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  • ...RD=O&MAILADDY=&SAVE.x=43&SAVE.y=ll Europe. Banks and banking--Corrupt practices--Switzerland. World War, 1939-1945--Economic aspects--Germany. World War, 1939-1945--Reparations. United States--Foreignrelations--Soviet Union. Soviet Union-~Foreign
  • to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed. MACK of Illinois, from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, submitted the following REPORT [To accompany H.n. 6462J The Committee on'In:terstate and Foreign
  • refused to sanction war plundering. The London Declaration from January 1943 reaffirmed this principle. Signed I by the United States, the Soviet Union, and several otner nations,the London Declaration provided that the Allies: ! "Reserve all
  • , 1954.-Commltted to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed Mr. HI~SIlAW, from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, submitted the following REPORT [To accompany S. 24201 The Committee
  • · ,..," ".­ . - - - - " - - - -- States 6ftheFo'rriler Soviet Union . .. ............................ 4501 60. Anti-Apartheid Program [Repealed] ...... '.' . . . . . .. .......... ... . 5001 64.' United States Response to Terrorism Affecting Americans Abroad ... 5501 65. Control
  • , 1947.-Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed Mr. VORYS, from the Committee on Foreign Affairs, submitted the following REPORT [To accompany H. J. Res. 207] The Committee on Foreign Affairs
  • the early 20th century, when it became a signatory to the Hague Convention, the United States refused to sanction war I plundering. The London Declaration of January 1943 reaffirmed this principle. Signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and several
  • /03120003:54 PM http://infosharel.p~inceton.edu:20 ...one/rbsc/fmding_aidsljfdoral.html 1. F. Dulles Oral History Catalog SHAPE Supreme Headquarters of Allied Powers in Europe United Kingdom OS: United States USIA: United States Information Agency
  • which l$ anatiollnl of the United States" will not be allowed.1T rI'hat means that, if a corporation is incorporated in any State of the Union and is owned 51 percent by Americans and 49 percent by aliens at an relevant times, '1'8 the claim
  • state. Mr. Speaker, the path to California statehood began when the conflict with Mexico offices of Van. Bourg, Weinberg, Roger & ceased in Califomia in 1847. A number of Rosenfeld, one. of the largest union-side law United State~ citizens had already
  • , 1954.-Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union and ordered to be printed Mr. O'HARA of Minnesota, from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, submitted the following REPORT [To acCompany S. 3731 The Committee
  • WITH RESPECT , ,TO WAR CLAIMSjAND PROVIDING RE!..IEF FOR,':~~TE~~EE$I IN CERTAIN CASES ,,' ' ,. ""1 ". ~ ' t'~., .:' '7 ' , ,> i i " lllLY 17, 1947.-Commltted'to the Committee of the Whole Ho'W,e bilthe State of the Union and ordered to be printed
  • not be assented to and to impress upon the would-be acquirers that they would nL be pe~rnitted to keep the assets after Allied'victory." The London DeClaration of January 5, i . 5 I 1943, reiterated and added weight to thi~ message. Signed by the United States
  • resettlement and rehabilitation; President Truman's . . " ' . . . ' ' , ., representative to the Moscow Reparations Conference, Edwin Pauley, drafted a memorandum suggesting that the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain establish
  • Declaration oflanuary 1943 reaffirmedthisprihciple. Signed by the United States, the' Soviet Union, and sixteen other natioiis, the London Declaration stated that the Allies: • Reserve allthdr nghtstodeclare invalid any transfers of~ or d.eali~gs
Chronology (Item)
  • . Eastern. and Western Military Districts are established for military government and supply purposes. 2 August The Potsdam Agreement, resulting from tripartite conferences 17 July-2 August in Berlin, between the United States, the Soviet, Union, and Great
  • . , Signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and sixteen other nations, the London Declaration . I I 11, stated that the Allies: I I Resbrve all their rights to declare invalid any transfers of, or dealings with, property, rights and interests
  • by the United States, the Soviet Union, and sixteen othe~ 'nations, the London Declaration I stated that the Allies: I I i I I I I I , Reserve all their rights to declare invalid any transfers of, or dealings with, property, rights and interests
  • ieclaration of January 1943 reaffirmed this principle. Signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and several other nations, the London Declaration provided that the Allies: , R~serve all their rights to declare invalid any transfers of, or dealings
  • < < :',." taot that the d~stinotion between'~eside~oe and domi- ~" :>~" I somethiPg which has caused some ot the most ex­
  • , . i' Un4er US law, underth~ law of most states in the union, unlike European law, where those: looted assets remain in the bank, so we can trace them, as we are through the Volker process~ In the US, those looted assets -- excuse . , . . . .me, those
Stabilization (Item)
  • -Allied Declaration Against Acts ofDisposse:ssion Committed in Territories Under Enemy or Control stated that "The Union of South Africa, the United States of America, Australia, Belgimu, Canada, China, the Czechoslovak Republic, the United Kingdom
  • to annul wrongful property dispossession under wartime conditions. I I Signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and sixteen other nations, the London Declaration . stated that the Allies: Resenie all their rights to declare invalid any transfers
