, PA 19460 CHARLES V. P. VON LUTTICHAU THE COLONNADE, APT. 1118 2801 NEW MEXICO AVE., N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20007 World War II (Europe); Vietnam/S.E. Asia DR. WAYNE C. LUTTON 9777 GOLF PORT DRIVE STANWOOD, MI 49346 Air & naval history; Mediterranean Theater WWII; European Axis CHARLES B. MacDONALD 5300 COLUMBIA PIKE ARLINGTON, VA 22204 WWII--Europe DAVID MacISAAC 3411 ROYAL CARRIAGE DR. MONTGOMERY, AL 36116 Military aviation 29 BENEDICT V. MACIUIKA RIST. DEPT., U-103, UNIV. OF CONN. STORRS, CT 06268 WWII--Eastern Front MAJOR W. VICTOR MADEJ P.O. BOX 3385 ALLENTOWN, PA 18106 Russo-German war over Central Europe; falsification of u.S. history PROF. ANTONIO MARQUINA-BARRIO CALLE HERMANOS SAN ROMAN, 5 POZUELO DE ALARCON 28023 MADRID SPAIN (Secretary, Spanish Comm. on the Rist. of the Second World War Spain, Portugal, South America, Vatican during World War II (political, international, enonomic matters) S. L. A. MARSHALL MIL. HIST. COLLECTION ATTN: THOMAS F. BURDETTE, CURATOR UNIV. OF TEXAS AT EL PASO LIBRARY EL PASO, TX 79968 CLARENCE WM. MARTIN 1070 AMITY ROAD #46 BETHANY, CT 06525 Pacific War; Japanese aviation; combat gear; Pearl Harbor and U.S. entry into World War II JAMES V. MARTIN, Jr. 3346 STUYVESANT PL., N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20015 Communications intelligence, diplomatic relations (AsiaPacific) : DR. VOJTECH MASTNY CENTER FOR INTERN. RELATIONS BOSTON UNIVERSITY 152 BAY STATE ROAD BOSTON, MA 02215 Soviet foreign policy, Eastern Europe lYlAURICE MATLOFF 10831 LUXBERRY DRIVE ROCKVILLE, MD 20852 World War II strategic planning & coalition warfare ANTHONY F. MAURIELLO 156 VIBURNUM TERRACE RED BANK, NJ 07701 Planned invasion of Japan 30 r------ ----------------- ------------------­ ERNEST R. MAY KENNEDY SCHOOL OF GOVERNMENT HARVARD UNIV., 79 JFK ST. CAMBRIDGE, MA 02138 PROF. MARLENE J. MAYO HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF MD. COLLEGE PARK, MD 20742 World War II in Pacific & Asia; modern Japanese history; U.S.-East Asia relations J. KENNETH McDONALD CHIEF HISTORIAN, CIA WASHINGTON, DC 20505 OSS; U.S. intelligence history LAWRENCE H. McDONALD, Sr. 8108 CUSTER ROAD BETHESDA, MD 20814 Archives, WWII records, OSS records, National Archives PROF. JOHN V. McGINNIS COMMUNICATION/JOURNALISM ST. JOHN FISHER COLLEGE 3690 EAST AVENUE ROCHESTER, NY 14618 Propaganda, O.W.I., War Advising Council, journalism, public information, psychological warfare KERMIT E. McKENZIE HIST. DEPT., EMORY UNIV. ATLANTA, GA 30322 Modern Russian/Soviet history H. A. McWILLIAMS 335 BEVERLY ROAD CAMP HILL, PA 17011 U.S., English history, World War II DR. JOSEPH F. MEANY, Jr. SENIOR HISTORIAN, NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM ROOM 3097, C.E.C. ALBANY, NY 12230 ALAN MECKLER 11 FERRY LANE WEST WESTPORT, CT 06880 Conscription GEORGE E. MELTON RT. 5, BOX 25, OAKWOOD DR. LAURINBURG, NC 28352 Vichy France 31 THAD E. MENDENHALL 820 MILDENHALL DR. CHESAPEAKE, VA 23320 Theater logistics RAY MERRIAM 218 BEECH ST. BENNINGTON, VT 05201 Aviation, naval, and military history FREDERIC M. MESSICK CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIV. LIBRARY MT. PLEASANT, MI 48859 Diplomat history; Spain PROF. MILTON W. MEYER 239 SOUTH MADISON, #20 PASADENA, CA .91101 WWII: Far East (general); WWII: Philippines & OSS-CBI (in par­ ticular) PERIODICAL RECORD MIAMI UNIVERSITY LIBRARY OXFORD, OH 45056 ALFRED