Word: submitted
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...This is an urgent request. It is important that the National Theatre Conference have available without delay certain facts to submit to the national government. Please send to this office the names of those of your recent graduates who are qualified to direct plays and supervise dramatics in military training camps...
...department also told why John O'Ryan had gone to Tokyo. A Tokyo organization called the Japan Economic Federation (whose Manhattan representative is the Japanese Government's trade commissioner) had hired the General and two economists to survey Japanese-U. S. trade relations, submit an "impartial report." His fee (plus expenses): $15,000, plus an additional $5,000 a month if the survey lasts more than three months...
...procedure was, in a land of imitation, positively inspirational. Instead of settling down in clublike "Cabinet-forming headquarters," surrounded by seas of steaming tea, trays of raw. fish and rafts of politicians, Prince Konoye simply told the Army and Navy what he stood for and directed them to submit the names of candidates for their ministries. When they did, he summoned three men. The first, onetime president of the monopolistic South Manchuria Railway Yosuke Matsuoka, promptly accepted the ticklish post of Foreign Minister. The second, Director General of Military Aviation Lieut. Gen eral Eiki Tojo, took the War Ministry...
Month ago, Connely and SEC Chairman Jerome Frank agreed to work out amendments to the Securities Acts together, submit joint proposals to Congress by January. Three weeks ago Frank abruptly offered to go further: Why not get the 20-day clause repealed right away? Surprised I. B. A. agreed. Last week they went to work on the details of an amendment. Probable change to be proposed to Congress: instead of waiting 20 days. SEC would release securities for sale as soon as it had checked the registrations. This should seldom take more than a week...
...whole, inept and ineffective. But they feel that British propaganda is not just another name for Empire publicity. It is a force dark, sinister, pervasive, ineluctable. Its strength lies in the fascination which the British upper classes exert upon the U. S. upper classes. As proof they submit a somewhat original interpretation of Anglo-American relations before 1917. During World War I, they claim, there was a deep cleavage in U. S. sentiment: "To upper-class America, the Allies truly represented civilization, for England's culture was their culture too." So the upper classes foisted World...