Word: denmark
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...sometimes not enough. Having made Georgia Neese Clark Treasurer of the U.S. and having sent diamond-studded Mrs. Perle Mesta off as minister to Luxembourg, the Democrats last week offered U.S. females further evidence of trust and affection. Mrs. Eugenie Anderson of Red Wing, Minn, was named Ambassador to Denmark...
Professor John Finch of Dartmouth College, the Executive Director of the Seminar, will lead the money raising campaign. He will be assisted in the United States by past and present members of the Seminar faculty and staff. Former students will seek financial support for the Seminar in England, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Holland, and Belgium...
...aircraft. But the major share of planes would go to Britain, including every type from trainers to 6-173 and 6-298. Benelux countries would get the same sort of equipment as France, but less of it. Norway, closest to Russia, would get radar equipment and some army supplies. Denmark would be given antiaircraft guns and radar for the defense of her air bases. Italy, her armament limited by treaty, would get little more than rifles. Most MAP countries needed (and would get) minelayers, minesweepers and harbor-defense equipment...
Talks by Professor Hansen are scheduled for the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, the University of Stockholm in Sweden, and the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England. The lectures in each case will be open to all members of the university...
...Idpmann, who was born in Germany in 1899, received the M.D. (1922) and Ph.D. (1927) from the University of Berlin. After several years of research work with the Carlsberg Foundation in Denmark, and a year as a Rockefeller Fellow (1931-32), he continued his research at Cornell and the Massachusetts General Hospital. He became an associate at the Harvard Medical School...