Word: consulates
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...hating Arthur Krock, New York Times columnist, gave the President's decision to campaign backhanded praise (he likened him not to Cincinnatus but to Coriolanus, the patrician who despised the plebeian voters but went through the form of asking for their votes, because he wanted the office of Consul), even admitted that the decision was "of great value to democracy." Candidate Willkie seemed delighted and excited. The general feeling was: Here he comes! Now, at last, the campaign will really get down to cases...
...Hull brow took a deeper furrow last week. In big black type the New York Post said Dies Committee evidence showed that Friedhelm Drager, German Vice Consul in New York, is the head of a vast Nazi propaganda and espionage machine operating in the U. S. Deep and dark as an Oppenheim thriller was the story which the Post spread across its pages...
Quipped a parliamentary wag about Sir Thomas Inskip's appointment in 1936 as Defense Minister: "There has been no similar appointment since the Roman Emperor Caligula made his horse a Consul." Winston Churchill remarked that Sir Thomas was perfectly right in saying that the Army was being mechanized- "in the sense that its horses are being taken away from it." Said Sir Thomas: "Sometimes I do not feel very well equipped for my office." He held it three years. Just after the British troops sailed for Norway without proper weapons or supplies, Minister of Supply Leslie Burgin was photographed...
...country scuttled two official Nazis, bound for Japan: Dr. Friedrich Ried, assistant German consul in New York City, subject of State Department inquiry, and Dr. Gerhardt Alois Westrick, German trade counselor to the U. S., indignant over being made an object of suspicion...
...Grande do Sul went Richard Paulig, an assistant in the German Consulate in Manhattan, and Dr. Ried went north to fill Paulig's shoes. Day after he had settled himself at work, the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League rushed a note to the State Department reviewing the Ried record. Three days later a "thank you" letter came back explaining that no information had yet been received as to Ried's U. S. duties. There the matter lay until last week when the Ried cries grew louder as the New York Post's Daniel Lang tracked him down...