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5. Gajewski pointed out that under present conditions it is necessary
to store considerable stocks of all kinds of materials, such as
a. Nonperishable foods; for example, pulses, rice, sugar,
preserved meats, preserved fruit, jam, fats, potatoes, et cetera.
b. Raw materials necessary for operations; for instance, lumber,
linters, cellulose, cellite, gasoline, silver nitrate, gelatin, carbon
disulfide, anhydride, glacial acetic acid, et cetera.¹
6. In reply
to Gajewski's question, Riess reported on the state of the air-raid protection
preparations:
a. Installations for defense measures.
b. Supply of gas masks for employees.
c. Shelters
for the passive crew [passive Belegschaft].²
d. The
air-raid drills which are to take place in the near future. On 13 July a tour
of the air-raid protection installations of the film factory is to take place.
7. It is to be determined whether, in case of war, the gentlemen living
some distance away and who are essential to operations could be accommodated in
the houses of the Wolfen settlement as long as traffic is disrupted.
8.
It is to be expected that there will be difficulties (transfer of personnel,
traffic regulations) for organizational reasons as soon as wartime measures are
started. Therefore, it should be checked to what extent changes or closing down
will have to take place in the plants. With regard to the film factory, it is
planned to close down the foundry gradually. |
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| * * * * * * * * * * |
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Wolfen, 12 July 1939 Dr. Sch/W |
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| Signed: DR. SCHULZE |
__________ ¹ See section I,
"Stockpiling, Storage of Material, and Dispersal of Production." ²
Those workers who, in case of an an aid, could go into shelters, in contrast to
the active crew, which had to keep on working during an air raid.
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