Word: europeanization
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...tell us that, Austria has no longer a name of its own, that on April tenth the "free" plebiscite will be an inevitable Nazi victory, that Italy is dubious about Germany's friendship. When these facts are scrambled together with others, the mixture, for one thing, shows that the European situation is little different from what it was before the First World War. England and France are still inseparable; England will not stand by and watch Germany make her a secondary power, and France, if Blum can keep her government upright, will fight to prevent Nazi enticement. Suspicious...
...There is no great chance of a European war developing directly from the Austrian crisis," William L. Langer '15, Coolidge Professor of History, predicted last night as he told an audience of 200 in Adams House that it is doubtful whether the Rome-Berlin axis can survive the strain Hitler's latest move has placed...
...European diplomacy since 1919 has brought collective security to ruin," Professor Langer concluded. "Right is still on the side of the strongest...
...last week rendered his 30th annual report as general manager of the Jewish Agricultural Society. Established in 1900, the Society is still backed by a fund set up by Baron Maurice de Hirsch (1831-96), the great German Jewish philanthropist who spent millions trying to improve the lot of European Jews, to get them to emigrate from their ghettos. In 1900 there were 200 Jewish farmers in the U. S. Today, although many Americans have never seen any Jewish farmers, there are nearly 100,000, many of whom have benefited by the $7,500,000 in loans the Society...
William L. Langer, Coolidge Professor of History, will speak tonight on the present general European situation. The talk will be held at 7:30 o'clock in the Upper Common Room of Adams House and will follow the weekly House dinner...