Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1952 — Page 29

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FRIDAY, SEPT. 12, 1952 ____ °

| REVIVAL IN GERMANY . . . No. 4—

By CHARLES R. and

ROSETTE HARGROVE GIESSEN, West Germany, Sept. 12—Three days before we saw her,

sitting at a table in ‘the recreation room of this refugee camp, Martha B. a - pretty blonde in her early 20s, had been working in a textile factory in Saxony, in the Russian Zone. When the works representative of the Communist Trade Union took her to task for not attending a meeting, she decided to quit the very next day. “TI put on my best suit, as it was Sunday,” she told us, “‘and just walked across the threemile ‘No Man's Land’ which the Russians have now set up along their border. My parents remained behind but I hope they will be able to cross over soon.” Martha is one of the hundreds of thousands of refugees from the Soviet Zone who in the past months have sought a safe haven in this particular camp, one of the three in Western Germany established to take care of German “escapees.” “It is quite simple,” explained

8%

LIKE AN ENDLESS LINE—Newly arrived

ister at the camp in Giessen. Hundreds of thousands have fled Soviet zone in recent months.

Service for 20 years when he received a notice saying he was fired for “having transgressed the laws of the People’s Republic against pro-Fascist activities.” He fled. “I knew that prigcon would be the next step,

——

Girl Worker Sheds Russian Yoke

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refugees wait outside the administration office to reg-

MOST PREVALENT crime among boys is stealing or breaking into automobiles. There are practically no charges for alcoholism or sex offenses and no drug addicts among minors, Officials blame the war

The city of Frankfurt has 1500 children living in institutions, 1000 with foster parents. “Most adopted children are illegitimate,” said a welfare offi-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 29

raised.” This year 500 children will find a legal family and a home. : The older people in revived West Germany are inclined to be utterly fatalistic about most

unabated horror of hunger, war and Russia, despite what the vociferous but rapidly decreasing Communistic element in Germany may say to the contrary. ‘ The younger generations have two goals: To achieve a higher standard of living and the unity of their country. Meanwhile, since the end of the war, American organizations have heen doing everything within their power to teach the rising and older generations the -democratic way of life. It is too soon to expect proving results, (End of a Series)

things. All have in common an |

| Pickets Still Enjoy ¥ Firms’ ‘Coffee Time’

MILWAUKEE — Striking AFL truck drivers enjoyed free coffee furnished by their employers here? vesterday and then went back to {their picket lines at wholesale grocery firms, About 200 drivers are striking to back up demands for a 25 cent hourly wage noost plus a $2 weekly health and welfare plan. “Coffee time,” is a long estab-

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state of your . 1 I» { business calls for a dis-

white-haired Frau H., who 1 went, leaving my wife and the military occupation for We usually find foster |} cussion over luncheon, came from Thuringia, “I was and two children behind,” he the increase in juvenile crime, Parents end up by asking to [Ji ick the Hawthern: picking blackberries in the 0 oo . including black market deals. adopt the child théy have pic ipo . Eh wood next to my cottage when All these people tell their Good food, efficient ~ 1saw a gang cutting down trees i ries in an expressionless service, relaxing pop- | a little way off. Then and there y,i0e They know that it has | | ia I decided to leave rather than ypapnened to hundreds of thou- ular pricés, paved |

wait untillater. Nobody stopped me and once safely over'I went to the police who gave me a train ticket to Giessen. Now I am told that I shall not be allowed to join my sister who lives in Bavaria and will be sent somewhere else.” Here she broke down and sobbed bitterly. Ed » ” OSCAR L. explained he had held a minor job in the Civil

lowa Wins New Civil War Spat With the South

DES MOINES, Towa, Sept. 12| {UP)—TIowa yesterday refused to return to the South a symbol of] the South's defeat in the Civil] War. |

Claude R. Cook; curator of the] State Historical Building, aaid| Mrs. Eva W. Davis, director of | the Vicksburg and Warren County Historical Society, Vicksburg, Miss., had requested a Confederate flag now displayed in the Historical Building be returned for the “Old Courthouse Museum” 2t Vicksburg. 0 sitll Bin MR. COOK said he understood the flag would be valuable for the Vicksburg museum, but he said it was valuable also as a part of the Iowa collection of Civil War flags and trophies. The flag, under which Confederate Gen. Pemberton fought and

surrendered at Vicksburg July 4,|

1863, to Gen. Ulysses 8S. was presented to Iowa 40 ago by Willard Baker, The Iowa Civil War collection Includes 13 Confederate flags,

Grant, years

Picked on By Burglars

FT. WORTH — A. J. Lee has| been a victim of burglars 33 times | In his 50 years as a Ft. Worth groceryman. It's not as bad as it used to be, though. Once, he was, robbed 25 ‘times in 24 motnhs.

Burgles Empty Sack IRENE, Tex.—A burglar en-| tered the Paul Haverman general | store, dumped a sack of corn meal| on the floor and left with the sack his only loot.

{ provincial Jugendamt, the court

| than 7 per cent are girls.

sands before them and that their own particular tragedy is already commonplace. The majority of men who come here and to the ofper | camps tell of being tipped off | in time to make a getaway. But recent arrivals say escape is getting more hazardous than it was three months ago. Remarking on the number of elderly people—80 to 85 years of agle—we were told that they | all say they came across because they all wanted to die in the beloved fatherland. = td ” STATISTICS SHOW that refugees represent one-fifth of the West German Republic's population. About 9.8 million people who now reside in Western Germany lived outside its present boundaries at the outbreak of the second world war, | It is not astonishing, there- | fore, that the resettlement plus the housing and employment of

LLY

this number of people — who | represent almost twice the popu- | lation of Switzerland — keeps |

members: of the government awake at night. i Delinquency and child welfare are big problems for the | new government, too, and the official attitude -is—essentially paternalistic. Haus Heisterberg, perched on a hill overlooking the Rhine at Koenigswinter, is a good example. A state “youth home” since 1939, it houses 30 boys in the former servants’ quarters of a 100-acre estate, : ...8 THE' BOYS, from 16 to 20, were sent to Heisterberg by the

for “education of juvenile delinquents.” The aim is re-edu-cation. There is no ironclad discipline, They are tatight democracy, trained to become worthy members of the community, and given the opportunity to learn a trade by which they can earn an honest living. || At Heisterberg, 85 per cent of the boys make good, says the director. Although the immediate postwar years saw a big increase in juvenile delinquency — 800 cases a year in Frankfurt alone —it has now been stabilized at about 300 cases a year. Less

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