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...only a harmless outcast, clutching her pride to her thin shoulders. But in 1943 Love lighted her up like a pinball game, and in the hands of the Nazi schemers, she stayed lighted for a long time. The man who was the cause of it all was one Max Otto Koischwitz, a slightly potbellied professor who had spent years at New York's Hunter College, and who served in the German Foreign Office during...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TREASON: True to the Red, White & Blue | 3/7/1949 | See Source »

Hungarian Communists would have had no trouble finding a drug suitable for duping Cardinal Mindszenty into making statements against his will, Dr. Otto Krayer, associate professor of Comparative Pharmacology, declared yesterday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Krayer Reveals Drugging of Cardinal Easy Job for Reds | 2/12/1949 | See Source »

After Pearl Harbor she fell in with a Foreign Office radio official named Max Otto Koischwitz. Koischwitz, who had once been a professor at New York's Hunter College, was a man of influence. That, plus Mildred Gillars' soft and insinuating American voice, brought her a highly paid job-opportunity to show her talent. Soon she was doing her best to undermine the morale of U.S. troops, was famed from Africa to Italy as Axis Sally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TREASON: Big Role | 2/7/1949 | See Source »

...Fifth Avenue, with a fine view of Central Park across the street, sits a 66-room red brick Georgian mansion, one of the largest and most lavish houses in New York City. Across the street, the late Banker Otto Kahn's Florentine stone palace is now the Sacred Heart Convent for girls; a block up Fifth Avenue stands Banker Felix Warburg's six-story home: it is now the Jewish Museum. Farther down Fifth Avenue, workmen this week started tearing down Financier Thomas Fortune Ryan's ornate 30-room mansion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Big House on Fifth Avenue | 1/31/1949 | See Source »

...East. Principal task of the delegates who met at Bielefeld last week was to elect a successor to venerable Bishop Wurm. They chose another big figure in German Protestantism. Like Wurm, the new chairman, stocky, white-goateed Bishop Otto Dibelius, Lutheran Bishop of Berlin and Brandenburg, was unbending in his opposition to the Nazis. Barred from the pulpit, he defied Nazi orders against speaking and writing, and was brought to trial. When Minister for Church Affairs Hanns Kerrl shouted at him: "What right have you to speak for the Church, now that you have been dismissed from your religious duties...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: New Day in Germany | 1/24/1949 | See Source »

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