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...Poland is wavering, Czechoslovakia stands firmer than ever in alliance with France. This year "Europe's Smartest Little Statesman." Foreign Minister Eduard Benes of Czechoslovakia, is taking his turn as President of the League Council. To oblige M. Barthou last week M. Benes paid Russia the unprecedented compliment of popping into his limousine and riding as Council President 20 miles out to Comrade Litvinoff's village. He brought an invitation for Russia to join the League signed by 30 countries whose signatures M. Barthou had obtained. Comrade Litvinoff "telegraphed" Russia's acceptance on a blank which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE LEAGUE: Old Diplomacy | 9/24/1934 | See Source »

...Assembly which acts by two-thirds vote convened, Czechoslovak Foreign Minister Dr. Eduard Benes, "Europe's Smartest Little Statesman.''strongly urged Russia's candidacy. In a pungent speech he hinted that to escape Depression large areas of the world may have to modify their Capitalist systems. Even so, Dr. Benes pessimistically declared, "Perhaps an entire generation is condemned to weakness and a long, painful struggle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE LEAGUE: Overture | 9/17/1934 | See Source »

...allies of the Little Entente (Czechoslovakia, Rumania and Jugoslavia) have held out valiantly against a Habsburg restoration. Last week France was believed to favor Otto as an Austrian bulwark against Hitlerism, but the Little Entente was fearful, furious and suspicious. Man of peace though he has always been, Dr. Eduard Benes, Foreign Minister of Czechoslovakia, has hinted that his country would "mobilize" should Otto be restored. No less restive are Kings Carol of Rumania and Alexander of Jugoslavia. The reason is simple: all three Little Entente countries contain huge slices of the old-time Habsburg realm of Austria-Hungary, slices...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY-AUSTRIA: Match Making | 9/17/1934 | See Source »

Assiduous U. S. gallery snoopers and the Paris Salon d'Autonne have known about Nura since 1925. She studied in Kansas City's Art Institute, at the Art Students League in New York and in Chicago where she met her Painter-Husband Eduard Buk Ulreich. Buk Ulreich nicknamed her Nura because he "never calls people by their right names." Her right name is Norah Woodson Ulreich. When she and her husband do murals together they sign them Bukannura. Living in a Manhattan studio, they have no children because Nura feels a real one might engross...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Buttermilk Tree | 9/10/1934 | See Source »

When Prince Otto Eduard Leopold von Bismarck was rattling his sabre under the tremulous nose of France, a German professor stuck his finger into the dead corpus of the Sanskrit language and pulled out a word that was to kindle the fires of scientific controversy for many a long year to come. The word that Friedrich Maximilian Muller introduced to the Western world was Aryan, which in Sanskrit means nothing more than "noble...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Anthropologists on Aryanism | 8/13/1934 | See Source »

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