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spilch OF SENTATOR HARRY S TRUMAI berore THE NATIONAL LAWYLRS' GUILI, deTROIT CHAPTIR detroit, MICHIGAN, AT THE HOTL STATLLR MARCH 16, 1944, AT 8:00 O'CLOCK IN THE EVLNING. RELEASI ON deliviry I value your invitation, not only as a personal honor, but as an expression of i terest in the work of the Congress and the Conmittee of which I am Chairman. Lawyers are making a notable contribution to the war effort. We depend upon you to work out and administer the rules of business conduct. This is not always easy even in a normal world. put in the last two years we have created a new whole war econoryy. Many of the old business and commercial rules no longer apply. Thousands of difficult and thorny legal problems have had to be solved and solved correctly. They have had to be solved fast. In this war we have had to create an enormous number of new regulations and controls. Where they have been imperfect, usually our only remedy was to create still more controls and make them so definite and detailed that they govern and restrict almost every human activity. That is part of the price which we must pay for war. It is no greater than the price being paid by our allies and our enemies. It is what we must bid to purchase victory and freedom. These wartime controls have no relation to politics. they were imposed solely because of war needs. Nearly all of them were suggested by industry and labor. Most of the government representatives dealing with them earne from private life. And these representatives are about evenly divided between both ma jor political parties. These restrictions must be maintained just as long as they are required to assure victory - just that long and no longer. Personal and business libertie and freedom from regimentation are not only abstract ideals. They are concrete realities which impinge daily on our lives. They seriously affect our happiness S GENERA NARA