German Sabbath – Part VIII
Oct 15th, 2010 | By Lois Bassen | Category: German Sabbath, SeriesOn Thursday the 21st, four days following von Papen’s speech at Marburg, Lisel was sitting at a restaurant with a particularly whiteeyed Horst
On Thursday the 21st, four days following von Papen’s speech at Marburg, Lisel was sitting at a restaurant with a particularly whiteeyed Horst
On Sunday, June 17, after Hilter’s Venetian visit with his model and mentor Mussolini, a speech was given which threatened him directly.
Within the week, German Chancellor Hitler was in Venice with Mussolini for the state visit of June 14. Appropriately, the Italian leader would be the only foreign statesman at the Chancellor’s funeral three weeks later.
Albert was also at work, reexamining…
Lisel arrived at Albert’s door brought by the old farmer on the following day. The village doctor had recommended hot baths and hypnosis, which his own wife in menopause had found helpful.
A week later, on June 7th, in the evening’s newspapers throughout Germany, Stormtrooper Chief Ernst Roehm made official the announcement that Ruprecht Jabloner had heard rumored:
Two weeks later on May 25th, little more than a month before the assassination of German Chancellor Hitler, above the Prinzregentstrasse the enclosed gardens of Albert Entrater were thriving.
After five days in the hospital, the girl still lay tucked in the fetal position on her side in bed.
Very little from a personal perspective has been written about the assassination of German Chancellor Adolf Hitler on July 1, 1934, following the so called Night of the Long Knives.
To exchange items they’d left behind, Marwa planned to meet James for lunch before she went to a matinee of Shaw’s ST. JOAN.
If James-Beekmans would agree to go to a play Marwa wanted to see, she’d go to the Yankees-Red Sox game on Wednesday night, October 20th.