Renate Feyerbacher

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Renate Feyerbacher (2012)

Renate Feyerbacher (born June 30, 1941 in Hope Valley near Cologne ) is a German journalist . At the beginning of the 1980s, her reporting on the "sugar tea caries" made a significant contribution to the fact that the negative consequences of sweetened, so-called children's tea, became generally known. She is the recipient of several recognized journalism awards.

Life

Renate Feyerbacher was the second child of the dentist and Vice-President of the North Rhine-Westphalia Dental Association (from 1957 to 1969), Gustav Mouchard (July 21, 1905 - November 11, 1991), and the clerk Margarete Mouchard born Klüber (December 3, 1905 - March 17, 1985). Her mother was a huge influence on her. She was a passionate music and literature connoisseur. Renate Feyerbacher inherited her passion for theater and concerts from her. She also loves to sing. As a child she was in operas, drama, exhibitions (parents were members of the Wallraf-Richartz Museum ), films (mother was a member of the Cologne Film Club), etc.

As a young girl, Renate Feyerbacher received the book The Conscience Stands Up from her mother by Annedore Leber , which deals with the German resistance between 1933 and 1945. Renate Feyerbacher has been dealing with National Socialism for a long time . She made this clear not only with the topic of her master's thesis on theater in the 3rd Reich. She is still concerned with the topic today, has visited numerous National Socialist memorials, such as Auschwitz , Bergen-Belsen , Buchenwald , and repeatedly visits the topography of terror in Berlin, about which she will soon write a larger article in Erhard Metz's online magazine. Finally, the special relationship between Renate Feyerbacher and Jewish people should be mentioned. I now realize that it was Jewish people who accompanied me scientifically and personally as a young person. She has an older brother named Karl-Bernd Mouchard, priest of the Archdiocese of Cologne, District President of the Kolping Society. He was an official notary and an interrogation judge at the ecclesiastical court. She is very closely connected to her brother. He has phenomenal historical knowledge. Because of his extensive knowledge, he is my lexicon .

Renate Feyerbacher was married from 1967 to 1999 and has two daughters and two granddaughters.

schooldays

From 1947 to 1951 Renate Feyerbacher attended the Catholic elementary school in Cologne-Buchheim . In 1951, after passing the entrance exam, she entered the sixth grade (today 5th grade) of the girls' high school in Cologne-Mülheim. Because of her still playful manner and because the sixth was not allowed to be repeated, she came to the Catholic boarding school and Progymnasium Marienberg in Boppard am Rhein from 1952 to 1958 on the recommendation of her math teacher . There she obtained her secondary school leaving certificate with Latinum at the Progymnasium . Then she went to the Ursuline School in Cologne, which she dropped out of the same year because she couldn't cope there after a long boarding school. She then attended the Empress Theophanu School in Cologne-Kalk from 1959 to 1962 , where she passed the women's high school diploma. Subsequently, on the advice of the school director Franziska Hermann of the Kaiserin-Theophanu-Schule, she completed the supplementary high school diploma with a high Latinum and mathematics in the office of high school councilor in Düsseldorf . Her school days had an impact on her later journalistic activities. She took part in various school theater performances and sometimes took over the moderation at large school celebrations. As a child, she was given her first film camera and loved shooting and taking photos. Her good eye for film and photography resulted from this time. At the same time she was and is a passionate reader. In the boarding school, her boarding school certificates were unruly , she objected . At that time Renate Feyerbacher learned to take responsibility for others. Empathy is an important trait of mine . This was reinforced by the fact that she was socially committed on Sundays as a teenager in a Riehler ( Cologne-Riehl ) nursing home.

Education

Actually Renate Feyerbacher wanted to become an actress , but the acting examination committee advised her to study because she faced them completely inexperienced and without preparation.

Renate Feyerbacher began in 1963 with the study of theater arts (Professor Rolf Badenhausen ), Art History (Professor Heinz Ladendorf) and German (Professor Walter Hinck) at the University of Cologne .

