Some damn foolish Thing in the Balkans
In regards to the Hungarian Massacres on Romanians in Southeast Hungary, the League of Nations send in peace keeping troops to prevent further massacres from taking place. Most of these forces had come from the East over Romania, but the fear of Sanctions by many Hungarians meant that the Nationalist Hungarians were on the backtrack for now and the Hungarian leadership dialed it’s army and paramilitary back, while allowing neutral League of Nation Forces. Still the division and rivalry for Transylvania would not end any time soon. In the United State the first long-distance controlled-access highway, the Pennsylvanian Turnpike was opened up, while the Good Neighbors policy promoting movie Down Argentinian Way by the Portuguese-born performer Carmen Miranda debuts in the United States. In his movie The Great People’s Dictator, Charlie Chaplin portrays Stinklin Dictator of the Commune Republics Union (CRU), a parody of the Soviet Union dictator Joseph Stalin in the first sound film written, directed, produced and starring Charlie Chaplin, which would become a commercial and financial success. Isolationists in the United States oppose the New Deal and any attempts to establish a draft for the tensions in Europe and Asia that made many fear war. In Southern Albania, the Italians are deporting Greeks in fear of Greek irredentism ambitions and Greek Nationalism of retaking the whole region as the Epirus province, like Greek Propaganda claimed. In Washington D.C. the Selective Service System lottery is held for the first time.