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Women's Democratic News 5 (Apr. 1930): 2, 12, 16; 6 (May 1930): 6, 13; 6 (June 1930): 16; 6 (Aug. 1930): 6, 16; 6 (Oct. 1930): 14, 24; 6 (Dec. 1930): 16; 6 (Feb. 1931): 14; 6 (Apr. 1931): 7, 16; 7 (May 1931): 16; 7 (July 1931): 2. "What Is a Wife's Job Today?" Good Housekeeping (August 1930): 34-35, 166, 169-73. "Women in Politics." Women's City Club of New York Quarterly (Jan. 1930): 5-7. 1931"Building Character: An Editorial." Parents' Magazine 6 (June 1931): 17. "How I Make My Husband Happy: An Interview." Babylon (N.Y.) Leader (November 30, 1931). "Let Every Child Have His Own Library." Wings (Literary Guild of America) 5 (Jan. 1931): 16-17. "Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt Tells the Story in a Nutshell: A Word to the Woman in the Home and to the Woman in Business by the First Lady of New York." Baltimore and Ohio Magazine 19 (May 1931): 21. "Ten Rules for Success in Marriage." Pictorial Review 33 (Dec. 1931): 4, 36. "This Question of Jobs." Junior League Magazine 17 (Jan. 1931): 14. "Travels of a Democrat." Women's Democratic News (February, March, and April 1931). 1932Introduction. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Through the Looking-Glass, and The Hunting of the Snark. By Lewis Carroll. Washington: National Home Library Foundation, 1932. [2]. Babies: Just Babies. Ed. Eleanor Roosevelt. 1-2 (Oct. 1932-June 1933). "Be Curious and Educated!" Liberty 9 (2 July 1932): 30-31. "Children of School Age." School Life 18 (March 1933): 121-122. "Christmas." New York American 24 Dec. 1932. "Economic Readjustment Necessary." Democratic Bulletin (August 1932): 14, 27. "Grandmothers Can Still Be Young." Liberty 9 (20 Feb. 1932): 38-40. "Grow Old Gracefully." Reader's Digest 21 (Sept. 1932): recto and verso of back cover. "How to Choose a Candidate." Liberty 9 (5 Nov. 1932): 16-17. Introduction. John Martin's Book: Tell Me a Story. Jacket Library, 1932. "Make Them Believe in You: An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 1 (Nov. 1932): 3. "Merry Christmas! An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 1 (Dec. 1932): 3. "Preparing the Child for Citizenship." New York Times, 24 Apr. 1932, sect. 3: 7. "Presenting 'Babies: Just Babies.' " Babies: Just Babies 1 (Oct. 1932): 5-6. "Today's Girl and Tomorrow's Job." Woman's Home Companion 59 (June 1932): 11-12. "What Are the Movies Doing to Us?" Modern Screen 4 (Nov. 1932): 26-27, 102. "What Religion Means to Me." Forum 88 (Dec. 1932): 322B24. "What Ten Million Women Want." Home Magazine 5 (Mar. 1932): 19-21, 86. "Wives of Great Men." Liberty 9 (1 Oct. 1932): 12-16. "Women's Political Responsibility." Democratic Bulletin 7 (Jan. 1932): 12. 1933"The Camp for Unemployed Women: A Novel American Experiment Under the Relief Administration." World Today: Encyclopedia Britannica 1 (Oct. 1933): 1. "A Child Belongs in the Country: An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 1 (Apr. 1933): 3. "Consider the Babies: An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 2 (May 1933): 3. "A Happy New Year: An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 1 (Jan. 1933): 3. "Has Life Been Too Easy for Us?" Liberty 10 (4 Feb. 1933): 4-7. "I Answer Two Questions." Woman's Home Companion (Dec. 1933): 24. "I Want You to Write to Me." Woman's Home Companion (August 1933): 4. "In Appreciation of Anne Alive!" [Foreword] Anne Alive! A Year in the Life of a Girl of New York State. By Margaret Doane Fayerweather. New York: Junior Literary Guild & McBridge. 