Re: [Cz-L] Restaurants in Czernowitz

From: HARDY BREIER <HARDY3_at_BEZEQINT.NET>
Date: Mon, 19 Jul 2010 18:23:43 +0300
To: alexander rosner <alexanderrosner_at_yahoo.de>, Miriam Taylor <mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>, cornel fleming <cornel.fleming_at_virgin.net>, Arthur Rindner <vonczernowitz_at_yahoo.com>, Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu
Reply-to: HARDY BREIER <HARDY3_at_BEZEQINT.NET>

Thank you Alex,
 For giving us inside story.
  As I understand after Stalin and until Gorbatchov they had 8 presidents or
so.
   Did'nt each of them make changes to daily life ?
    Didn't the rule become more liberal ?
Hardy
----- Original Message -----
From: "alexander rosner" <alexanderrosner_at_yahoo.de>
To: "HARDY BREIER" <HARDY3_at_bezeqint.net>; "Miriam Taylor"
<mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu>; "cornel fleming" <cornel.fleming_at_virgin.net>;
"Arthur Rindner" <vonczernowitz_at_yahoo.com>; <Czernowitz-L_at_cornell.edu>
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2010 5:45 PM
Subject: AW: [Cz-L] Restaurants in Czernowitz

Hardy,

yes, it is sometimes funny to read such posts, while they have a true core.

I can speak about the 60th and beginning of the 70th. During the 50th I was
too
small to realize such things.

During the described time Czernowitz was not a closed city, not at all.
I could remember several cars with foreign plates. Sometimes we were
guessing
from which countries they were.
At the beginning we thought that "D" was standing for "Diplomat", until we
discovered that the drivers always spoke German.
We saw sometimes "CH", "F", "USA", "CDN", "A", etc. Also cars from Poland,
Romania, Czechoslovakia, etc.

I remember very well two Czech cars driving like crazies trough Czernowitz
on
August 20 (?), 1968.
Later same night I saw military vehicles driving the same direction through
Czernowitz.

By that time we knew from the radio what happened.

Foreign people always needed permissions to go through the country with the
description of the exact route. This was normal.

We could travel without any permission through the most of the USSR.
Some areas were closed to everybody without a special document, among them
lots
of areas within few kilometers from the state border

and all areas of special military interest.

Our border to Romania was not a closed area till August 1968 - then a strip
of
10 to 20 kilometers became a closed area for a while.

I know that after the WWII there was a time when travels were restricted and
"Propusk" was required. I never saw such a thing and never needed.

Alex

-snip-
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Received on 2010-07-19 09:29:04

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