To Proceedings of the Trusteeship Council, 1949

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

To Proceedings of the Trusteeship Council, 1949 \'{.. I~h UNITED ~~~ NATIONS ~~ CHECK LIST OF UNITED NATIONS DOCUMENTS PART 4: NO. 3 TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL, 1949 Fourth and Fifth Sessions First and Second Special Sessions UNITED NATIONS LIBRARY UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK, 1951 ST/Lm/SEIL F/4.:3 31 JULY 1951 The following adrlft.iorra! Chech List» in this series ure avuiluble: ST/LIB/SEIL F/4:1 Trusteeship Council First und Second Sessions 194·7-1943 Sales No.: 19,t9. I. 2 Priee $1.50 ST/LIB/SEH. F/1.:2 Trusteeship Council Third Session 19411 Sales No.: 19,t9. I. 5 Price $1.00 UNITED NATIONS PUBLICATIONS SALES NUMBER: 1951. I. 17 PREFACE The Check List of United Nations Documents (series ST/LIB/ SER.F/) is planned as a complete list of the documents issued by the organs of the United Nations. It appears in separate parts, each devoted to a particular organ. The following table shows the general plan. Part 1 General Assembly (and subsidiary organs) 2 Security Council (and subsidiary organs) 3 Atomic Energy Commission 4 Trusteeship Council 5 Economic and Social Council Functional Commissions of the Economic and Social Council 6A Economic and Employment Commission 6B Transport and Communications Commission 6C Statistical Commission 6D Commission on Human Rights 6E Social Commission 6F Commission on the Status of Women 6G Commission on Narcotic Drugs (and other related bodies) 6H Fiscal Commission 6J Population Commission Regional Economic Commission of the Economic and Social Council 7A Economic Commission for Europe 7B Economic Commission for Asia and the Far East 7C Economic Commission for Latin America B United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund and United Nations Appeal for Children 9 Secretariat The individual parts are issued in one or more numbers listing documents issued from the beginning of 1946 to the end of 1949. iii 4: TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIl In addition to the list of documents, every part contains a subject-index and introductory notes giving information on the organization of the bodies concerned. It also notes the unpubli slu records of meetings and sound recordings deposited in the Archil of the United Nations and the press releases concerning the meet ings. Part 4 of the Check List of United Nations Documents compris the documents of the Trusteeship Council. This third number of Part 4 lists the documents of the fourth and fifth sessions and its petitions for the year 1949. Documents issued after the beginnin] of 1950 are listed in the current issues of the monthly United Nations Documents Index. The user of this volume will find it helpful to read carefully the explanations preceding the Check List and the Subject-Index. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Entry No. Preface ... iii Explanation viii Abbreviations . x TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL, 1949 1 Establishment . 1 2 Members and Terms of Office . 2 3 Officers . 3 4 Secretary . 3 5 Rules of Procedure . 3 Fourth Session (24 January to 25 March 1949) 6 Meetings . 4 7-121 General Series. 5 122 Working Papers . 29 123 Official Records . 29 Report to the General Assembly . 29 Ad hoc Committees . 30 Administrative Unions . 30 124 Establishment . 30 125 Meetings . 30 126-155 General Series . 30 156 Petitions . 36 Higher Education . 36 157 Establishment, Meetings . 36 158-175 General Series . 37 176 Annual Reports (Committee of the Whole) 39 Fifth Session (15 June to 29 July 1949) 177 Meetings . 41 178-261 General Series . 42 262 Working Paper . 59 263 Official Records . 50 254a Report to the General Assembly. .. 50 254b Report to the Security Council . 60 v TRUSTEESHIP COUNCILj Entry No. Fifth Session (15 June to 29 July 1949 (cont.) Ad hoc Committees .. 61 265 Annual Reports (Whole) . 61 266 Nauru ....................... .. 61 267 New Guinea. 61 268 Pacific Islands . 62 First Special Session (27 September 1949) 269 Meetings 63 270-271 General Series 63 272 Official Records 64 Second Special Session (8 to 20 December 1949) 273 Meetings .. ..... , 65 274-282 General Series .. 65 283-288 Limited Series .. 67 289 Official Records . 68 Ad hoc Committee , 69 Italian Somaliland ....... .. 69 290 Establishment . 69 291 Meetings 69 Sixth Session (19 January to 4 April 1950) 292-299 General Series 71 Visiting Missions . 74 300 West Africa 74 301 Pacific Islands 74 302-310 Information Series 74 Petitions: 311 Petitions concerning Trust Territories in General 76 312 Petitions concerning Western Samoa. 76 313-343 Petitions concerning Tanganyika. 76 344-367 Petitions concerning Ruanda-Urundi . 