More attention is given to English, principally because it will be useful in carrying out the great aim of world conquest by the Nazis. The teaching of English is begun early in the life of the school-child; the subject has been making headway, and is now one of the major courses, for Nazi propaganda in Anglo-Saxon countries is being given its due.

PHYSICS

Since all instruction is Nazi instruction, all science is Nazi science. Physics is Nazi physics, Wehrphysik — the “physics of weapons.” Professor Lenard, a Nobel Prize winner, an old Heidelberg scholar, and one of the few of whose achievements the Nazis may be proud, has written a new German Physics, dedicated to Dr. Frick, Prussian Minister of the Interior, and opening: “German Physics? These words will raise a question, and it is true that I might as well have said Aryan physics — or the physics of the Nordic man, or the physics of those who have fathomed the depths of reality. ‘But,’ I shall hear, ‘science is and remains international.’ That is an error. Science is and remains, like everything else created by the human mind, racially bound and a result of blood.”

There it is, with the familiar ring, leaving no doubts as to the success of their totalitarian co-ordination, the Gleichschaltung they all profess.

“The physics of weapons will naturally play an important part in the education of German Youth to bear arms,” says Oberstudiendirektor Erich Günther, in the preface to his textbook on Wehrphysik. The transformation of physics into the teaching of National Socialism has the purpose “of awakening not only the ability to bear arms but the will to do so, and beyond that, to show the ways and technical means to carry out the decision to bear arms.” In the first chapter, “to see, to measure distances, and to carry into execution,” are all physical laws, having to do with the gauging of distance, sighting the line of fire, and calculating military aims. An example: “A coast artillery gun is firing at a ship steaming at a speed of thirty knots diagonally toward the point where the cannon is. How great is the approach? The average speed of the projectile is to be assumed as 600 meters per second.”

It continues: “Sound and the measurement of sound” are treated in their relation to aerial defense. “Weather” and “Pioneer Mechanics” each include a section about war, and transmission techniques are tested for usefulness in case of war.

A ministerial edict of February 17, 1934, made it obligatory for all schools “further to accustom the young to the idea of aerial maneuvers,” and has had great influence on the teaching of physics. To supplement the regular textbooks, two copy-books by Professor K. Schütt have appeared. One is entitled Elements of Aeronautics, and the other Aeronautics in the Period for New German Language. The study, indeed, plays a highly important part in almost every subject: instruction in mathematics is almost entirely given over to “Aeronautics” in the higher classes — that is, when it is not superseded by statistical studies in the interest of racial education or of Nazi colonial ambitions.

“What is really important,” says Dr. Rudolf Krieger in the April, 1937, N.S. Bildungswesen, after a statement about weapons, “is that the educator must, objectively, through stories having to do with weapons, and articles written about weapons, treat of the National Socialist point of view and make this attractive to his pupils with historical or contemporary facts which will open his (the pupil’s) eyes to such questions and form his opinion in a healthy attitude toward the politics of weapons.”

CHEMISTRY

All the sciences offer opportunities to the teacher who desires to make “the science of weapons” attractive to his pupils. School Experiments in the Chemistry of Fighting Materials — A Book of Experiments in Protection against Poison Gas and Air Raids, “informs youth as to the use of, and defense against, chemical warfare.” Its author, Dr. Walter Kintoff, explains in great detail that the defense of the country, in case of war, would have to be taken over by those between fifteen and eighteen, not yet old enough to bear arms. It is therefore essential to teach these children the problems of defense. Nothing could be more important for this than instruction in the practical side of chemical warfare. The Doctor regrets that this careful instruction is not entirely without difficulties, since the “creation of one or another situation in the lessons is bound to meet with this or that conflict not entirely free from danger.” Nevertheless he sets, in his first chapter, experiments with “incendiary materials,” such as the thermite (igniter) used to fill explosive bombs. And he reflects: “Fire has a double mission in matters pertaining to war: on the one hand, it is supposed to cause considerable damage, and, on the other, to wear the population out morally, that is, to break its power of resistance…. It is modem chemistry which puts arson on a new footing.”