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After a somewhat colorless cantata by Buxtchude, the audience found itself four centuries after Machaut and finally on more familiar ground with Bach's cantata No. 32, Liebster Jesu, mein Verlangen. The performance, featuring two excellent soloists, Jean Lunn, soprano, and Vincent Allison, baritone, was smooth and often moving. Violinist Helena Pappenheimer and oboeist Robert Freeman also deserve special commendation for their rendition of the instrumental obbligatos...

Author: By Alexander Gelley, | Title: The Music Club | 5/20/1952 | See Source »

World War II brought the Malanites to prominence. They were openly pro-Nazi. The Rev. Jacobus Daniel Vorster, preaching at Potchefstroom University, told the Afrikaner Student Union: "Hitler's Mein Kampf points the way to greatness. Afrikaners must be fired by the same holy fanaticism that inspires the Nazis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTH AFRICA: Of God & Hate | 5/5/1952 | See Source »

Jawohl. Destiny perched on Remer's shoulders. Instead of arresting Goebbels, he went to see him, unsure what to do. Goebbels persuasively cooed that Hitler was still alive, reached for the phone, handed it to Remer. "Do you recognize my voice?" asked Adolf Hitler. "Jawohl, mein Führer," quavered Remer-and his mind was made up. Hitler empowered Remer to act in his behalf to crush the plot and supersede all officers. By evening, the Nazis again gripped Berlin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Heroes or Traitors? | 3/24/1952 | See Source »

Intense, nervous Prosecutor Fritz Bauer, whose eye tic and lined face attested to years in Nazi concentration camps, summoned his witnesses. He called survivors of the plot; he summoned theologians who said that Christians were justified in ridding their nation of tyrants. Another witness quoted Hitler himself in Mein Kampf: "If through exercise of governmental power, a nation is led toward ruin, rebellion is not only a right but a duty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Heroes or Traitors? | 3/24/1952 | See Source »

...character, a petition is somewhat of a plebiscite since it restricts the individual's freedom of opinion. The late Adolph Hitler, in the first-half of his best-seller "Mein Kampf," explained at length how to win a plebiscite. His psychology of the masses, although it is at times very accurate, does not correspond in the least to our ideals of democracy...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PETITIONS & PRANKS | 3/7/1952 | See Source »

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