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Word: ernstli (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...scuffle burgeoned into an international incident. The French (in whose sector the shooting occurred) protested to the Russians, who sputtered back. The senate of West Berlin met in a special session to call a public "demonstration of grief" and Lord Mayor Ernst Reuter announced that he would attend Patrolman Bauer's funeral...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: Borderland Incident | 1/5/1953 | See Source »

...colonels-much of what is left of the stiff-necked high command of Hitler's Wehrmacht. They met early this month in a smoke-filled beer hall in the U.S. zone city of Stuttgart; their host was a self-styled "aristocrat and man of the world": Ernst von Reichenau, brother of the Nazis' famed Field Marshal Walter von Reichenau...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: The Collector of Opinions | 12/22/1952 | See Source »

...founders of the SRP were Fritz Dorls--former Nazi Gauleiter--Gerhard Kruger, and Count Wolf Von Westorp, both fairly prominent Nazis. These men were the brains of the party, but the popular leader, the man often mistaken for the head of the party, was General Otto-Ernst Remer. Remer's claim to popularity was his part in crushing the July 20th, 1944 plot by high German officers to assassinate Hitler, take over the government, and seek peace. Remer, then in charge of the Berlin SS troops, refused to turn the city over to the plotters, and after speaking over...

Author: By Robert J. Schornberg, | Title: Nazi Rebirth | 11/25/1952 | See Source »

Died. Bishop Johann Wilhelm Ernst Sommer, 71, head (since 1946) of the Methodist Church in Germany, an organizer of the Council of Evangelical Churches of Germany, chairman of a 1945 Methodist congress in Frankfurt which passed resolutions of "guilt and repentance" for Germany's war guilt; after long illness; in Zurich, Switzerland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Oct. 27, 1952 | 10/27/1952 | See Source »

When the Justice Department's Office of Alien Property got ready this year to sell Manhattan's E. Leitz, Inc., the U.S. distributors of Leica cameras, it took pains to see that E. Leitz did not fall back into the hands of its German parent, Ernst Leitz of Wetzlar (TIME, June 16). The Justice Department remembered what had happened after World War I. Then Alfred Traeger, the former manager of the U.S. branch of Leitz (also seized by the Government in World War I), bought the company from the Government's alien property division...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN TRADE: Shell Game | 10/13/1952 | See Source »

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