Peaceful Coexistence: International Law in the Building of Communism
Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, [1967]. 24 cm, 262, front DJ flap price clipped, DJ worn and torn mostly around edges. More
Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, [1967]. 24 cm, 262, front DJ flap price clipped, DJ worn and torn mostly around edges. More
Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, [1967]. Hardcover. 24 cm, 262 pages. Footnotes, bibliography, index, front DJ flap price clipped, black marker crossouts on front flyleaf, DJ worn and chipped. More
Secaucus, NY: The Wellfleet Press, 1987. Reprint edition. Presumed First Edition, First printing this publisher. Hardcover. The format is approximately 9.125 inches by 12.25 inches. 319, [1] pages. Illustrations (includes color plates). Bibliography. Index. Ink notation on fep. DJ has wear, small tears and soiling. A visual survey of all forms of propaganda used by Allied and Axis powers immediately before and during World War II. Contents include Foreword by Victor Margolin; The Propagation of the Reich, 1933-1945; Mussolini's New Rome, 1922-1945; Britain Improvises, 1936-1945; United States: Isolation and Intervention, 1932-1945; Rule and Resistance in "The New Order," 1936-1945; The Soviet Union: Propaganda for Peace, 1917-1945; The Rise and Fall of Japan, 1931-1945; Afterword by Daniel Lerner; Essay and Filmography by William Murphy;, and Notes on Color Plates by Victor Margolin. Victor Margolin (1941–2019) was an American design historian, researcher and educator. He was a Professor of design history at the University of Illinois, Chicago, where he taught from 1982 until 2006. Margolin published widely and was the founding editor and co-editor of the academic design journal, Design Issues. A major work was his comprehensive World History of Design. In 1972, he published his first two books on design history and design theory, American Poster Renaissance: The Great Age of Poster Design, 1890-1900 (1975) and the edited volume, Propaganda: The Art of Persuasion, WWII (1976). Margolin began teaching art and design history in 1982 at the School of Art and Art History, University of Illinois, Chicago, where he was the first design historian they had hired, and taught there until retiring in 2006. More
London: Pandora, 1987. First Printing. 252, chart, notes, slight wear to top edge of DJ. More
New York, NY: Penguin Press, 2006. Reprint. Third printing. Hardcover. Glued binding. Paper over boards. [8], 341, [3] p. Notes. Index. More
Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill Company, c1918. First? Edition. First? Printing. 20 cm, 303, illus., front board weak, usual library markings. More
London: T. F. Unwin Ltd, 1917. 22 cm, 124, wraps, covers worn: some tears, pieces missing on spine. More
London: T. F. Unwin, Ltd., 1917. First? Edition. First? Printing. 19 cm, 10, wraps, library stamp on front cover. More
Baton Rouge, LA: LA State University Press, [1972]. 24 cm, 326, index. More
Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Doran & Company, 1943. Hardcover. ciii, [4], 323, [1] pages. Illustrations. Some soiling inside hinges. Ex-library copy with usual library markings. Name in ink inside front board. Boards and spine scuffed, soiled, and worn. Carlos P. Romulo, one of the most decorated Filipinos of all time, told the story of the Filipino-American defense against Japanese invasion and aggression. Because he worked as both MacArthur's aide-de-camp and chief public relations officer, he was privy to what was occurring around the Philippines. The author was a Filipino editor, a Pulitzer Prize winner, and personal aide to General MacArthur. The War Department requested that certain statements be deleted. "The request came to late for the book to be reset. These deletions are indicated by heavy black lines". This printing is a rare example of specific military censorship during the Second World War. More
New York, New York: Reader's Digest Press, 1977. First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. xxx, [2], 286, [2] pages. Introduction. Author's Preface, Occasional footnotes. Index. A few ink marks to text noted. Some edge soiling. Harry Rositzke was an author, teacher, scholar and spy who for 25 years ran Central Intelligence Agency covert operations against the Soviet Union from Munich, New Delhi, New York and Washington. Mr. Rositzke wrote books about the CIA and the KGB, taught at Harvard University, and, during the Cold War, directed the parachuting of espionage agents into the Ukraine region of the Soviet Union. His books include "The CIA's Secret Operations" (1977) and "The KGB: The Eyes of Russia" (1981). Mr. Rositzke was a veteran of World War II duty with the Office of Strategic Services, the predecessor in espionage to the CIA. He volunteered in 1946 to monitor the intelligence operations of the Soviet Union, a major wartime ally against Nazi Germany. In the OSS, he had been chief of military intelligence in London and Paris, and later chief of the steering division in Germany, where he operated out of a former sparkling-wine factory near Wiesbaden. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., who became an aide to President John F. Kennedy and a presidential scholar, was one of Mr. Rositzke's OSS colleagues. It came to him as no surprise that Mr. Rositzke opted for a career in intelligence after the war. He wrote "War had made him a professional. Peace evidently offered him a scope for analysis and action on questions more urgent... " More
