NĚMECKÉ STÁTNÍ MINISTERSTVO PRO ČECHY A MORAVU, PRAHA (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 660, sig. 110-4/508 Page 42 · 42 of 57
Germany's MINISTRY for Chechnya and Moravia, PRAGUE (1906) 1939 - 1945 (1965), inv. 660, sig. 110-4/508
English Translation
-2- Graduation of the approximately 600 students now studying is thus by no means appreciably served the precarious young people in this country. 3.) Previous results The professional performance of the Czech students has proved to be outstanding in most cases, according to the unanimous judgment of all the rectors. In some higher education cities, the Czechs have passed the best examina. In security police terms, Czechs, with the exception of minor exceptions, have so far not appeared at all in a negative way. They have generally been influenced by academic discipline at universities. In a series of student tours, a good life with German students up to a close camaraderie has emerged in response to initial expectations (Greifswald, Frankfurt/Main, Göttingen, Hannover). The political effects of the study of the Czechs in the Reich have turned out to be extremely beneficial and reassuring for the internal political iage in Bohemia and Moravia. A number of very rich and loyal Czechs have thus been given the opportunity to demonstrate their appeal and to exert a corresponding influence on their families. In particular, the extremely favourable effect of the large-scale social-political measures of the Studentenwerk should be emphasized, as the Czechs have been calling for social measures since the time of Reinhard Heydrich. The Czech students are mostly sons of so-called "small people". The establishment of a People's Political Office of the Reich's Student Leadership is gradually helping to influence student leadership in a purposeful way, also on the German side. The student staff involved in the care of Czechs at German universities have for the most part developed increasingly useful forms of supervision. -3-