Word: tagesspiegel
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Imported antiSemitism! cried Berlin's U.S.-licensed Tagesspiegel. It was protesting against the expensively produced British movie Oliver Twist, J. Ar thur Rank's cinematic hot potato which the protests of Jewish groups had kept from U.S. screens (TIME, Oct. 4). A short time later, Berliners themselves protested in more destructive fashion at the movie's faithful portrait of Charles Dickens' "Jew Fagin," fence and brutal master of a gang of young thieves...
...editor and publisher of Berlin's Tagesspiegel (Mirror of the Day), biggest paper in the U.S. zone, 54-year-old Reger is a key man in the Allied effort to reestablish a free German press. In the summer of 1945, when "good" Germans were hard to find, American officers summoned him from his village of Mahlow. They knew his record: he was a onetime (1920-27) publicist for the Krupp works at Essen, later an anti-Nazi novelist and broadcaster. During the war he had escaped the Gestapo's notice by dropping his pen name of Reger...
...Tagesspiegel is not Berlin's biggest daily (the Russian-licensed Tägliche Rundschau sells 800,000 copies, the British-licensed Telegraf 600,000), but it is the best-balanced. It is not pre-censored, follows no party line. Thus, it has readers in all zones. Written in prosy, pedantic German, it runs unemotional editorials that occasionally criticize vacillating U.S. policy. Reger's own articles, like himself, are stolid, learned and long-winded. His chief troubles are those of all the German press: newsprint shortage (most of it comes from the Russian zone), and newsmen who are untainted...
...language newspapers) in the late war, Weidenreich figured that TIME would be a stiff jolt for Germans accustomed to the controlled misinformation of Herr Gocbbels' press. To help make TIME more intelligible to German readers, he wrote the following piece (given here in translation) for Berlin's Tagesspiegel. Although I disagree with some of his observations, I found his viewpoint interesting and believe you will...
...This week I read that TIME will be sold once more in Berlin-together with the Tägliche Rundschau, the Telegraf, the Kurier, and the Tagesspiegel. The results should be interesting. Perhaps some explanations will be in order, so that the 'New Germany' won't mistake a critique of President Truman as the first step by certain political elements to start a 'putsch' or news about Russian officers being arrested somewhere as the beginning of a new war. Here, therefore, are some comments that may help in reading TIME...