World War Three 1946 Series Boxed Set: Stalin Strikes First
Page 138
Data concerning U.S. war industry production in May from the WPB's secret report;
Data concerning plans for a 1945–1946 aircraft production from the WPB;
More data on specific aircraft's technical aspects;
August
Data concerning the new Export-Import Bank; Data concerning supplies of American aircraft to the Allies in June 1945; Data from the top secret WPB report on U.S. war industry production in June;
October
Detailed data concerning the industrial capacities of the Western occupation zones of Germany that could be brought out as war reparations; Information on views within the U.S. Army circles concerning the inevitability of war against the USSR as well as statements by an air force general supporting U.S. acquisition of advanced bases in Europe for building missiles.
Just amazing!
Here are the members and their positions in the government. WPA is War Productions Board. They decided what was produced and in what quantities. Many credit them with winning the war.
Quote:
Victor Perlo headed the Perlo group. Perlo was originally allegedly a member of the Ware group before World War II. After receiving a master's degree in mathematics from Columbia University in 1933, Perlo worked at a number of New Deal government agencies among a group of economists known as “Harry Hopkins’ bright young men.” The group worked, among other things, for creation and implementation of the WPA jobs program, and helped push through unemployment compensation, the Wagner National Labor Relations Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act, and Social Security. During World War II, Perlo served in several capacities, working first as chief of the Aviation Section of the War Production Board, then in the Office of Price Administration, and later for the Treasury Department. Perlo left the government in 1947. Perlo also worked for the Brookings Institution and wrote American Imperialism. Perlo's code name in Soviet intelligence was "Eck" and "Raid" appearing in Venona project as "Raider".
Victor Perlo, Chief of the Aviation Section of the War Production Board; head of branch in Research Section, Office of Price Administration Department of Commerce; Division of Monetary Research Department of Treasury; Brookings Institution
Edward Fitzgerald, War Production Board Harold Glasser, Deputy Director, Division of Monetary Research, United States Department of the Treasury; United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration; War Production Board; Advisor on North African Affairs Committee; United States Treasury Representative to the Allied High Commission in Italy
Charles Kramer, Senate Subcommittee on War Mobilization; Office of Price Administration; National Labor Relations Board; Senate Subcommittee on Wartime Health and Education; Agricultural Adjustment Administration; Senate Subcommittee on Civil Liberties; Senate Labor and Public Welfare Committee; Democratic National Committee
Harry Magdoff, Statistical Division of War Production Board and Office of Emergency Management; Bureau of Research and Statistics, WTB; Tools Division, War Production Board; Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, United States Department of Commerce
Allen Rosenberg, Board of Economic Warfare; Chief of the Economic Institution Staff, Foreign Economic Administration; Senate Subcommittee on Civil Liberties; Senate Committee on Education and Labor; Railroad Retirement Board; Council to the Secretary of the National Labor Relations Board
Donald Wheeler, Office of Strategic Services Research and Analysis division
[xxxvii] - John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr, Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America, Yale University Press (1999), pg. 259, 347, 449. ISBN 0-300-07771-8.
[xxxviii] - The Shukhov cracking process is a thermal cracking process invented by Vladimir Shukhov and Sergei Gavrilov. Shukhov designed and built the first thermal cracking techniques important to the petrochemical industry. His patent (Shukhov cracking process – patent of Russian empire No. 12926 from November 27, 1891) on cracking was used to invalidate Standard Oil's patents (Burton process – Patent of USA No. 1,049,667 on January 7, 1913) on oil refineries.
[xxxix] Circus (Russian: Цирк; translit. Tsirk) is a 1936 Soviet melodramatic comedy musical film. It was directed by Grigori Aleksandrov and Isidor Simkov (as I. Simkov) at the Mosfilm studios. In his own words, it was conceived as "an eccentric comedy...a real side splitter."
Starring the glamorous and immensely popular Lyubov Orlova (Aleksandrov's wife), the first recognized star of Soviet cinema and a gifted singer, the film contains several songs which instantly became Soviet classics. The most famous is the "Song of the Motherland" (Широка страна моя родная).
Orlova plays an American circus artist who, after giving birth to a black baby (played by James Lloydovich Patterson), immediately becomes a victim of racism and is forced to stay in the circus, but finds refuge, love and happiness in the USSR. Her black son is embraced by friendly Soviet people. The movie climaxes with a lullaby being sung to the baby by representatives of various Soviet ethnicities taking turns.
