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DESCRIPTION;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div>The Department of History hosts Bruce Zellers in the History Comes Ali
 ve lecture series on&nbsp;The Consequences of Disillusionment: World War I, 
 Isolationism, and the Shaping of American Strategy in World War II.</div>\n<
 div><br />\n</div>\n<div>Americans came away from World War I feeling used —
  by their allies, by their own leaders and by their own idealism. As a conse
 quence, during the 1920s and 1930s, the United States followed a pattern of 
 disarmament and disengagement from the world’s crises. This pattern continue
 d after the outbreak of World War II. Thus, when the Americans again found t
 hemselves at war, they confronted grave strategic perils with very limited m
 ilitary means. The consequences helped shape the Cold War for the next gener
 ation.&nbsp;</div>\n<div><br />\n</div>\n<div>Please RSVP to the contact ema
 il or phone below.&nbsp;</div>\n<div><br />\n</div>\n<div>More info about th
 e series is available on this <a href="/upload/docs/Department-of-History/HC
 A.2012-13.pdf" target="_blank">flier</a>.&nbsp;</div><br /><a href='http://m
 aps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&geocode=&q=2200 N. Squirrel Road, Rochester, M
 I 48309-4401' target='_blank'>Map & Directions</a><br /><br />Contact Phone:
  (248) 370-3511<br />Contact Email: jkessler@oakland.edu<br /><br /><a href=
 'http://www4.oakland.edu/Events/EventDetails.aspx?EventID=7479'>Get Latest E
 vent Information</a>
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div>The Department of History hosts Bruce Zellers in the History Comes Ali
 ve lecture series on&nbsp;The Consequences of Disillusionment: World War I, 
 Isolationism, and the Shaping of American Strategy in World War II.</div>\n<
 div><br />\n</div>\n<div>Americans came away from World War I feeling used —
  by their allies, by their own leaders and by their own idealism. As a conse
 quence, during the 1920s and 1930s, the United States followed a pattern of 
 disarmament and disengagement from the world’s crises. This pattern continue
 d after the outbreak of World War II. Thus, when the Americans again found t
 hemselves at war, they confronted grave strategic perils with 