  • for Je17ish stuc.cnta from Europe to some universities in the United States. The \'Jorld Union is affilia.tod with the World Je\"d.sh Congress. VIII. LATIN AMEItICA The need of planned :1.nd systemnticr1..l work on the pnrt of' the World Jewish Con­ gress
  • ' , lstSe88wn OFREPRESE~TATlVES HOUSE ,I , ,.' .:' i {" , 'REPoRT No. 624 FOREIGN CLAIMS SETTLEMENT COMMISSION,' MAY 24, 1955.-pommitted to the Committee of the "Iho1e House on, the State : of , the Union and ordered to be:printed I Mr. RICHARDS
  • basic utilities back in service. -On' June 5 the commanders in chief of European theater forces from the Soviet Union, Britain, the United States, and France (the latter added as an occupying power at the Yalta Conference in February 1945) met In Berlin
  • . (See pp. 8 and 9.) . . I . . . .Although the United States and Soviet Union made agreements and cooperative efforts to bring Nazis to justice, postwar rifts between the two coun­ tries developed over such issues as the makeup of Eastern Europe
  • , direct compensation was limited to former German citi­ zens, refugees and stateless persons. Holocaust sur­ · vivors living in Soviet bloc countries received no · indemnification. During the period of detente between the United States and:the Soviet Union
  • [105668]. , " WORKING DRAFT' - NOT FOR CIRCULATION !' 15 : , I I these states into the.Soviet Union.,,35 The Baltic nations, established as independent countries . I: . " . I.' ' I . ' . after the First World War, had been annexed
  • to the HagueConvention,theUnited Stiltes refused to sanctiori war plundering, The London ~claration of January 1943 reaffirmed this principle. Signed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and sixteen other nations, the London Declaration. stated that' the Allies
  • Pauley, . I ' . . draftM a memorandum suggesting that·the United States,the Soviet Union, and Great Britain I· I . ' . '. . .' . establish an "International Board ofTrustees" to represent the thousands ofindividualsma:de WORKING DRAFT
  • the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain, is published'I' ' 1 The main \headquarters of the U.S. Group, Control Council, Is transferred from . Hoechst, near Frankfurt, to Berlin. '. The Coun1cil of Foreign Ministers Is created by the Potsdam
  • CONOREsS } ROUSE OFR]lP~SENTATlVES { ~d Session • REPORT 'No. 3095 Serial Set 11384 AMENDING SECTION 32 (A) (2) OF, THE TRADING WITH THE ENEMY: AOT SEPTEMBER Mr. 15, 1950.-Committed to the Committee oltbe Whole House on the' State of the Union
  • to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the-Union and ordered to be printed ,~ I: Ill i: ; Mr. " t ;t 1; ;: :t_·,_ from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign" . -. -Conim&~~, Btibmi~ted th~ foll~~fug. . ,'­ , BECKWORTH, '. ' " !. ,,­ ;: n
  • LOSSES '" FEBRUARY \, , ;-" . 'II " 18, 1960.-Committed to the Committee of the Whole House State. of the Union and ordered to be printild on thl! ' Mr. MACK. ofIllinois, from the Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, submitted
  • to the point common to those two States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is hereby restored as' it existed on January I, 1938, with the exception of the change resUlting from the stipulations of the following sub-paragraph. (c) Hungary shall cede
  • (Latvia, Lithuania, andEstonia) in 19~5,34 but by 1946 the U.S. government had ceased restitution of items belonging to those' countries because it did not' "recognize [the] incorporation of these states into the Soviet Union."3s The'Baltic nations
  • , Reappearance and Recovery o~Cullural Property (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1997), 278-79. . , i I 230 I I , ~igned by the United States, the Soviet Union, and sixteen otheli nations, the London Declaration I I . I s,tated that the Allies: Reserve all
  • ;tation ' was obtained shqwing that persons in every State of the Union, including laborers and busmessmen, charitable· institutions and large American corporations, held assets in foreign countries which might be affected by the war. The Uses
  • percent. Moreov~r, for the firSt time information was obtained showing that persons in every State of the Union, including laborers and businessmen, charitable institutions and large American corporations, held assets in foreign countries which might
  • to the Soviet Union. Although the assignment stated that it was pr~para1io.~",~0. a final settlement of outst-anding claim~ and counterclaIms between the two Governments, further efforts to , ' ',~~t.;;l~~F1>~: > ' , , l'mmtl·;A"l. ""/",,,...,,.-1
  • ), and MasSachusetts (5'3). In the remaining States of the Union, in. which 16·5 per cent of the United' States Jews lived, they formed less than 5 per cent of the population,and in most of these' States less than I per cent.. The smallest percentage (0,2
Reports [1] (Item)
  • PROVED BY THE HEADS OF GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES, THE SOVIET UNION, AND THE UNITED KINGDOM PROTOCOL OF PROCEEDINGS EDITOR'S N OTE.-The text of the Protocol, as released to the public by the Departmentof State on March 24, 1947,1 was developed
  • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 10/12/00 Draft, Chapter V reaffirmed the commitment io annul wrongful property dispossession under wartime conditions. Signed by the United States
  • of the intergovern­ types of assets, 13 percent. Moreover, for the first time information was obtained showing that persons in every State of the' Union, mental debts, was estimated at about $17,200,000,000" The three including laborers and businessmen, charitable
  • when such law, decree, or regulation was abtogated, enjoyed full rights of citizenship under the laws 9f such nation." , . i I l ~ This Bill waS committed by the Committee 'on the Judiciary to the Comniittee of the Whole House on the State