Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1946 — Page 15
FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1946 =
RETURNED NAZIS RK GUATEMALA
Wartime, Hatreds™ Impede ~ Coffee Production. By HAL O’FLAHERTY
Times Foreign Correspondent COBAN, Guatemala, April 19.— Some two hundred. avowed Nazi Germans were deported from this, area during ‘the war. Now they have begun to filter back from the concentration camps in Canada and the United States.
The. returning Nazis, every one of whom insists that he was never a member’ of Hitler's party, are creating a social problem. The ab- © sence of the others is creating an equally acute eco nomic problem. The loyal Guatemalans whose sons or relatives is were in the war on the allied side Mr. O'Flaherty now refuse to mix with returning Germans. The hatreds engendered by the war are smoldering and may not die for many years, On the economic side, the German plantation managers were the most, efficient producers of coffee this area has ever known. They had the “know how” of getting work out of the Indians and of keeping the plantations, or “fincas” as they are called, in excellent! order. { Plantations Decline Since the Germans were de-| ported the fincas have gone! through two steps. In the first, the fincas in the whole Coban area, which produces some of the finest coffee, were merged under the| management of an Englishman who did his job brilliantly, | Then came a change in adminis- | tration when the revolution of 1942! displaced ex-dictator Ubico. The! Englishman resigned and political! appointees are ruling the coffee! fincas. The fincas are suffering. The cost of harvesting and procHing the coffee has gone up rapy. The amounts have slipped down- | ward with the result coffee drinkers all over the world will get less coffee and undoubtedly will pay more for it.
Ex-Dictator Still Favored
Meantime, beautiful Guatemala will suffer declining revenues and an internal strife that must eventually cause a change in administration or, perhaps, another revo- | lution. | Former President Ubico, now liv-! ing in exile near New Orleans, i not unpopular. He gave this little | country one of its biggest laughs by winning a motorcycle race at the! age of 75 last year in Mississippi. | On the same day his successor | drove a car over a cliff in the Guatemalan highlands and was severely injured. OE Th ree Det Gaery Times
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By EVELYN PEYTON GORDON | Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, April 19.—Wives of senators and supreme court. justices aren't often found out in the kitchen cooking lunches for 70 people. But then they don’t often have the apportunity to do it in the White House kitchens. : They * will have tomorrow, Mrs. Truman has arranged<it for the members of Prof, Ramon Ramos’ Spanish classes, one of which meets in the White House.
The professor has been teaching
Spanish to a large number of the capital's most prominent women for several years. Occasionally he bor rows a student's home and with members of her particular class he sfows them how to whip up a luncheon, Spaiiish style. The catch is all the words spoken during the
operation must be Spanish.
Mrs. Truman's turn arrives Saturday and she is including not only her own classmates but those from other courses. So the whole affair will be in the hands of the women. They'll do the marketing, the cook-
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lng and the serving—everything but the dishwashing and that will be left to the White House servants. Tomorrow morning Gen. Eisenhower’s car, lent by Mrs. Eisenhower, will fare forth for shopping. Mrs. Robert Patterson, wife of the secretary of state; Mrs. George Allen, wife. of the RFC director, and Mrs. Clarence Norton Goodwin will beat their way around the markets for the ingredients for “picadillo,” spicy - Spanish dish which will be the-luncheon’s main course;
‘THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Wives of High Officials to Prepare Lunch in White House
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greens for a salad; guava paste and cream cheese” for dessert. On Saturday morning Mrs. Dean Acheson, wife of the under secretary of state; Mrs. Leverett Saltonstall, wife of the Massachusetts senator, and Mrs. Hugo Black, wife of the supreme court justice, will, join Mrs. Truman in the kitchen to grind and mix the beef, pork, famb, almonds, raisins, olives and hot spices that go into “picadillo” which is served hot over white rice.
.
Kitchens. 2
‘tiated into the art of making black|.
coffee Cuban style—lowering a cheesecloth full of coffee into bolling, salted water, and letting fit simmer for an hour. Then another group including Mrs. John Sullivan whose husband is assistant secretary of the navy and Mrs, Brian McMahon, wife of the Connecticut's senator, will announce luncheon in the state dining
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CENTRAL COLLEGE SCHEDULES PLAY
A three-act play, “Thunder in the Alr,” will be presented April 26 by
tral college. To open at 8:15 p. m. in Kephart Memorial auditorium, the play will be sponsored by Alpha Psi Omega, campus dramatic society. It will be directed by Mrs. Lola L. Pence, dramatics professor, assisted by Miss Charlet Norton, Wabash, student director. » In the cast will be Richard How-
dramatic students of Indiana Cen~
room &nd stand by to do the
The amateur cooks will be. ini-
serving.
ell, Helen Cravens, Nathan Wooden, Ruth Griffin, Bettie Moore, Ernest
son and Jimmie Weber,
CHILDREN'S HOME PLANS EGG HUNT,
Easter egg hunts for the Chil- - dren’s Guardians’ home will be held all day Sunday according ts plans being mapped by Mrs. H. C. Gammon and Mrs. E. P. Oliver, chair. women, Girl Scout troops and the Irvington chapter of Job's Daughters are assisting Guild members by color
ing eggs, making corsages and table favors.
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