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  Alfred Hugenberg
Born as the son of Karl Hugenberg, a member of the Prussian parliament, he studied Law in Göttingen, Heidelberg, and Berlin, as well as Economics in Strassburg.
In 1918, Hugenberg joined the Deutschnationale Volkspartei (DNVP[?], German National People's Party), which he represented in the National Assembly (that would produce the 1919 constitution of the Weimar Republic) and later in the Reichstag, the Republic's parliament.
In the last years of the Weimar Republic until the appointment of Adolf Hitler as Reichskanzler (Chancellor) in 1933, the DNVP (under the lead of Hugenberg) cooperated with the NSDAP to oppose the cabinet of Heinrich Brüning and, to an extent, the Republic as a whole.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/hu/Hugenberg_Press.html   (319 words)

  
 Alfred Hugenberg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born as the son of Karl Hugenberg, a member of the Prussian parliament, he studied Law in Göttingen, Heidelberg, and Berlin, as well as Economics in Strasbourg.
At the beginning of the 1920s, Hugenberg exerted substantial influence on the right-wing press in Germany with his right-wing publishing firm Scherl House.
Under Hugenberg's leadership the DNVP also toned down or abandoned the monarchism which had characterized the party in its earlier years.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Alfred_Hugenberg   (440 words)

  
 Hans Fritzsche - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fritzsche was born in Bochum (a city in the Ruhr Area) and served in the German army from 1917.
Post-war he studied briefly at a number of universities before becoming a journalist for the Hugenberg Press and then involved in the new mass media of the radio, working for the German government.
In mid-1938 he became deputy to Alfred Berndt at the German Press Division.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hans_Fritzsche   (314 words)

  
 Alfred Hugenberg   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-21)
At beginning of the 1920s Hugenberg exerted substantial influence on the press in Germany.
In 1918 Hugenberg joined the Deutschnationale Volkspartei (DNVP German National People's Party) which he in the National Assembly (that would produce 1919 constitution of the Weimar Republic) and later in the Reichstag the Republic's parliament.
In the last years of the Weimar until the appointment of Adolf Hitler as Reichskanzler (Chancellor) in 1933 the DNVP (under the lead of cooperated with the NSDAP to oppose the of Heinrich Brüning and to an extent the Republic a whole.
www.freeglossary.com /Hugenberg_Press   (556 words)

  
 Hans Fritzsche   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-21)
For the correct definition of the role of defendant Hans Fritzsche it is necessary, firstly, to keep clearly in mind the importance attached by Hitler and his closest associates (as Goering, for example) to propaganda in general and to radio propaganda in particular.
Without propaganda, founded on the total eclipse of the freedom of press and of speech, it would not have been possible for German fascism to realise its aggressive intentions, to lay the groundwork and then to put to practice the war crimes and the Crimes against Humanity.
As Chief of the Press Section inside Germany it was also Fritzsche who was responsible for the activity of the German daily press consisting of 2,300 newspapers.
www.adolfhitler.ws /lib/nsdap/Fritzsche.html   (2439 words)

  
 THE HOLOCAUST PROJECT - Selected Biographies - H
HUGENBERG, ALFRED (18??-19??) Co-founder of the Pan-German League in 1890, the most powerful publicist in Weimar Germany, and one of the men most responsible for Hitler's appointment as Chancellor in 1933.
Hugenberg had been Krupp's general manager and during WWI had endorsed Germany's most aggressive war plans.
Hugenberg's promise to serve in a cabinet under Hitler helped convince Hindenburg that Hitler could be controlled and used to unify German nationalists.
www.humanitas-international.org /holocaust/bios_h.htm   (1731 words)

