Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 229, Decatur, Adams County, 29 September 1954 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
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THE DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
Correspondent Tells Os Trip Into East Germany
(Editor’s note: This is the last of three articles in which Joseph H. Singer, Berlin bureau manager for International News Service, tells of life In East Germany as he found it on a trip deep into the Soviet ■one on the occasion of the annual Leipzig state trade fair.) By JOSEPH H. SINGER LEIPZIG, East Germany (INS) —Wilma could have been a young American co-ed, ready to enter college. She came up to our American car as it stood parked on a street in Leipzig, and asked: “Is this an American cur?” When we said it was, she walked all around it, looking curiously, but watching us out of the corner of her eye. Then she asked: “Are you really Americans?” She said she didn't know that Americans were allowed to enter Communist East Germany, and especially drive to Leipzig. We explained we were allowed to come to the Leipzig trade fair. Once assured that we were genuine Americans, Wilma looked around carefully with her bright eyes and then, like so many others, told us how bad life was in East Germany. She was almost 18, she eaid. Her short brown curls tossed angrily as she described how little food she had to live on. She flashed a warm smile of confidence: “It's so good to be able to talk to someone I can trust.” She said there was no freedom under the Communists. “See all those slogans and posters about freedom and liberty?", she said. “Well, that's’ ail we have —slogans and posters. But not the real thing.” When she is 18, she confides to us, she intends to leave East Germany. Where will she go? "Why, to the west, naturally.” Wilma was a serious girl, attractive and seemingly totally unspoiled by nine years of Communist propaganda and influence. Fortunately, her parents had been able to keep her close to them, within the family. Most East German parents are not so lucky. “They are taking our children away from us,” one mother said. Systematically, the Reds are separating children from mothers and fathers, sending the younger generation to schools in other towns. During school vacations,, the children are sent to spend four to six weeks in Communist vacation .camps. “Most of the children enjoy the camps,” said another mother. The Communists are deliberately trying to make East German children into “Soviet men.” But they are not doing too good a job —• so far. One 15-year-old in Leipzig admired our American car. We asked him where he got his •■tally-colored Hawaiian type shirt, which was obviously his most prized possession.
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“It’s a gift from relatives in the Sit. Look how all the people re at it. It’a forbidden to wear these kind of shirts here.” Why did he wear it then? “To the devil with them,” he grinned back. American and West German new model cars attracted more attention at the Leipzig fair than did the official exhibits. East Germans swarmed over any American car they saw, looking underneath, peering at the interior, commenting excitedly about the dashboard. The car that attracted the most Interest from East Germans, however, including women, was the West German Mercedes 300. Its massive lines acted like a magnet. “American cars are always interesting. But look at what our brothers in West Germany are producing now,” one young man in a trenchcoat remarked. ' His national pride was obvious. He explained that they always expected American cars to be right and modern. But the Mercedes proved how wrong the Red propaganda was when it charged West Germany was worse off than East Germany. At one state-owned department store during the fair, the entire fourth floor was used for displaying and selling goods from Communist China. East Germans crowded into the corner where Red Chinese soap and combs were sold, passing up the silk and ark objects. Although the Chinese soap costs no more than East German-made soap, it was better quality, one woman said. After using East German soap, we understood her completely. Hard to wash with, it doesn't ent the dirt very effectively; it leaves a disagreeable odor which clings to your hands for hours. But it isn’t the soap you think of as you drive back to West Germany. You think, for instance, of the porter you tipped with two cigarettes in the Leipzig railroad station, and his startled query: “Why are you so generous to me?” You think of him, shaking his head gloomily, as he remarks: “We in East Germany have forgotten how’ to be generis and courteous to one another. We must work so hard to keep from dying all else is forgotten. We are like animals ready to claw and eat each other . . . Just to live.” Mrs. Lana Kalver Dies In Chicago Word was received here yesterday of the death of Mrs Lena Kalver. 72. -who died In Chicago, Mrs. Kalver was the widow of the late J. B. Kalver, brother of I. A. Kalver. local theater owner. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Kalver were residents of Decatur more than 40 years ago. at which time he operated the Hub Clothing store in the K. of C. building. Roy Kalver will attend the funeral services in Chicago tomorrow.
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