Word: accessible
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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With a sidelong look at the five globetrotting Senators and their worries over the U.S.'s shrinking oil supply (TIME, Oct. 25), the White House report stressed the assertion that such a postwar policy, for example, would give the U.S. adequate access to the oil of the world. Similarly, disposition of the globe-straddling United Nations air bases which the U.S. helped build, and which will be some of the prize plums of postwar commerce, would be a part of the final settlements. (The President did not give details of what that part might be.) How much would...
...insistence upon payments for Lend-Lease. N.A.M. plumped for writing off all Lend-Lease balances over a period of 25 years, with "payment" confined to anticartel agreements, equal access to the world's raw materials, airways...
...conceded the probability that newsmen would not be allowed to sit at the peace table. Nevertheless, he suggested, let journalists unite, demand a peace treaty clause on press freedom. Specifically, he urged that foreign correspondents be given free and direct access to all the news of all nations, with equal facilities for sending the news to their own countries...
...week's end no official reply from Britain, the U.S. or Russia was disclosed. But France may have access to the tri-power European Advisory Commission to be set up in London. By agreement before and at Moscow, the Liberation Committee is to participate in the lesser Mediterranean Commission and in the settlement of Italian affairs. General de Gaulle has spoken overhastily in the past; he may have done so once again...
Rewald had access to a vast amount of Seuratiana and to the painter's lifelong friend, the aged and acute French art critic, Félix Fénéon, from whom he has not heard since the fall of France. The result is an unexpectedly intimate portrait of an unusually reserved man, and a lucid exposition of his "scientific" methods of painting...