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OCR Page 1 of 14RECORDING*
We should find our domestic problems in education much
easier of solution if we could give them our undivided attention.
But these problems at home are complicated by recent developments
in' international relationships, which should properly be the
concern of the schools. Our leadership in the United Nations
Organization, our efforts through the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization to join free nations in resisting totalitarian
aggression, our intellectual and cultural activities in
connection with UNESCO, our technical assistance under Point 4
and the Mutual Security Agency, our work in the Organization
of American States, our Fulbright program for the exchange
of teachers and students--all these activities and many others
like them make our position of international responsibility
and leadership abundantly clear. These international involvements
combine with the development of telephone and radio communication
and rapid transportation by air to place us politically,
physically, and socially close to people everywhere. The
activities of our national and personal lives affect, and are
affected by, people around< the globe. And we have also become
By Earl J. McGrath; U. S. Commissioner of Education, Federal
Security Agency, Washington, D. C. , for use in series to be
made available by Educational Recording Services, Los Angeles,
California Recorded by U. S. Recording Company, Washington,
D. -C., , January 9, 1953.
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