TIME ETHIOPIA Defeat of the Press

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ETHIOPIA: Defeat of the Press Monday, Jan. 27, 1936 Journalism by last week had been defeated in Ethiopia on all fronts. The most unfortunate setbacks had been suffered by outstanding journalists assigned to the North Front. Swizzling in Cairo recently and proclaiming, "I'm having a nervous breakdown!" famed Floyd Gibbons was all but unrecognizable when last photographed (see cut) except for his trademark, the patch across one blind eye. Others were arriving in Manhattan, London and Paris heart-shocked by the altitude; nausea-shocked by the fleas, flies and filth; sleepless from malaria and dysentery; jittering and at such low ebb that their journalistic employers sent them to secluded rest homes. On the subject of altitude able United Press European News Manager Webb Miller vividly said: "You would lie down, thoroughly fatigued, your heart would palpitate and you would get scared, thinking you were going to die. Then would come fits of weeping, and then fits of passionate anger. It was a God-awful experience." Of some 120 correspondents and photographers who originally beseiged Addis Ababa for news only a scant dozen had not left by last week. Gone were Karl von Weigand, Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker and Evelyn Waugh. The Ethiopians had cheated the pants off the correspondents as individuals and collectively mulcted the world's news and newsreel services to an extent which makes Ethiopia journalism's worst investment of all time. The Addis Ababa crowd, who had supposed the North Front crowd were "riding around in Italian limousines and bathing in chianti,"

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TIME ETHIOPIA Defeat of the Press

Transcript of TIME ETHIOPIA Defeat of the Press

Page 1: TIME ETHIOPIA Defeat of the Press

ETHIOPIA: Defeat of the PressMonday, Jan. 27, 1936

Journalism by last week had been defeated in Ethiopia on all fronts.

The most unfortunate setbacks had been suffered by outstanding journalists

assigned to the North Front. Swizzling in Cairo recently and proclaiming, "I'm

having a nervous breakdown!" famed Floyd Gibbons was all but unrecognizable

when last photographed (see cut) except for his trademark, the patch across

one blind eye. Others were arriving in Manhattan, London and Paris heart-

shocked by the altitude; nausea-shocked by the fleas, flies and filth; sleepless

from malaria and dysentery; jittering and at such low ebb that their journalistic

employers sent them to secluded rest homes. On the subject of altitude able

United Press European News Manager Webb Miller vividly said: "You would lie

down, thoroughly fatigued, your heart would palpitate and you would get

scared, thinking you were going to die. Then would come fits of weeping, and

then fits of passionate anger. It was a God-awful experience."

Of some 120 correspondents and photographers who originally beseiged Addis

Ababa for news only a scant dozen had not left by last week. Gone were Karl

von Weigand, Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker and Evelyn Waugh. The Ethiopians

had cheated the pants off the correspondents as individuals and collectively

mulcted the world's news and newsreel services to an extent which makes

Ethiopia journalism's worst investment of all time.

The Addis Ababa crowd, who had supposed the North Front crowd were "riding

around in Italian limousines and bathing in chianti," discovered with surprise

on reaching civilization that it was themselves who physically and mentally

suffered least. Dictator Mussolini, with the tendency of a onetime editor to hold

reporters' lives cheap, let the boys on Italy's front get thoroughly Ethiopia-

shocked.

Home from Addis and Harar with bloodshot-eyes, malaria and insomnia but in

hearty spirits, Fox Movietone's Laurence Stallings bubbled of Ethiopian

beauties "too proud to notice a white man," confirmed that at the first sound of

an Italian bombing plane Ethiopian officers dive for the nearest Red Cross

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shelter. A prized Stallings snapshot shows the Ducal Palace of Emperor Haile

Selassie's younger son Makonnen at Harar flying the Red Cross flag although

not used for any Red Cross purpose.

One correspondent died in Ethiopia, Chicago Tribune's Will Barbour. Of him in

Manhattan last week Emperor Haile Selassie's Public Relations Counsel Josef

Israels II said, "I like to place Will Barbour among some of the other empire

builders who are buried in African soil, because never in all the history of

journalism has the press so swiftly, so expertly and so completely built an

empire of news and enlightenment in a wilderness hitherto unpenetrated." This

was one way of alluding to the fact that it remains impossible to obtain for love

or money anything remotely approaching an accurate day by day account of the

war on Ethiopia's fronts.

Sensation of Ethiopia today are newly arrived Moscow correspondents and

cinemen representing Tass, official Soviet news agency. Seemingly supplied

with unlimited funds and spending right & left, they say they are "preparing a

complete photographic document of Ethiopia," were splashing vigorously about

in Dessye last week making most elaborate shots of His Imperial Majesty for

Bolsheviks to gape at.