Az Ember, 1943 (18. évfolyam, 25. éves jubíleumi szám)

1943-07-04 / 25. éves jubileumi szám

50-ik oldal. Az Ember July 4, 1943 A PECULIAR GENTLEMAN OF THE PRESS By DR. EDMOND PAUKER Gentlemen of the Press are peculiar individuals all over the world. ■ We have known many of them in various parts of the globe but none so singular as one Ferenc Gondor of East 79th St., New York, N. Y. He owns and controls a whole paper, body and soul ,to the last inch, a Hungarian weekly which looks like a pocket­­bood edition compared to American journals. This publication is now celebrat­ing its 25th anniversary. Twenty-five years is a lot of years in a newspaperman’s life and for that matter in anybody’s life. In the course of a quarter of a century much good and much harm can be done by a fighting pen. Mr. Gondor’s paper has done much good for good causes, much harm to bad ones. It fought incessantly, valiantly, fearlessly, and so effectively that it made a vast number of friends and no less enemies. It is a guess whether the friends out­number the enemies. Cer­tainly the multitude of friends is large enough to make a political party and if you count his enemies you have an army. This potent and vigorous weekly with its eight-ten pages is obviously a pretty important organ. It whips Hungarian public opinion into shape to do its share in the momentoos fight for the Freedoms of humanity. How­ever, this is not the point at the moment; this point has been recognized and ac­­kowledged often enough by friends and enemies alike. What we want to empha- j size on this occasion is the ! unique achievement of the man and his paper, hardly ' DR. PAUKER ÖDÖN matched by other publishers and editors. Many papers live twenty-five years or more but few arrive at dis­tant milestones bearing the original credo on their ban­ner. It is a notorious fact that ownership of publica­tions undergoes changes, other interests take over with the result of new po­licy. The paper’s name may be the same but its princi­ples and opinions swing to the right or the left. When financial difficulties, forced sales, political temptation, pressure or dictatorial ter­ror wrest control from the hands of publishers, there it is: the change of font. Edi­tors come and go, yield or quit according to backbone. To be sure, dauntless news­papermen, editors, column­ists, correspondents, report­ers don’t bow their heads but protest and battle for prin­ciples and public interest. Usually, however, they have to fight their battles in col­umns of other papers. Ferenc Gondor’s career is j unique because he didn’t have to yield or quit. When- I ever his independence as a I publisher or editor was threatened a magic formula enabled him to carry on. The magic of this formula secur-RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL A VILÁG LEGNAGYOBB SZÍNHAZA ROCKEFELLER CENTER 6,000,000 embert rajongással szórakoztat évente a Radio City Music Hall . . . ahol a nemzet legkiválóbb mozgóképei kerülnek bemutatásra . . . ahol a NAGY SZÍNPADON a hires MUSIC HALL SZIMFONIKUS ZE­NEKARA RAPÉE ERNŐ vezetése alatt a világ legközkedveltebb nyitányait játsza és zenei hátteret ad a látványos színpadi pro­dukcióknak, bemutatva az újra szerződte­tett ROCKETTES táncegyüttest ... az egyetlen állandó amerikai Corps de Ballet­et .. . kiváló VOKAL EGYÜTTESEKET . . . és ragyogó különleges szórakoztató előadá­sokat. Phone: RAvenswood 8-2901 Standard Exterminating Co. Alex Feuerstein, Prop. 25-56 STEINWAY STREET LONG ISLAND CITY, N. Y. ed for him freedom of the press under all circumstan­ces. To provide himself with a publication of his own he founded “Az Ember” 25 years ago in Budapest. To assure faithful heralding of his so­cial philosophy and practical politics he employed himself as editor-in-chief, columnist, correspondent, reporter, and office boy. For tidiness in j h i s one-room publishing [ plant, he signed on for