Word: accept
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...article in TIME who expressed a wish to do something toward the building of my church. I am told that Roman Catholics all over the country are very favorably disposed toward your magazine because of the fair manner in which you treat their religious news. Please accept my very best wishes for the continued success of your very interesting and valuable publication. May God bless you and the staff of TIME...
...Pink's department (TIME, March 23). This high bid for all of National's 100,000 shares of stock, was made by Commercial Investment Trust, cash-heavy installment financier. Last week, however, the courts ordered Mr. Pink to reject C. I. T.'s bid, accept one from Banc-america-Blair Corp. for 70,000 shares at a slightly higher per-share price...
...campaign manager was needed, reluctant as Senator Borah might be to accept assistance. Mr. Fish found onetime (1925-33) Representative Carl George Bachmann of West Virginia, dragged him back from his law practice in Wheeling. Manager Bachmann, blue-eyed, husky, bald, collects the small change which falls in a scanty shower from admirers of the aging statesman from Idaho. Biggest receipt so far has been $500 from an anonymous donor. This rivulet of cash Mr. Bachmann diverts to Borah posters, Borah buttons, rent, telegrams, petty cash...
...demanded an immediate vote, and in so doing he would have been well within France's juridical rights. Instead, towering M. Flandin rose to say with a broad-minded casual mien worthy of Squire Baldwin himself: "I have too much sense of courtesy, even toward Germany, not to accept Herr von Ribbentrop's suggestion. I propose therefore that we do not vote until the afternoon session...
Finally the officially injured Locarno Powers (Britain, France, Italy and Belgium) adopted and sent to the guilty State proposals which M. Flandin said were the minimum France could accept and which British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden said were submitted to evoke from Germany either acceptance or counter proposals. Exhausted Mr. Eden then took a nap in the Foreign Office, after which he motored to spend a quiet country weekend with Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin. Behind him he left instructions that he could not be reached by telephone unless the call was from Berlin. Exhausted Chancellor of the Exchequer Neville Chamberlain...