[xl] - Lauterbach, Richard Edward These are the Russians, 1945 pg 146
[xli] - Tin and Global Capitalism, 1850-2000: A History of "the Devil's Metal" edited by Mats Ingulstad, Andrew Perchard, Espen Storli
[xlii] - Hollowed Ground: Copper Mining and Community Building on Lake Superior By Larry D. Lankton
[xliii] - Death's Door: The Truth Behind Michigan's Largest Mass Murder by Steve Lehto
[xliv] - The Story of the Aluminum Specialty Company Manitowoc, Wisconsin: Its Manufacturing Facilities
[xlv] - Unfulfilled Promise: The Soviet Airborne Forces, 1928-1945By Leroy Thompson - Pg. 33
[xlvi] - Over Fields of Fire By Timofeeva-Egorova Pg. 105
[xlvii] - War Is a Racket: The Antiwar Classic by America's Most Decorated Soldier By Smedley Darlington Butler
[xlviii] -The Royal Air Force - Volume 2: An Encyclopedia of the InterWar Years 1930-1939 By Ian Philpott
[xlix] -The Torso Murder: The Untold Story of Evelyn Dick by Brian
[l] - The Ultimate Weapon: The Race to Develop the Atomic Bomb by Edward T. Sullivan
[li] - Air University Quarterly Review, Volume 9 U.S. Army Air Forces, 1956 - Aeronautics
[lii] - The encyclopedia of the world's combat aircraft by Bill Gunston
[liii] - Strike From the Sky: The History of Battlefield Air Attack, 1910-1945 By Richard P. Hallion pg. 244
[liv] - Shukhov Cracking Process edited by Lambert M. Surhone, Miriam T. Timpledon, Susan F. Marseken
[lv] - The Life of a Chemist: Memoirs of Vladimir N. Ipatieff By Vladimir Nikolaevich Ipatieff
[lvi] - Chemical Abstracts, Volumes 96-105 American Chemical Society. Chemical Abstracts Service
[lvii] Hutterer, R. (2005). Wilson, D. E.; Reeder, D. M, eds. Mammal Species of the World (3rd ed). p. 303
[lviii] - Out of the Cold: The Cold War and Its Legacy edited by Michael R. Fitzgerald, Allen Packwood
[lix] - The Dead and Those about to Die: D-Day : the Big Red One at Omaha Beach by John C. McManus
[lx] - How Products are Made: An Illustrated Guide to Product Manufacturing, Volume 6 Jacqueline L. Longe pg. 256
[lxi] - The Home Guard: A Military and Political History S. P. Mackenzie
[lxii] - Early Cold War Spies: The Espionage Trials that Shaped American Politics By John Earl Haynes, Harvey Klehr
[lxiii] - Houses of the Welsh Countryside: A Study in Historical Geography By Peter Smith
[lxiv] - Extreme Hauntings: Britain's Most Terrifying Ghosts By Paul Adams, Eddie Brazil
[lxv] - Clash of Wings: World War II in the Air By Walter J. Boyne
[lxvi] - Beria: Stalin's First Lieutenant By Amy Knight
[lxvii] - Venona: Decoding Soviet Espionage in America By John Earl Haynes, Harvey Klehr
[lxviii] - Engineering Communism: How Two Americans Spied for Stalin and Founded the Soviet Silicon Valley By Steven T. Usdin
[lxix] - Dawn of the Electronic Age: Electrical Technologies in the Shaping of the Modern World 1914-1945 By Frederik Nebeker
[lxx] We Shall Suffer There: Hong Kong's Defenders Imprisoned, 1942-45
[lxxi] - Russian Reactions to German Airpower in World War II. By Klaus Uebe
[lxxii] - Red Air: Politics in Russian Air Power By Sanu Kainikara pg. 144
[lxxiii] - Dawn of the Electronic Age: Electrical Technologies in the Shaping of the Modern World 1914-1945 By Frederik Nebeker
[lxxiv] - German Guided Missiles: Henschel Hs 293 and Ruhrstahl SD 1400X, by William Wolf
[lxxv] - The Soviet Economy and the Red Army, 1930-1945 By Walter Scott Dunn
[lxxvi] - The V2 and the German, Russian and American Rocket Program By C. Reuter
[lxxvii] - He 162 Salamander: Design - Production – Operations by Chris
[lxxviii] - Washing Machine Charlie by Lambert M Surhone, Mariam T Tennoe, Susan F Henssonow
[lxxix] - Night witches: the untold story of Soviet women in combat by Bruce Myles
[lxxx] - The Soul of Battle: From Ancient Times to the Present Day by Victor Davis Hanson.
