Word: dieckhoff
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Washington Secretary Ickes said: "I haven't changed my mind on the subject. I haven't made it up yet." To a Washington dinner in honor of Dr. Eckener, German Ambassador Hans Dieckhoff this week invited State Department officials, Munitions Board members, Senators, but not Harold L. Ickes...
...Facto. News that Austria had ceased to exist as such was first officially presented to the State Department by Germany's Ambassador Hans Dieckhoff day after the Hitler coup. Three days later, Austria's popular Minister Edgar Prochnik called to announce that the functions of his legation-long the scene of some of Washington's nicest parties-had indeed been taken over lock, stock & barrel by the German Embassy...
...establishment of a Bund camp on village property. Then a midwestern Bund convention was postponed twice because of difficulty in finding a St. Louis hall in which to hold it. Last week the Bund encountered trouble again, this time from another source. In Washington German Ambassador Dr. Hans Heinrich Dieckhoff called on Secretary Hull to announce that the German Government had again warned its 350,000 nationals residing in the U. S. that they "must not belong to" the Bund or any "possible substitute organizations of that kind." In New York Bund leaders promptly announced that since their membership...
...German Ambassador in Washington, Dr. Hans Dieckhoff, has been keeping cat-like watch on the Brazilian-U. S. treasury negotiations. It is a more or less open secret that one reason President Roosevelt was so generous last week was to enable Brazil to buy more U. S. goods and thus get along with less of the German goods she has been taking with some reluctance under the dubious trade-promoting schemes which Dr. Schacht works with his various kinds of German marks. This week Adolf Hitler openly revealed his displeasure at the Brazil-U. S. liaison, declared that Washington...
...Hans H. Dieckhoff presented Franklin Roosevelt: 1) his letters of credence as German Ambassador succeeding Dr. Hans Luther, 2) the personal greetings of Adolf Hitler...