SPEECH IN BERLIN.
GOOD PRESS RECEPTION. Received June 7, 1.50 p.m. BERLIN. June 0.
The Press reacted gratefully to the new Ambassador, Sir Neville Henderson’s speech at the Anglo-German Society’s welcoming dinner advocating better mutual understanding. The Press, with a single mind, seizes on Sir Neville’s comment on some Englishmen’s erroneous conception of Nazism’s aims and that they might even learn useful lessons from them, but they are silent on his eon•verse criticism of the German suspicion that Britain is trying to hem in Germany. The Press makes the occasion one for propaganda ill favour of Herr Hitler’s plan for ensuring peace stage by stage in preference to the so-called “collective, indivisible peace.”
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Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 160, 8 June 1937, Page 2
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113SPEECH IN BERLIN. Manawatu Standard, Volume LVII, Issue 160, 8 June 1937, Page 2
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