1933. vii-ix. "Lives of Great Men: An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 1 (Feb. 1933): 3. "The Married Woman in Business." Woman's Home Companion (Nov. 1933): 4. "Mobilization for Human Needs." Democratic Digest 8 (Nov. 1933): 3. "Mrs. Roosevelt Replies to the Letter of an Unknown Woman." McCall's 60 (Mar. 1933): 4. "Mrs. Roosevelt Urges Women to Have Courage of Convictions and to Stand on Own Feet." Clubwoman GFWC (General Federation of Women's Clubs) 13 (Feb. 1933): 10. "On Girls Learning to Drink." Literary Digest (January 1933): 3. "Passing Thoughts of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt." Women's Democratic News 8 (February 1933): 6. "Passing Thoughts of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt." Women's Democratic News 9 (June 1933): 6-7. "Ratify the Child Labor Amendment." Woman's Home Companion (September 1933): 4. "Recreation as a Preparation for Life." Recreation 27 (Nov. 1933): 374, 394. "Setting Our House in Order." Woman's Home Companion (October 1933): 4. "Should a Wife Support Herself?" Every Woman 1 (July 1933): 9. "The State's Responsibility for Fair Working Conditions." Scribner's Magazine 93 (Mar. 1933): 140. "What I Hope to Leave Behind." Pictorial Review 34 (Apr. 1933): 4, 45. "When Nature Smiles: An Editorial." Babies: Just Babies 2 (June 1993): 3. "White House to Mrs. Roosevelt." New York Times, 2 Apr. 1933, sect. 2: 1-2. 1934"Adventures with Early American Furniture." House & Garden 65 (Feb. 1934): 21-23. "Appreciations." Miss Wylie of Vassar. Ed. Elisabeth Woodbridge Morris. New Haven: Yale University Press for the Laura J. Wylie Memorial Associates. 149-55. "By Car and Tent." Woman's Home Companion (Aug. 1934): 4. "Exposition Farms: A New Idea in Experimental Farming." Consumers' Guide 1 (13 Aug. 1934): 3-4. "First Lady Pleads for Old Age Pensions." Social Security 8 (Feb. 1934): 3-4. Foreword. Getting Acquainted with Your Children. By James W. Howard. New York: Leisure League of America, 1934. 5-6. "I Have Confidence in Our Common Sense." Woman's Home Companion (June 1934): 4. "Learning to Teach." Virginia Teacher 15 (May 1934): 100-101. "Let Us Be Thankful." Woman's Home Companion (Nov. 1934): 4. "Living and Preparation for Life Through Recreation. Recreation 28 (Nov. 1934): 366-369. "A Message to Parents and Teachers." Progressive Education 11 (Jan. 1934): 38-39. "The National Conference on the Education of Negroes." The Journal of Negro Education 3 (Oct. 1934): 575-575. "The New Governmental Interest in the Arts." American Magazine of Art 27 (Sept. 1934): 47. "On Education." School Life 19 (Jan. 1934): 102-3. "Our Island Possessions." Woman's Home Companion (Oct. 1934): 4. "The Power of Knowledge." Woman's Home Companion 3 (Mar. 1934): 5. "Recreation." Woman's Home Companion (Jan. 1934): 4. "The Right to Give." Woman's Home Companion (Dec. 1934): 21. "Subsistence Farmsteads." Forum 91 (Apr. 1934): 199-201. "Too Old for the Job." Woman's Home Companion (Feb. 1934): 4. "Traditional Holidays." Woman's Home Companion (Sept. 1934): 4. "Youth Facing the Future." Woman's Home Companion (May 1934): 4. "What Does the Public Expect from Nursing?" American Journal of Nursing 34 (July 1934): 637-640. "The Woman's Crusade." Daughters of the American Revolution Magazine 68 (Jan. 1934): 8-1. "The Women Go After the Facts about Milk Consumption." Consumers' Guide 1(28 May 1934): 3-5. 