FORMER AUSTRIAN PREMIER
New York, Sept. 27. The Vatican City correspondent of the “New York Times” says he learns that Dr. Schuschnigg, who was the Chancellor of Austria before the Germans marched in, is still alive at the Buchenwalde concentration camp, where he was imprisoned after the Moscow Con. ference premised the re-establishment of an independent Austria. Till then Schuschnigg had lived in a village near Berlin, but he was compelled to change his name. He wanted to call himself Dr. Austria, and when this was not permitted he took the neme of Dr. Auster, meaning oyster in German.
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Nelson Evening Mail, Volume 79, 28 September 1944, Page 5
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99FORMER AUSTRIAN PREMIER Nelson Evening Mail, Volume 79, 28 September 1944, Page 5
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