Word: fiscales
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...satisfied with the results."One result was that, on Repeal's second birthday, a citizen could buy himself a drink of hard liquor across a bar in 28 States and the District of Columbia. Only one State is wholly dry-Alabama. The Federal Government had during the past fiscal year taken in $411,000,000 in liquor taxes. The States had collected many millions more. Consumption was only 70% of the 1917 level, and while 324 cities reported 23,683 arrests for drunken driving last year, the total was below the 1928-31 average. That the nation definitely...
...newshawks. If he and his committee were to get any credit for a budget cut, he, not the President, must spring the surprise on the public. Not yet having seen the President's figures, he announced that he was going to aim to cut the deficit for fiscal 1937 to not over $500,000,000, which would entail a budget cut of $3,000,000,000, or six times as much as the President was reported to hope for. Congressmen cannot be put in their places quite so easily as the Press. Vacationer Roosevelt could see that his budget...
...research projects have begun to increase. One substantial project for the study of Public Opinion, involving cooperation between the members of the departments of Psychology, Government, and Education, was financed by the committee this past year. Other joint applications were presented to the committee and approved for the next fiscal year. It is apparent that interest in joint research in the social sciences is growing and that the committee may expect such projects to form a growing proportion of its budget in future years...
Harvard completed the fiscal year 1934-35, which ended June 30, 1935, with expenses $115,793.19 below these of the year before. This was disclosed with the release yesterday of the annual report of Henry L. Shattuch '01, treasurer of Harvard College, to the board of Overseers...
...Some months ago I sent you my contribution for the current fiscal year, and in doing so stated that it would be my final annual gift to the unified budget of the Northern Baptist Convention. Hereafter, such sums as I may donate to general religious work, it is my present thought to contribute to specific projects, chiefly interdenominational or nondenominational in character, which interpret the Christian task in the light of present day needs and which are based not so much on denominational affiliation as on broad, forward-looking principles of cooperation...