1935"Because the War Idea Is Obsolete." Why Wars Must Cease. Ed. Rose Young. New York: Macmillan, 1935. 20-29. "Building for the Future." Woman's Home Companion (Feb. 1935): 4. "Can a Woman Ever Be President of the United States?" Cosmopolitan (Oct. 1935): 22B23, 120-21. "Children." Hearst's International Cosmopolitan (Jan. 1935): 24-27. "Facing Forward." Woman's Home Companion (Jan. 1935): 4. "Facing the Problems of Youth." National Parent-Teacher 29 (Feb. 1935): 30. "Facing the Problems of Youth." Journal of Social Hygiene 21 (Oct. 1935): 393-94. "Five Years: What Have They Done To Us?" Hearst's International Cosmopolitan (Jan. 1935): 24-27, 146-147. "Gardens." Woman's Home Companion (March 1935): 4. "In Defense of Curiosity." Saturday Evening Post 208 (24 Aug. 1935): 8-9, 64-66. "In Everlasting Remembrance." Woman's Home Companion (May 1935): 4. "Jane Addams." Democratic Digest 12 (June 1935): 3. "Maternal Mortality." Woman's Home Companion. (July 1935): 4. "Mountains of Courage." This Week (4 Nov. 1935): 7, 25. "Mrs. Roosevelt Believes in Paroles and Providing Jobs for Released Men." Periscope (U.S.N.E.P. Lewisburg, Pa.) 3 (Oct. 1935): 5-6. "The Place of Women in the Community." National Education Association Proceedings. 1935: 313-316. "Traveling Thoughts of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt." Women's Democratic News 11 (Oct. 1935): 6-7. "Tree Worship." Woman's Home Companion (July 1935): 4. "We Can't Wait for the Millennium." Liberty (1935): 18-20. "We Need Private Charity." Current Controversy (Nov. 1935): 6, 47. "Woman's Work Is Never Done." Woman's Home Companion (April 1935): 4. 1936"About State Institutions." Caswell News (Caswell Training School, Kinston, N.C.) 1 (May 1936): 3, 8. "Are We Overlooking the Pursuit of Happiness?" Parent's Magazine 11 (Sept. 1936): 21, 67. Bulletin (National Committee on Household Employment) 4 (Jan. 1936). "A Fortnight in the White House." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Feb. 1936): 3-4. "Goal Kicks for '36." School Life 21 (Jan. 1936): 105. "The Homesteads Are Making Good." Democratic Digest 13 (Mar. 1936): 10. "A Month at the White House." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (June 1936): 3. "The Negro and Social Change." Opportunity (Jan. 1936): 22-23. "Persistence Wins." School Press Review (Oct. 1936): 1-2. "Safeguard the Children." American Child 18 (Jan. 1936): 1. "The Unemployed Are Not a Strange Race." Democratic Digest (June 1936): 19. "What Libraries Mean to the Nation." American Library Association Bulletin (June 1936): 477-79. "The White House and Here and There." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (July 1937): 2. 1937"A Busy Month in and out of the White House." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (July 1937): 2. "A Christmas Letter." Post-Intelligencer [Seattle, Wash.], 25 Nov. 1937. "A Christmas-Spirited Housecleaning." Reader's Digest 31 (31 Dec. 1937): verso of front cover, recto and verso of back cover. "Highlights of a Busy Month." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (May 1937): 2. "Highlights of a Month at the White House."Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Aug. 1937): 2, 4. "Highlights of the Past Few Months." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Mar. 1937): 2. "In Praise of Molly Dewson." Democratic Digest 14 (Nov. 1937): 15. "A Month in the White House." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Apr. 1937): 2, 4. "My Month." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Dec. 1937): 3. "A Peaceful Month in the Country." