Word: zeit
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...Ease. West Germans from Chancellor Adenauer on down have been listening attentively if warily to Grafin Donhoff for 17 years. They know by now that as foreign editor of Die Zeit, a small, opinionated weekly published in Hamburg, she will seldom say any thing to give them ease. After the war ended, for example, most Germans felt that the less said about their Nazi past the better. But Die Zeit and die Grafin boldly demanded that all German war criminals be punished for their crimes. After the Chancellor appointed one Theodor Oberlander to his Cabinet, Die Zeit raised the issue...
...years since then have not diminished the spirit of Kompromisslosigkeit -no compromise-that guides both Die Zeit and its foreign editor. To Bonn and most West Germans, East Germany is anathema. But the Grafin has persistently advocated closer contacts with the other side of the Wall. "The Iron Curtain does not protect us from Eastern infiltration," read a recent editorial, "but cuts the Eastern countries off from the infiltration of freedom." The Grafin has visited East Germany twice; once, when a group of East German writers were refused permission by West German police to pay a return visit to Hamburg...
...they viewed all Germans. Her letter came to the attention of a lawyer named Gerd Bucerius-himself a mettlesome man, who had spent most of the war years in Nazi Germany at the unpopular task of defending Jews in court. Bucerius, who was then getting ready to launch Die Zeit, recognized a kindred spirit and hired the Grafin at once...
...alliance has been good for both -and for West Germany. Thanks in large part to its strong-willed Grafin, Die Zeit wields an influence out of all proportion to its size-a bare 200,000 subscribers-and in more than one sphere. The paper was one of the first to recognize postwar Germany's literary resurgence, among the first to encourage such gifted young novelists as Giinter Grass and Heinrich Boll...
...other hand, Wolfgang Leonhard, the ex-Communist who now analyzes Red affairs for West Germany's Die Zeit, thought it was "very possible that Khrushchev will give up one of his posts, more likely the government job." The free-for-all was clearly getting out of hand; somewhat unprofessionally the Guardian's Polish-born Soviet expert, Victor Zorza, shrugged, "it's all guesswork," then plunged back into the fray...