64 results

  • Mentions: Government of Germany
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Feld discusses the formation of the University for Political Science in Germany.
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Addams gives the example of a Belgian woman who aided Germans after the war as a model for new beginnings.
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Addams spoke about the roles women are playing in the peace movement to a breakfast meeting in Topeka. The article also details other activities during her trip.
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Addams argues that women can organize to prevent wars.
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Dulles explores the implications of the World War I reparations on the world's economy. The speech was initially delivered at the League of Free Nations Association on March 12, 1931 in New York and then published in the New Republic.
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Heymann updates Addams on the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Executive Committee meeting, office, and issues in Vienna.
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Muprhy details the American peace tour of Annot Robinson, Gertrud Baer, and Thérèse Pottecher-Arnould.
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The Association's news bulletin discusses revolution in Mexico, war debts in Germany, the organization of a national student forum, and a treaty between Germany and Poland, resolutions for international peace from the convention of the National League of Women Voters, and limiting the manufacturing of opium.
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Balch drafts a Women's International League for Peace and Freedom message about war debts and reparations for the Genoa Conference.
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Brown testifies on behalf of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's United States Section for a dramatic reduction in American military spending and and for universal disarmament.
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Ernst tells Addams that she thinks the French occupation of the Rhine should not be stopped and that American women should resist the urge to object.
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Ebert welcomes Addams to Europe and thanks her for her efforts to relieve suffering after World War I.
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Lindemann tells Addams about the plight of Germany and asks help employing German women.
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Bryan lays out six alternatives to war and urges readers to alert them to the President and their Congressmen.
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Ernst asks Addams for a meeting, telling her that she has felt alienated from American peace activists and advising on the problems in Germany.
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The author asks Addams for help getting American women to protest atrocities in Wiesbaden, Germany.
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Hamburg reports on its inadequate food supplies and failing crops.
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Dreier offers Addams her views on several German women leaders.
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Hobhouse writes Addams about relief for children in Leipzig, Germany, children.
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Hobhouse describes hunger as a result of the war in Leipzig, Germany, and asks Addams for relief funds for children there.
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Kellogg thanks Addams for the article on her visit to Germany and asks her to leave in some passages that she had deleted.
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De Jong Van Beek en Donk tells Addams that the International Conference for the Study of a League of Nations has been postponed and invites her to participate.
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The author asks Addams to stand against polygamy, which she fears will infect the United States due to war casualties. .