The Annual Register, Volum 195Edmund Burke Rivingtons, 1954 Continuation of the reference work that originated with Robert Dodsley, written and published each year, which records and analyzes the year’s major events, developments and trends in Great Britain and throughout the world. From the 1920s volumes of The Annual Register took the essential shape in which they have continued ever since, opening with the history of Britain, then a section on foreign history covering each country or region in turn. Following these are the chronicle of events, brief retrospectives on the year’s cultural and economic developments, a short selection of documents, and obituaries of eminent persons who died in the year. |
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Side 56
... agreed on all hands that sponsored television ' of what was called the American type was undesirable . The question now was , did the proposals of the White Paper contain adequate safe- guards against that sort of thing or would their ...
... agreed on all hands that sponsored television ' of what was called the American type was undesirable . The question now was , did the proposals of the White Paper contain adequate safe- guards against that sort of thing or would their ...
Side 130
... agreed to this proposal and suggested that armistice negotiations should be resumed . The exchange of 500 U.N. and nearly 6,000 Communist prisoners began on 20 April and lasted for 11 days . Full - scale negotiations were started again ...
... agreed to this proposal and suggested that armistice negotiations should be resumed . The exchange of 500 U.N. and nearly 6,000 Communist prisoners began on 20 April and lasted for 11 days . Full - scale negotiations were started again ...
Side 147
... agreed on a declaration which would bind countries signing it to trade with Japan on the G.A.T.T. principles of no discrimination . They also agreed to grant the U.K. a waiver in respect of its obligations under the no new preference ...
... agreed on a declaration which would bind countries signing it to trade with Japan on the G.A.T.T. principles of no discrimination . They also agreed to grant the U.K. a waiver in respect of its obligations under the no new preference ...
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PART I | 1 |
EASTER TO MIDSUMMERTHE CORONATION | 18 |
MIDSUMMER TO MICHAELMAS THE KOREAN TRUCE | 31 |
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administration affairs African agreed agreement agricultural American announced appointed April armistice Assembly August Bill Britain British Budget Buganda cent coal Colonial Commission Committee Commonwealth Communist conference Constitution continued Coronation Council Council of Europe countries Court debate December declared defence East economic elections European European Defence Community export favour February Federal Finance forces Foreign Minister Germany Government Government's held House of Commons important increase India industry International issued January July June Korean Labour leaders London Lord M.P. The Rt majority March Mau Mau ment military million months negotiations November October Opposition Pakistan Parliament Parliamentary Party political President Prime Minister prisoners production programme proposals Queen result Rhodesia Russian scheme Secretary Security September session South Southern Rhodesia Soviet speech Sudan territories tion trade treaty Trieste U.K. Government Union United Kingdom United Nations votes Western Yugoslavia