In the summer semester of 1965 she took a semester abroad at the University of Vienna , where she attended seminars in the dramaturgy of radio plays and in newspaper studies . There she also met the composer Zoltán Kodály , whose music inspires her.

After eight semesters she wrote her master's thesis on the subject of The Dramatist and Ideologist Eberhard Wolfgang Möller - his demands on the theater and their realization , which emerged from the advanced seminar on German theater at the time of the Third Reich by Prof. Badenhausen. In her master's thesis, she also wanted to prove that Eberhard Wolfgang Möller was the screenwriter of the anti-Semitic propaganda film Jud Süß by Veit Harlan . That was u. a. a point of conversation with Eberhard Wolfgang Möller, whom she visited in Bietigheim and questioned. She corresponded with all film archives, got to know Ernst Loewy , among others , who became a kind of mentor for her master's thesis. She couldn't find any evidence back then to support her suspicion. This only succeeded decades later when she found out that the Veit-Harlan court files had been opened by a colleague from the NDR ( North German Broadcasting Corporation ).

Influence of the student movement in the late 1960s

Renate Feyerbacher initially had no access to the student movement, as she had already completed her studies at that time. She married and moved from Cologne to Frankfurt am Main . Although she came from a conservative family, she made a political change during and after her studies and carried the student movement in her head, even if she was never at demonstrations.

Over the years it has become more and more critical. I don't mean to say I'm on the left because I don't want to be squeezed into a template. I used to advocate the thesis that I am becoming more and more left - there is something to it - but not in terms of party-political things because I cannot support the way the left is hacking and falling apart .

religion

Renate Feyerbacher was raised Catholic . She adheres to the Christian ethical principles, but has problems with the Catholic official church, which she calls men's associations . For the women's radio, Renate Feyerbacher wrote a program about the position of women in the Catholic Church with the title Marienverehrung is not enough . She also conducted interviews, which came to the conclusion that women still play a minor role in the church. In this program, she also drew attention to people who pursued more women-friendly approaches in the church and criticized the prevailing patriarchal structures, but who had to reckon with consequences, as in the example of the Catholic theologian Hans Küng , who received the church's license to teach ( Missio canonica ) in 1979. was withdrawn.

Professional background

When he arrived in Frankfurt, Renate Feyerbacher initially applied to various publishers and in the dramaturgy in the theater. However, she only received rejections on her applications on the grounds that she had chosen a man. In 1968 Erich Lissner (editor of the Frankfurter Rundschau) was the first to give her the opportunity to write for the Frankfurter Rundschau. All in all, she was an author for the Frankfurter Rundschau for over 20 years (including for the page Women and Society with the editor Martina I. Kischke ). Occasionally she wrote u. a. Article for the IG Metall newspaper.

From 1968 to 1970 she worked as an archive editor for Hessischer Rundfunk (hr). There she learned to work briefly and factually. Klaus Klöckner was the first to give her the chance to write her first radio feature on the radio. She suggested the subject of difficulties in writing the truth - based on a sentence by Bertolt Brecht. This radio feature for the school radio of the hr was broadcast on January 30, 1970 (10: 05-10: 35). The topic related u. a. of the results of her master’s thesis, in which exile literature and inner exile also played a major role. The show had great success and was broadcast repeatedly. After that it happened in quick succession. Klaus Scheunemann, head of the Society and Modern Life editorial team , which was later renamed Contemporary Issues, approached her and gave her radio assignments. Together with Jürgen Gandela, also an editor in this department, he became one of the most important clients. She then worked as a “protected freelance journalist at hr” until 2008 . The broadcasters SWR ( Südwestrundfunk ) and NDR occasionally took over their broadcasts. For years she was constantly active for Deutsche Welle. Her career as a freelance television journalist began in April 1970 with a mini-volunteer with Kurt Morneweg, who set up the Hessenschau studio in Kassel. In the end, she worked for the Hessenschau for three decades, occasionally also for the Tagesschau. She was also active in the television editors Education and Upbringing and Der Markt , of which Valentin Senger was the editor . From the beginning she was an employee of the "Hessentipps", and from 2002 to 2007 was one of the first video journalists. As a radio and television journalist, she edited a. a. Topics from politics , medicine , psychology , education , women and family . Today she works for various online magazines, such as B. for feuilletonfrankfurt.de , frankfurtlive.com and rmt-magazin.de .

