All but 4% of Refuqees ' ~- Resettled, V~Orhees Says :By the Associated Press Tracy Voorhees, Chairman of the Presidential Committee for Hungarian Relief

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All but 4% of Refuqees ' ~- Resettled, V~Orhees Says :By the Associated Press Tracy Voorhees, Chairman of the Presidential Committee for Hungarian Relief - ~'Man, You Must Be Out _of Your Mind"' . .. All But 4% of Refuqees ' ~- Resettled, V~orhees Says :By the Associated Press Tracy Voorhees, chairman of the Presidential Committee for Hungarian Relief. says all but about 4 per cent of the refugees . admitted to this country have been resettled. .. Mr. Voorhees, appearing on NBC's TV program, Youth Wants .to Know. said yesterday that up until Saturday night there w--ere only 1,256 refugees remaining at the Camp Kilmer, N. J.,. recep­ tion center out of a total of --- · - - - ·--- -- - f28,928 · brought to the United 1Pa, earlier that "6,300 Hun- States. garian Communists and crim- : Saying that only 12 persons 1inals were given American visas out of the thousands of refu- and have slipped into this coun­ gees brought here have proved try along with genuine refugees." to be undesirable-. he added: Mean\vhile, legislation to pro- j "The freedom :fighters them- lvide for the immigration of ref- 1selves knew the secret police Iugees · from the Middle East as type and put the finger on ;well as escapees fror.ll behind 1 1 1them.'' . It he Iron Curtain was proposed by i I But Representative Walter, Senators Javits and Ives, New 1 Democrat of Pennsylvania, told York Republicans. 1 /a veterans' group in Harrisburg, Under the legislation, the 1 Every tin1e this set of notes is ready for the deadline (and sometimes afterward), Tracy Voor­ hees pops up. This time he appeared on TV on "Youth Wants to Know" on March 10. For half an hour Tracy had a succession of tough ques­ tions thrown at him by a group of brilliant teenagers about the admission and assimiliation of the 29,000 Hungarian refugees in this country. Needless to say, Tracy handled the situation adrnirably, explaining the need for the refugee n1ovement and setting straight the thinking of son1e of th~ young people. jJ!Iisconceptions , Dispelled For 1/angOi-iUn :Students · Dr. Andrew Szent-Gyorgyi, 1 students' first reactions to Am- chairman of the committee for erican life. 1 the shelter of Hungarian stu- " One boy was frightened by · · dents, told the Kiwanis club the noise when a washing rna­ Monday evening of the success Ichine started to · centrifuge. An­ of the program that has already other wouldn't have boiled eggs. brought nine l>tU:dents to the One family -showed a fishing i Cape, six or ti1.em to Falmouth. movie in their home. Their ! Dr. Szent-Gyorgyi was a hesi- young student commented that i tant speaker as he began outlin- there were many fish in Hun­ ! ing the frustrated delays that ga ry but few movie projectors. Iattend the birth and growth Several students protested when 1 ! of the committee. As he told of they were presented red neck- I Ithe results of the program and I ties and shirt~ . To them red is I the · response of the yom·:-s stu- the ~Yn;,bol or communism and . dents to their new homes, tneir I Russm. l I·enthusiasm was reflected in the 1· ----- doctor's words. 1 "They didn't expect this wel- l . come," said Dr. Szent-Gyorgyi. I "When they got off the train in i Providence they were c\istrust- !ul, even when they were speak­ mg to us in Hungarian. We could 1 still see the hatred instilled b:'l:: 1 the Russians. -~ne boy asked us . I1 1 1 why the families were willino- I iI t o take them in. He couldn'tb . understand that it was simply because the families wanted to I1 help. 'I never got anything be­ 1 fcr e without having to pay for - it,' . the boy said. When they got their new homes they asked why they had been placed with such j wealthy families, not realizing that they were in average hon1.es.'' The youngsters changed com­ pletely in three da ys, said Dr. , Szent-Gyorgyi. " We had a Hun-~ ! garian dinner for them and they all wanted to talk at once to \ tell of their new experiences. They are living in a fairy land I and they are trying hard to merit the wonderful . treatment they have received." IT cuching To See l Dr. Szent-Gyorgyi · estimated i that it will be only one to three months before the ·students are expressing them selves in Eng-. I!ish '. He said it is touching to see the trouble taken both by ! the families ·and the students in 1 .! expressing their ~ee lings and I 'i gr B-titude to each other . The doc- l tor then · described some of the I - -----· ·-·--···------- 1 won:~n et!n. ",. n w.!".en Karl ' tVh\;;:l ""':.!1 ~1-.o.;;i.L~, s:.. ... :.. -d h_r '!!nz pr., t • • · ".. : ~· n co h :-.pf·.:... \Vhtm h! ... ~ .. to vL.:t t:.l c • !te-nc ... !l. h ........ ...,2nt· 1]•r • J:Jk!-.a: • · !lt b iith ;ot.rc­ " . 7 to -...t~e~y ud . ~r :trt:t. )io·v. •c:tb .,:ob. ?.!y ht:star.a ---Y~ h lJ l::iin ~: tc help my - e k rr. J .:nmC'(U r ..~:· r.c v ·.; .!ler .a:o j ~-n tc Iarm. H • "'" m.a .... _ · .e. ~1 ~'!.! r:e·. "'r -iven a ~a: ~~ I ;3 ra'"'idly :.~ :-:1Ir. ~., ~0 spe.a:-c • I -~ t;.Jh. Ev~r] s; r mcr.;ent !:~ h.a.:J ~'ti! n r:l d:] !:1 !c·: IiI .~ por-s · :r : ' P" .... :' ~~ t with .. r-.y ... :n!U'ia.n ~.: to;:· t! ' ot H u 11 ':!' 't .. I ~ n· E n 11 ! h bi:~, ju..: .. o it ° CC!J. phra.ses. Ha !eves to i1ave UJ uu !. gc !nr l!3 ~., t!'­ r d ~o hi n, , >!:=.n n?'"' ' ~ va~ey to hav. the..::~ feu!" ~y •..,ras-~ • ytun !n ~rt ~. to ·r... m s1 UJ ".\nd Un !"~- -= tim- you of our en ~l! ~ bl i.;, • \V corr.~ home?. · eryor. ~ L'l the h.;1v~ so m:tch of ve::...r..:1ir. ·-. "I L1~'t yc..a v.:\lley ~ill ~ J tw to m ~t~ L"lcludin ~ liherr.r, tlMt 7'J ~~c- ·. t rcru Hun g::t:Ll~ goul.!$h L"'l ct.TI to tnke everyt11L'1 'I ~rot.i" r ch!ck!:l pa;n:<a. K.:1rl a.r.d "":anted. .. oth-er Cll"c~ youn ~ :r. -~1. .. Nov1 I h v t \."' .... tt... "<"t ~ t.!achl.:.:: ' 3. ':'b."y'r~ geed no ugh. But I thou '!l:t •r3U ~ccdc'l. A.s f!'o:t t~er o! t:.ct, wr-uld u:m to know .hvW E.;~ . ... ~y· ~ All ,C. ular. With the ~l:inn rdu~ c!.:t?tbg ! of :'! tnt-a?:e.zr. th y out he:-e in t.ia !a.{ehru.. h. ~ave ~o!L'n !lt ·: nurr.tc:r o! Ti'l~ a::swer 1 '!ln.e.' o.· thl.; u \b~ut ~ JJ ~Y ch 'r~:1 ar.d .ci'nc gat! erin .:J. !"!c _ rou.ld b2 on th or•z:.:­ sil~!~·L"l·' cl:!-:1 .. 1n· 'T"-e th ~ r:.,. th:\t tm:-r ..s ' !xt. Leastwise, we':., h \ 111..., vitzd 011t tQ tl."!ir !~ 1 to ... ~ :-nest about all o! t~2:n ; out .!h to-r .w, r-e- tcni t::. •• " YORK , aftibUllt zo I•'t·iclay, 1\by 10, 19_5_7________ '\l__ _ l '""=-- == ·1reedotn's $30 Millioit Bonus fly James P. Mitchell Secretary of LahQr scientists, engineers and other 11ew Jive~ Jn America that :m T ~;;opp~E1~~:i~~~~~1e }~~~: university graduates represents assessment of the country's gain Kilmer Refugee Reception Cen­ an investment of over $30 mil· could be made. ter at Camp Kilmer, N. J. The lion. Of the 20,000 cscape>es willing crowded quarters where 1,000 In a nation like ours in which Rnd able to work, 5,946 were workers from many industries are feeling the craftsmen, foremen or kindred 22 private crimp of a skilled worker short­ workers. Over 4,600 were skilled agencies spent age, in which the development operatives. More than 3,400 were long, hectic of a skilled worker force ade­ professional and technical men hours process­ quate to meet· the future needs and women. Two thousand of ing more than of industry is a pressing con­ this group were clerical workers. 30,000 Hun­ cem, the addilion to the ranks 0~ the entire Jot, less than 2,000 garian escap­ of such workers is welcome were unskilled. ees are silent indeed. These figures assume real and deserted. meaning when measured against 3,600 of­ That iL was accomplished so like proportions of the United ficers and men successfully and so quickly is a States labor force as a whole. In of the United great credit to the seemingly a labor force of 70 million in States Army tireless men and women who 1956, only 9 million are skilled. who manned manned the huge program from Professional and technical work­ the installa- J\ustria through Kilmer to ers, 18 per cent of the Hunga­ Mitchcll tion have been American communities. rian escapees, account for only· reassigned to other duties. The On Nov. 21, 1956, the day the 9 per cent of the United States hundreds of reporters, photog­ first escapees stepped foot on labor force. raphers, officials and curious free American soil at McGuire visitors have packed up their Air Force Base, the United In an economy short of skilled equipment, folded their brief­ States Employment Service had workers, the arrival of 18,000 of cases, returned their passes and only two interviewers and one them out of the blue, as it were, left behind a little barracks ghost clerk at the Camp Kilmer Re­ is both a godsend and a respon­ town that will be long remem­ ception Center.
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