Word: anti-fascist
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...Anti-Fascist Frenchmen were not long in replying. Next day the 450-foot aerial masts of Radio Paris, 130 miles south of the capital near Bourges, were dynamited. For the first time since Hitler took Paris, the principal outlet of Nazi radio propaganda in France went dead. To many a Frenchman, St. Joan seemed by that act a little more alive...
...shot in the morning. S. K. could not commit suicide, because the police had discovered where he kept his granule of cyanide, and took it away from him. How he got out of that one proved to be a turning point in S. K.'s relations with the anti-Fascist "underground"-the cryptic groups that with sabotage, strikes, espionage, propaganda and murder wage an unremitting subterranean war to overthrow Mussolini and his Blackshirts...
...recent rioting in Detroit between Negroes, who were peacefully moving into their new government homes, and their white attackers is a shameful example of how many Americans, on the one hand paying lip service to the anti-fascist cause are, on the other, committing crimes worthy only of a sadistic Japanese soldier. Negro defense workers and their families, after several postponements and one refusal, were finally given permission to move into a government housing project built originally for them. On the day of the moving, the Negroes planned to celebrate. But there was no celebration. It was stolen from them...
Fascism's most spectacular Special Tribunal in years assembled in Trieste last week. Its purpose: to frighten Italians out of sabotage, insurrection and anti-Fascist activities. The presiding judge: Lieut. General Antonino Tringali-Casanuova. The "criminals": students, antiFascists, Slovene nationalists, Communists. The crimes: a plot against Mussolini's life at Caporetto in 1938; the blowing up of three powder factories in 1940; an attempt to establish a Soviet regime embracing the old Yugoslavia...
...conflict of opinion as to how Germany should be treated in case she loses the war featured the first meeting of the Lowell House Symposium last night. Major Thomas Thomas, military analyst, and E.R. Halles, cable editor of the United Press, flung the verbal brickbats as they discussed anti-fascist military aims...