Wendell Willkie One World Pdf
Wendell Lewis Willkie (1943). “One World”, New York: Simon and Schuster 19 Copy quote. No man has a right in America to treat any other man 'tolerantly' for tolerance is the assumption of superiority. Our liberties are equal rights of every citizen. Wendell Willkie.
Full text of ' WENDELL WILLKIE by May Mart THUon Here is a pioneering biography which has gone to the sources to tell the story of one of the most remarkable men of our time, whose idealism and personal magnetism swept him to the threshold of the White House and made him an international figure. This story of the man and his work is written with vigor, gusto and liveliness. It unfolds the life of the Indiana boy who became president of Commonwealth & Southern when barely forty, who led the crusade for free enterprise during the first two terms of the New Deal, and who took on 'The Champ' in the colorful cam- paign of 1940. There is a fascinating behind- the-scenes account of this 'campaign of ama- teurs,' in which popular enthusiasm vanquished practical politics at the Republican Convention but was inadequate to win the final battle at the polls. From defeat, WillHe rose to a position unique in American history as leader of the loyal oppo- sition, a man who contributed signally to keep- ing the war out of politics and preserving a united front for the prosecution of the war. This account of Willkie's wartime travels for Roosevelt to England, Russia and China goes in many respects considerably beyond what Willkie recorded in One World. Wendell Willkie the lawyer, the business executive, the political crusader emerges as a man of stature and significance, seen through eyes at once realistic and sympathetic, whose influence is perhaps as active today as it was during his own lifetime.
WENDELL WILLKIE 1892-1944. MARY EARHART DILLON J. Sathyam tamil font for windows. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY AMD NJE V YORK.
Publication date 1943 Media type Print (hardback) Pages 206 One World is a manifesto and a travelogue written by, a liberal, about his seven-week, 31,000-mile tour, and originally published in April 1943. It advocates for an end to colonialism,, and equality for non-whites in the United States. One World inspired the One World movement and the — which included among its supporters,, —and advocated strong and democratic super-national institutions. That wave of thinking gave birth to the postwar international order, including the, but was also very critical of the postwar order and the UN, claiming it is insufficient to avoid another world war. Willkie was accompanied on his tour by, among others, the publisher and editor, who ultimately assisted Willkie in the writing of One World (which was edited by ). Contents • • • • Content of the book [ ] It is a document of his world travels and meetings with many of the ' heads of state as well as ordinary citizens and soldiers in locales such as,,. The main idea of the book is that the world became one small inter-connected unit and Isolationism is no longer possible: When you fly around the world in 49 days, you learn that the world has become small not only on the map, but also in the minds of men.