reception

Sugar caries

Through the television and radio broadcasts in the Hessenschau and the hr-Frauenfunk; Dental caries from sweetened children's tea ; Ready-made tea beverages for children - Renate Feyerbacher made a significant contribution to educating people about the consequences of consuming sweetened children's tea. For this purpose she visited the center for dentistry, oral and maxillofacial medicine at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen , where Prof. Dr. Willi-Eckhard Wetzel treated affected children and informed their parents about the consequences of sweetened children's tea. Willi-Eckhard Wetzel was the one who traced a new form of deciduous tooth caries in small children back to the administration of children's tea products through so-called continuous sucking . Subsequently, based on this knowledge, some judgments were made in which it was decided that the manufacturer of the children's tea is obliged to pay damages if he does not affix a clearly visible warning notice on his products and if it causes caries damage after continuously sucking sweetened children's tea from a plastic bottle Small children come.

“A Nestlé manager told me at a gynecology convention when he heard my name when someone introduced him to me: You have cost us millions . I am persona non grata at Nestlé. When he said that, his initially friendly face turned icy. " Not clearly enough warned in the newspaper article : OLG about manufacturers of sugared children's teas in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung of December 12, 1990, one got u. a. the additional information that lawyer Christoph Kremer from Frankfurt am Main alone represented over 60 cases in this context before lower courts and had already lost 20 cases since 1982. Furthermore, based on expert assessments and figures from the health insurance companies, the lawyer calculated that around 100,000 children are affected by the so-called baby bottle syndrome . The treatment costs between 10,000 DM and 30,000 DM per case, so that the damage amounted to one to three billion DM.

In the last instance of the proceedings in the so-called Milupa case, the Federal Court of Justice (BGH) issued a judgment that expanded the case law in the area of ​​product liability. Since then, manufacturers have been encouraged, on the one hand, to check a potentially dangerous product for possible health hazards before it is placed on the market, and on the other hand, they have been obliged to highlight warnings about product hazards and the type of impending hazard more clearly.

Martinsviertel

The short film Martinsviertel is about the district of the same name in Darmstadt , which has the highest residential density. On the decision of the city council, a four-lane expressway for through traffic - the so-called Osttangente - was to be built right through this residential area. This would have required the demolition of 36 residential buildings with 353 households and 74 ancillary buildings. An alternative plan, however, provided for a route east of the Martinsviertel. It would have led through mostly undeveloped areas and required the demolition of a maximum of two residential buildings. For her short film, she interviewed individual residents of the residential area, a citizen group against the decision of the city council and the then mayor of Darmstadt, named Heinz Winfried Sabais, who was hired by the city council's resolution. She asked him critical questions about the problem. With her short film and her commitment, Renate Feyerbacher made a decisive contribution to the fact that the Osttangente was not built through the Martinsviertel.

Guest workers and car insurance

Renate Feyerbacher's television program Gastarbeiter KFZ Versicherung drew attention to the discrimination against foreigners in the field of motor vehicle liability insurance, since foreigners, unlike Germans, had to pay higher contributions. This contribution has helped this situation to improve for the benefit of foreigners.