  
 Shofar FTP Archives: imt/tgmwc/tgmwc-05/tgmwc-05-41.01
Concerning the German Press Division, Fritzsche's affidavit states: "During the whole period from 1933 to 1945 it was the task of the German Press Division to supervise the entire domestic Press, and to provide [Page 82] it with directives by which this division became an efficient instrument in the hands of the German State leadership.
The less important newspapers and periodicals, which were not represented at the daily Press conferences, received their information in a different way by being provided either with ready-made articles and reports, or with a confidential printed instruction.
The German Press Division was also in charge of pictorial reporting, insofar as it directed the employment of pictorial reporters at important events.
www.nizkor.org /ftp.cgi/imt/ftp.py?imt/tgmwc/tgmwc-05/tgmwc-05-41.01   (2467 words)

  
 HighBeam Encyclopedia - Hugenberg, Alfred   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-21)
HUGENBERG, ALFRED [Hugenberg, Alfred], 1865-1951, German financier and politician.
Control of the Hugenberg combine, a media and finance conglomerate, enabled him to mount a powerful propaganda campaign against Communists, socialists, and the Versailles Treaty.
He was a major financial backer of the Nazis, hoping to control them, and a member of Hitler's first cabinet (1933), but he resigned after six months.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/H/Hugenber.asp   (291 words)

  
 FES: Archiv für Sozialgeschichte - Bd. 41.2001   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-21)
This essay does not seek to provide the reasons for the influence of the major press companies in general; instead it focuses on the question of which political ambitions the bosses of the major newspaper corporations held for themselves and the extent to which they were successful in fulfilling those ambitions.
One central argument is thus that for those press entrepreneurs who held political ambitions – such as William Randolph Hearst, the British Lords Northcliffe, Rothermere or Beaverbrook as well as Alfred Hugenberg – there were considerable structural problems for transforming their journalistic influence into direct political power.
Alfred Hugenberg too, who had established his newspaper empire specifically for party political purposes, failed in the end to transform his journalistic influence into political power.
library.fes.de /afs-online/41/41-en03.htm   (369 words)

  
 Hans Fritzsche
This description of Fritzsche's establishes clearly that the German Press Division was the instrument for subordinating the entire German press to the political aims of the Nazi Government.
Between December 1938 and 1942, Fritzsche, as head of the German Press Division, personally gave to the representatives of the principal German newspapers the "daily parole of the Reich Press Chief." During this period he was the principal conspirator directly- concerned with the manipulations of the press.
Nazi Germany and its press went into war with Fritzsche in control of all German news, whether by press or radio.: In 1942, when Fritzsche transferred from the field of the press to radio, he was not removed for bungling, but because Goebbels then needed his talents most in the field of radio.
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org /jsource/Holocaust/Fritzsche.html   (5583 words)

  
 Social Cognition Lab
Hugenberg, K., and Bodenhausen, G. Category membership moderates the inhibition of social identities.
Galinsky, A. D., Hugenberg, K., Groom, C., and Bodenhausen, G. The reappropriation of stigmatizing labels: Implications for social identity.
Hugenberg, K., and Bodenhausen, G. Facing prejudice: Implicit prejudice and the perception of facial threat.
www.psych.northwestern.edu /folks/bodenhausen/publications.htm   (1747 words)

  
 Shofar FTP Archives: imt/nca/nca-06/nca-06-3469-ps-01
My way from the so-called Hugenberg press to the Propaganda Ministry was as follows: 4.
Alfred Hugenberg was a member of the German National Assembly and of the Reichstag from 1920 until after the seizure of power in 1933.
The Telegraph Union belonged to and was controlled by the Alfred Hugenberg Enterprises.
www.vex.net /~nizkor/ftp.py?imt/nca/nca-06/nca-06-3469-ps-01   (1265 words)

  
 portland imc - 2003.04.17 - FOX News Complicit In US War Crimes?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-21)
The head of the German Press Division held daily press conferences in the Ministry for the representatives of all German newspapers.
Fritzsche was named head of the German Press Division in 1938 after the "primitive military-like" methods of his predecessor, Alfred Ingemar Berndt, created "a noticeable crisis in confidence of the German people in the trustworthiness of its press," in Fritzsche's words.
Without propaganda, founded on the total eclipse of the freedom of press and of speech, it would not have been possible for German Fascism to realize its aggressive intentions, to lay the groundwork and then to put to practice the war crimes and the crimes against humanity.
portland.indymedia.org /en/2003/04/60180.shtml   (2593 words)

