Word: socialistes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...fresh vote of confidence in the Chamber, 457 to 120, defeating a Socialist motion to take away from Foreign Minister Pierre Laval the treasured "secret funds" of the Quai d'Orsay, traditionally used to sweeten the French Press. In effect the Chamber thus endorsed a double-barreled speech by M. Laval last week in which he fired blandishments and menaces at Adolf Hitler: "We shall ask of other countries that they assure conjointly with us a police mission for the eventual re-establishment of order. . . . Chancellor Hitler affirms his wish for peace. We ask him by associating in the policy...
...Harry Bexler. Her real adventures began when a German agent broke into their bedroom, shot Harry because he knew too much about his boss's secret business. Suzy left England in a hurry, took refuge in Paris. There she sang in a cabaret, shared a room with a fanatic Socialist, picked up geography, table manners and general intelligence from the quickening Parisian atmosphere. Her affair with a handsome French nobleman was purely platonic until he went to the front; then she discovered she was no platonist. She flew to his side as he lay wounded in a hospital, but Mata...
Norman M. Thomas, former Socialist candidate for President, will speak next Monday at 4 o'clock in the New Lecture Hall about the developments in the Roosevelt program for the past year and the lessons they hold for democratic government. The meeting, which is open to all, will be held under the auspices of the Liberal Club...
...Thomas, prominent Socialist, was born in Ohio and attended Marion high school. He graduated from Princeton in 1905 and received his B.D. from Union Theological Seminary in 1911 and his Litt.D. from Princeton in 1932. He founded the "World Tomorrow," and was editor of "Nation" in 1921 and 1922. In the same year he became director of the League for Industrial Democracy. During his political career he ran for governor of New York on the Socialist ticket and twice for mayor of New York City. His most famous political campaigns were in 1928 and 1932, at which times...
...York yesterday, having been refused permission to land on English soil. This fact is comparatively unimportant in itself. It does illustrate, however, the paradoxical position in which the British government finds itself. Ramsay MacDonald, the prime minister, was the leader of the labor party and a convinced socialist five years ago; five years before that he was known as a dangerous radical. During the War he was cursed by all patriots for his pacifism. Yet today he is the leader of a government that considers such men as Mr. Adler to be undesirable. Some explanation is obviously necessary...