Awards

6. Lilly Schizophrenia Reintegration Award

On November 22, 2001 Renate Feyerbacher was deported in the context of the congress of the German Society for Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Neurology in the category of radio journalism for her show Mentally Ill People - Still? on April 4, 2001 in the hr Forum Body and Soul was awarded the main prize of the 6th Lilly Schizophrenia Reintegration Award in Berlin. For the radio program she interviewed seven young men and one young woman in the Offenbach day clinic in the psychiatric clinic in Offenbach am Main . They reported on their personal well-being and their daily schedule in the day clinic. According to the Hofheimer Zeitung of January 11, 2002, Renate Feyerbacher has been dealing with mental illnesses and the stigmata to which the sick are exposed for more than 20 years. The aim of their constant endeavors is to provide educational work about a disease that triggers fears and insecurities in many people and is burdened with numerous prejudices.

2. Frankfurt Psychiatry Prize

The work of the Forum, Leib und Seele editorial team at hr 2 received the 2nd Frankfurt Psychiatry Prize in August 2001, for which Renate Feyerbacher also made contributions for decades.

The Political Book of 1985

The working group of publishers, booksellers and librarians in the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES) published the book Arbeitszeit ist Lebenszeit! Arguments for the Shortening of Working Hours Awarded as The Political Book of 1985 on the Future of Work . Renate Feyerbacher honored Renate Feyerbacher's contribution, I have seldom had time for myself .

In this article, she reports about a working woman and mother who had to get job , family and household under one roof and hardly had any time for themselves. Using this example, Renate Feyerbacher shows how many working women and mothers are doing in Germany and therefore calls for better jobs for women and a reduction in working hours.

Journalistic and literary works

On television and radio
  • Live interview with Egon Bahr

A highlight in Renate Feyerbacher's journalistic life was the live interview with Egon Bahr , which she conducted with a colleague. The interview was about development policy.

Under the direction of editor-in-chief Wolf Hanke , ARD filmed thirteen 45-minute programs about Goethe's life and work. Renate Feyerbacher was hired as a documentarist. She received many facts on the subject of Goethe from Rudolf Hirsch, whom she held in high regard. The program first aired on August 26, 1974 and ended on May 25, 1978.

Renate Feyerbacher realized the contribution Ultrasound of the female breast for the Hessenschau . The contribution, which also showed the self-examination of the female breast, was well received by the viewers. Even Prof. Dr. med. Ernst-Gerhard Loch from the German Clinic for Diagnostics in Wiesbaden requested the TV report to be shown to his staff .

  • Mother-child home in the penal system in Frankfurt Preungesheim

Renate Feyerbacher drew attention to the problematic situation of the mother-child home with the program Mother-Child-Home in Prison in Frankfurt Preungesheim . For the contribution, she interviewed both affected women and the then head of the penal institution Sigrid Bernhardt and Bernd Maelicke . The situation in the prisons was questioned critically and possibilities for improvement were pointed out.

  • Structures: Research Spotlight on Pregnant At 14 - Study of Young, Single Mothers

In the show Pregnant at 14 - Study on Young, Single Mothers , Renate Feyerbacher reports on the award-winning study Conflicts in Pregnancy - an empirical study of the pregnancy experience of expectant mothers in a maternity and toddler home by the educationalist Claudia Bier-Fleiter. To do this, she went to a home for mothers and children with the educationalist and asked the young mothers how they were living with their child.

  • Family ties - a changing institution

Renate Feyerbacher's hour feature explores the question of what family life looks like today. Parents, children and connoisseurs of the family scene such as Gerald Hüther and Barbara Beuys have their say.

  • Ene mene muh ... and you're out - loser and winner of the German education system

