Word: mutuality
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...specific demands of the workers are that 1. The yellow dog contract be abolished. 2. A scheme securing mutual welfare by a lottery be abandoned. 3. The wage rate be determined by a ruling of the State Board of Arbitration. 4. Sanitary conditions be improved...
...measure of disarmament we may be able now to achieve. It must be definite, it must be substantial. We are prepared to make very great efforts to assist in the maintenance of peace when a determination to preserve peace is evidenced by the achievement of real measures for mutual and progressive disarmament. ... At the appropriate time we should be willing to ... give a more precise indication of the manner in which we consider that the United States can most effectively co-operate." Surely here was an achievement of the White House conferences. Foreign oracles quickly interpreted this statement...
...State Hull, President Roosevelt motored to the patioed Pan-American Union Building to address a meeting of the Pan-American Union's governing board. The President interpreted the Monroe Doctrine to his listeners not as an instrument of U. S. dominion over the Americas, but as a mutual protective society "aimed against the acquisition in any manner of the control of additional territory in this hemisphere by any non-American power." For the first time, President Roosevelt took public notice of South America's two undeclared wars between Paraguay and Bolivia, Colombia and Peru. "I regard existing conflicts...
...Liberalization of the Federal Reserve Act to allow admission to the Reserve of State commercial and mutual savings banks, (Based on last week's figures 84% of Federal Reserve member banks but only 67% of State banks had reopened on an unrestricted basis...
...peasant way. Sergei was a believing, practicing Communist, with nothing but hatred for the old order, with no time or interest for anything but the present and the future. Then in 'Moscow he met Ludmilla, a member of the intelligentsia-to Sergei, a "lady." Their attraction was mutual, and Sergei's qualms about "ladies" temporarily subsided when they began living together. Gradually he discovered that Ludmilla was an incorrigible embodiment of the old order. Her love for him was so possessive she could hardly bear to let him out of her sight; she was jealous of his work...