C. MIERZEJEWSKI 809 TRACI DRIVE COPPERAS COVE, TX 76522 Nazi war economy, Deutsche Reichsbahn, strategic bombing of Germany COL. PAUL L. MILES HIST. DEPT., USMA WEST POINT, NY 10996 American strategy in World War II; Franklin Roosevelt as Commander-in-Chief MR. EDWARD S. MILLER 235 DOLPHIN COVE QUAY STAMFORD, CT 06902 Pacific War 1941-45, prewar Pacific 1898-1941 ALLAN R. MILLETT HIST. DEPT., OHIO STATE UNIV. COLUMBUS, OH 43210 U.S. Marine Corps and the Pacific War, 1941-45 DR. SYBIL MILTON 3730 MANOR ROAD #1 CHEVY CHASE, MD 20815 Holocaust, esp. photography as historical evidence, Gypsies, and postwar political culture confronting the Holocaust 32 .-----­ PROF. JOHN E. MOON 11 MONMOUTH COURT BROOKLINE, MA 02146 strategy; chemical warfare PROF. H. WAYNE MORGAN HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF OKLAHOMA NORfilAN, OK 73019 Grand strategy, clandestine ops, resistance PROF. GORDON R. MORK HIST. DEPT., PURDUE UNIV. WEST LAFAYETTE, IN 47907 DONALD J. MROZEK HIST. DEPT., KANSAS STATE UNIV. MANHATTAN, KS 66506 American military history, twentieth-century military institu­ tions, Vietnam War PROF. ARMIN E. MRUCK HIST. DEPT., TOWSON STATE UNIV. TOWSON, MD 21204 (1) Anti-Nazi resistance, (2) foreign relations of the F. D. Roosevelt administration with the German anti-Hitler resis­ tance, (3) East; German refugees and expellees, 1944-45 RICHARD Iv1ULLER 51 E. 16TH, APT. B COLUMBUS, OH 43201 Air war, especially the Luftwaffe; Eastern front; North Africa TIMOTHY P. MULLIGAN 5106 ODESSA ROAD COLLEGE PARK, MD 20740 U-boat war; Eastern Front DR. ROSS MULLNER 10301 S. KOSTNER OAK LAWN, IL 60453 German Navy, German U-boats NASM LIBRARY, RM. 3107 SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION WASHINGTON, DC 20560 NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY 9800 SAVAGE ROAD FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, MD 20755-6000 Second World War 33 OTTO M. NELSON HIST. DEPT., TEXAS TECH UNIV. LUBBOCK, TX 79409 Germany PROF. MAURICE F. NEUFELD BOX 288, NEW YORK STATE SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL AND LABOR RELATIONS CORNELL UNIVERSITY ITHACA, NY 14851-0952 Military government in Italy during World War II THOMAS R. NINNEMAN 334 HARVEY HALL UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-STOUT MENOMONIE, WI 54751 Modern U.S. history; history of World War II SELMER S. NORLAND 1806 ELTON ROAD ADELPHI, MD 20783 World War II in Europe SERIALS DEPARTMENT UNIV. OF N. C. AT CHAPEL HILL DAVIS LIBRARY 080-A CHAPEL HILL, NC 27514 RAYMOND G. O'CONNOR 212 CLAUDIUS DRIVE APTOS, CA 95003 U. S. diplomatic and military history DIREKTOR OESTERR. WIDERSTANDSARCHIV ALTES RATHAUS, WIPPLINGERSTR. 8 A-1010 VIENNA 1 AUSTRIA ARNOLD A. OFFNER HIST. DEPT., BOSTON UNIV. BOSTON, MA 02215 20th-century U.S. diplomacy, international relations JAMES H. OGDEN, Jr. 301 PLUM POINT ROAD HUNTINGTOWN, MD 20639 U.S. military history (infantry replacements in the European Theater of Operations, 1944-45) ERIC W. OLSON 5 COACHMAN COURT SURREY PARK WILMINGTON, DE 19803 World War II 34 MARK T. ORR 2807 SAMARA DR. TAMPA, FL 33618 Japan: education in occupied Japan W. A. (DOLPH) OWINGS 4 BROADVIEW TERRACE LITTLE ROCK, AR 72207 Military; modern Europe; Slavic; S.E. Europe DRS. A. HARRY PAAPE DIRECTOR, NETHERLANDS STATE INSTITUTE FOR WAR DOCUMENTATION HERENGRACHT 474 1017 CA - AMSTERDAM THE NETHERLANDS (Secretary General and Treasurer,' International Committee