Prof. Hale's - Captive Press in the Third Reid.' Apples in Israel and in Tradition By DAVID SCHWARTZ Now take out your Bible and (Copyright, 1964, JTA, Inc.) Tells How Nazis Made Shambles of Newspapers turn to the Song of Songs and you Prof. Hale declares at the out- Prof. Oron J. Hale of the In- stitute for Advanced Study at set that "one topic should be dis- Princeton University, in one of posed of," that relating to Jew- the most authoritative revelations ish publishers, and he states: about Nazi oppressions, "The "From Nazi propaganda asser- Captive Press of the Third Reich," tions is derived the impression published by Princeton University of a large Jewish-owned press Press, shows how Hitler's Press in Germany. This is quite er- Chamber took control of Ger- roneous. The Ulistein publish- many's newspapers. ing house in Berlin was one of Under the dictatorial rule of the largest producers of news- papers, periodicals and books; Max Amann, who is referred to by the Mosse firm operated the the author as "Hitler's Business Dwarf," one chain of newspapers largest advertising agency and published the liberal Berliner after another fell under Nazi rule until every vestige of independ- Tageblatt, a journal of national and international distinction; ence vanished among Germany's and the Sonneman-Simon fam- editors and publishers. ily published the Frankfurter Zeitung, a leading liberal-demo- cratic daily. These enterprises were no larger or more potent than the Hugenberg concern or the newspaper chains operated by the Huck and Girardet fam- MA. Excluding the Ulistein, Mosse and Sonneman-Simon com- panies there was little Jewish of the Last Week's Winner capital invested in the newspa- per trade." "RASKIN The early acquistitions of news- BIG BABY BONUS" papers by the Nazis affected the MRS. SIDNEY ISRAEL Ullsteins most seriously. "Being (10 lbs., 8-oz.) Jewish owned, liberal, and a prod- uct of capitalistic enterprise and Congratulations on the birth of your son and we hope the RASKIN initiative, Ullstein was a target for PRODUCTS you received helped concentrated Nazi hate," Prof. make your first week at home easier. RASKIN FOOD CO. Hale states. "Trouble began im- mediately after January 1933: ■ ■ There were threats from the party July 18—To Mr. and Mrs. Shel- leadership conveyed to the Ull- don David Rocklin (Sharon Lynne steins through intermediaries; the Rosen), 20163 Northrop, a son, An- proclamation of anti-Semitic poli- drew Jay. cies which would make it impos- * * sible for them to continue in the July 17—To Mr. and Mrs. Cyril publishing business; intimidation Servetter (Miriam Schumer), 13510 of their subscription canvassers Dartmouth, Oak Park, twin sons, and subscribers by Nazi block Joseph Michael and David Aaron. wardens and SA men; and severe • * * pressure on advertisers." July 16—To Mr. and Mrs. Jack The Ullsteins attempted a re- Green w al d (Shirley Kesner), organization and appointed a non- 20101 Oakfield, a son, David Alan. Jewish son-in-law, Fritz Ross, as * * * manager. But the probable out- July 15—To Mr. and Mrs. Philip come of further Nazi persecutions Horowitz (Marilyn Herman), 23080 compelled them to sell the form Kipling, Oak Park, a daughter, for a fraction of its worth. A de- tailed account of the status of the Sherri Ann. * * * Ullsteins was given at Nurenberg July 12—To Mr. and Mrs. Samuel in 1947. There was an attempt by Deal (Sally A. Finkelstein), 18403 the Nazi defenders to show that the firm was already on the verge Indiana, a son, Raphael Franklin. * * * of bankruptcy when compensation July 8—To Mr. and Mrs. Arthur was asked, and Dr. Hale declares: Lieberman (Rochelle Fleischer), "That the Ullsteins were per- 18633 George Washington, South- secuted for political and racial field, a daughter, Lori Susan. reasons and despoiled of their * * * property is apparent. This was July 2—To Mr. and Mrs. Will- the finding of the restitution court after the war." iam R.. Katz (Barbara Burston), 19888 Cranbrook, a son, David Amann, held in high esteem by Martin. Hitler, became the chief controller * * * of the press. Hitler spoke of him June 23—To Mr. and Mrs. Shel- as a genius, as "the greatest news- don Brown (Judith Thomas), 29623 paper proprietor in the world. Fairfax, Southfield, a