Word: nazi
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...slave trade were aware that thousands on each slave ship would die like dogs of diseases before reaching their destination in Brazil, Guiana, West Indies, or the American South. This, I'm sad to say, is little different in my reckoning from the Germans' participation in the Nazi regime, knowing that such participation meant death for millions of Jews and other people...
...adopted in 1934 to thwart Nazi spies hunting German assets that had fled and were hidden abroad. Later Geneva was regarded as the financing center for both extremes in the Algerian war-the French O.A.S. and the Algerian F.L.N. Today some U.S. officials believe that the banks shield dol lars that have evaded U.S. taxes and foreign aid funds diverted by grafters in underdeveloped nations...
...lose the national elections in September over the Middle East fiasco, as CDU strategists privately admitted. But the issue went deeper than German politics. Protesting against the "new wave of distrust," Die Zeit in a front-page editorial noted that there is a "new generation" of Germans which knows Nazi crimes "only from history books and which therefore finds it hard to comprehend that being a German is a flaw of birth. For the sake of this generation, we may be forgiven for saying: One cannot treat a nation like a juvenile delinquent-always under the moral sword, a potential...
...Expiration. A second major cause for the new criticism of Germany had more justification than the arms cutoff. Last November, Erhard's Cabinet voted not to extend West Germany's 20-year statute of limitations on war crimes. Though some 70,000 Nazi criminals have been sentenced, prosecutions pending against 13,000 others would be dropped if the statute is applied. Nearly 75% of the German mail to the Bundestag on the statute of limitations was in favor of letting the law lapse. But in the face of mounting foreign criticism, the Cabinet last week reversed itself, agreed...
...course in "Nazi totalitarianism," taught by Richard Hunt, assistant professor of Social Studies, and a new course on Africa offered by Robert I. Rotberg, assistant professor of History, will also be offered as upper-level Soc Scis...