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HELEN KORENLENKO (left), aged 14, has proved another bone of contention between the Russians and the Americans in Berlin. When she went into hospital in the United States zone the Russians claimed that as a Russian subject she should be transferred to their zone. Helen, who is shown here reading all about it in a German paper, has not seen her parents since 1945. She speaks no Russian and she does not want to go to Russia. CARL SANDBURG (right), famous American poet and historian, has never allowed his work to interfere with his hobby of goat-raising. Here he poses with Alison, all-American champion milk-producer and top goat in Sandburg's flock of eighty, which he keeps on his farm at Flat Rock. North Carolina. He began goat-raising in 1937, when he bought one because it was easier to take around than a cow.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/BOPT19480929.2.31

Bibliographic details

Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 14788, 29 September 1948, Page 3

Word Count
143

HELEN KORENLENKO (left), aged 14, has proved another bone of contention between the Russians and the Americans in Berlin. When she went into hospital in the United States zone the Russians claimed that as a Russian subject she should be transferred to their zone. Helen, who is shown here reading all about it in a German paper, has not seen her parents since 1945. She speaks no Russian and she does not want to go to Russia. CARL SANDBURG (right), famous American poet and historian, has never allowed his work to interfere with his hobby of goat-raising. Here he poses with Alison, all-American champion milk-producer and top goat in Sandburg's flock of eighty, which he keeps on his farm at Flat Rock. North Carolina. He began goat-raising in 1937, when he bought one because it was easier to take around than a cow. Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 14788, 29 September 1948, Page 3

HELEN KORENLENKO (left), aged 14, has proved another bone of contention between the Russians and the Americans in Berlin. When she went into hospital in the United States zone the Russians claimed that as a Russian subject she should be transferred to their zone. Helen, who is shown here reading all about it in a German paper, has not seen her parents since 1945. She speaks no Russian and she does not want to go to Russia. CARL SANDBURG (right), famous American poet and historian, has never allowed his work to interfere with his hobby of goat-raising. Here he poses with Alison, all-American champion milk-producer and top goat in Sandburg's flock of eighty, which he keeps on his farm at Flat Rock. North Carolina. He began goat-raising in 1937, when he bought one because it was easier to take around than a cow. Bay of Plenty Times, Volume LXXVII, Issue 14788, 29 September 1948, Page 3