daughter, Prof. Hale describes Amann as an Pamela Eden. "aggressive, rowdy type of Nazi as was demonstrated at a Munich city council meeting when there were Recommended by Physicians taunts between Nazis and Social Democrats: "One of Amann's party associates was escorted from the council room by Mayor Scharnagl. Later when Amann denounced city Expert Mohel Serving Hospitals and Homes councillor Nussbaum as 'Jew Nuss- LI 2-4444 LI 1-9769 baum and provocateur,' Thomas Wimmer, who served as mayor of Munich after World War II, seized CERTIFIED EXPERT MOHEL Amann by the throat and forced RABBI him down upon the council table. Wimmer was only restrained from further violence against the Nazi tormentor by the intervention of FE 4-4149 FE 4-8266 his colleagues." Serving in Hospitals and Homes The evil-doers who were asso- ciated with Amann are listed and their activities described. Among REV. GOLDMAN L. them was Wilhelm Weiss, one of Amann's closest editorial asso- ciates, who, already in 1922, edited MOHEL Heimetlandbriefe in which he at- Serving at Homes and Hospitals tacked "Marxism, Jewry and poli- DI 1-9909 tical Catholicism." Weiss was less vindictive than others and "the Munich denazification court . . . RABBI CHASKEL placed him in the category of 'ac- GRUBNER tivist.' " SPECIALIZED MOHEL Total control was rapid and Recommended by Physicians Serving in Hospitals and Homes THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS TU 3-1441 3298 Sturtevant Friday, July 24, 1964 28 &IA An,nouncenients =11•1111111 RABBI LEO GOLDMAN Israel Goodman MARSHALL the strait jacket was provided for editors and publishers, for Catholic, Socialist, Communist newspapermen. Regimentation reached totality. To accomplish their purpose, the Amann group forced the Mosse company into hands of a receiver. Acquisition of all newspapers and advertising firms became routine. Prof. Hale points to the poor joke in one of the Nazi ordinances affecting newspapers which "pro- vided for the withdrawal of pub- lishing rights from any publisher whose papers by sensationalism, or offenses against public taste or morals, cast reflection on the pub- lishing business and the honor of the press." Dr. Hale declares: "That the ordinance was never en- forced against the worst offender —Julius Streicher and Der Stuer- mer—clearly reveals its sham ethi- cal character." "Dullness and uniformity" resulted. Prof. Hale shows that "Hitler's vaunted 'orchestra of the press' produced a very low order of music." Whatever minor efforts were made to improve upon these con- ditions were mild and ineffective. Germany began to suffer from shortage of newsprint. There were newspaper suspensions and con- solidations as the war progressed. But when the foreign press critic- ized the shutting down of the Frankfurter Zeitung, "founded and presumably owned by a Jewish publishing family," which "had been able to maintain itself dur- ing ten years of Nazi rule," a wit- ness at a hearing at the end of the war offered the briefest ex- planation—"Hitler's general aver- sion to the paper—`I don't like the name; it must be closed down.' " "In power, prestige and finan- cial gain," Prof. Hale states, "Max Amann was the principal benefi- ciary of the party's giant publish- ing monopoly." Amann enjoyed power and profits and the denazi- fication trial exposed his financial operations. He never admitted "that he had made a shambles of financial operations. He never ad- mitted "that he had made a sham- bles of the German publishing in- dustry." (In his review of Prof. Hale's book, in the New York Times, H. R. Trevor-Roper, author of "The Last Days of Hitler," stated that Prof. Hale's book "does not rouse in me much sympathy for the vic- tims." He concluded: "Like so much other evidence, it proves that the Germans thoroughly deserved the tyranny to which they so P.S. tamely submitted.") Miss Deborah Wise, the grand- daughter of the late Stephen Wise, is spending her summer at an Israeli Kibbutz. She had visited this Kibbutz before and says that the apples there are better even than the justly celebrated Oregon apples about which her grandfather, the famous Rabbi Wise, always liked to speak. I got this little social note from Morris Margulies, who had a let- ter from James Waterman