In the program, students , teachers , parents and scientists discuss the educational system in Germany and possible improvements in the school situation. According to the PISA studies , which have been around since 2000, German students are among the weakest in Europe. Apart from that, the tripartite school system discriminates against migrant children and children from the lower classes, as it became very clear in the final report in March 2007 of the UN observer for the human right to education, Vernor Muñoz . Children are also classified using criteria that are not very clear and uniform. The report Education in Germany 2008 on behalf of the Conference of Ministers of Education of the Länder and the Federal Ministry comes to the same conclusion . At the Helene-Lange-Schule (Wiesbaden) , Enja Riegel demonstrated how to change the situation in German schools for the better and prepare students better for life . She gradually converted the former grammar school into an integrated comprehensive school , which is now an all-day school. In the first PISA study, the Helene Lange School performed best internationally in both reading and natural sciences and won the German School Prize in 2007. Rainer Domisch (died in 2011), an education expert who worked in a leading position at the Central School of Education in Helsinki, also emphasized that educational equality is based on giving all children the same access opportunities, as is already the case in Finland . There is no primary school there , but a comprehensive school to which all children go up to 9th or 10th grade. Other main factors that contribute to student wellbeing are more staff, e.g. B. Specialists in school career counseling and career counseling, which is a compulsory subject in grades 7–9, and specialists in special education who not only look after children with learning difficulties, but also look after all other children with abnormalities. In order to increase the educational opportunities of children from the lower classes, there should be all-day schools in Germany, as in Finland and other countries, demands Christian Pfeiffer , Director of the Criminological Research Institute of Lower Saxony and University Professor of Criminology in Hanover. He reports on his and Dirk Baiers (diploma sociologist) study, which establishes the connection between delinquency and education. Both see the main cause of the increasing juvenile delinquency in the lack of school integration. In an all-day school, cultural and social learning is promoted. Students from all walks of life are in good hands and can pursue meaningful afternoon activities such as sports , art and culture . With her last feature, Renate Feyerbacher makes it clear how important it is to build a school for everyone. Only in this way can social equality and opportunities prevail in the education system.

Contribution to books
  • Article I rarely had time for myself (p. 88) in the book Working Time is Lifetime! Arguments for shortening working hours
  • Articles In search of physical changes (p. 41) , treatment with medication (p. 51) , light therapy (p. 56) in the book Mental Disorders: Recognize, Understand and Cope
  • Contribution against the status of guest workers: Equal treatment for our foreign fellow citizens (p.260) in the book Women's Program - Against Discrimination: Legislation - Action Plans - Self-Help, a manual
  • Article "Pillensucht (p. 80)" in the book Prepabac 34, l`oral d`allemand
  • Articles Mammal Humans, Pregnancy and Breastfeeding (p. 141) and When the Bones Are Torn, Nutrition in Old Age in the book On Everyone's Mouth: Nutrition Today
Articles in magazines and newspapers
  • Demand instead of ask

In the article Demanding instead of asking , Renate Feyerbacher writes about the situation of social welfare recipients. She explains why the majority of those in need of social assistance are women and how they are treated by the authorities.

  • Why are you still doing an apprenticeship at your age?

In the article Why are they still doing an apprenticeship at their age? Renate Feyerbacher writes about her conversations with participants in the model program for professional reintegration of the Federal Ministry for Youth, Family and Health from 1976. In doing so, she ascertains what opportunities women have gained on the job market through professional qualifications .

  • Saints and whore

Renate Feyerbacher's first newspaper article is about the book Heinrich Satter's Neither Angels nor Devils - Ida Orloff , which explains , among other things, the relationship between the then 43-year-old poet Gerhart Hauptmann and the 16-year-old Ida Orloff .

Her headline provocatively includes the words saint and whore , referring to Satter's analysis, in which he shows the contradiction in Hauptmann's behavior towards Ida Orloff by comparing Hauptmann's love letters to Ida Orloff and his diary entries from 1905/06. While he speaks of her as a saint in his love letters, he speaks of her as a whore in his diaries.

The interesting thing about Feyerbacher's work is the question of whether the liaison with Ida Orloff influenced Gerhart Hauptmann's middle creative period. Feyerbacher is convinced of this, as she writes: "Various plays and novels are variations on the theme of saints and harlots . For example, Emperor Karl Geisel , in which the figures of the old emperor and the young Gersuind clearly have autobiographical traits."

Feyerbacher refers to Satter's book in order to suggest a reinterpretation of Hauptmann's female figures in literary history .

  • Alcoholism in women

Renate Feyerbacher describes in her one-page article with the help of doctors, psychiatrists and those affected in detail the reasons for which a woman can become addicted to alcoholism. She notes that more and more women and young people are falling victim to alcoholism. It also describes different ways of treating alcoholism.