82 368-387 Petitions concerning the Cameroons under British Administration . 86 388-413 Petitions concerning the Cameroons under French Administration " 89 414-420 Petitions concerning Togoland under British Administration . 92 421-422 Petitions concerning Togoland under French Administration .......... .. 94 vi TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL Entry No. Sixth Session (19 January to 4 April 1950) (cont.) 423 Petitions concerning New Guinea . 94 424 Petitions concerning Nauru . 95 Index of Document Series Symbols ... 96 SUBJECT-INDEX. .............. 97 Additions to Part 4, No. 1 of the Check List 114 Additions to Part 4, No. 2 of the Check List 115 vii 4: TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL EXPLANATION ENTRY NUMBER. Documents, meeting records and intro­ ductory notes are referred to by entry numbers in the subject­ index to this Check List. The entry numbers do not appear on the documents and should not be used in citation. LANGUAGE OF ISSUE. The language editions in which a document is issued are indicated as English (E), French (F), Spanish (8), Russian (R), Chinese (C), or bilingual English-French (E&F) texts. DOCUMENT SYMBOL AND SHORT TITLE. The official document symbol number should be used in citing documents. In case of publications without document symbol numbers, titles should be cited together with the session number, issue number, supple­ ment number, and VOlume number, whichever is included in the entry. Title entries have been standardized and shortened or ex­ panded in order to clarify the meaning of the titles and the author­ ship of the document, as the entries do not always literally con­ form to the actual document titles. The collation shows the pagi­ nation of the English or bilingual English-French text only. The date appearing on each document below the document symbol number is usually the date of registration of the documentary text with the Bureau of Documents for publication and translation and should be the same in all language texts. The date of registration closes each entry. Corrigenda, addenda and revisions are usually grouped with the parent document in the same entry unless a separate reference from the subject-index is called for. Corrigenda are corrections of errors in the texts, tables, dates or classifications of documents, emendations of translations, and additions of omitted text. Addenda include supplementary material, such as annexes, appendices, tables, charts and additional communications, clauses and paragraphs. Re­ visions are texts revised through formal amendments or new edi­ tions of a document prepared by the submitting delegation or body or by the Secretariat. REPUBLICATION NOTES indicate the republication of whole documents in other documents or in the Official Records. In the case of resolutions, only their republication in collected sets is indicated. 4: TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL RESTRICTED AND LIMITED SERIES. Documents of "re­ stricted distribution" are indicated in this Check List by a black dot (e) before the symbol. Prior to the 15th of September 1949, this category included both documents of a confidential nature and documents the circulation of which was limited for other reasons. Since 15 September 1949* the term "restricted series" is to be used exclusively for confidential documents. The term "limited series" is to be used for documents the wide circulation of which is unnecessary for any other reason, such as their provisional or ephemeral character. The "limited series" is not withheld from the press. In this Check List documents of "limited" distribution are indicated by a plus sign (+) before the symbol. INTRODUCTORY NOTES give a short parliamentary history of the Council and describe briefly each Ad hoc Committee and Visiting Mission, session by session, including the date of its appointment, citing its terms of reference, naming its members and officers, listing its reports and document series symbol (if any), and tabulating its meeting records. The plenary meetings of the Council itself are shown in tables for each session. The tables indicate both published and unpublished meeting records and related press releases. Since drafts for the published meet­ ing records should be deposited as a matter of course in the Ar­ chives of the United Nations, the tables show under the heading " Archives" only the unpublished manuscript records deposited in the Archives ("TPV"; "TSR") and the sound recordings ("X"). *Administrative Instruction No. 72. UN Secretariat document AI/n, 26 September 1949. 4: TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL ABBRE VIATIONS Add Addendum art. article(s) C Chinese text chap chapter Check List Check List of United Nations Documents Corr Corrigendum E ..... English text E&F Bilingual text: English and French E.S.C.O.R. Economic and Social Council Official Records F French text G.A.O.R. General Assembly Official Records ILO International Labour Organisation IRO International Refugee Organisation no. number p page(s) par. paragraph(s) R Russian text Rev. Revision S Spanish text SC . Security Council sec. section(s) T.C.O.R. Trusteeship Council Official Records UN .... United Nations UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific
Recommended publications
  • WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION 13/122 26 May 1950 ORGANISATION MONDIALE DE LA SANTÉ LIST of RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED by .THE THIRD WORLD
    UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION MONDIALE ORGANIZATION DE LA SANTÉ 13/122 26 May 1950 LIST OF RESOLUTIONS ADOPTED BY .THE THIRD WORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLi Agenda Itera З. Establishment of Committee on Credentials A3/R/1 Verification of Credentials A3/R/50 Rev.l 4. Establishment of Committee on Nominations A3/R/2 5. Amendments to the Rules of Procedure of the Health Assembly A3/R/42 6. Election of officers A3/R/3 7- Adoption of the Provisional and Supplementary Agendas A3/R/6 8. Publication of an Assembly Journal. (See adopted amendments to the Rules of Procedure of Health Assembly, Document A3/30, Rule 75) 9 Establishment of Committee on Programme and & Committee on Administration, Finance and Legal 10 - Matters A3/R/5 Rev.l 11 Establishment of General Coinmittee A3/R/49 13. Admission of New Members A3/R/10 13.1' Admission of Associate Member A3/R/15 13.2* Requests of пеги Member States for permanent or A3/R/11 temporary inclusion in the South East Asia area A3/R/13 Procedure for consideration of programme and' budget for I95I A3/P/4 Form of presentation of Programme and Budget Estimates A3/R/91 -;h¡- Procedure for consideration of Programme and Budget at the Fourth World Health Assembly A3/R/90 * Supplementary Agenda Additional item The approval of the operating programmes for 1951 for individual sections is generally covered by overall resolutions for the divisions concerned. page 2 15'. Reports of the Director-General and &' of the Executive Board À3/R/99 16.
    [Show full text]
  • Download File
    •^tiSS^^i-S^ UNITED NATIONS Final Reprt of the' First Executive Beard of tiis MATiniMO ii \viftiiyi* •• L,^ & n 4 i' : y•-«•, pf-STPr^BSTSi^i Al ^P-^! f^-PSf^.?^ 1 \:A 11-111-1 ^ s ^ s I •" 1^ '-: ;-> i H; ?• "I I- ^•ii \ 1 * t; n a v) i 8 i ? i; •: '• •' *\ •* m I g.fiUiiig hJt^M- yssisu^slLia y kfe^tealSW E B C?«'iiai> 11 DECEMBER 1946—-31 DECEMBER 19SO ECONOMIC AND SOQAL COUNCIL OFFICIAL RECORDS TWELI^TH SESSION SUPPLEMENT No. 3 NEW YORK ) TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION ................................................ 1 I. SUMMARY .................................................... 1 II. ORIGIN OF THE FUND ........................................... 3 III. WHAT THE FUND DID AND WHY ................................. 3 The work in Europe ........................................... 3 The work in Asia ............................................. 8 The work in Latin America ..................................... 11 The work in the Middle East and North Africa ................... 13 IV. FINANCIAL HISTORY ........................................... 14 Government contributions ....................................... 14 UNRRA residual assets ......................................... 15 United Nations Appeal for Children .............................. 15 Allocations ................................................... 16 Expenditures ................................................. 17 Value of assistance remaining to be fulfilled ........................ 18 Annual and cumulative statistics ..............................r:. 18 Resources
    [Show full text]
  • CHAPTER IX HEALTH New York, 22 July 1946 .ENTRY INTO FORCE: 7 April 1948, in Accordance with Article 80. REGISTRATION
    CHAPTER IX HEALTH 1. CONSTITUTION OF THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION New York, 22 July 1946 ENTRY. INTO FORCE: 7 April 1948, in accordance with article 80. REGISTRATION: 7 April 1948, No. 221. STATUS: Signatories: 59. Parties: 193. TEXT: United Nations, Treaty Series , vol. 14, p. 185 (with regard to the text of subsequent amendments, see further under each series of amendments). Note: The Constitution was drawn up by the International Health Conference, which had been convened pursuant to resolution l (I)1 of the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, adopted on 15 February 1946. The Conference was held at New York from 19 June to 22 July 1946. In addition to the Constitution, the Conference drew up the Final Act, the Arrangements for the