[lxxxi] Napalm: An American Biography by Robert M Neer, Author
[lxxxii] - GEMA: Birthplace of German Radar and Sonar By Harry von Kroge
[lxxxiii] - Aces High: The Heroic Saga of the Two Top-Scoring American Aces of World War II By Bill Yenne
[lxxxiv] . Masters of the Air: America's Bomber Boys Who Fought the Air War Against Nazi Germany By Donald L. Miller Pg. 313-329
[lxxxv] . B-29 Superfortress John Pimlott Chartwell Books, 1980 pg. 40
[lxxxvi] - Death in the City of Light: The Serial Killer of Nazi-occupied Paris By David King
[lxxxvii] - The Luftwaffe: A History By John Killen
[lxxxviii] - The Red Falcons: the Soviet Air Force in action, 1919-1969 by Robert Jackson
[lxxxix] - The White Rose of Stalingrad: The Real-Life Adventure of Lidiya Vladimirovna the highest scoring female fighter pilot of all time. Pg. 231 By Bill Yenne
[xc]- Kievan Russia By George Vernadsky
[xci] Leonardo Da Vinci was well familiar with Armenian art and architecture, but must have certainly gotten his idea of “The Last Supper” (painted in 1495-1498) from an illuminated Armenian Bible manuscript (dated 1038, of Vanian school). This Armenian manuscript is the first and probably the only painting that shows among the disciples a woman, Mary Magdalene, lovingly leaning her head on the shoulder of Jesus!
Da Vinci may certainly have been influenced by this idea of Jesus at the table scene showing a feminine looking disciple sitting on his left.
[xcii] The Soviet Economy and the Red Army, 1930-1945 by Walter Scott Dunn pg. 225
[xciii]- On what remained of the station facade the hands of the clock had been stopped by the fire at 8.15.
It was perhaps the first time in the history of humanity that the birth of a new era was recorded on the face of a clock. . . .
(Dr. Marcel Junod: Warrior without Weapons ICRC, Geneva, 1982, p. 300)
[xciv] - “On what remained of the station facade the hands of the clock had been stopped by the fire at 8.15. It was perhaps the first time in the history of humanity that the birth of a new era was recorded on the face of a clock. . . .” (Dr. Marcel Junod: Warrior without Weapons ICRC, Geneva, 1982, p. 300)
[xcv]- On what remained of the station facade the hands of the clock had been stopped by the fire at 8.15.
It was perhaps the first time in the history of humanity that the birth of a new era was recorded on the face of a clock. . . .
(Dr. Marcel Junod: Warrior without Weapons ICRC, Geneva, 1982, p. 300)
[xcvi] - Description of a Plan for Directing a Bomb at a Target
"B. V. Skinner. K. B. Breland, and N. Gunman. "The Present Status of the "Bird's-Eye Bomb." ‘February I. 1943. OSRD NDRC Division 3. Spencer Files (hereafter cited as Spencer Files). 15. General Mills. Special Reports.
Contract no. OEMsr-1068. Spencer Files. 13. General Mills-Contracts and Vouchers.
[xcvii] - Psychology: Six Perspectives by Dodge Fernald pg. 170
[xcviii]
[xcix]
[c] - Gypsies Under the Swastika By Donald Kenrick, Grattan Puxon
[ci] - St. Georgen - Gusen - Mauthausen: Concentration Camp Mauthausen Reconsidered By Rudolf A. Haunschmied, Jan-Ruth Mills, Siegi Witzany-Durda
[cii] - Under the Sky of My Africa: Alexander Pushkin and Blackness edited by Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy, Nicole Svobodny, Ludmilla A. Trigos pg. 25
Circus - 1936 Soviet Film https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circus_(1936_film)
[ciii] - Under the Sky of My Africa: Alexander Pushkin and Blackness edited by Catharine Theimer Nepomnyashchy, Nicole Svobodny, Ludmilla A. Trigos pg. 25. Circus - 1936 Soviet Film. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circus_(1936_film)
[civ] - The Red Tide – Chapter 12 – Death of a Division by Harry Kellogg III
[cv] - Disability and the Media: Prescriptions for Change Pg. 86 Best Actor Harold Russell for the Best Years of Our Lives by Charles A. Riley
[cvi] Sun Tzu
[cvii] - Sun Tzu
[cviii] - LABOR: The Most Dangerous Man – Time Magazine Monday, Mar. 17, 1952
[cix] - The Bleak Midwinter, 1947 by Alex J. Robertson
[cx] - Cast a Giant Shadow by Ted Berkman
[cxi] - Moshe Dayan: Israel's Controversial Hero By Mordechai Bar-On
[cxii] - Hirelings of the Desert: Transjordan and the Arab Legion by Samuel Rolbant
[cxiii] - World War Three Book One – The Red Tide - Stalin Strikes First – Third Edition by
Harry Kellogg III page 144
[cxiv] - World War Three Book One – The Red Tide - Stalin Strikes First – Third Edition by
Harry Kellogg III page 64
[cxv] - The Red Tide – Stalin Strikes First – Book One – World War Three 1946 by Harry Kellogg III print edition page 205
[cxvi] - Eisenhower’s Lieutenants by Russel F. Wiggly page 327 – XX Corps under Walton Walker chased the retreating Germans 500 miles in 26 days.