the job of scrubwoman also. Having thus organized ,an j able and reliable staff, and being in full control of the whole enterprise, lock, stock, and barrel, he issued his first number declaring a one-man war against the enemies of the Freedoms. When bloody force of political terror strangled the free press in Hungary, he put his paper under his arm and set up tent in Vienna, Austria. Los­ing no time, he published his paper in the heart of that foreign country and so de­monstrated the magic of the free and portable press. The magic worked. It burrowed underground channels for propaganda in Hungary, or­ganized resistance among refugees in Austria and showed the western world how the seeds of rebellion are sowed in the midst of subjugated people. When it became no longer possible for a liberal foreign paper to appear on the streets of Vienna, Mr. Gon­dor packed up and, putting his newspaper business into his vestpocket, availed him­self of the freedom of the seas. He took passage to America. After settling on the East Side of New York in the heart of the Hungar­ian district, he started the procedure all over again. In his capacity as a publisher he recruited a strong edi­torial staff appointing him­­sell editor, columnist, etc., all the way down the line and invaded those nooks and corners of the United States where Hungarians live. Here he is, this amazing Gentleman of the Press and his unique paper which started out twenty-five years ago with the same principles it proudly professes today. These principles, which seemed like idle dreams way back in the dim past, are nearer and nearer to realiza­tion every day. They are so vitally valid today that you find them in the Atlantic Charter as fundamental re­quisites of worthwhile hu­man existence anywhere on the earth. Mr. Gondor’s battle is not over as yet but the signs point to victory. He already has the satis­faction that Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Churchill at the head of the Allied Nations envisage for common people everywhere 2 world which he dreamed about, de­manded, and fought for since a quarter of a century. Remegünk már... Irta: VÁRNAI ZSENI Remegünk már, kiesik vagyunk nagyon, Mi urunk, Végzet, ne tiporj agyon. Buvunk tőled, mint üldözött zsivány, Utánunk nyargalsz szilaj paripán. Jaj most á jónak s jaj, ki vétkezett, Minden rejtekbe elér a kezed. Mindenütt vagy, ó mindenütt tudunk, Te irányítod rosszra az utunk. Te vagy a kard és te vagy a golyó, Halálvonat vagy és a vérfolyó. Szárnyas gépen a megbomlott kerék, Csatahajón a reccsenő derék. Háború vagy, a dögvész, a halál, Hulló kö, mely fejünkön talál. Szivünknek mélyén ó te vagy a seb És sosem voltál szörnyűbb, véresebb, Mint ezidön, mely felettünk inban. A lelkűnkben most őrület fogan. Kezemben is, lássad, reszket a toll, Mikor csapsz le rám, mikor érsz utói? Hisz úgy hullunk már, mint őszi legyek Hova rejtsem, kik nékem kedvesek? Hol van a rejtek és hol van a zug, Mikor felettünk vad haragod zug? És süvít és kavar, tombol és sej jer . . . Szörnyű szavában egy isten perel És romboló haragját zúdítja ránk, Emberi szókat már nem tud szánk, Csak bődülünk, mint taglózott barom: Mi urunk, Végzet, ne tiporj agyon! I A New Yorki Magyar Egyletek Központi Bizottsága A magyar demokratikus egységért tiz éve folytatott harca alkalmából Üdvözli mindazokat, kik munkájukkal az Egyesült Nemzetek teljes győzelmét elő­segítik s a Magyar Egységet lehetővé teszik A huszonötödik évforduló alkalmából üdvözli AZ EfdBER-t TUTURUTU BANDI A 25 éves “AZ EMBER”-t szeretettel üdvözli: I. FÖLDES IMMIGRATION SERVICE, STEAMSHIP TICKETS 1523 First Avenue — BU 8-4985 — NEW YORK PÁRTOLJA j “AZ EMBER” HIRDETŐIT! Szívélyesen üdvözlöm AZ EMBER-t és annak kiváló szerkesztőjét, Göndör Ferencet, 25 éves jubileuma alkalmából BLAU JENŐ PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

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