  • The desire for a baby Help for childless couples

The article The Desire for a Baby, Help for Childless Couples is about couples who would like to have children but remain childless. Renate Feyerbacher presents various possibilities how such couples can still be helped to have a child with medical help.

  • Mama, we won't give the B.

Renate Feyerbacher wrote a very personal report about her second pregnancy in the newspaper article Mama, we don’t give her B. any more , in which fears and discomfort arose. As a freelance mother, she felt overwhelmed at times. Since she was like many mothers at this time, it was important to her to publish the course of this pregnancy.

  • I wanted to be like them sooner - the reconstruction of the female breast after cancer - surgery

In the article I wanted to be like it was before, the reconstruction of the female breast after cancer surgery , three surgical methods for reconstructing the female breast that are used in Germany are presented. In addition, women who have had an operation report on their experiences.

  • The woman is seen as a foreign body - On the situation of female engineers

The article The woman is viewed as a foreign body - On the situation of female engineers, it is shown that women have not yet been able to assert themselves in engineering professions, since of the five hundred to six hundred thousand employed only fourteen thousand women work as engineers. Renate Feyerbacher makes it clear through interviews with those affected and scientists how important the recognition of women in engineering professions is in the interests of gender politics.

  • Conflicts with food - It's about the issue of anorexia

This article is about anorexia . Renate Feyerbacher explains the causes and treatment options of anorexia through interviews with Christopher Hebel (then a doctor in the psychosomatic department in the Clementine Children's Hospital Dr. Christ'sche Foundation ) and those affected.

  • Helping to make life worth living No checkbook mentality: International women's organizations

The article is about two international women's organizations, Zonta International and the Soroptimist . "Both organizations see themselves as service organizations. Their female members want to use their knowledge to provide non-material help as well as financial support for social projects all over the world. Instead of a checkbook mentality, active help is the order of the day. So even a less wealthy member can get active bring in. " The aim of both organizations is to improve the position of women in all areas of life.

  • The mother was also brought in the fate of German women after World War II

The contribution Die Mutti was brought also reminds of millions of German women and girls who were raped and kidnapped by victorious soldiers in 1945. These incidents were not individual fates, but mass rapes (especially in eastern Germany) and yet they were not included in scientific historical research. It was also kept silent in society. During the GDR era it was even forbidden to talk about it. If this happened anyway, it was included in the Stasi files. It is also mentioned that women have always been raped in wars and still do today. The rape in the Kosovo war was the reason for the scientist Dr. Regina Steil from the Institute for Psychology at the Friedrich Schiller University Jena and the psychologist Silke Sömmer to carry out a study on the post-traumatic disorders of raped women five decades ago. For this purpose, 32 affected women who were older than 65 years made themselves available. It was found that those affected suffer from recurring images or memories or from strong, stressful dreams. In addition, 70 percent of those affected are unable to experience feelings.

  • The flap can save lives Project foundling, anonymity guaranteed: women religious and family advisors help helpless mothers

In the article Die Klappe can save lives, foundling baby project, anonymity guaranteed: Religious women and family counselors help helpless mothers , it is about various facilities (including the first house Kinderhaus Sonnenblume for unwanted children in Germany) where unwanted mothers can give their newborns. On the one hand, examples are used to illustrate the reasons why women give up their children and what social taboos this is subject to, and on the other hand, help is shown for unwanted mothers.

  • Pictures of life that reflect the eventful history of the 20th century . A look into the twelve volumes of the biographical series 'Founders, Patrons and Scholars'

In the article Renate Feyerbacher writes about the twelve volumes of the biographical series 'Founders, Patrons and Scholars' as part of the 100th anniversary of the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main. It deals with outstanding personalities who co-founded the university, as well as with the generation of reconstruction after 1945. It also portrays pioneers and actors of the 1960s and 1970s, which were particularly active in education. The series of biographies show how closely the history of the university is interwoven with that of Frankfurt.

