Word: europeanizing
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...world is realizing more clearly every day that Germany is the foundation for Europe's economic structure, and that without a busy, peaceful Germany the effectiveness of the efforts toward industrial reconstruction in the other central European nations will be greatly hampered. None of the Allies has the slightest sympathy with the idea of getting Germany back on her feet for her own sake; their feeling in the matter is naturally quite the reverse. But what thinking men everywhere are appreciating more and more forcibly as the weeks go by is that, if it can be done with safety...
...last four or five months practically all of the writers on European reconstruction, from J. M. Keynes down to the newspaper correspondents, have emphasized two things: first, that German business rehabilitation is indispensable to the prosperity of the bordering nations, and, second, that strong support for a democratic German government by America and the Allied Powers is greatly to be desired...
...continued. "But there is this to be said: It has developed that we cannot secure a League without what are called the Lodge reservations. College men should, therefore, be for the adoption of the League with these reservations, which Lord Grey's letter shows will be accepted by the European and other powers already united in the League. The President's supporters should have ratified the Treaty with the reservations as early as November last when they had the full opportunity to do so, and the President should have accepted this and submitted it to the conference. Had this been...
...very great material factors which this country lent toward defeating the common enemy. Furthermore, let us never forget the extraordinary assistance afforded Europe in the first half of 1919 through the agency of Mr. Hoover and the American Commission of Relief. It was this commission alone that saw the European position during these months in its true perspective and dealt with it in that light. It was their efforts, their foresight and their perseverance, combined with the American resources placed at their disposal, which in spite of European opposition, not only averted an immense amount of suffering, but even preserved...
...producing this Spanish play the Dramatic Club is following its newly established policy of staging in translation notable European plays which have never been produced in America. "The Passi Flower" and "The Bonds of Interest," the only two plays by the same author thus far seen on the American stage, have been enthusiastically received, and "The Governor's Wife" promises to merit equal attention. It is a three-act comedy, first produced in Spain in 1901, but translated into English by John Garrett Underhill only a few months ago. Although of decided Spanish atmosphere, the play has universal appeal...