Word: fiscales
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...same time the National Council of the Confederation of War Veterans served an ultimatum on the Government: The cut must be for one year only, beginning July 1. Before that time the Government must take definite action "toward repression of scandals, revision of the financial markets, repression of fiscal frauds, restoration and reorganization of credit, reorganization of the railways and reform of the State. . . . Otherwise the veterans will impose their own program of national renovation by means within their power to assure once again the safety of the nation...
Outlay- First complete guess at the cost of the New Deal was Franklin Roosevelt's Budget message to Congress (TIME, Jan. 15). He estimated that the Government would spend $10,569,000,000 in fiscal 1934 of which $7,523,000,000 was for emergency expenses exclusive of subsidies to cut farm production. Last week it became apparent that the Administration had not been able to toss out dollars as fast as it had planned. With nine months of the fiscal year past, it had spent a total of $4,848,000,000-only about $4 for every...
...face broke into a broad grin. When the call was finished he went back to the sideboard and filled up his glass again, for here was something better than a 40-lb. salmon. The young man at the Treasury had just finished balancing Britain's books for the fiscal year. The Treasury could now announce a surplus of ?31,148,000, greatest since 1923-24, and an achievement in belt-tightening unmatched by any other country since Depression...
...Note--It was decided that for the present, financial considerations did not warrant the larger paper. When fiscal conditions are sufficiently improved, the CRIMSON expects again to publish six-page papers every day. In the meantime, the majority of the features of the larger paper will be retained...
...need for better distribution of all funds that are made available. President Conant and Financial Vice-President Lowes have begun a campaign to raise money among the Harvard alumni. With Henry L. Shattuck, Treasurer of the Corporation, reporting an operating profit of $475,000 for the fiscal year 1932-33, some of the University's funds might well be applied, temporarily at least, to meet the unprecedented need for financial assistance. Distribution of all funds, scholarships, aids, loans, and employment, should be in the hands of one consolidated body, as Dean Hindmarsh has long advocated, to insure a coordinated...