Institute of Pacific Relations: Hearings Before the Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-second Congress, First[-second] Session..U.S. Government Printing Office, 1951 - 5964 lappuses |
No grāmatas satura
1.–5. rezultāts no 100.
1252. lappuse
... Lattimore and Mr. Lawrence Rosinger . You will also recall that the State Department on the next morning issued a press release which denied my testimony and that Mr. Lattimore and Mr. Rosinger also issued press releases which denied my ...
... Lattimore and Mr. Lawrence Rosinger . You will also recall that the State Department on the next morning issued a press release which denied my testimony and that Mr. Lattimore and Mr. Rosinger also issued press releases which denied my ...
1255. lappuse
... Lattimore is speaking , and he opens it up : Mr. Chairman- they are addressing Dr. Jessup I think I am definitely encouraged by the evident trend this morning , which shows that we should proceed from facts rather than from subjective ...
... Lattimore is speaking , and he opens it up : Mr. Chairman- they are addressing Dr. Jessup I think I am definitely encouraged by the evident trend this morning , which shows that we should proceed from facts rather than from subjective ...
1279. lappuse
... Lattimore . May we address ourselves to that ? I will go into the other names as they come up . Mr. COLEGROVE . I checked the transcript , and I would agree that the statements which Mr. Lattimore made in the conference indicate that ...
... Lattimore . May we address ourselves to that ? I will go into the other names as they come up . Mr. COLEGROVE . I checked the transcript , and I would agree that the statements which Mr. Lattimore made in the conference indicate that ...
1289. lappuse
... Lattimore . I won't go into the quotations , except to say that Mr. Murphy and Owen Lattimore at very considerable length took exception to my proposal that we give military aid to Chiang Kai - shek to assist him to recover the southern ...
... Lattimore . I won't go into the quotations , except to say that Mr. Murphy and Owen Lattimore at very considerable length took exception to my proposal that we give military aid to Chiang Kai - shek to assist him to recover the southern ...
1298. lappuse
... Lattimore . Mr. MORRIS . You dictated it to Mrs. Lattimore ? Mr. WALLACE . Yes . Mr. MORRIS . Did she take it down in shorthand ? Mr. WALLACE . No , she took it down in outline . I don't think she is an expert in shorthand . She may be ...
... Lattimore . Mr. MORRIS . You dictated it to Mrs. Lattimore ? Mr. WALLACE . Yes . Mr. MORRIS . Did she take it down in shorthand ? Mr. WALLACE . No , she took it down in outline . I don't think she is an expert in shorthand . She may be ...
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Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
Admiral Cooke ALSOP American answer Army believe Budenz cable CHAIRMAN Chennault Chiang Kai-shek China Chinese Communists Chou En-lai Chungking COLEGROVE committee Communist Party conference connection consulted Daily Worker Department discussion document East economic fact Fairbank forces Formosa Gauss Generalissimo give going Institute of Pacific Japan Japanese Jessup John Carter Vincent knew Korea Kunming Kuomintang Manchuria MANDEL Marshall matter mean meeting ment military mission MORRIS munist Nationalist Government Nations never Owen Lattimore Pacific Relations political position present President pro-Communist problem question recall recognition recognize recollection recommendation record referred regard regime remember Rosinger Russian Secretary seems Senator EASTLAND Senator FERGUSON Senator SMITH Senator WATKINS situation Soong SOURWINE southeast Asia Soviet STASSEN statement Stilwell Stilwell's suggested SWNCC T. V. Soong talking testified testimony thing thought tion trying United WALLACE Wallace's Wedemeyer
Populāri fragmenti
1864. lappuse - The terms of the Cairo Declaration shall be carried out and Japanese sovereignty shall be limited to the islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, Shikoku and such minor islands as we determine.
1995. lappuse - Hoover back in 1950 tellingly pointed this out before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Relations of the United States Senate.
1864. lappuse - To bring about the eventual establishment of a peaceful and responsible government which will respect the rights of other states and will support the objectives of the United States as reflected in the ideals and principles of the Charter of the United Nations.
1868. lappuse - Control is to be maintained over all imports and exports of goods, and foreign exchange and financial transactions. Both the policies followed in the exercise of these controls and their actual administration shall be subject to the approval and supervision of the Supreme Commander in order to make sure that they are not contrary to the policies of the occupying authorities, and in particular that all foreign purchasing power that Japan may acquire is utilized only for essential needs.
1534. lappuse - The heart of China is in Communist hands. The Communist leaders have foresworn their Chinese heritage and have publicly announced their subservience to a foreign power, Russia, which during the last 50 years, under czars and Communists alike, has been most assiduous in its efforts to extend its control in the Far East.
1867. lappuse - To favor a program for the dissolution of the large industrial and banking combinations which have exercised control of a great part of Japan's trade and industry.
1859. lappuse - Encouragement shall be given and favor shown to the development of organizations in labor, industry, and agriculture, organized on a democratic basis. Policies shall be favored which permit a wide distribution of income and of the ownership of the means of production and trade.
1864. lappuse - The Japanese people shall be encouraged to develop a desire for individual liberties and respect for fundamental human rights, particularly the freedoms of religion, assembly and association, speech and the press.
1864. lappuse - To insure that Japan will not again become a menace to the United States or to the peace and security of the world.
1865. lappuse - This policy, moreover, does not commit the Supreme Commander to support the Emperor or any other Japanese governmental authority in opposition to evolutionary changes looking toward the attainment of United States objectives The policy is to use the existing form of Government in Japan, not to support it...