15 research outputs found
Personal Papers (MS 80-0002)
Telegram sent by Clarence Streit to Harris Leon and Ruth Alma Kempner requesting donations for Federal Union Inc. to double match Rockefeller
"Where iron is, there is the fatherland!" a note on the relation of privilege and monopoly to war,
Mode of access: Internet
Louisa K Fast LWV - Labor Extend Work 1929
A newspaper clipping from the New York Times, written by Clarence K. Streit, October 31, 1929, it a part of the Louisa K. Fast collection of letters and information related to the League of Women Voters.
Louisa K. Fast was a prominent member in the Women's Suffrage Association, which later became the League of Women Voters in 1920. She was employed by the LWV to speak throughout Ohio to encourage women to form local chapters of the group. Later, Miss Fast was employed in the New York office of the International Relations Branch of the LWV. In April 1935 Miss Fast was preparing for the International Conference in Istanbul that was sponsored by the International Alliance of Women For Suffrage and Equal Citizenship.
The collection of Louisa K. Fast correspondence is related to the League of Women Voters. This letter is from a private collection and was loaned to the library by Bonnie Boroff
Union now with Britain
CatalogingThomas S. Hansen2010111
Classical Liberalism, Non-interventionism and the Origins of European Integration: Luigi Einaudi, Friedrich A. von Hayek, Wilhelm Röpke
What did classical liberal thinkers contribute to the theoretical underpinnings of the European unification project? This paper examines works by Luigi Einaudi, Friedrich A. von Hayek and Wilhelm Röpke, attempting to understand to what extent the nineteenth-century pacifist tradition of classical liberalism came back to life in works of these authors. Their views on the international order show a certain degree of homogeneity—but up to a point. While Einaudi and Hayek were distinctively more favourable to the European project, Röpke had a less favourable view of European unificaton, fearing it may result in increasing centralisation. They, nonetheless, shared some common elements in understanding international order that we trace back to nineteenth-century liberalism.2reservedmixedMasala, Antonio; Mingardi, AlbertoMasala, Antonio; Mingardi, Albert