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Oct. 1937): 2, 4. "Questions." Progressive Education 14 (Oct. 1937): 407. "Should Wives Work?" Good Housekeeping 105 (Dec. 1937): 28-29, 211-12. "South by Motor and West by Plane." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (July 1937): 2. "This Is My Story." Ladies' Home Journal 54 (Apr. 1937): 11-13, 48, 50, 53, 55; 54 (May 1937): 14-15, 47-48, 50, 52-53; 54 (June 1937): 14-15, 100, 102-4, 106-7; 54 (July 1937): 22, 76-80; 54 (Aug. 1937): 29, 68-70, 72; 54 (Sept. 1937): 30, 52-53, 55-56; 54 (Oct. 1937): 18, 88, 90, 93, 95; 54 (Nov. 1937): 19, 55-56, 58-60, 63; 54 (Dec. 1937): 29, 49, 51-52, 54-55; 55 (Jan. 1938): 23, 55-57. "A Vacation Month Spent in Guest House at the Val-Kill Cottages." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Sept. 1937): 2, 4. Foreword. The White House: An Informal History of Its Architecture, Interiors and Gardens. By Ethel Lewis. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1937, v-vi. "When the First Lady of the Land Entertains: An Interview." Democratic Digest 14 (Sept. 1937): 16-17. 1938"Americans I Admire." Woman's Day 1 (Sept. 1938): 4-5, 43-44; 2 (Nov. 1938): 8-9, 42; 2 (Jan. 1939): 8-9, 43; 2 (Mar. 1939): 16, 49. "Cherry Blossom Time in Washington." Reader's Digest 32 (Apr. 1938): 57-58. "Cherry-Blossom Time." Reader's Digest 32 (Apr. 1938): 228c. "A Christmas Letter." Post-Intelligencer [Seattle, Wash.], 24 Nov. 1938. "Divorce." Ladies' Home Journal 55 (Apr. 1938): 16. "Education, a Child's Life." Progressive Education 15 (Oct. 1938): 451. "Henry Street's Pioneer." Rev. of Lillian Wald: Neighbor and Crusader by R. L. Duffus. Survey Graphic 27 (Dec. 1938): 616. "Lady Bountiful Rolls up Her Sleeves." Reader's Digest 32 (Mar. 1938): 53-55. "Mrs. Roosevelt Answers Mr. Wells on The Future of the Jews." Liberty 15 (31 Dec. 1938): 4-5. "My Children." McCall's (Apr. 1938): 4, 75. "My Day." Consumers' Cooperative 24 (Feb. 1938): 19. "My Days." Quote 1 (Nov. 1938): 36-37. "My Home." McCall's (Feb. 1938): 4, 46, 132. "My Job." McCall's (Mar. 1938): 4, 68. "My Month." Women's Democratic News (New York State Section of the Democratic Digest) (Feb. 1938): 2, 4. "On Teachers and Teaching." Harvard Educational Review 8 (Oct. 1938): 423-24. "Resolutions I Wish Consumers Would Make for 1938: A Dozen Targets for Consumers Who Want to Make Their Buying Power Count Toward a Better New Year." Consumers' Guide 4 (3 Jan. 1938): 3-8. "Seeking a Place in Community." Southern Workman 67 (June 1938): 165-171. "Should Married Women Work? A Californian Asks Mrs. Roosevelt to Explain Her Statement in the Democratic Digest." Democratic Digest 15 (May 1938): 24. "Success Formula for Public-Spirited Women." Democratic Digest 15 (Aug. 1938): 39. "Trialog on Office Holders." Independent Woman (Jan. 1938): 17-18. "Two Paths to Peace." Democratic Digest (Aug. 1938): 19. "Youth." Hearst's International Cosmopolitan (Feb. 1938): 26-27, 134B36. 1939"Adventures with Early American Furniture." House and Garden (Feb. 1939): 21-23. "American Democracy and Youth." New University (Mar. 1939): 7-8. "Challenge." The Guardian (Dec. 1939): 1-2. Common Sense Neutrality. Ed. Paul Comly French. New York: Hastings, 1939. 