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<p>[Page 108]</p><p>can stretch one&#39;s legs. There are a few shady trees and many shrubs and bushes, which makes for a nice change. The area is open from 8 am to 5 pm.</p><p>Upon special request, the Commander has allowed transfers into the main camp, and apart from our friend Wehrs and the singer Pl&uuml;cker, some 15 gentlemen have taken him up on this. But Burkard was denied a transfer. Brennecke and I also toyed with the idea, but decided against it, as we hope to get a quicker release from here.</p><p>In exchange, we got some additions from the main camp, probably about 10 men, among them Mr Scharff, whom we got to know the first time in Liverpool, and Mr Edwards alias Eichengr&uuml;n, the manager of Continentale Gummi Co. in Hannover. The latter, a naturalised Australian, was a member of the volunteer automobile corps before the war, probably for business reasons, and was interned early in 1915, because he wrote in a letter to a friend that Germany &quot;hopefully</p>

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