for the History of the Second World War) MICHAEL PARRISH INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON, IN 47401 The Great Patriotic War; Soviet military history THOMAS PARRISH 110 CRESCENT DR. BEREA, KY 40403 Strategy; command relationships; intelligence ARCHIMEDES L. A. PATTI 480-310 VERSAILLES PLACE LONGWOOD, FL 32779 Sotheast Asia (Indochina) ROBERT O. PAXTON 605 FAYERWEATHER HALL HIST. DEPT., COLUMBIA UNIV. NEW YORK, NY 10027 France, Vichy Regime, World War II generally, fascism PROF. JOHN CURTIS PERRY THE FLETCHER SCHOOL OF LAW AND DIPLOMACY TUFTS UNIVERSITY MEDFORD, MA 02155 US-Japanese relations AGNES F. PETERSON HOOVER INSTITUTION STANFORD UNIVERSITY STANFORD, CA 94305 Twentieth-century European history; Fifth Republic; Third Reich EDWARD N. PETERSON HIST. DEPT., UNV. OF WISC. RIVER FALLS, WI 54022 End of war in Europe 35 MR. NEAL H. PETERSON 5429 N. 19th STREET ARLINGTON, VA 22205 LUCILLE M. PETTERSON 6200 WILSON BLVD., #707 FALLS CHURCH, VA 22044 NSDAP, SS, German Army and Luftwaffe in WWII PROF. DAVID WINGEATE PIKE 37 RUE SARRETTE 75014 PARIS FRANCE The role of Spain; the participation of Spaniards, esp. Span­ ish communists; the SS concentration camps, esp. Mauthausen and its Zweitlager; the resistance in France, esp. in the South­ west; Nazi Germany in the face of defeat; diplomatic history. LAWRENCE E. PIRTLE III 6467 WANDA ST. LOUIS, MO 63116 German-Russian front, esp. the psychological results on the German and Russian people of the Battle of Stalingrand FORREST C. POGUE 1111 ARMY-NAVY DR., B-207 ARLINGTON, VA 22202 World War II, diplomatic history 1933-53 PROF. E. B. POTTER 10 CARVEL ROAD ANNAPOLIS, MD 21401 Pacific War, 1941-45 (biographies of Nimitz, Halsey, and Burke) DR. ARNOLD H. PRICE 6693 BARNABY ST., N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20015 Germanic warrior clubs; intelligence ROBERT A. PROVOST III 20 STANLEY AVENUE WATERTOWN, MA 02172 DONALD BAKER QUINT 1 2 DEER RUN ROAD WOODBRIDGE, CT 06525 British Pacific fleet in WWII & U.S.-British diplomatic re­ lations relating to it R. C. RAACK HIST. DEPT., CAL. STATE UNIV. HAYWARD, CA 94542 Media (photo, film, sound) as hist. source 1929-1953 in Soviet Union, Poland, Germany 36 CARL N. RAETHER 1205 HUNTMASTER CT. McLEAN, VA 22102 Europe & Mediterranean R. RAIBER, M.D. 102 SHEFFIELD DRIVE CANTERBURY HILLS HOCKESSIN, DE 19707 Eastern Front; Fuehrerhauptquartiere; Wehrmacht DR. LOUIS RECCOW 5542 SIERRA ROJA ROAD IRVINE, CA 92715 WWII; American history 1 & 2 MICHAEL N. REGNIER P.O. BOX 9355 ARLINGTON, VA 22209 Airborne operatiqns, special units, OSS & SOE operations PROF. E. A. REITAN 1319 CHADWICK NORl>1AL, IL 61761 Small-unit combat by the U.S. Army in the European Theater E. BRUCE REYNOLDS HIST. DEPT., SAN JOSE STATE UNIV. SAN JOSE, CA 95192-0117 Japanese diplomacy; Thailand's role in WWII DAVID W. RICHARDSON P.O. BOX 1075 [VlcLEAN, VA 22101 Italian campaign; German resistance movement; Malta; jet aviation; intelligence THOMAS E. RICHMOND ROUTE 1, BOX 112 ARMINGTON, IL 61721 American history, 20th century (aerospace history) CAROL J. RIZZO 3305 KENILWOR'rH KALAMAZOO, MI 49001 Military history; WWII; AAF JEFFERY J. ROBERTS 51 E. 16TH, APT. B COLU~BUS, OH 43201 Airborne ops & development, single/continuous front issue, postwar developments 37 ... - ----- CYNTHIA J. ROBINSON 2005 ASHLEY DRIVE PHENIX CITY, AL 36867 HAMMOND M. ROLPH SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES, CA 