Word: hitlerized
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Added Le Petit Journal: "It is evident that the Hitler mildness was a result of President Roosevelt's note, also the counsel of Premier Mussolini. Despite assertions that there is no connection between the Reichswehr and the Nazis, France has every reason to distrust...
Reactions. Like millions of other U. S. citizens, Franklin Roosevelt heard the last half of the Hitler speech and a summarized translation over his own radio set in the White House. He expressed himself as "very much pleased." The strongly anti-Nazi New York Times said: "His speech will come as a great relief to the world which feared that it might be so much worse than it is. ... So far as words go, Hitler has done much to reassure opinion in other nations. But they will not cease to ask whether the appropriate deeds are to follow...
Revival at Rome. Almost immediately the stalled engine of Disarmament began chugging again. The world learned more about Hitler's telegram from Mussolini. Whether or not it contained advice on the Hitler speech, it did contain a request for an important conference. Into an airplane climbed Prussian Premier Hermann Wilhelm Göring, a War ace grown beefy, to roar over the Alps to Italy for the second time. He was a far milder Göring than the one who flew to Rome and back last month. In Rome the official banner of the Fascist party flapped from...
Within the week, world attention switched from Franklin Roosevelt to Adolf Hitler to Edouard Daladier. As the world had hoped- and guessed-Chancellor Hitler backed down, the immediate German crisis passed (see p. 12). What was France with the largest army in Western Europe, the largest gold reserve and an international position the envy of every other European nation, now going...
...week's events brought Premier Daladier plenty besides Hitler to ponder. First there was the domestic situation. The existence of a French Premier, never too secure, becomes most critical at Budget time. France's budget, under consideration by the Senate for two weeks, comes up again for discussion by the Deputies this week. It cannot be balanced for 1953: as passed by the Senate last week it contained a deficit of $156,710,400. French Socialists under long-nosed Léon Blum served notice on the Radical-Socialist* Government of Premier Daladier that they would not support...