182-97. "Conquer Fear and You Will Enjoy Living." Look 3 (23 May 1939): 6-11. "Current Quotations." Education Digest 4 (May 1939): 7. "Do Our Young People Need Religion?" Liberty 16 (17 June 1939): 12-13. "Eleanor Roosevelt Says." Educational Music Magazine 18 (Jan./Feb. 1939): 6-7. "Flying Is Fun." Collier's 103 (22 Apr. 1939): 15, 88-89. "Food in America." Woman's Day (Oct. 1939): 27-29, 33. "Good Manners." Ladies' Home Journal 56 (June 1939): 21, 116-17. "Government Becomes Alive." Daily Times [Chicago, Ill.], 6 Sept. 1939: 55. "Keepers of Democracy." Virginia Quarterly Review 15 (Jan. 1939): 1-5. "Mrs. Roosevelt Awards Medal." Crisis (Sept. 1939): 265, 285. "Mrs. Roosevelt Counsels Women." Democratic Digest 16 (Jan. 1939): 11. "Mrs. Roosevelt on Democratic Women's Day." Democratic Digest 16 (Dec. 1939): 29. "Our American Homes." Child Study 16 (May 1939): 182. "Security Begins Beyond the City Limits." Hearst's International Cosmopolitan 106 (May 1939): 38-39, 90-91. "Security for Youth and Age." Time (March 6, 1939): 11. "Talk to Birds." Good Housekeeping 109 (Dec. 1939): 27-29. To Enrich Young Life: Ten Years with the Junior Literary Guild in the Schools of Our Country. Garden City: Junior Literary Guild, 1939. [24]. "A Vision for Today." New York Times Magazine, 24 Dec. 1939: 4. "War! What the Women of America Can Do to Prevent It." Woman's Day 2 (Apr. 1939): 4-5, 46B47. Introduction. Washington, Nerve Center. The Face of America. By Edwin Rosskam; Ruby A. Black, co-editor. New York: Alliance, 1939. 5-6. "Why I Am Against the People's Vote on War." Liberty 16 (8 Apr. 1939): 7-8. "Why I Am a Democrat." Junior League (Sept. 1939): 29, 60. "Women in Politics." Democratic Digest 16 (July 1939): 13-14. "The Women of America Must Fight." This Week Magazine 16 (2 July 1939): 7. "You Can Prevent Crime." Woman (Nov. 1939): 36-37. 1940"The American Home and Present Day Conditions." What's New in Home Economics 4 (April 1940): 1, 11. "Art and Our Warring World." Round Table (November 24, 1940). Foreword. American Youth: An Enforced Reconnaissance. Ed. Thacher Winslow and Frank P. Davidson. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1940. ix-xi. Foreword. American Youth Today. By Leslie A. Gould. New York: Random House, 1940. vii-viii. "Christmas 1940: A Short Story." Liberty (28 Dec. 1940): 10-13. Also published as "Christmas: A Story." Eleanor Roosevelt's Christmas Book. New York: Dodd, Mead. 1963. 3-5. "Civil Liberties, the Individual and the Crisis." Reference Shelf 14 (1940): 173-182. "Eleanor Roosevelt on Recreation." Recreation 34 (Dec. 1940): 570. "Farm Youth of Today." American Farm Youth 6 (Nov. 1940): 3. "Fear Is the Enemy." Nation 150 (10 Feb. 1940): 173. "A Guest Editorial." Opportunity 18 (Mar. 1940): 66. Foreword. Happy Times in Czechoslovakia. By Libushka Bartusek. New York: Knopf, 1940. [iii]. "Helping Them to Help Themselves." Rotarian 56 (Apr. 1940): 8-11. "Helping People to Help Themselves." Ladies' Home Journal 57 (Aug. 1940): 12. "Homes for Americans: An Editorial." Woman's Day 3 (Apr. 1940): 3. "In Appreciation." Synagogue Light 8 (Oct. 1940): 4. "Insuring Democracy." Collier's 105 (15 June 1940): 87-88. "Intolerance." Cosmopolitan (Feb. 1940): 24B25, 102-3. "The Man from Jail." World Digest 12 (June 1940): 61-62. "Men Have to Be Humored." Woman's Day 3 (Aug. 1940): 12-13, 58. "Mrs. Roosevelt's Advice on Public Speaking." Democratic Digest 17 (Feb. 1940): 3. "Mrs. Roosevelt Speaks." Democratic Digest 17 (Aug. 1940): 16. "My Advice to American Youth." Look 4 (27 Aug. 1940): 56B58. "Read the Bill of Rights." Democratic Digest 17 (Jan. 1940): 12. "Shall We Enroll Aliens? No." Liberty 17 (3 Feb. 1940): 13. "Sixty Years Consecutive ORT Work." ORT