The Shanghai Herald

The Shanghai Herald was an English-language newspaper published in Shanghai, China.[1]

The editor of the Shanghai Herald and China Critic, Kwei Chung-shu, had graduated from the University of Wisconsin.[2]

Günther Lenhardt, a journalist from Berlin, Germany, established the Herald.[3] He hired two journalists from Vienna, Austria, Ladislaus Frank and Mark Siegelberg, who had previously worked for the Shanghai Jewish Chronicle.[4] Hartmut Walravens, author of German Influence on the Press in China, said that despite the paper's establishment, "the Shanghai Jewish Chronicle remained the leading paper".[3] The Shanghai Herald and the Shanghai Journal formed an affiliation on March 1, 1946. The Herald began publishing a German supplement, called The Shanghai Herald / German Language Supplement.[3]

Content

One regular feature of the Herald was "Der Wochenslat" ("the weekly salad") by Kurt Lewin.[5]

References

Notes

  1. Yung, p. 257.
  2. Cornebise, p. 46.
  3. 1 2 3 Walravens, p. 95.
  4. Points East, Volumes 8-17, p. 110. "[...]and a Berlin journalist, Guenter Lenhardt, founded the Shanghai Herald, hiring Frank and Siegelberg away from the Shanghai Jewish Chronicle."
  5. Eber, p. 120.
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