  
 SPN Professional Profile: Galen Bodenhausen
Hugenberg, K., & Bodenhausen, G. Ambiguity in social categorization: The role of prejudice and facial affect in racial categorization.
Hugenberg, K., & Bodenhausen, G. Facing prejudice: Implicit prejudice and the perception of facial threat.
Quinn, K. A., Hugenberg, K., & Bodenhausen, G. Functional modularity in stereotype representation.
bodenhausen.socialpsychology.org   (367 words)

  
 The Avalon Project : Nuremberg Trial Proceedings Vol. 6
The German Press Division likewise was in charge of pictorial reporting insofar as it directed the employment of pictorial reporters at important events.
Between December 1938 and 1942, Fritzsche, as head of the German Press Division, personally gave to the representatives of the principal German newspapers the "daily parole of the Reich Press Chief." During this history-making period he was the principal conspirator directly concerned with the manipulations of the press.
Nazi Germany and its press went into the actual phase of war operations with Fritzsche at the head of the particular propaganda instrument controlling the German press and German news, whether by the press or by radio.
www.yale.edu /lawweb/avalon/imt/proc/01-23-46.htm   (19480 words)

  
 The Nuremberg tribunal and the role of the media
According to Fritzsche’s own affidavit: “During the whole period from 1933 to 1945 it was the task of the German Press Division to supervise the entire domestic press and to provide it with directives by which this division became an efficient instrument in the hands of the German State leadership.
They used the press, after their earlier conquests, as a means for further influencing foreign politics and in maneuvering for the following aggression.”
The prosecution went on: “For the correct definition of the role of defendant Hans Fritzsche it is necessary, firstly, to keep clearly in mind the importance attached by Hitler and his closest associates (as Goering, for example) to propaganda in general and to radio propaganda in particular.
www.dangerouscitizen.com /Articles/492.aspx   (2655 words)

  
 Ullstein and Mosse: Overview
Hugenberg has gained notoriety as an example of German conservatives who thought that they could readily manipulate Hitler ("We'll box Hitler in.… In two months we'll have pushed Hitler so far into a corner that he'll squeal").
George Mosse's Confronting History: A Memoir (Madison: Uni of Wisconsin Press 2000) is of particular merit.
For Hugenberg see in particular John Leopold's Alfred Hugenberg: The radical nationalist campaign against the Weimar Republic (New Haven: Yale Uni Press 1977) and Gerald Feldman's characteristically incisive 'Right-Wing Politics and the Film Industry: Emil Georg Stauss, Alfred Hugenberg, and the UFA, 1917-1933'.
www.ketupa.net /ullstein.htm   (1102 words)

  
 Communication Studies
Craig, M., Olaniran, B.A., Scholl, J.C., and Williams, D.E. (in press).
Stow, B. and Williams, D.E. It’s not what you said, but how you said it.” In Hugenberg, B.S. and Hugenberg, L.W. (Eds.).
Hugenberg, L.W., Gray, P.L. and Trank, D.M. Teaching and directing the basic communication course.
www.depts.ttu.edu /communicationstudies/williamsr.html   (923 words)

  
 Horsefeathers - HAPPY ANNIVERSARY CHANCELLOR HITLER
Led by Alfred Hugenberg, the press and movie-industry lord, the nationalist opposition tried to force the government to repudiate the reparations debt completely as well as the war guilt clause of Versailles upon which the debt rested.
But an unintended effect of Hugenberg’s campaign was to give widespread public exposure to Hitler, who used his access to the Hugenberg-owned press empire and to its weekly movie newsreels to give himself and his Nazi movement national publicity.
They assured the reluctant president that Hitler's radical tendencies would be checked by the fact that Papen would hold the vice-chancellorship and that other conservatives would control the crucial ministries, such as those of war, foreign affairs, and economics.
doctor-horsefeathers.com /archives2/000533.php   (3699 words)

