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...difficulties of an African campaign, France was frightened last week that if Italy were once embarked on an Abyssinian campaign she would be forced to send so many troops to Africa that Adolf Hitler would have the chance of a lifetime to stage a coup d'état in Austria...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY-ABYSSINIA: Intolerable Presumption! | 5/27/1935 | See Source »

...more than a month, churchmen and pacifist organizations have been rat-tat-tatting the White House with protests against the forthcoming naval maneuvers in the Pacific (TIME, April 8). Out of this fleet operation involving 177 ships, 447 planes and covering 5,000,000 sq. mi. of seaways, pious people feared, might come the incident which would plunge the U. S. into war with Japan. By last week pacifist pressure had grown so great that the Navy Department for the first time in many a year was obliged to say something, do something...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMY & NAVY: Pacifist Pressure | 4/15/1935 | See Source »

...Venizelos had planned merely a show of force and a quick coup d'état. Instinctively he seized first the key war boats in Greece's Navy. But the thing turned into a civil war on land (TIME, March 18). Seventy thousand loyalists and some airplanes crumpled the rebel army of 30,000 planeless Greeks from the islands, from Macedonia and Thrace. Venizelos had no stomach for civil war. For all the shooting, the revolt ended with only 100 dead on both sides. The Government, however, promised to execute three times as many. Last week Venizelos, his second...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREECE: Farewell to Venizelos | 3/25/1935 | See Source »

...still "the poorest nation in Europe.'' Partial cause of this was the unprecedented importation of 1,400,000 indigent Greeks from Turkey and Bulgaria in exchange for deported Turks and Bulgars. Without Venizelos, Greece entered a typical Balkan shambles of dictatorships and coups d'état, with the royalists always gaining. The old split between the Balkan interests of the repopulated peninsula and the world-trading Mediterranean interests of the islands began to widen, complicated by the unreconciled Macedonians of the north. Finally, in 1928, Venizelos cashed in his popularity for one more Premiership, made alliances with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREECE: Farewell to Venizelos | 3/25/1935 | See Source »

...Blache admitted that the French feared the potential war strength of their eastern neighbors, since the Germans had greater manpower. He stated tat his countrymen were going to increase their fortifications gradually, although little work was being done at present due to the lack of money and because the present forts were not yet outmoded...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Germany Will Build Up Her Armaments as Much And as Quickly as She Can, Says Professor Blache | 2/1/1935 | See Source »

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