In 1964 Fennell moved with wife and son to Freiburg, Germany, as assistant editor of Herder Correspondence, the English-language version of Herder-Korrespondenz; a Catholic journal of theology, philosophy and politics which played a leading "progressive" role during the Second Vatican Council.
Desmond Child | William Desmond Taylor | Desmond Morris | Desmond Elliot | Desmond Hume | Dermot Desmond | Desmond Richardson | Desmond Norman | Desmond Guinness | Earl of Desmond | Desmond Howard | Desmond FitzGerald | Desmond Bagley | Richard Desmond | Kingdom of Desmond | Desmond Shawe-Taylor | Desmond McKenzie | Desmond Harrington | Desmond FitzGerald (politician) | Desmond Connell | Desmond Choo | Tony Fennell | Tom Fennell | The Secret Diary of Desmond Pfeiffer | Richard Preston, 1st Earl of Desmond | Patricia Fennell | L. Raymond Fennell | Leslie Desmond Foster Vesey-Fitzgerald | John Desmond Bernal | J. Desmond Clark |
The Conservatives considered three candidates: Desmond Fennell, a Lincoln-born barrister, Robert V. Jackson, a journalist, and merchant banker Hon. Jonathan Guinness who was chairman of the Monday Club on the party's right-wing.