Word: ernstli
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...hrer, Christmas, 1938, in which year he twice overran borders in order to bring back German territory into the Reich." Among half a dozen other books from the Führer's personal library: autographed first editions by Authors Alfred Rosenberg, Joseph Goebbels and Ernst Roehm; a German translation of Henry Ford's My Life and Work, inscribed by piano-thumping Ernst ("Putzi") Hanf-staengl, "Mit alien besten Wunschen fur 1924." Price...
...service of the German Army? Whatever were Sannwald's motives for fighting in the Nazi cause, it is obvious that he was not defending in any way the principles of freedom that have so nourished Harvard. As long ago as 1934, President Conant rebuked a high Nazi official, Ernst F.S. Hanfstaengl '09, by refusing his offer of a gift because it was "so closely associated with the leadership of a political party which has inflicted damage on the universities of Germany through measures which have struck at principles we believe to be fundamental to universities throughout the world (Italics added...
...were united (as Schumacher keeps demanding), and elections were free, he certainly would become Chancellor. Or if West Berlin were to be included politically in West Germany (as Schumacher also demands), he would clearly be Germany's top politico, for the party of Berlin's able Mayor Ernst Reuter is the party of Schumacher...
Seniors--Dustin Maholn Burke, Athol, Mass; Donald Joseph Case, Belmont, Mass.; Frederick Ernst Drill, Minneapolis, Minn.; William Bainbridge Frothingham. Jr., Medfield, Mass; William David Hoaley, Jr., Wakefield, Mass.; John Walter Hickey, Wakefield, Mass.; John Leeman Lewis, Jr., Austin, Texas; Carroll Martin Lowenstein, Malden, Mass.; Thomas William Ossman, Rockville Center, N. Y.; Fred Aaron Ravreby, Brookline, Mass.; Joseph Herbert Shaw, Northville, Mich.; Robert Huntley Thompson, Highland Park, III.; Warren Donald Wylie, Chelmsford, Mass...
...great hall of the University of Bonn one day last week, retiring Rector Ernst Friesenhahn stood before 1,000 students, professors and guests to say a few words about himself and his successor. "It seems symbolic to me," said he, "that a rector who was refused a teaching position by the Nazis in 1933 is succeeded by a rector who was dismissed by the Nazis in 1933." Thereupon, anti-Nazi Ernst Friesenhahn, who will return to teaching law, took off his crimson cap and gown, handed the symbols of his office to anti-Nazi Werner Richter...