90089-0043 Intelligence, Pacific area operations, Asian-Pacific diplomacy of the 1930s & 1940s PROF. GEORGE K. ROMOSER SHIPMAST FARM, WORSTER ROAD ELIOT, MN 03903 Nazism; totalitarianism; resistance to Nazism ADOLPH G. ROSENGARTEN, Jr. BOX 347 WAYNE, PA 19087 Intelligence DAVIS R. B. ROSS 367 HIGH STREET CLOSTER, NJ 07624 U. S. industrial mobilization NORIVlAN A. ROSS 1995 BRbADWAY, ROOM 603 NEW YORK, NY 10023 ULTRA DR. RODNEY J. ROSS 4308 HILLSDALE ROAD HARRISBURG, PA 17112-2103 Prewar Pacific; Philippines; Indochina; strategy; domestic im­ pact of WWII on U.S. PROF. MARGARET L. ROSSITER 1765 NORTHBROOK DRIVE ANN ARBOR, MI 48103 Modern European history; women's history in Europe PROF. PAUL ROSSMAN HIST. DEPT., QUINSIGAMOND COMM. COLL. 670 WEST BOYLSTON STREET WORCESTER, MA 01606 Resistance movements. MR. TAKASHI SAITO GAKUSHUIN UNIVERSITY 1-5-1 MEJIRO, TOSHIMAKU TOKYO 171 JAPAN 38 I -------,~-.--- HARRISON E. SALISBURY BOX 70 TACONIC, CT 06079 Russia, China, Vietnam JOHN J. SBREGA 325 BUTTERNUT DRIVE NORTH KINSTOWN, RI 02852 Diplomacy of the war, Anglo-American relations in the war against Japan HELMUT J. SCHMELLER HIST. DEPT., FORT HAYS STATE UNIV. HAYS, KS 67601 National Socialism, anti-Semitism, Holocaust PROF. ARTHUR SCHLESINGER, Jr. 171 EAST 64TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10021 EPHRAIM SCHULMAN 1506 SLATER ST., #8 VALDOSTA, GA 31602 Soviet-American relations DR. JOHN ANTHONY SCOTT BOX 1487, R.F.D. 2 HOLLAND, MA 01521 European Theater of Operations DR. DONAL J. SEXTON RIST. DEPT., TUSCULUM COLLEGE GREENEVILLE, TN 37743 WWII military cover and deception activities; WWII in the Medi­ terranean, Southeast Asia, and Southwest Pacific HENRY I. SHAW, Jr. MARINE CORPS HISTORICAL CENTER BLDG. 58, WASHINGTON NAVY YARD WASHINGTON, D.C. 20374 USMC in World War II FRANK JOSEPH SHULMAN DIRECTOR, EAST ASIA COLLECTION McKELDIN LIBRARY, UNIV. OF MD. COLLEGE PARK, MD 20742 The postwar occupation of Japan; East Asian bibliographical and archival resources BRIG. GEN. EDWIN H. SIMMONS, USMC (Ret.) 9020 CHARLES AUGUSTINE DRIVE ALEXANDRIA, VA 22308 U.S. Marine Corps history and biography; Pacific War (1941-45); Korean War (1950-53); Vietnam Conflict (1954-75) 39 JOHN F. SLOAN 5218 LANDGRAVE LANE SPRINGFIELD, VA 22151 Soviet military history ROBERT M. SLUSSER 131 LEXINGTON AVE. EAST LANSING, MI 48823 Soviet foreign policy; Intelligence (Ultra) ARTHUR L. SMITH, Jr. HIST. DEPT., CAL. STATE UNIV. LOS ANGELES, CA 90032 Modern Germany, WWII, occupation period DR. ROBERT SMITH 108 SCHOOL STREET NORTH BROOKFIELD, MA 01535 Prewar and wartime diplomacy, with emphasis on United States, British, and Sov~et relations DR. DANIEL E. SPECTOR 1615 FAIRWAY CIRCLE JACKSONVILLE, AL 36265 Middle East, modern China, chemical warfare DR. RONALD H. SPECTOR HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF ALA. TUSCALOOSA, AL 35487-1936 War with Japan; World War II in India and Southeast Asia STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY 816 STATE STREET MADISON, WI 53706-1482 DR DAVID STEEDS DEPT. OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF WALES ABERYSTWYTH, DYFED SY23 3DB WALES, UNITED KINGDOM (1) Sino-Japanese and Pacific War, 1937-1945 (2) Burma campaigns, 1941-1945 GEORGE H. STEIN 2300 HEMLOCK LANE VESTAL, NY 13850 Modern Germany; Europe during the Hitlerian era PAUL STILLWELL U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE