Word: europeans
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Speaking practically, there is not much chance of any of the modern European despotisms releasing their political prisoners or punching bags. If there were any chance, the maximum number of refugees entitled to enter the U. S. under present quotas would be 26,000 each year from Germany, 1,400 from Austria, 2,700 from Russia, 5,800 from Italy...
...first look, he headed for Paris, had his car sideswiped on the way in the reconstructed town of Arras, called in the top-flight Paris correspondents, questioned them closely on the European political situation. Next day Looker & Listener Hoover conferred with President Albert Lebrun in his Elysée Palace. During a brief stay in Geneva he piqued League officials by ignoring their new $10,000,000 palace, instead motored to nearby Morges and chatted "about old times" with his friend of 40 years, 77-year-old Pianist-Politician Ignacy Jan Paderewski, former Premier of Poland, now in Switzerland...
High point of Mr. Hoover's European conferences was his rather straight-backed, formal, 40-minute talk with Adolf Hitler. U. S. correspondents pumped their Berlin pipe lines dry in an effort to learn what Herr Hitler said to Mr. Hoover but their best unconfirmed information was that the Chancellor had given Listener Hoover a roseate picture of the Nazi regime and Listener Hoover had finally broken in to say testily that, in effect, "Naziism is built on principles of government that it would be wholly impossible for the people of the United States to tolerate in their...
Stepping nimbly just ahead of trouble for the second time on his European trip, Mr. Hoover three weeks ago chatted amiably with Poland's white-haired President Ignacy Moscicki, Army Dictator Smigly-Rydz and Premier Felician Slawoj Skladkowski. A week after his visit. Hosts Moscicki, Smigly-Rydz and Skladkowski made their little neighbor, Lithuania, knuckle under to their will with an ultimatum (TIME, March 28). By this time Mr. Hoover had journeyed through Finland, Estonia, had missed a luncheon date with Sweden's Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf because fog delayed his Baltic steamer, and popped in on Copenhagen...
...unless France stop such shipments of munitions, Italy will take measures of intervention far beyond any she has yet taken. Declared Informazione Diplomatica, the most highly authoritative newsorgan controlled by the Italian Government: "Such intervention would have unpredictable and certainly very grave repercussions and might compromise peace on the European Continent...