Wise. Usually this column does not de- vote itself to social items and I am not sure Miss Wise would even approve of my publishing it, but I hope I will be forgiven, because it interests me for a special reason which I think would also interest many others. You see, some 30 years ago, I was in Jerusalem try- ing to get an apple and couldn't get one. I was very disconcerted by that fact. It wasn't Israel then, it was just a Jewish homeland as they called it, with the promise of sometime being a state, and I asked myself how could it be a state without apple trees? Logically, of course, I knew, apple trees were not indispensable to a state. It wasn't strictly speak- ing a sine qua non of a political entity. But I felt like Thomas Jef- ferson felt about freedom of the press and a state. He said, if he were offered the option of a state without freedom of the press or freedom of the press without a state, he would choose the latter. And I felt that, given a land with- out legislators and policemen and all the other things that go to make a state, but without apple trees, I would prefer a land with apple trees without councilmen and policemen. On my leaving Jerusalem then, I confided to one of the settlers my anxieties, and he reassured me in a very explicit way. He showed me an apple grown there. He said they were then experimenting with growing apples. The apple he showed me, he said, wasn't very good, but he added: "Come back in 10 years and you will see good apples." So that now they are growing apples there that are as good as the Oregon apples—I think Israel had a reason for congratulation! According to the Talmud, it is forbidden for an army attack- ing an enemy stronghold to des- troy its fruit trees. All fruit trees are nice, but there is something special about an apple tree. will see that the idea of sit- ting in the shade of an old apple tree was already there. It reads as follows: "As an apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons; under its shadow I delighted to sit, and its fruit was sweet to my taste." Later in the same Song of Songs we come across the much quoted line: "Comfort me with apples for I am sick with love." But it is not only the lovesick to whom the apple offers com- fort. It comforted a nation back in 1865, when Lee laid down his arms to Grant and the nation was once again reunited. The surren- der was under an apple tree at Appomattox. It is said that Eve's eating of the apple caused the expulsion of man from the Garden of Eden. This is a libel on the apple. Ac- tually, there is no mention of the apple in the Bible in the Adam and Eve story. The name of no specific fruit is given. Presumably the rumor spread that it was an apple because the people natural- ly presumed that only an apple tree offered temptation enough to chance the losing of Paradise. The fact is, wherever the apple is mentioned in the Bible, it is only to praise it. The highest tri- bute the Bible can conceive is to compare something with an apple. Thus, in the Book of Proverbs, we read that a good word in its sea- son is "like apples of gold in pitchers of silver." Scholarship Awarded Leonard Schreiman, a Wayne State University junior, has re- ceived the $100 Farband-Labor Zionist Scholarship Award for ex- cellence in Hebrew. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sol Shreiman, 19171 Ilene. and ENTERTAINMENT BY HAL GORDON UN 3-5730 UN 3-8982 LI 8-1116 LI 8-2266 • MOVIES • COLOR • CANDIDS • BLACK & WHITE American Jewish World Changes Into a Tabloid For Your Fine Diamonds and Jewelry MINNEAPOLIS (JTA) — The American Jewish World, Minneap- olis-St. Paul based English-Jewish weekly, changed its format this week to that of a tabloid. Here- tofore, throughout its 52-year his- tory, the publication has appeared as a news magazine. The weekly's page size has been increased from a four-column width to five col- urns and the page depth length- ened. A larger and more legible type-face was introduced with the changeover. L. H. Frisch, publisher and edi- tor of American Jewish World since its founding in 1912, empha- sized that the newspaper in its new "dress" will be enabled "to increase coverage of local, national and international n e w s. 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