Title | Document type |
Speech by H.E. Paul-Henri Spaak, Secretary General of NATO01 Nov. 1957 Community for the development of men who can deal with the space age. But we must look further. Ten to twenty years from now, our need for men trained in these fields will be twice as much as it is now and we must now encourage our young people to take | Opinion |
Speech30 Oct. 1957 when San Franciscans look to their East they see Europe, and to their West they see Asia. But, in this age of space which we have now entered, geographical directions arc no longer important. What is important is that in whatever direction you may look | Opinion |
Speech made by the Secretary General,Chairman of the North Atlantic Council, H.E. M. Paul-Henri Spaak, to the Washington Pre...24 Oct. 1957 consultation considered as a moral obligation seems to me to be a great novelty in diplomatic. procedure: it indeed involves a profound upheaval in age-old traditions. I think it possible to assert that "individual diplomacy" has for long been | Opinion |
Speech made by the Secretary General,Chairman of the North Atlantic Council, H.E. M. Paul-Henri Spaak, to the students of St...01 Oct. 1957 Dean Spaeth, my friends, Nothing is more moving for a man of my age than addressing an audience of young people such as this one,It is in circumstances such as these that we feel our responsibility most, because it is for you that we are working | Opinion |
Report of the Committee of Three on Non-Military Cooperation in NATO13 Dec. 1956 and national power, is inadequate for progress or even for survival in the nuclear age. As the founders of the North Atlantic Treaty foresaw, the growing interdependence of states, politically and economically as well as militarily, calls for an everincreasing | Official text |
Several Speeches in Honor of General Gruenther A farewell ceremony held for General Alfred M. Gruenther, the departing Supre...09 Nov. 1956 with". Whereupon two urchins, grand-sons of mine aged. six and. five attached, themselves to him for the rest of his visit and when he left they wept "bitter tears. That I think is a sideline. Well I have spoken far too long. It is with very heavy hearts that we | Opinion |
Radio talk on the BBC by Lord Ismay13 Sep. 1953 abandoned their historic isolationism from the affairs of Europe. It means that several other countries have abandoned their age-long policy of neutrality. It means that no future aggressor will be able to gobble up his victims one by one as Hitler did. "One | Opinion |
Broadcast by Lord Ismay17 Nov. 1952 their historic isolationism from the affairs of Europe. Several European countries have abandoned their age-long policy of neutrality. Fourteen proud sovereign states, bound together in bonds of faith and friendship, have agreed by solemn treaty that an armed | Opinion |
The Sinews of Peace Speech by Winston S. Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdomat the Westminster College, Fulton, ...05 Mar. 1946 of an age of plenty. I have often used words which I learned fifty years ago from a great Irish-American orator, a friend of mine, Mr. Bourke Cockran. "There is enough for all. The earth is a generous mother; she will provide in plentiful abundance food | Opinion |
The Sinews of Peace Speech by Winston S. Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdomat the Westminster College, Fulton, ...05 Mar. 1946 of an age of plenty. I have often used words which I learned fifty years ago from a great Irish-American orator, a friend of mine, Mr. Bourke Cockran. "There is enough for all. The earth is a generous mother; she will provide in plentiful abundance food | Opinion |