Economic Bulletin 1 (Nov. 40): 1-2. "A Spanking." Liberty 17 (22 June 1949): 6-8. "Twenty-four Hours." Ladies' Home Journal 57 (Oct. 1940): 20, 58, 60. "What Can We Do for Youth?" Occupations 19 (Oct. 1940): 9-10. "What Value Has the Ballot for Women?" Democratic Digest 17 (June/July 1940): 25. "The White House Speaks." Ladies' Home Journal 57 (June 1940): 21, 121-24. "Why I Still Believe in the Youth Congress." Liberty 17 (20 Apr. 1940): 30-32. "Women in Politics." Good Housekeeping 110 (Jan. 1940): 8-19, 150;110 (Mar. 1940): 45, 68; 110 (Apr. 1940): 45, 201-3. "Women in Politics." Woman's Press (Y.W.C.A.) (Apr. 1940): 165. Foreword. Youth: Millions Too Many? A Search for Youth's Place in America. By Bruce L. Melvin. New York: Association Press, 1940. 5-6. 1941[Review]. The American Presidency: An Interpretation. By Harold J. Laski. Harvard Law Review 54 (June 1941): 1413-14. "Appreciating the Great Outdoors." Student Life 7 (May 1941): 2. "Defense and Girls." Ladies' Home Journal 58 (May 1941): 25, 54. "Girls and National Defense." Women in America: Half of History. Ed. Mary Kay Tetreault. Chicago: Rand McNally, 1978. 60-64. "First Lady Addresses Workers' Wives." Trade Union Courier 6 (1 Sept. 1941): 6. "First Lady in Her Own Right." Echo. (March 1941): 3-5. "If I Were a Freshman . . ." Threshold 1 (Oct. 1941): 5-6. "Important as Ever." Our Bill of Rights: What It Means to Me, a National Symposium. By James Waterman Wise. New York: Bill of Rights Sesqui-centennial, 1941. 116. "An Inspiration to All." Opinion 12 (Nov. 1941): 12. "Know What We Defend." Democratic Digest 18 (May 3, 1941): 12-13. "Larder for the Democracies." Democratic Digest 18 (Oct. 1941): 7. "My Week." Our Country 1 (May 1941): 16. Foreword. The New Program of the United States Committee of International Student Service. New York: The Committee, 1941. 4-5. "Our Widening Horizon." Democratic Digest 18 (Feb. 1941): 9. "Shall We Draft American Women?" Liberty 18 (13 Sept. 1941): 10-11. "Social Gains and Defense." Common Sense 10 (March 1941): 71-77. "Speech Training for Youth." Quarterly Journal of Speech 27 (Oct. 1941): 369-71. "Tower Club." The Tower: Yearbook of the Tower Club, Ohio State University, 1941. 2. "Weaving: An Old American Handicraft." Woman's Day (Feb. 1941): 27-28. "What Does Pan-American Friendship Mean?" Liberty 18 (4 Oct. 1941): 10-11 and Congressional Record Appendix (22 Oct. 1941): A4784-85. "What Is the Matter with Women?" Liberty 18 (3 May 1941): 12-13. "What Must We Do to Improve the Health and Well-Being of the American People?" Town Meeting (December 8, 1941): 13-22. "What's Wrong with the Draft." Look 5 (15 July 1941): 23-25. "Women in Defense: A Script by Mrs. Roosevelt." New York Times Magazine, 7 Dec. 1941: 6-7. 1942"Attitudes of Youth and Morale." The Family in a World at War edited by D. M. Gruenberg. Harper and Brothers, 1942. Foreword. ABorn in the USA." Baby Talk 7 (July 1942): 11. "The Community and Morale." Educational Record 23 (Jan. 1942): 63-68. "The Democratic Effort." Common Ground 2 (Spring 1942): 9-10. "Education Is the Cornerstone on Which We Must Build Liberty." Education for Victory 1 (1 Apr. 1942): 1. "For American Unity." American Unity 1 (Oct. 1942): 3. "How about Your Vacation?" Cosmopolitan (Apr. 1942): 28-29. "The Issue Is Freedom." Rev. of American Unity and Asia. by Perl Buck. New Republic 107 (3 Aug. 1942): 147-48. "Let Us Earn a True Peace." Country Gentleman 112 (Dec. 1942): 9, 52-53. "Let Us Have Faith in Democracy." Land