Establishment of an Interim Commission of the World Health Organization and the Protocol concerning the Office international d'hygiène publique , for the text of which, see United Nations, Treaty Series , vol. 9, p. 3. Definitive Definitive signature(s), signature(s), Participant2,3,4 Signature Acceptance(A) Participant2,3,4 Signature Acceptance(A) Afghanistan..................................................19 Apr 1948 A Botswana .....................................................26 Feb 1975 A Albania.........................................................22 Jul 1946 26 May 1947 A Brazil ...........................................................22 Jul 1946 2 Jun 1948 A Algeria ......................................................... 8 Nov 1962 A Brunei Darussalam ......................................25
    [Show full text]
  • Dollar Shortage and Oil Surplus in 1949-1950
    ESSAYS IN INTERNATIONAL FINANCE No. II, November 1950 DOLLAR SHORTAGE AND OIL SURPLUS IN 1949-1950 HORST MENDERSHAUSEN INTERNATIONAL FINANCE SECTION - DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Princeton, New Jersey The present essay is the eleventh in the series ESSAYS IN INTERNATIONAL FINANCE published by the International Finance Section of the Department of Economics and Social Institutions in Princeton Uni- versity. The author, Dr. Horst Mendershausen, has been associated with the National Bureau of Economic Research, Bennington College, and the United States Military Government for Germany. He is now an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Nothing in this study should be considered an expression of the views of that institution. While the Section sponsors the essays of this series, it takes no further responsibility for the opinions therein expressed. The writers are free to develop their topics as they will and their ideas may or may not be shared by the editorial committee of the Section or the members of the Department. • GARDNER PATTERSON, Director International Finance Section DOLLAR SHORTAGE AND OIL SURPLUS IN 1949-1950 BY HORST MENDERSHAUSEN* , I. SURVEY OF ISSUES ECOVERY from the effects of World War II led the Western European countries on to a broad issue: Should they seek eco- nomic viability in a progressive integration of the non-Soviet world or in narrower frameworks implying some discrimination against United States commerce? Since their dollar needs showed a persistent tendency to exceed dollar availabilities during the recovery period and their dollar reserves proved either too small or too volatile, many coun- tries, in particular Britain, found it necessary to make preparations for the latter alternative.
    [Show full text]
  • Two Visions of Spain in the 1950S: Eugene Smith and Brassaï
    Please, return this text to box no. 404 available at museoreinasofia.es Two Visions of Spain in the 1950s: Eugene Smith and Brassaï In the nineteen fifties Spain caught the interest of a number of international photographers. Two specific projects are recalled here: Eugene Smith’s Spanish Village, a controversial feature with overt political intentions made for Life magazine, and Brassaï’s series Séville en fête made for Harper’s Bazaar, that proposes instead a picture of Spain halfway between the dream-like images indebted to Surrealism and the clichés of a tourist guide. posing his pictures in the manner of a sta- ge director, and on the other it revealed the harshest aspects of Spanish reality, the subsistence economy, the Roman plough and the handcrafted distaff still in use, or the weight of authority symbolised by the two civil guards reproduced on a large sca- le by Life. In Spain, however, Spanish Village trigge- red great controversy. Mundo Hispánico review reminded its readers that it was a tendentious article, and that similar sce- nes could be found in the United States if one were to look for them. Arte Fotográfi- The country’s relative opening up after the ten years of autocracy that followed the co, the main photography magazine pu- Spanish Civil War prompted many of the top photojournalists of the time to travel to blished at the time in Spain, declared that the Iberian Peninsula in the early fifties. American photographer William Eugene Smith Spanish Village was an ‘outrageous and (1918-1978) visited Spain early in May 1950 to prepare a feature on ‘the hunger and deplorable’ feature, and that while it was fear provoked by Franco.’ Smith’s assignment was for Life, one of the most important true that it contained some ‘magnificent’ illustrated magazines of the day, each issue of which published a photographic essay, pictures (albeit ‘only from a photographic i.e., a picture sequence accompanied by text and devoted to a single theme of special point of view’) many of them seemed to interest.
