Word: delayed
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...terms have been approved by AEC, the Attorney General, the Acting Comptroller General and TVA. But the contract cannot become effective until the Joint Atomic Energy Committee considers it for 30 days while Congress is in session, a provision of law which could delay the contract until the next Congress meets...
...second atomic submarine, the Sea Wolf, now abuilding. After a careful checkup, the Navy blamed the trouble not on sabotage but on carelessness. Electric Boat fired the man who slipped up-a warehouse foreman with 42 years' service-and will pay for repairs. But the mistake will delay the Navy's atomic submarine program from three to six months...
...Visiting Committee was considerably upset. Fourteen members retained another lawyer, J. W. Farley, and requested delay in putting the Plan into effect until their counsel could report. He reached an opposite result. Meanwhile, Grenville Clark, who had just resigned from the Corporation, called in still a third, Robert G. Dodge. His report agreed with Farley's Both reports reached the President and Fellows, and they responded by asking Ropes, Gray, Best, Collidge, and Rugg for a fourth, report. Oscar M. Shaw for that firm penned a vigorous endorsement, though not wholly without reservation as to details...
...maneuver for Big Four talks on Germany. This time, said Molotov, Russia would be willing to discuss-though not necessarily to agree to-"free all-German elections." This held out to the Germans hope of unity, which all ardently desire, while offering the French a fresh excuse to delay still longer their agonizing decision over Germany, The Soviet anti-London tactics did not stop with Molotov. In the United Nations. Andrei Vishinsky revived the debate (and with it the soul-searching) of atomic age disarmament simply by suggesting that Moscow might, with certain vague exceptions, be willing to come...
...arms for Germany. It is not to be too optimistic to hope that during this period negotiations [with Russia] will have [ended] in disarmament." It was almost as if the Premier were inviting Frenchmen to use the London agreement as they had for four years used EDC, to delay Germany's sovereignty and rearmament while pretending to inch towards it. In effect, he was asking the Assembly to approve German rearmament in theory, while suggestting sotto voce that the new German army might never become a reality...