Nikolaus Albrecht was a young boy living in Schwaebisch-Hall, a small town in the middle of Occupied Germany. One day on the way home from school he witnessed the aftermath of an accident involving a German motorcyclist who ignored a stop to be killed by a U.S. Army truck. In the midst of the shouting match between the locals (who resented the Army of Occupation) and the group of army men, the GI. driver of the truck noticed the young boy standing there; he threw him a pack of gum as a gesture of goodwill. A few years later Nikolaus moves to Portland, Oregon. He eventually graduates from Willamette Law School. One of his first clients is a woman whose son is having difficulties finding a job because of a dishonorable discharge from the U.S. Army for vehicular manslaughter. It seems he was driving a truck in a small town in the middle of Occupied Germany, when a motorcyclist fatally ignored a stop sign ... I would like to quote (from the article in the "Oregon State Bar Bulletin") their exchange when they met: Nikolaus: "Thanks for the gum." Ex-GI: "What gum?" Nikolaus: "The gum you tossed when you stood at this corner, and I caught." After staring at Nikolaus thinking about the age and the accent, the Ex-GI says, "Only that little boy would remember that!" and wraps his arms around Nikolaus. Nikolaus succeeded in upgrading the Discharge. When the Ex-GI wanted to pay him, Nikolaus replied, "You prepaid with the pack of gum." If truth is stranger than fiction, it is because it has a better author.
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