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Word: anti-nazi (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...career gave testimony in his favor. A professional soldier, he fought in the Boxer war, in World War I (when Turkey was Germany's ally) became chief of staff of the Seventh Ottoman Army. Between wars, he was a member of the Steel Helmet, a right-wing but anti-Nazi party. He retired from the Reichswehr in 1930, went to China as Chiang Kai-shek's military adviser, became his good friend and stayed on to help him fight the Japanese even after Germany had formed the Axis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BELGIUM: The Best I Could | 3/19/1951 | See Source »

...they returned a few days later, with two genuine Helgolanders and supplies. Within a week two dozen students, newspapermen and banished Helgolanders were on the island. The most prominent new arrival was Historian Prince Hubertus zu Lowenstein, a wartime anti-Nazi refugee and postwar German nationalist. "A Gandhian gesture," explained the prince...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: And No Birds Sing | 1/15/1951 | See Source »

...Neumann's role in the German Communist party (and in the Comintern) before his fall from grace. Other ex-Communists, writing books of their own, have told more. In Out of the Night (1941), the late Jan Valtin described him as "the ruthless Heinz Neumann," chief of the anti-Nazi division of the German Communist party, who once, in ordering a strong-arm demonstration, told Valtin: "Ich will Leichen sehen" (I want to see corpses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: One Who Survived | 1/15/1951 | See Source »

Author Hans Richter, 42, an anti-Nazi who was drafted into Hitler's army, was captured at Cassino and shipped off to a prison camp in the U.S. In its glowering animosity to Naziism and its painful and perplexed discussions of the dilemmas facing anti-Nazi Germans, his book bears all the bitter marks of a man trying to write his way out of an ordeal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: From Hitler's Army | 7/31/1950 | See Source »

...Race Apart. Gühler and his friends decide that because the Americans have never lived under terror they cannot really understand how the Nazis operate. "Since I've got to know the Amis," says one of them, "I've realized we must settle with the Nazis by ourselves . . . For most of the Amis, you're either a Nazi or a traitor. They're a race apart from us." The anti-Nazi prisoners then decide to form an underground of their own in order to break the Nazi hold...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: From Hitler's Army | 7/31/1950 | See Source »

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