ANNAPOLIS, MD 21402 Oral history; battleships, particularly the USS Arizona 40 MARK A. STOLER HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF VT. BURLINGTON, VT 05405 U.S./Allied strategy & diplomacy; U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff DR. JOE STRANGE 2 MEADOWVIEW DRIVE FREDERICKSBURG, VA 22401 World War II--military strategy; World War I--the Schlieffen Plan ERWIN E. STRASMICH 11 GORTON STREET PROVIDENCE, RI 02906 BRENDA M. W. STRICKLER RT. 2, BOX 274 STONEBRIDGE RD. ARGYLE, TX 76226 MR. TRUMAN R. STROBRIDGE HQ USEUCOM, BOX 165 APO NEW YORK 09128 European Theater, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, U.S. Coast Guard at war, and U.S. Marines in the Pacific island campaigns JOHN F. SWEETS HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KS 66045 Modern France, occupation & resistance in WWII France PROF. JACQUES SZALUTA 19 MAXWELL DRIVE WESTBURY, NY 11590 France, Vichy, psycho-history VICTOR C. TANNEHILL 6164 WEST 83RD WAY ARVADA, CO 80003 U. S. Army Air Forces in WWII; B-26 Marauder EDWARD C. TANNEN 8643 OSPREY LANE JACKSONVILLE, FL 32217 ETO operations JOHN E. TAYLOR 4600 YUMA ST., N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20016 All types of intelligence; mobilization of industry and man­ power; and war crimes in Europe and Far East 41 TELFORD TAYLOR 54 MORNINGSIDE DR. NEW YORK, NY 10025 WWII PROF. JAMES F. TENT HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM, AL 35294 Postwar Germany, 1945-55 CONRAD THOMASON 1111 NW DESPAIN PENDLETON, OR 97801 Code-breaking~ resistance movements GERALD J. TILK 510 W. WALNUT #3 CARBONDALE, IL 62901 Eastern Europe MR. JOHN TOLAND 1 LONG RIDGE RD. DANBURY, CT 06810 ETO, Pacific DAVID F. TRASK 3223 B SUTTON PL., N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20016 U.S. military history; U.S. diplomatic history CHARLES M. TRAYNHAM 205 FACULTY DRIVE WINGATE, NC 28174-0079 Modern Europe HUBERT P. van TUYLL UNION COLLEGE BARBOURVILLE, KY 40906 Soviet military: Lend-Lease TED ULDRICKS RIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF N.C. ASHVILLE, NC 28804 USSR; international relations PETER C. UNSINGER 1581 ELKA AVENUE SAN JOSE, CA 95129 Korean War~ WWII intelligence; Australia in WWII MICHAEL E. UNSWORTH P.O. BOX 6253 EAST LANSING, MI 48823 Home front; Japanese balloon attack; bibliography 42 .-------------- - - - ­ PROF. DR. ANGEL VINAS ATOCHA 62 E-28012 MADRID SPAIN Economic aspects of WWII, Spain and WWII JOHN F. VOTAW CANTIGNY 1 S. 151 WINFIELD RD. WHEATON, IL 60187 1st Infantry Division, U.S. Army; military attaches PROF. IRWIN WALL HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF CAL. RIVERSIDE, CA 92521 France, communism, postwar reconstruction, U.S.-French rela­ tions PIOTR S. WANDYCZ HIST. DEPT., YALE UNIV. NEW HAVEN, CT 06520 . Interwar and Second World War diplomatic history with emphasis on East Central Europe (Poland and Czechoslovakia) WERNER WARMBRUNN PITZER COLLEGE CLAREMONT, CA 91711 Occupation Western Europe, World War II HANS H. WEBER 5640 VIA MENSABE RIVERSIDE, CA 92506 Pacific theater of operations, WWII aircraft PAUL M. WEBER 3210 WISCONSIN AVE., N.W., #508 WASHINGTON, DC 20016 Communications--electronics including radar; bibliography PROF. RUSSELL F. WEIGLEY 327 SOUTH SMEDLEY STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA 19103 European campaign of 1944-45; military history in general PROF. GERHARD L. WEINBERG HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF N.C. CHAPEL HILL, NC 27599-3195 World War II JAMES J. WEINGARTNER BOX 1454, SOUTHERN ILLINOIS UNIV. AT EDWARDSVILLE EDWARDSVILLE, IL 62026 War crimes 43 STEVE vmISS 9049 HARGIS STREET LOS ANGELES, CA 90034 French resistance and life of the American infantryman in com­ bat in the European theater: training, logistics & leadership ANNE S. WELLS DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY AND POLITICS VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE LEXINGTON, VA 24450 U.S. high command; MacArthur HAL ELLIOTT WERT ROUTE 2, BOX 181 BALDWIN CITY, KS 66006 American diplomacy, WWII; aid to refugees, Europe, WWII FRANKLIN C. WEST HIST. DEPT., PORTLAND STATE UNIV. PORTLAND, OR 97207-0751 Germany--20th century DR. GERHARD WETTIG BUNDESINST. FUER OSTWISSENSCHAFTL. & INTERN. STUDIEN LINDENBORNSTR. 22 D-5000 KOELN 30 FED. REP. OF GERMANY ROBERT H. WHEALEY RIST. DEPT., BENTLEY HALL OHIO UNIVERSITY ATHENS, OH 45701-2979 Spanish Civil War; diplomatic; Hitler PROF. DOUGLAS L. WHEELER HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF NH DURHAM, NH 03824 20th century military intelligence and secret operations in WWII, especially in Europe BRIAN L. WHITE 92 E. FRAMBES, APT. B COLUMBUS, OH 43201 Resistance history (especially French); European warfare & strategy; OSS PROF. DONALD R. WHITNAH HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF N. IOWA CEDAR FALLS, IA 50614 u.S. and Austria 44 DR. JOHN E. WICKMAN BOX 325 ENTERPRISE, KS 67441 Military biography, World War II & Eisenhower LIBRARY, SIMON WIESENTHAL CENTER 9760 WEST PICO BLVD. LOS ANGELES, CA 90035 Holocaust studies, war crimes JOHN vH LHELM 2228 CATHEDRAL AVE., N.W. WASHINGTON, DC 20008 DR. RONALD L. WILLIAMS 1001 S. 23rd KINGSVILLE, TX 78363 ALAN F. WILT HIST. DEPT., IOWA STATE UNIV., AMES, IA 50011-1202 World War II MARSHALL WINDMILLER 3328 COOK LANE ALAMEDA, CA 94501 Intelligence and intelligence agencies during the war and the Cold War period WALLACE R. WINKLER 5020 LAKE CIRCLE COURT COLUMBIA, MD 21044 Intelligence: ULTRA, MAGIC; operations & related activities ROBERTA WOHLSTETTER 2805 WOODSTOCK RD. LOS ANGELES, CA 90046 Warring MAR'rIN WOLFE 245 HATHAWAY LANE WYNNEWOOD, PA 19096 Airborne warfare in the ETO ROBERT WOLFE 602 CRESTWOOD DRIVE ALEXANDRIA, VA 22302 (1) 20th-century Germany, especially Third Rei and U.S. occupation (2) Archival sources YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY P.O.B. 1603 A YALE STATION NEW HAVEN, CT 06520 45 STEVEN K. YATES 2037 BRIAR GATE DRIVE MONTGOMERY, AL 36116 u.S. history; European history; military history DAVID T. ZABECKI AM ALTEN TURNPLATZ 9 D-6652 BEXBACH FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF GERMANY Artillery; World War II GARY D. ZAETZ 124 LONG SHADOW PLACE CARY, NC 27511 China-Burma-India Theater, U.S. Army Air Force operations, strategic bombing, Stilwell, Chennault HANNAH ZEIDLIK CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY WASHINGTON, DC 20314 HENRY L. de ZENG IV 1156 WINGED FOOT CIRCLE EAST WINTER SPRINGS, FL 32708 Balkans, 1941-45 JANET ZIEGLER 18333 ALGIERS ST. NORTHRIDGE, CA 91324 Bibliography of WWII EARL ZIEMKE HIST. DEPT., UNIV. OF GA. ATHENS, GA 30602 Germany, Russia STEPHEN J. ZIERING 2638 WOODWORTH PL. HAZEL CREST, IL 60429 Japanese-U.S. diplomatic relations, Pearl Harbor 46 AMERICAN COMMITTEE ON THE HISTORY OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR