Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 54, Number 187, Decatur, Adams County, 9 August 1956 — Page 9
THURSDAY, ATOTTST 9, 195«
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THE DECATUR DATT.Y DEMOCRAT. DECATUR, INDIANA
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America Miracle Land For German Is Salvation From Poverty And Death By JAMES R. QUINN (United Press Staff Correspondent) OMAHA (UP) — For HeinHuetter, America is a land of miracles. And he didn’t get that Impression from a story book. For Huetter. 42, a displaced person from Germany, America has meant salvation from death and rescue from poverty. Huetter’s first contact with America was in the little Bavarian town of Cam. just IS days before V-E Day in 1945. A top sergeant In the German army. Huetter was captured by Czech soldiers. Then came miracle No.~T. His Czech captors were moving him and two comrades into a woods for a quick execution when an American infantry captain drove up. Huetter took a chance, despite a machine gun in his back, and flagged down the officer. Through a young girl in the village who knew English, Huetter pleaded with the captain that he was a soldier in uniform and entitled to the rules of war. The captain saved his life, took custody of the three (Germane. He was a prisoner of war only three weeks. Then he located his wife and two children in Austria. There followed a long period of wandering. Joblessness and hunger in Austria and on their return to Germany. His home town was in the eastern zone, which was impenetrable, so they went to Munich where Huetter worked at odd jobs and existed mainly on potatoes. Then came miracle No. 2. He had applied for admission to the United States and, through the help of George Peter, Omaha publisher and travel agency executive, he was accepted. The family, penniless, arrived in New York in March, 1952. Huetter loaded his wife and two children on a Greyhound bus and headed for Omaha. . . Since then, he said, life is a continuing cycle of miracles. Huetter, a butcher before the war, was* given .a job by Fred Glaser, Omaha meat packer, washing trucks. In the four years since then he has risen to supervisor of the Glaser plant. He has bought a white house in a quiet residential area, a car, a television set. The - family has enough money to begin thinking of vacation trips. Trudy, the pretty 16-year-old daughter advanced rapidly at Omaha technical high school and is entering her senior year. Waifgang, 15, Is entering his sophomore year at Central high school and faces education opportunities unheard of in Germany. Both, children adjusted easily. Indeed, the family marvels, noadjustment .really was necessary. They “just fitted in” with the community and neighborhood. Even before they learned English —by attending nlght school — they found life was not as hard as they imagined it would be. Mrs. Huetter, a dark — haired, attractive woman, said her biggest surprise during the long bus ride from New York was that "everyone had his own little house.” "We thought right we would work hard so we could get one,” she said. They have found the American economy almost unbelieveable after the years in Germany in which buying a pair of shoes meant weeks of privation. IN NEW YORK, William Randolph Hearst, Jr., editor-in-chief of Hearst Newspapers, tries one of the many hand!talkie radios which will be used by International News Photos and International News Service for covering the two national political conventions. Photographers and reporters carrying these will be able to move about the convention floor and still keep in constant touch with colleagues.