[cxvii] - A Magnificent Disaster: The Failure of Market Garden, the Arnhem Operation September, 1944... By David Bennett
[cxviii] - Dogface Soldier: The Life of General Lucian K. Truscott, Jr. By Wilson A. Heefner
[cxix] - Matthew B. Ridgway: Soldier, Statesman, Scholar, Citizen By George Charles Mitchell
[cxx] - Oscar Griswold: Soldier, General Officer, South Pacific Area, South West Pacific Area Lambert M. Surhone, Miriam T. Timpledon, Susan F. Marseken
[cxxi] - Patton's Bulldog: The Life and Service of General Walton H. Walker by Wilson Allen Heefner
[cxxii] - The Bitter Woods By John S. D. Eisenhower
[cxxiii]- Pacific Blitzkrieg: World War II in the Central Pacific By Sharon Tosi Lacey
[cxxiv] - Hell on wheels: the 2d Armored Division, Volume 2; Volume 67 by Donald Eugene Houston
[cxxv] - Terrible Terry Allen: Combat General of World War II - The Life of an American Soldier By Gerald Astor
[cxxvi] - The Rhine Crossing: 9th US Army & 17th US Airborne By Andrew Rawson
[cxxvii] - 500 Great Military Leaders edited by Spencer C. Tucker
[cxxviii] - Alamo in the Ardennes: The Untold Story of the American Soldiers Who Made the Defense of Bastogne Possible... By John C. McManus
[cxxix] - Eisenhower's Lieutenants by Russell F. Weigley, pp. 758-759
[cxxx] - "Eyes of the Eighth": a story of the 7th Photographic Reconnaissance Group, 1942-1945 by Patricia Fussell Keen
[cxxxi] - Foibe Killings by Jesse Russell and Ronald Cohn
[cxxxii] - The Normandy Mulberry Harbours by William Jordan, History Press Limited, Apr 1, 2005 - Mulberry harbors - 20 pages
[cxxxiii]Pigeons in a Pelican:
This paper was presented at a meeting of the American Psychological Association at Cincinnati, Ohio, September, 1959 and was published in the American Psychologist in January, 1960.
B. F. SKINNER
Harvard University
This is the history of a crackpot idea, born on the wrong side of the tracks intellectual
ly speaking, but eventually vindicated in a sort of middle class respectability. It is the story of a proposal to use living organisms to guide missiles—of a research program during World War II called "Project Pigeon" and a peace-time continuation at the Naval Research Laboratory called "ORCON," from the words "organic control." Both of these programs have now been declassified.
Man has always made use of the sensory capacities of animals, either because they are more acute than his own or more convenient. The watchdog probably hears better than his master and in any case listens while his master sleeps. As a detecting system the dog's ear comes supplied with an alarm (the dog need not be taught to announce the presence of an intruder), but special forms of reporting are sometimes set up. The tracking behavior of the bloodhound and the pointing of the hunting dog are usually modified to make them more useful. Training is sometimes quite explicit. It is said that sea gulls were used to detect submarines in the English Channel during World War I. The British sent their own submarines through the Channel releasing food to the surface. Gulls could see the submarines from the air and learned to follow them, whether they were British or German. A flock of gulls, spotted from the shore, took on special significance. In the seeing-eye dog the repertoire of artificial signaling responses is so elaborate that it has the conventional character of the verbal interchange between man and man