Word: hamburg
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Stockholders of the Hamburg-American Line filed into their annual meeting at Hamburg last week as though into a morgue. Adolf Hitler has reduced Nazi interference with German industry to a minimum, placing at his Cabinet's right hand an Economic Council of industrial tycoons (TIME, July 24). But shipping is another matter. Last week slender, stern old Dr. Max von Schinckel, board chairman of Hamburg-American since 1910, rose to announce the resignation of himself and the entire board...
...Wellesley Hills is the largest in the world. . . Stop at the Administration Building on Hill side road near Houghton's Pond in the Blue Hills Reservation. . . If you can bear to visit transatlantic liners (or can pretend to be looking them over with an eye to choice) the Italian, Hamburg-American, Cunard and White Star lines welcome visitors. . . If the dogs of conscience drag you to the Art Museum, don't forget you can get lunch on the premises. . . And finally, if you can save out seventy-five cents, there's tea at the Ritz
...with the Government alone!" Sure, perhaps prematurely, that German business is really going to be largely let alone by the Nazi State, Dr. Gustav Krupp von Bohlen lent eager aid to a Nazi press campaign which sought to pretend last week that such interference had never existed. Speaking at Hamburg he recalled that one of his great grandfathers. Brigadier General Henry Bohlen of Philadelphia, died during the Civil War near Kelly's Ford on the Rappahannock. "I appeal," cried Gustav Krupp von Bohlen, "for American understanding-sympathetic understanding-of Germany!" Soon afterward Chancellor Hitler placed the Fatherland...
...possibility did not seem to cheer the retiring Commerce men as they clambered aboard the George Washington at Hamburg, Southampton and Havre with their wives, children and chattels. They promptly christened the boat "the ship of lost souls...
...precedent to allow. Church diplomats tried to patch a truce between the German Christians and Bodelschwingherians by suggesting that Bishop von Bodelschwingh might retire after a few months in office in favor of Dr. Müller or a new neutral candidate, possibly Lutheran Bishop Schöffel of Hamburg. Suddenly Chancellor Hitler stepped in. Word was sent to Dr. Müller that the entire Nazi propaganda department, press and radio both, would be at his service to force a new election...