New York, New York: Reader's Digest Press, 1977. First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. xxx, [2], 286, [2] pages. , Introduction. Author's Preface, Index. Some discoloration inside front and rear boards. Inscribed on the front free end paper--inscription reads For Mr. Sanders from Harry Rositzke. Transmission letter from the Association of Former Intelligence Officers laid in. Harry Rositzke was an author, teacher, scholar and spy who for 25 years ran Central Intelligence Agency covert operations against the Soviet Union from Munich, New Delhi, New York and Washington. Mr. Rositzke wrote books about the CIA and the KGB, taught at Harvard University, and, during the Cold War, directed the parachuting of espionage agents into the Ukraine region of the Soviet Union. His books include "The CIA's Secret Operations" (1977) and "The KGB: The Eyes of Russia" (1981). Mr. Rositzke was a veteran of World War II duty with the Office of Strategic Services, the predecessor in espionage to the CIA. He volunteered in 1946 to monitor the intelligence operations of the Soviet Union, a major wartime ally against Nazi Germany. In the OSS, he had been chief of military intelligence in London and Paris, and later chief of the steering division in Germany, where he operated out of a former sparkling-wine factory near Wiesbaden. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., who became an aide to President John F. Kennedy and a presidential scholar, was one of Mr. Rositzke's OSS colleagues. It came to him as no surprise that Mr. Rositzke opted for a career in intelligence after the war. He wrote "War had made him a professional. Peace evidently offered him a scope for analysis and action on questions more urgent... " More
London: Hutchinson & Co., 1941. Presumed first U.K. edition. Hardcover. vi, 7-200 p. illus. (maps) 21 cm. Index. More
[Washington, D.C. ] (50 F St., N.W., Suite 8800, Washington 20001): Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 1989. Wraps. ix, 90, [4] p.; 26 cm. More
New York: Ballantine Books, 1994. First Edition. First Printing. 25 cm, 338. More
Time Life Medical, 1981. Reprint. Second printing (1982). Hardcover. 208 p. Illustrations (some in color). Bibliography. Index. More
Central Milton Keynes, United Kingdom: AuthorHouse UK Ltd., 2011. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Trade Paperback. viii, 336, [8] pages. Includes chapters on The New Competitors and the Shift of Power; The Campaign against Islamic Charities after 9/11; Islamic Charities in the US Congress; The Declared Objectives of the Campaign: Analysis; Case Studies Islamic Charities under American Hegemony; Mistakes of Islamic and non-Islamic Organizations: A Double Standard; and The Motives and Objectives. Also includes Conclusion, Appendix, Index, and References, as well a a Foreword by Former U.S. Congressman Paul Findley, and an Introduction by Dr. M. A. Salloomi. Dr. Salloomi has thoroughly presented a timely subject in "Innocent Victims in the Global War on Terror," and has posed many critical questions for the reader. Little has been accurately documented on the subject of terror financing, and Dr. Salloomi covers the spectrum of defining, clarifying, comparing, and analyzing the depths of such an important topic. Dr. Salloomi received his Ph.D. in Theology and religious studies from the University of Wales lampeter (UK) and worked as Professor in Umm AQl Quraa University. Letter on behalf of Dr. Salloomi to Recipient lain in, presenting a copy of the book so that the recipient and others 'might better understand how Western policies have affected negatively Islamic charities and their needy recipients - the homeless, the injured, the poor, orphans, and the destitute. With this understanding it was hoped that common ground might be found so that legitimate security concerns were met and the needs of the innocent victims might also be better met. More
London: Evangelical Information Comm, 1917. 22 cm, 12, wraps, cover slightly soiled. More
London: J. Rolls Book Co. Ltd., 1945. 123, illus., ink markout on title page, boards worn and soiled. Introduction dated March 1945. More
New York: Random House, [1942]. 20 cm, 35, wraps, pencil erasure on dedication page, some wear and soiling to covers The title is derived from a quotation of Abraham Lincoln's. More
Chicago, IL: Ivan R. Dee Publisher, 2003. Hardcover. xix, 329, [1] p. Index. More
New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, [1915]. 20 cm, 320, boards scuffed, boards weak, clipping pasted to endpaper. More
New York: Macmillan Company, 1949. First Printing. 22 cm, 273, some wear and soiling to boards, usual library markings Sequel to Confessions of a European Intellectual. Schoenberner writes about his exile from Nazi Germany. After fleeing to France in 1933, he was put into an internment camp at the beginning of the war, where he came into contact with Andre Gide. More
Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1984. 25 cm, 733, v.3 only of the 10-vol. set, illus., maps, color fold-out maps, color endpaper maps, index, usual library markings. More