Membership in associations and unions

  • Member of the Rundfunk-Fernseh-Film-Union (RFFU) / Ver.di union
  • Member of the Frankfurt Press Club
  • Founding member of the Association of Women Journalists in the FPC (Frankfurt Press Club)
  • Member of the German Journalists Association (she is repeatedly nominated as a delegate)

Web links

Selection of articles for online magazines

Individual evidence

  1. Rheinisches Zahnärzteblatt 8/1990, p. 32.
  2. Annedore Leber: The conscience stands up: 64 life pictures from d. German resistance 1933-1945; Mosaik Verlag, Berlin, Frankfurt / Main 1954.
  3. www.feuilletonfrankfurt.de .
  4. http://erhard-metz.de/ .
  5. a b c d e f Quote from the interview with Renate Feyerbacher on May 17, 2012.
  6. a b c d e f g h i j k l Interview with Renate Feyerbacher from May 17, 2012.
  7. Broadcast from June 11, 1985, 11:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m., 2nd edition.
  8. http://www.baukultur-forschung.de/datenbank/alphabetisch/m/p441/ .
  9. http://www.ism-info.de/ism-info.html?qdb=ism&a=775cd805c522ad19 .
  10. Many thanks to Klaus Scheunemann. Retrieved March 5, 2013.
  11. Ceremonial award ceremony at Thanksgiving on November 22, 2011 in Frankfurt am Main .
  12. http://web.ard.de/ard-chronik/index/2839?year=1998 .
  13. ^ Hessenschau , broadcast on March 15, 1982.
  14. hr-Frauenfunk, broadcast on April 16, 1982.
  15. hr-Frauenfunk, broadcast on June 1, 1984.
  16. OLG Frankfurt from November 13, 1990 - 11 U 44/90; Frankfurt Higher Regional Court, December 11, 1990 - 11 U 44/90.
  17. BGH, November 12, 1991 - VI ZR 7/91.
  18. ^ Hessenschau contribution, broadcast on October 11, 1972.
  19. Darmstädter Echo , October 11, 1972, Osttangente - pro and contra : Short film about the Martinsviertel on television today - interview with Mayor Sabais .
  20. Broadcast on June 3, 1972.
  21. ADAC motorwelt, 4/90.
  22. das hr magazin, radio zeit, No. 3/2002 - D 13604 D, February 15 to March 24, 2002, p. 5; Hofheimer Zeitung, number 4, January 11, 2002, 91st volume.
  23. Working time is lifetime! Arguments for shortening working hours, Gutenberg Book Guild, Frankfurt am Main 1984, ISBN 3-7632-2935-3 .
  24. ^ Youth press conference on the hr, broadcast on February 22, 1975.
  25. ^ Frankfurter Neue Presse, Goethe divided by Thirteen , October 17, 1973.
  26. (1905–1996), German publisher and journalist.
  27. ^ Hessenschau, broadcast on January 6, 1983.
  28. ^ Letter from Prof. Dr. med. Ernst-Gerhard Loch from the German Clinic for Diagnostics to Renate Feyerbacher on June 28, 1983.
  29. ^ Hessenschau, broadcast on December 27, 1984.
  30. Ariane Barth: "Mama, why don't you have a key?" In: Der Spiegel . No. 24 , 1985 ( online - June 10, 1985 ).
  31. ^ FS hr, editorship for education and upbringing (editor Heinz Grossmann), broadcast on December 12, 1986, 8:45 p.m.
  32. Claudia Bier-Fleiter, Wilma Grossmann, Heide Kallert: Conflicts in Pregnancy: An empirical study of the pregnancy experience of expectant mothers in a home for mothers and children, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 1985, ISBN 3924058024 .
  33. ^ ARD Children's Theme Week, April 15, 2007, 6:05 pm, a production by Hessischer Rundfunk (hr2).
  34. http://www.gerald-huether.de/ .