Arthur L. Funk, Chairman Professor EmHitul-> of History Unlv~'rsitv Florida 'jH5 N. W' ;IUth Boulevard Gaine~wl1le. Florida 32605 or Permanent D£rectors Charles F. Delzell Vanderbilt University H. Stuart Hughes University of California at San Diego }'(;rrf:st C. Pogue Dwight D. Eisenhower Institute Terms ('xpiring 1990 !lean C. Allard Naval Historical Center Stephen E. Ambrose University of New Orleans HamId C. Deutsch Army War College and University or Minnesota (erner.) ACHSWW ELECTION BALLOT FOR THE 1991-93 TERM As a nominating committee, the present directors recommend that the members of the committee elect two officers and eight directors from the slate below for three-year terms from January 1991 through December 1993. Please indicate on this ballot your choice of officers and up to eight directors (including names you write in) and return it to the secretary by 30 May 1990. For chairman (vote for one)~ Donald S. Detwiler, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale David Kahn Great Neck, N.Y. Warren F. Kimball H:llgers University Tf'iford Taylor ~ew York City Hobert Wolfe National Archive~ For secretary (vote for one): D. Clayton James, Virginia Military Institute Donald S. Detwiler, Secretar.v and News/dter }~'ditor Department of Hi6tory Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Carbondale, Illinois 62901 Robin Higham, Archivist Department of History Kansas State University Manhattan, Kansas 66506 International Book Review Coordination: Arthur L. Funk 3445 N.W. 30th Boulevard Gainesville, Florida 32605 The ACH8WWis affiliated with: American Historical Association 400 A Street, S.E. Washington, D.C, 20003 Comite International d'Histoire de 1a Deuxieme Guerre Mondiale A. Harry Paape, Secretary General and Treasurer Netherlands Slate Institute for War Documentation Herengracht 474 !OI7 CA Amsterdam The Netherlands ,Jal1EJt Ziegler Ulll\'t'Tsity of Cahfornia ,11 Los Angeles Tf'rm~ expiT/1JJ;1 l!::1!'Jl Brig, nen ,James L. Colhnl,;, Jr. Chi~f Qf MIlitary Hi3wry (ret.) ,John Lewis Uaddis Uhiu University HolHn Higham K:l.nsa~ j) State Univ('rsity CI'l'.'tlJn ,James Virg"lnia Military Institute }<obcrt O. Paxton Columhia University A~ild F. Peterson l-luo\'er Institution Davltl 1-'. 'iT:l~k Center 01 Mtlitary lJistory (rd.) HU:-;"t'il F. \Vuglt-') 1'i'1l1ple l ]nlvl'r~jl.v .\-Ll.rtin Blumensml Washint:-,crtnn, 1),(;. William II. Cunliffe Natillnal Archives :-:;tanll y L. Falk Office of Air Force History (ret.) Mauriet-' Matloff Center of Military Hit;tor.. . (ret) Enwst H.. May Harvard Univerl:lity ){onald H. Spector Naval His1,oricilJ Center Gerhard L. Weinberg University of North Carolina Earl F. Ziemke University of G~orgia For director (vote for no more than eiqht): Dean C. Allard, Naval Historical Center Stephen E. Ambrose, University of New Orleans John M. Blum, Yale University Robert Dallek, University of California at Los Angeles Harold C. Deutsch, Army War College and University of Minnesota (emer.) Brig. Gen. Roy K. Flint, USA, U.S. Military Academy Brig. Gen. Alfred F. Hurley, USAF (ret.), University of North Texas David Kahn, Great Neck, New York Warren F. Kimball, Rutgers University at Newark Richard H. Kohn, Office of Air Force History Charles B. MacDonald, Center of Military History (ret.) Allan Millett, Ohio State University Timothy Nenninger, National Archives Carol Petillo, Boston College Robert Wolfe, National Archives