Hearings, Reports and Prints of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Part 1U.S. Government Printing Office, 1978 - Administrative procedure |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 2
... ships . " Our job is primarily maintaining the locks and seeing that ships move efficiently through the canal , " Chapman said . Basic design and operation haven't changed since the canal opened , Chapman said , although some sections ...
... ships . " Our job is primarily maintaining the locks and seeing that ships move efficiently through the canal , " Chapman said . Basic design and operation haven't changed since the canal opened , Chapman said , although some sections ...
Page 25
... ships went through the Canal carrying 13,800,000 long tons of cargo compared to 1,322 American ships carrying 10,500,000 long tons . The biggest users were Liberia , with 1,798 transits , and Japan with 1,348 . Russian use amounted to ...
... ships went through the Canal carrying 13,800,000 long tons of cargo compared to 1,322 American ships carrying 10,500,000 long tons . The biggest users were Liberia , with 1,798 transits , and Japan with 1,348 . Russian use amounted to ...
Page 39
... ships . The introduction of large Panamax class ships ( so classified because their dimen- sions are the maximum the Panama Canal's locks can accept on routine transits : 950 feet by 106 feet by 40 feet ) has accentuated a ...
... ships . The introduction of large Panamax class ships ( so classified because their dimen- sions are the maximum the Panama Canal's locks can accept on routine transits : 950 feet by 106 feet by 40 feet ) has accentuated a ...
Page 55
... ships Toyotas to New Orleans , the ship carrying them may pay very high , was the example . Russia and Cuba might get much better rates . Such concerns are hardly ever broached in the U.S. national press , though Wash- ington Post ...
... ships Toyotas to New Orleans , the ship carrying them may pay very high , was the example . Russia and Cuba might get much better rates . Such concerns are hardly ever broached in the U.S. national press , though Wash- ington Post ...
Page 71
... ships as they entered the canal and accompany them through the various locks and no guarantee could be made that a ... ships but 13 could go through the canal ; that war material of all kinds could transit it , including men and ...
... ships as they entered the canal and accompany them through the various locks and no guarantee could be made that a ... ships but 13 could go through the canal ; that war material of all kinds could transit it , including men and ...
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Common terms and phrases
administration agree agreement Ambassador amendment American Article ask unanimous consent authority believe Bethancourt Brig Canal operating Canal Zone Chairman Chiefs Colombia Committee Communist concerned Congress Congressional Constitution construction cost Cuba defend the canal defense Department dictatorship economic Ellsworth Bunker employees Escobar executive forces Government of Panama guarantee Hemisphere human rights important interests issue Isthmus Isthmus of Panama jurisdiction land Latin America Linowitz major matter ment military million neutrality treaty nian officials Omar Torrijos Panama Canal Commission Panama Canal Company Panama Canal Treaty Panama Canal Zone Panama City Panamanian government percent political present President Carter problem proposed treaty protect question ratification regime Republic of Panama sea-level canal Secretary ships signed Sol Linowitz sovereign sovereignty Soviet statement territory threat tion transfer transit the Canal U.S. citizens U.S. Congress U.S. Government U.S. Senate United vessels Zonians