Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Other points noted: Tourists receive preferential treatment; migration of Mexican workers to the U. S. is not grave, most of them returning to Mexico at the termination of their labors; the electoral campaign had so far been conducted in an orderly manner, the Government observing a strictly neutral attitude. Then he came to international relations...
...held down, in all places he is exploited, in all places his blood is made a lubricant for the chariot wheels of other races. . . ." Resolutions. Negroes need: a voice in their own government; modern education for all children; the development of Africa for Africans, not European profit; the treatment of civilized men as civilized, despite difference of race or color; the removal from Haiti of U. S. military or naval forces; the improvement of racial conditions in Africa and the West Indies...
...have never read nor subscribed for any periodical that became so much a part of my life as TIME has become. When TIME comes into my home it demands reading throughout. This is due, I think, to the complete and concise treatment of world-wide news and to the distinguished style and diction. I have much to praise, little to criticize in TIME...
Stipulations. Although the terms of the treaty were not published, it became known that the principle of most-favored-nation treatment* had been conceded by both nations for a large number of imports. Germany granted a minimum tariff on French wines, perfumes, soaps, woolens, porcelains and several manufactured articles, while France agreed to admit at minimum rates German electrical, chemical, mechanical and other manufactured products. Furthermore, in December, 1928, discrimination against certain classes of German goods by France will cease and the lowest French tariff rate will be applied uniformly to all classes of German imports...
...superabundance and at the same time facilitating the entry of products that are badly needed, a fact that goes far to favor the Franco-German industrial cartel. Germany wins several points: 1) She secured a much needed outlet for her industrial products. 2) She obtained equal trade treatment, which she did not expect. 3) She forced the French to reaffirm their renunciation, made at the time of the London Conference (TIME, Sept. 1, 8, 1924), of their right (Versailles Treaty, Article XVIII) to seize German private property in the event of the Reich defaulting on reparation payments...