    [Show full text]
  • The U.S. Army Between World War Ii and the Korean War
    .. .....;;:·.. -� AUSA BACKGROUND BRIEF No.40 March 1992 THE U.S. ARMY BETWEEN WORLD WAR II AND THE KOREAN WAR The material that follows was extracted from official history of the U.S. Army; see sources listed below. It is repeated here to remind the reader of the events following the allied victoryin World War IIwhich led to the rapid deterioration of the Army's capabilities to conduct immediate military operations. The reader should reflect on these historical events and lessons learned, and relate them to the course the Army may be forced to take in this period after the allied victory in the Cold War and Operation Desert Storm. Deja vu? Part One: Postwar Military Policy and the Army ( Demobilization The United States did not return to its prewar isolationism after World War II. The balance of power in Europe and Asia and the safety of ocean distances east and west that made isolation possible had vanished, the balance upset by the war, the protection of oceans eliminated by advances in air transportation and weaponry. A clear responsibility of U.S. membership in the United Nations was to maintain sufficient military power to permit an effective contribution to any U.N. force that might be necessary. The immediate task was to demobilize the great war machine assembled during the war and, at the same time, maintain occupation troops in conquered and liberated territories. The Army initially established as an over-all postwar goal a Regular and Reserve structure capable of mobilizing four million men within a year of any future outbreak of war; later it set the strength of the active ground and air forces at one and a half million.
    [Show full text]
  • Membership of the Bureau of the General Conference
    MEMBERSHIP OF THE BUREAU OF THE GENERAL CONFERENCE States Date of entry Number of times member of Bureau Afghanistan 4 May 1948 6 Albania 16 October 1958 3 Algeria 15 October 1962 9 Andorra 20 October 1993 – Angola 11 March 1977 4 Antigua and Barbuda 15 July 1982 – Argentina 15 September 1948 16 Armenia 9 June 1992 – Australia 4 November 1946 19 Austria 13 August 1948 9 Azerbaijan 3 June 1992 2 Bahamas 23 April 1981 1 Bahrain 18 January 1972 2 Bangladesh 27 October 1972 3 Barbados 24 October 1968 9 Belarus 12 May 1954 – Belgium 29 November 1946 11 Belize 10 May 1982 – Benin 18 October 1960 5 Bhutan 13 April 1982 – Bolivia, Plurinational State of 13 November 1946 – Bosnia and Herzegovina 2 June 1993 3 Botswana 16 January 1980 1 Brazil 4 November 1946 22 Brunei Darussalam 17 March 2005 – Bulgaria1 17 May 1956 7 Burkina Faso 14 November 1960 2 Burundi 16 November 1962 5 Cambodia2 3 July 1951 – Cameroon 11 November 1960 10 Canada 4 November 1946 20 Cabo Verde 15 February 1978 1 Central African Republic 11 November 1960 3 Chad 19 December 1960 2 Chile 7 July 1953 9 China 4 November 1946 20 Colombia 31 October 1947 6 Comoros 22 March 1977 2 Congo 24 October 1960 2 Cook Islands 25 October 1989 – Costa Rica 19 May 1950 7 Côte d’Ivoire 27 October 1960 6 Croatia 1 June 1992 5 Cuba 29 August 1947 13 Cyprus 6 February 1961 – 1 At the 35th session of the General Conference, Bulgaria was a member of the Bureau in two capacities (Vice- President of the General Conference and Chairperson of the SC Commission).