  
 Publications
Roese, N. J., & Sherman, J. (in press).
Robins, R. W., Tracy, J. L., and Sherman, J. (in press).
Conrey, F. R., Sherman, J. W., Gawronski, B., Hugenberg, K., & Groom, C. Separating multiple processes in implicit social cognition: The Quad-Model of implicit task performance.
psychology.ucdavis.edu /labs/sherman/site/Publications.cfm   (879 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Alfred Hugenberg (German History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com - Alfred Hugenberg (German History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > German History, Biographies > Alfred Hugenberg
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/H/Hugenber.html   (213 words)

  
 Trials of German Major War Criminals: Volume 5
German Press Division by Dr. Goebbels, and accepted, from Dr.
For a clear exposition of the general functions of the German Press Division of the Propaganda Ministry, the Tribunal is referred to Document 2434-PS, Document book Page 5.
"During the whole period from 1933 to 1945 it was the task of the German Press Division to supervise the entire domestic Press, and to provide
www.nizkor.org /hweb/imt/tgmwc/tgmwc-05/tgmwc-05-41-01.shtml   (2700 words)

  
 Find in a Library: Alfred Hugenberg : the radical nationalist campaign against the Weimar Republic
Alfred Hugenberg : the radical nationalist campaign against the Weimar Republic
To find this item in a library, enter a postal code, state, province, or country in the field above.
WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.
www.worldcatlibraries.org /wcpa/ow/c0cbd7c71aed3b77.html   (69 words)

  
 [No title]
Other research interests include the study of automatic processes in behaviors and in the processing of affective information.
Distortions in the Memory of the Pitch of Speech.
Potter, T., Corneille, O., Ruys, K. and Rhodes, G. (in press).
www.psor.ucl.ac.be /personal/corneille   (1248 words)

  
 Review of Nazism Series, Pridham and Noakes
Other documents in Volume One may be less familiar but of particular help in grasping how Hitler raised money for a relatively insignificant Bavarian Party during the 1920s, and how he curried favor with national conservative media--both essential activities if he intended to bring himself and National Socialism to the attention of a mass public.
With respect to the latter objective, during the autumn of 1929 Alfred Hugenberg, a press and film mogul, called on Germans to reject the Young Plan and that blueprint's implication that war guilt articles in the Versailles Treaty and German reparations were justified.
Among the last documents in this volume is an account by Hans Fritzsche, press division head at the Propaganda Ministry, of a conversation with Goebbels, who, like Hitler, would pin blame for the collapse of the Third Reich on Germans:
www.ess.uwe.ac.uk /genocide/reviewstr4.htm   (2201 words)

  
 Iraq War: The Nuremberg tribunal and the role of the media
One in twelve of world’s children are forced into 'worst forms' of child labor
AIDS death toll in Africa may reach 100 million by 2025 Associated Press
Indonesian quake leaves 4,300 dead and 200,000 homeless Associated Press
www.worldrevolution.org /article/800   (2843 words)

  
 Rhetorical Studies Honoring James L. Golden by Lawrence W. Hugenberg, New, Used Books, Cheap Prices, ISBN 0840341423   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-08-21)
Rhetorical Studies Honoring James L. Golden (By Lawrence W. Hugenberg)
Hardcover / Louisiana State University Press / 0807120057
Rhetorical Criticism: Essays in Honor of James Mui...
www.bookfinder4u.com /detail/0840341423.html   (253 words)

  
 Simulations for Business and Professional Communications by Lawrence W. Hugenberg, New, Used Books, Cheap Prices, ISBN ...
Simulations for Business and Professional Communications by Lawrence W. Hugenberg, New, Used Books, Cheap Prices, ISBN 0840346352
Hardcover / Haworth Press, Incorporated, The / 0789000415
The Communications Toolkit: How to Build and Regul...
www.bookfinder4u.com /detail/0840346352.html   (192 words)

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