Word: joachim
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Blond-haired, German-born scholar of politics, Carl Joachim Friedrich, professor of Government, was a natural to head the Overseas Administrators' School when it was established last February. Now training military governors who may someday take over the temporary administration of his form-his trainees the benefit of a wide store of trainees the benefit of a wide store of first hand experiences with European governments and people during his youth spent abroad...
From the meeting Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop and General Keitel reportedly hurried to Verona to talk with Italy's new Foreign Minister, Raffaele Guariglia. The Chief of the Italian General Staff, General Vittorio Ambrosio, joined them, "on the germans' invitation," in "important discussions." From the German point of view these discussions had only two objects: maximum, to hold the Badoglio Government to its Axis alliance for war and/or peace; minimum, to keep Italy in the war long enough for Germany to get forces and matériel down through the Brenner to hold a de fensive line...
...Devil. Bern reported that German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop had slipped into Italy for crucial talks with Italian Foreign Minister Raffele Guarig-lia (see p. 23). In any haggling with Germany, the Badoglio Government stood at a disadvantage. The Nazis held as hostages for Italian conduct some 400,000 Italian workers in Germany, some 25 Italian divisions hemmed by the Wehrmacht in the Balkans. German troops had occupied the strategic sectors of northern Italy. The Nazi position seemed clear: if the Allies would not accept a neutral Italy, the Germans would accept nothing but Italy's continued alliance...
Adolf Hitler was absent. In his stead, Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop last week presented the Grand Cross of the Order of the German Eagle to Dr. T. M. Kivimäki, Finland's Minister to Berlin...
Most concerned over the outcome of the balloting was Carl Joachim Friedrich, professor of Government, who declared that "disappointment with the way the war was going was reflected in the election returns." He pointed out, on the other hand, that the defeat of the Democrats was due principally to their lack of political leadership and their pre-occupation with other things...