    [Show full text]
  • 1938 1939 1947 1948 1949 1950 January-May 1950 1872 1820 16
    UNITED HATIONS OFFICE AT GENEVA Press Release GATT/40 Information Contre 24 September 1951 GEMERAL AGREEMENT ON TARIFFS AND TRADE Sixth Session- of the Contracting Parties ITEM 30 - RESTRICTIONS ON IMPORTS OF DAIRY PRODUCTS INTO THE UNITED STATES . Menorandun submitted by the Danish Delegation 1, The Danish Delegation acting upon instructions frori its Government hereby informs the Contracting Parties that the quantitative restrictions on the importation of dairy products introduced by the United States Department of Agriculture on August 9, 1951, have caused a serious impair­ ment of the benefits accruing to Denmark under Article XI of the General Agreement. In addition the action by the United States involves a reduction of the benefits of the tariff concessions on cheese granted by the United States at Annecy» 2. The Danish export of cheese to the United States is an important feature in the Dollar Export Drive necessitated by Denmark's balance-of- paynents difficulties in the post-war period. Encouraged by the advisory work of the United States authorities Danish cheese producers as a result of large investments gradually succeeded in regaining the market which had been lost by tho outbreak of the war. When in 1950 the export passed the 1938 figure of 1872 metric tons it was partly due to the fact that the tariff concessions on blue cheese granted by the United States at Annecy diminished a serious obstacle to the competition of Danish cheese producers on the American market, and partly due to tho ability of the Danish cheese manufacturers to make their products in accordance with the taste of the American consumers» The volume and value of the Danish export of cheese to the United States appears fror.
    [Show full text]
  • An Alliance Shaken: Brazil and the United States, 1945-1950. Kenneth Callis Lanoue Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1978 An Alliance Shaken: Brazil and the United States, 1945-1950. Kenneth Callis Lanoue Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Lanoue, Kenneth Callis, "An Alliance Shaken: Brazil and the United States, 1945-1950." (1978). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 3247. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/3247 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This material was produced from a microfilm copy of the original document. While the most advanced technological means to photograph and reproduce this document have been used, the quality is heavily dependent upon the quality of the original submitted. The following explanation of techniques is provided to help you understand markings or patterns which may appear on this reproduction. 1.The sign or "target" for pages apparently lacking from the document photographed is "Missing Page(s)". If it was possible to obtain the missing page(s) or section, they are spliced into the film along with adjacent pages. This may have necessitated cutting thru an image and duplicating adjacent pages to insure you complete continuity. 2. When an image on the film is obliterated with a large round black mark, it is an indication that the photographer suspected that the copy may have moved during exposure and thus cause a blurred image.
    [Show full text]
  • Zhou Enlai and China's Response to the Korean
    NORTH KOREA INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTATION PROJECT E-DOSSIER #9 ZHOU ENLAI AND CHINA’S RESPONSE TO THE KOREAN WAR NKIDP E-DOSSIER Introduction Zhou Enlai and China’s Response to the Korean War 1 by Charles Kraus *** DOCUMENT NO. 1 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Bulganin, 13 April 1950 4 DOCUMENT NO. 2 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Wang Jiaxiang, 6 May 1950 5 DOCUMENT NO. 3 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Bulganin, 13 May 1950 6 DOCUMENT NO. 4 Telegram from the Party Central Committee to Gao Gang, 11 July 1950 6 DOCUMENT NO. 5 Telegram from the Party Central Committee to Gao Gang, 18 July 1950 7 DOCUMENT NO. 6 Report from Zhou Enlai and Nie Rongzhen to Mao Zedong, 22 July 1950 8 DOCUMENT NO. 7 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Ni Zhiliang, 23 August 1950 9 DOCUMENT NO. 8 Letter from Zhou Enlai to Gao Gang, 3 September 1950 9 DOCUMENT NO. 9 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Ni Zhiliang, 20 September 1950 10 DOCUMENT NO. 10 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Ni Zhiliang, 29 September 1950 11 DOCUMENT NO. 11 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Kim Il Sung, 1 October 1950 11 DOCUMENT NO. 12 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Ni Zhiliang, 2 October 1950 12 i www.wilsoncenter.org/nkidp NKIDP e-Dossier no. 9 DOCUMENT NO. 13 12 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Gao Gang, etc., 4 October 1950 DOCUMENT NO. 14 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Ni Zhiliang, 4 October 1950 13 DOCUMENT NO. 15 Telegram from Zhou Enlai to Ni Zhiliang, 5 October 1950 13 DOCUMENT NO.
