Word: munichs
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Gammler have a regular home. They are merely protesting against the existing social order." Declared the state of Hesse: "It would be wrong to condemn all young people who neglect their clothing and keep their hair long." Even the police chief of West Germany's unofficial Gammler headquarters, Munich's Schwabing quarter, could report only 32 infractions of the law by beatniks so far this year, and they were mostly minor...
...plan to establish kolkhozes, or collective farms, in the non-Russian areas-nominated him for purging. After five years in Siberia, where he was sent without trial, he joined the abortive 1943 Chechen revolt against Communist rule and later escaped into Germany. Since then, as a founding member of Munich's Institute for the Study of the U.S.S.R. and a professor of political science at the U.S. Army Intelligence Center at Oberammergau, he has been pounding away at Communism with archangelic zeal...
...grooming no genuine Hitler youth would approve of. For another, a girl wore a Nazi party arm band, a decoration never permitted the weaker sex. And there was a package of French cigarettes on the table. Whoever heard of a Nazi indulging a decadent French taste? Sensing a phony, Munich reporters soon smoked...
...costume-store proprietor named Peter Breuer, who recalled renting the Nazi garb to some men who told him they wanted to write a story on his shop. "I had absolutely no suspicion," said Breuer, "not the way they fooled around, laughing themselves silly while they took the photographs." Next, Munich police rounded up three youths who claimed that they had been talked into posing as a joke. Back in Paris, Paris Match Reporter Jean Taousson and Editor André Lacaze casually admitted the hoax. "The photos may imply stronger political ideas than those people really hold," Taousson explained lamely...
...Paris Match. Prince Konstantin of Bavaria promised to bring the issue before the Bundestag, and he complained that a magazine of the "reputation and importance of Paris Match cannot be allowed to poison the political atmosphere for the purpose of creating a phony sensation." Said Die Welt's Munich correspondent Wilhelm Maschner, who has done some sober reporting of his own on German neo-Nazism: "Such false alarms tend to weaken resistance against the real causes for alarm...