Word: reuters
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Berlin's municipal elections this week showed an opposite trend: the Socialists lost ground; the Christian Democratic Union gained. Berliners agreed with staunch Socialist Mayor Ernst Reuter: they would fight the Reds whether they got Allied arms...
...Ernst Reuter...
Most of this was old hat. It meant, as always, a settlement of the German issue on terms favorable to Red conquest. In Berlin, Communist-wise Mayor Ernst Reuter observed: "We've heard these proposals a hundred times. The Russians know that they are no basis for serious negotiations. We can't touch anything that doesn't first off promise free elections in all Germany . . . The Russians are speculating on finding weak spots in the Western armor, and they may well find them...
Like many other women with husbands in the Reserve, I dread the thought of my husband leaving me and our three little boys again. But how anyone, after reading your cover story on Ernst Reuter [TIME, Sept. 18], can sit on his complacent backside and say, "Wait until after elections, or next year, or the next . . ." is beyond my comprehension...
Toward the Initiative. Ernst Reuter was not a man to concern himself unduly or exclusively with what the Communists might be brewing for his city and the rest of the Western camp. He preferred to think about a course of action for the free nations. Last week, in an interview with TIME'S Berlin Bureau Chief Enno Hobbing, Reuter, in simple and eloquent language, summed up a program for Germans -and for all free men. Said...