    [Show full text]
  • Memorandum by Sir I. Kirkpatrick on the Political Implications of the Schuman Plan (11 May 1950)
    Memorandum by Sir I. Kirkpatrick on the political implications of the Schuman Plan (11 May 1950) Caption: On 11 May 1950, Sir Ivone Kirkpatrick, British High Commissioner in Germany, sends a memorandum to the British Foreign Office in which he outlines the political scope of the Schuman Plan. Source: BULLEN, R.; PELLY, M.E. (Ed.). Documents on British Policy Overseas, Series II. Volume I: The Schuman Plan, the Council of Europe and Western European Integration May 1950 - December 1952. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1986. 1023 p. Copyright: Crown copyright is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of Her Majesty's Stationery Office and the Queen's Printer for Scotland URL: http://www.cvce.eu/obj/memorandum_by_sir_i_kirkpatrick_on_the_political_implications_of_the_schuman_plan_11_m ay_1950-en-41496a26-f320-4f6a-8d5e-e46f89d7af14.html Publication date: 24/10/2012 1 / 3 24/10/2012 Memorandum by Sir I. Kirkpatrick Secret FOREIGN OFFICE 11 May 1950 The French Plan for the Political Point of View Some Long Term Political Considerations 1. The declared policy of the Western powers is to incorporate Germany into the Western comity of nations. This policy necessarily confronts us with a dilemma: how to reconcile the position of Germany as a prospective partner with a rigorous system of control and the maintenance of a number of onerous restrictions on German industry. So far as any eventual rearmament of Germany is concerned the Chiefs of Staff are inclined to think that the proper method of control is not the establishment of Military Control Commissions but the integration of any forces allowed to Germany in a Western military machine which will allot to Germany her task and supervise its execution.
    [Show full text]
  • September 1950
    SEPTEMBER 1950 U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE OFFICE OF BUSINESS ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT OF COM MERC FIELD SERVICE SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS Albuquerque, N. Mex. Memphis 3, Tenn. 203 W. Gold Arc. 229 Federal Bid Atlanta 3, Ga. Miami 32, Fla. 50 Whitehall St. SW. 36 NE. First S •A No. 9 Baltimore 2, Md. Milwaukee 1, Wis. 103 S. Gay St. 517 E. Wisconson Av SEPTEMBER 1950 Boston 9, Mass. Minneapolis 1, Minn. 2 India St. 2d Ave. S. at 4th S Buffalo 3, N. Y. Mobile, Ala. 117EllicottSt. 109-13 St. Joseph Si Butte, Mont. New Orleans 12, La. 14 W. Granite St. 333 St. Charles Av< L-ontents Charleston 3, S. C. New York 4, N. Y. PAGE 18 Broad St. 42 Broadwa THE BUSINESS SITUATION 1 Cheyenne, Wyo. Oklahoma City 2, Okla Manufacturers' Sales, Orders and Inventories .... 4 206 Federal Office BIdf. 102 NW. Third Si Increased Business Spending for Capital Goods ... 6 Chicago 4, 111. Omaha 2, Nebr. 332 S. Michigan Art. Construction Activity Continues To Expand 8 1319 Farnam St Cincinnati 2, Ohio Philadelphia 6, Pa. Supplies of Selected Basic Materials ........ 11 105 W. Fourth St. 437 Chestnut St Retail Buying High 14 Cleveland 14, Ohio Phoenix 8, Ariz. 925 Euclid Are. Changes in Social Security 16 234 N. Central Ave * * * Dallas 2, Tex. 1114 Commerce St. Pittsburgh 19, Pa. 700 Grant St SPECIAL ARTICLE Denver 2, Colo. 828 Seventeenth St. Portland 4, Oreg. Balance of International Payments, Second Quarter 520 SW. Morrison St, of 1950 18 Detroit 26, Mich.
    [Show full text]