Policy Review 5 (Jan. 1942): 20-22. "Marching . . . with Eleanor Roosevelt: This Month Your Government Asks That You . . ." McCall's 69 (Mar. 1942): 57. "Messages." Free World 4 (Oct. 1942): 7-18. "Mobilizing Human Skills." Common Sense 11 (July 1942): 240-42. "Mrs. Roosevelt Sends Columbus Day Message to Jewish People Through Jewish Mirror." Jewish Mirror 1 (Oct. 1942): 3. "Must We Hate to Fight? No." Saturday Review of Literature 25 (4 July 1942): 13. "My Day." Democratic Digest 19 (Sept. 1942): 14. "My Day: The Polish Day." Pulaski Foundation Bulletin 1 (Dec. 1942): 3. "Race, Religion and Prejudice." New Republic 106 (11 May 1942): 630. Preface. Refugees at Work. Comp. Sophia M. Robinson. New York: King's Crown, 1942. [v]Bvi. Special Issue on Morale. Ed. Eleanor Roosevelt. Saturday Review of Literature 25 (4 July 1942). "To Care for Him Who Shall Have Borne the Battle." Collier's 110 (28 Nov. 1942): 20. "War Work Is Not Enough." Democratic Digest 19 (Oct. 1942): cover, 10, 14. "What Is Morale." Saturday Review of Literature 25 (4 July 1942): 12. "What We Are Fighting For." American Magazine 134 (July 1942): 16-17, 60-62. 1943"Abolish Jim Crow!" New Threshold 1 (Aug. 1943): 4, 34. "The Four Equalities." Negro Digest 1 (Sept. 1943): 81-83. "The Case Against the Negro Press. Con." Negro Digest 1 (Feb. 1943): 53. "A Challenge to American Sportsmanship." Collier's 112 (16 Oct. 1943): 21, 71. 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"Studying Spanish." Saturday Review of Literature 26 (10 Apr. 1943): 10. "They Talk Our Language Differently." Collier's 111 (27 Feb. 1943): 18, 20, 22. "Trained Minds and Trained Hearts." Smith Alumnae Quarterly 34 (May 1943): 125. "Women at War in Great Britain." Ladies' Home Journal 60 (Apr. 1943): 22-25, 70, 72. Women Students: the Men Are Counting on You!" Intercollegian 61 (Dec. 1943): 7. "Your New World." Life Story 7 (Feb. 1943): 33. 1944"American Red Cross 'Down Under' " American Lawn Tennis 37 (Apr. 1944): 16-17. "The American Spirit." Congressional Weekly 11 (June 9, 1944): 10-11. "American Women in the War." Reader's Digest 44 (Jan. 1944): 42-44. "As Johnny Thinks of Home: He Idealizes What He Left Behind." Social Action 10 (15 Mar. 1944): 5-7. "Eleanor Roosevelt Says." Ammunition (UAW-CIO) 2 (Aug. 1944): 1. "Equality Is Labor's Cause." Workmen's Circle Call 12 (July 1944): 10. "Henry Wallace's Democracy." Rev. of Democracy Reborn by Henry Wallace. 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"Human Rights and Human Freedom." New York Times Magazine, 26 March 1946: 21. "If You Ask Mrs. Roosevelt." Practical English 2 (17 Mar. 1947): 7. "Importance of Background Knowledge in Building for the Future." Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 246 (July 1946): 9-12. Preface. The Jew in American Life. By James Waterman Wise. New York: Messner, 1946. 5-6. "A Message to American Girls." American Girl 29 (Feb. 1946): 4. "The Minorities Question." Toward a Better World. Ed. William Scarlett. Philadelphia: Winston, 1946. 35-39 and in Christianity Takes a Stand: An Approach to the Issues of Today, a Symposium. Penguin, 612. Ed. William Scarlett. New York: Penguin, 1946. 72-76. "The Refugees Place in American Life." Talks (CBS) IV (January 1946): 28-29. "Mrs. Roosevelt Speaks." Summary (Elmira, N.Y. Reformatory) 64 (29 Mar. 1946): 2. "My Father and I." New York Times Magazine, 16 June 1946: 28. "The People Interview Mrs. Roosevelt." 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