Word: josef
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Erhard had a candidate of his own who could probably have beaten Lücke: able, industrious C.D.U. Party Manager Josef-Hermann Dufhues, 57. But last week Dufhues announced that for "personal" reasons, he would not run for the post. For lack of any other suitable Erhard man, der Dicke last week was grimacing at the prospect that he might have to take over the C.D.U. chairmanship and become a politician in spite of himself...
...John Pennel, who won the K of C meet with a 16 ft. pole vault, will be headlining the cast at the Garden Saturday. Sprinters Sam Perry, George Anderson, and Darrell Newman, middle-distance men Tom Farrell. Theron Lewis, Olan Cassell, and Bill Crothers, and miler Josef Odlozil are also on the program. Marie Mulder, the U.S. record holder, will face Antje Gleichfeld of Germany in a woman's half-mile...
...easy for the flag to follow the trade. Just before last September's elections, Schroder hinted that he would like to see West German missions in East European countries elevated to embassies-and was quickly shouted down by Bavaria's Conservative Leader Franz Josef Strauss. Blessed with the backing of C.D.U. Chairman Konrad Adenauer, Strauss still has it in for Schroder for his role in the 1962 Spiegel affair, which cost Strauss his job as Defense Minister. Accused of being "soft" on the "Eastern question," Schroder quickly backed away...
...most famous of Prince Franz Josef II's 1,500 oils is Leonardo da Vinci's Ginevra del Bend, a painting that is strikingly evocative of the Louvre's Mona Lisa. It is the only recognized Leonardo not yet on a museum wall. Such may not long be the case. In a front-page story, the New York Times last week reported that Ginevra* had caught the eye of the prince of collectors. Said the headline: $6 MILLION...
...emptor according to the rules. The prince, currently hard pressed for cash following several unsuccessful business ventures, agreed-but he was in no mood to let his treasure cross his principality's boundaries or risk an adverse verdict. When negotiations broke down, the prince's art dealer, Josef Farago, issued a categorical denial: "The prince would not dream of selling the Leonardo." As for the prince, he was, as one to the manner born, off hunting in Austria. Does this mean that Ginevra del Bend will never leave Liechtenstein? Said a Liechtensteinian noble last week: "Eventually some fool...