Word: liaison
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Thus Communist propaganda will continue to be fomented in the U. S. by the U. S. Workers' Party whose avowedly Communist leaders will continue their close liaison with the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Comintern, Third International or World Communist Party which is technically superior to both and retains its Moscow headquarters. On the other hand, M. Litvinoff promised that "it will be the fixed policy of the Government" of Russia (he could not promise for the Party headed by Josef Stalin) to "refrain" in the most scrupulous manner from any interference in U. S. affairs...
...Eugene R. Black, Governor of the Federal Reserve Board, George L. Harrison, Governor of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, Henry Morgenthau Jr. of the Farm Credit Administration, Chairman Jesse Jones of R. F. C., Henry Bruere (president of Bowery Savings Bank), the President's financial liaison man, Fred I. Kent, foreign exchange expert, and two theorists: Professors James H. Rogers and George F. Warren. Such serious things had they to consider that the nine guests spent three hours in deep conference at the White House...
...clownish confrère and a suave young barrister (Conrad Nagel). It deals more comprehensively with her wartime love affair with Captain Resnick (Bruce Cabot). After these preliminary romances and Ann's brief, unhappy experience as a prison-executive, the picture launches enthusiastically into the matter of her liaison with Judge Barney Dolphin (Walter Huston...
...have a product to sell to the people. If we are successful, it must be so organized and so displayed as to make the people desire it more than some ephemeral pleasure done up in a tinseled package." Commissioner Zook has gone about organizing his product as follows: Liaison. Dr. Zook would gear the Office of Education to be a powerful liaison service between the schools and the new agencies of the Government. This month the Office's School Life (paid circulation 10,000-largest of any Government organ) describes for teachers the "Children's Code" (child labor...
...life of a college generation being only four years, the liaison of the Freshmen and the Yard has already begun to take on an aspect of hoary tradition. "Copey," Harvard's beloved Charles Townsend Copeland, has reluctantly abandoned his famous rooms under the roof of Hollis Hall. But the cry of "Reinhart," (shocking to the decorous quiet of the House quadrangles) rings out all the more volubly from the throats of Freshmen...