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Eugene Bagger was born in
Budapest of a free-thinking Jewish father in the year 1892. From an early age, he developed an interest in Catholicism, and was received into the Catholic Church in his late teenage years. When World War I broke out, he travelled to England, hoping to serve in the British
87:, escaping across the Spanish border, through Portugal, he eventually got back to the United States. Later in his life he returned to Portugal and lived there between 1948 and 1949, having published several works defending the
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forces. That, however, did not prove possible. He then travelled to the United States, where he later acquired citizenship. He followed for a time a journalist's career in
America writing for
83:. He lived in various countries of Europe, but mainly in Provence, France. With the coming of World War II, he moved first with his family to the west of France, and then with
38:, which declared itself "uncompromisingly opposed to any idea of americanization involving kneading the immigrant into static moulds." Author of multiple biographies, his
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19:(born 1892) was a Hungarian-born, American critic and writer. He wrote articles on international politics and current affairs for publications such as the
254:"Garden by the Sea" in Commonweal - A Review of Public Affairs, Literature, and the Arts, December 13, 1946, pp. 223–225
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In 1921, the New
Republic announced that Bagger was editing a Hungarian-language magazine,
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was widely reviewed when it was released in 1922. In 1941 he published the autobiography
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also
Published in "The Catholic World", Volumen 164, Paulist Press, 1947
287:"Books of the week, Europe and the fait, The Heathen are Wrong"
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For the
Heathen are Wrong: An impersonal autobiography
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For the
Heathen are Wrong: An Impersonal Autobiography
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Francis Joseph: Emperor of
Austria--king of Hungary
133:. Boston: Little, Brown and Co; 1st edition. 1941.
106:Eminent Europeans: Studies in continental reality
40:Eminent Europeans: Studies in Continental Reality
115:Psycho-Graphology: A Study Of Rafael Schermann
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325:Hungarian emigrants to the United States
285:Hollis, Christhofer (October 4, 1941).
178:"The Playboy of the Southern World".
173:. January 25, 1919. pp. 135–136.
125:. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1927.
109:. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1922.
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139:Portugal: Anti-Totalitarian Outpost
162:. November 2, 1918. pp. 9–10.
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167:"Poland and the Jewish Problem".
234:"Flight from France, June 17–25"
141:. Lisbon: Edicoes S.N. I. 1947.
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117:. G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1924.
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259:"Impressions of Portugal"
156:"The Hungarian "Chaos"".
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212:"Expatriates in time"
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190:"Uprooted Americans"
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