  35. hr 2 Kultur, broadcast on October 5, 2008, 6:05 pm.
  36. ^ The 2nd Education Report (2008) ( Memento from March 31, 2013 in the Internet Archive ).
  37. http://www.enja-riegel.de/ .
  38. http://www.taz.de/!76383/ .
  39. Working time is lifetime! Arguments for shortening working hours, base books No 6, Gutenberg Book Guild, Frankfurt am Main 1984, ISBN 3-7632-2935-3 .
  40. Regina Oehler: Psychological disorders: recognize, understand and manage, Eichborn GmbH & Co. Verlag KG, Frankfurt am Main 1998, ISBN 3-8218-1482-9 .
  41. ^ Marielouise Janssen-Jurreit: Women's program - Against Discrimination, Legislation-Action Plans-Self-Help, a manual, Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH, Hamburg 1979, ISBN 3 499 14426 3 .
  42. ^ Dominique Macaire / Claudine Francois: Prepabac 34, l`oral d`allemand, Verlag Hatier, Paris 1993, ISBN 2-218-04118-9 .
  43. Utz Thimm / Karl-Heinz Wellmann: On everyone's lips: Nutrition today, paperback 3602, Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main 2004, ISBN 3-518-45602-4 .
  44. Alice Schwarzer: EMMA, magazine for women from women, September 1977, No. 9, p. 31, EMMA-Frauenverlags-GmbH, Cologne 1977.
  45. Meeting point 14, We women can do more , An information publication from the Federal Minister for Youth, Family and Health, Industriedruck AG, Essen, 1979.
  46. Frankfurter Rundschau, Bücher Von Heute, number 172, page VI, July 27, 1968.
  47. Ida Orloff's son from his first marriage to Karl Satter.
  48. Heinrich Satter: Neither angel nor devil. Ida Orloff. Scherz, Munich / Bern / Vienna 1967; New edition under the title Ida Orloff and Gerhart Hauptmann. Neither angel nor devil. Ullstein, Frankfurt / Berlin 1996, ISBN 3-548-35610-9 .
  49. Emperor Karl's hostage. A game of legends (verse drama in 4 acts). Berlin (S. Fischer) 1908. Created 1906–1907. Premiere January 11, 1908 Berlin (Lessingtheater; director: Emil Lessing ; dramaturgy: Otto Brahm; with Hans Marr [Karl], Ida Orloff [Gersuind])
  50. Schwarzwälder Bote, Frau und Familie, Number 23, 4./5. June 1977.
  51. Frankfurter Rundschau, Frau und Gesellschaft, page V, No. 247, November 4, 1978.
  52. ^ Frankfurter Rundschau, Woman and Society, page V, December 13, 1980.
  53. ^ Frankfurter Rundschau, Woman and Society, page V, August 13, 1983.
  54. Frankfurter Rundschau, Frau und Gesellschaft, page ZB 5, November 3, 1984.
  55. Frankfurter Rundschau, Frau und Gesellschaft, page ZB 5, September 2, 1989.
  56. Frankfurter Rundschau, Frau und Gesellschaft, No. 152, page ZB 5, July 4, 1998.
  57. Frankfurter Rundschau, Frau und Gesellschaft, page ZB 5, No. 84, April 8, 2000.
  58. http://www.socialnet.de/rezensions/6937.php .
  59. ^ Frankfurter Rundschau, FROM THE FEDERAL STATES; Page 6, D / R / S; April 4, 2001.
  60. Sunflower Children's House. A home for the uninhabited. ( Memento from May 1, 2013 in the Internet Archive )
  61. ^ Research Frankfurt: the science magazine of the Goethe University, 1.2014, 31st year 2014; Page 150–155.
  62. Together with her colleague Wolf Lindner, she was the spokesperson for the freelance staff at the hr (1976 to 1978).
  63. from 1972 to 1997.
  64. since January 1, 1985 until today.
  65. since October 31, 1986 until today.
  66. since December 1, 1997 until today.