Germany:
Contents
- Political developments in Germany under the National Socialist
Regime;1 the
four-year economic plan (Documents 98-110)
- Relations of the Nazi Regime with the Evangelical and Roman Catholic
Churches38 (Documents 111-118)
- Government control and Nazification of institutions of education and
training in Germany59 (Documents 119-128)
- Persecution of Jews in Germany79 (Documents 129-138)
- American interest in the work of the High Commission for Refugees (Jewish
and other) coming from Germany99 (Documents 139-145)
- Unsatisfactory trade relations between the United States and Germany;7 German representations
against imposition of countervailing duties by the United States (Documents 146-181)
- Negotiations for a settlement of the Drier claim and the sabotage claims
of United States against Germany58 (Documents 182-207)
- Representations in behalf of an American citizen deprived of right to
continue business in Germany because of anti-Jewish regulations (Documents 208-213)
- Representations in behalf of an American citizen arrested for smuggling
communistic literature into Germany and held fourteen months in prison
before trial (Documents 214-236)
- Continued from
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 257– 294.↩ - Continued from
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 342– 376.↩ - For previous
correspondence on Nazification of educational institutions, see
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 376 ff.↩ - Continued
from
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 391– 412.↩ -
Continued from
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 412– 427. For further official data pertaining to the refugee subject see:- (1)
- Report by Committee on International Assistance to Refugees, submitted to the Council of the League of Nations, January 20, 1936, League of Nations, Official Journal February 1936, pp. 69, 142.
- (2)
- Provisional Arrangement Concerning the Status of Refugees From Germany, Geneva, July 4, 1936, League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. clxxi. p. 75.
- (3)
- Report on International Assistance to Refugees, submitted by the Sixth Committee to the Assembly, October 10, 1936, League of Nations, Official Journal, Special Supplement No. 161, p. 63.
- Continued from
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 438– 477.↩ - For previous
correspondence respecting settlement of sabotage claims, see
Foreign Relations, 1935, vol.ii, pp. 477 ff.↩