Word: chamberlaine
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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While at Geneva for the 34th meeting of the Council of the League of Nations (see Page 8)., it was but natural that Foreign Ministers Austen Chamberlain of Britain and Aristide Briand of France should discuss the all-important question of European security, which means a stable peace in Western Europe. Background to the statesmen's discussions...
...swung on wires. At tables sat a company of 850. Most of them were delegates to the Interstate Post-Graduate Medical Assembly, which opened in Wigmore Hall, London, last week, when the Duke of York gripped the hand of Dr. Charles H. Mayo, President. Addresses were delivered by Neville Chamberlain, Ambassador Houghton, the Duke of Connaught. Lord Dawson, physician to King George, defined life as "one long innoculation." Others discussed this, that. This party was preceded by one in the garden of the London Hospital, where they danced, ate, drank, talked, smoked. This week they will continue their deliberations...
...Austen Chamberlain, Foreign Secretary, replied to critics that he had no intention of resuming negotiations with Bolshevik Russia. "I shall," he said, "consider any proposals made to me, but I have no intention of initiating them...
Security. In announcing his for eign policy, M. Briand professed himself faithful to the League Protocol, mortally wounded by the silver rapier of British Foreign Secretary Chamberlain's oratory (TIME, Mar. 23, INTERNATIONAL), as embodying France's cherished objectives?Security, Arbitration, Disarmament...
Beyond a declaration that France desired the peace and stability of the world, M. Briand said nothing and his policy was identical to that followed by the Herriot Cabinet. It was understood that, inasmuch as M. Briand is shortly to go to London to meet Mr. Chamberlain, he was not opposed in principle to the pact offered by Germany and sponsored by Britain (TiME, Mar. 16, INTERNATIONAL...