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Word: anti-nazi (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...sharply contrasting scenes, several hundred mourners filed into a tightly-guarded Holocaust Remembrance Day memorial service while others rallied outside, chanting anti-Nazi slogans in anticipation of the arrival of members of the Arkansas-based White Revolution and other fascist groups...

Author: By Kristin E. Blagg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students Join Protest of Neo-Nazi Rally | 5/9/2005 | See Source »

After marching down Congress Street, the neo-Nazi demonstrators were directed behind police barricades as about ten times as many anti-Nazi protestors hurled insults and chanted slogans like “we say no, we say no, Nazi scum have...

Author: By Kristin E. Blagg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students Join Protest of Neo-Nazi Rally | 5/9/2005 | See Source »

...situation meant “extermination.” Although the Nazis were savagely beating Jews in the streets and had expelled Jews from the professions and university faculties, Grynbaum suggests it was acceptable for Harvard to extend a warm welcome to a leading Nazi. Grynbaum fails to mention that this institution of higher learning provided a friendly reception to a top representative of a regime that had already staged massive public book burnings. Nor does he indicate that Harvard police ripped down anti-Nazi fliers activists posted in the Yard, or that then-University President James B. Conant...

Author: By Rafael Medoff and Stephen H. Norwood, S | Title: An Anti-Semitic History: A Different Interpretation of Hanfstaengl’s Harvard Visit | 5/2/2005 | See Source »

...felt that joy. "I remember the sky was clear and the heavens blue, and we felt liberated," says German Author Walter Kempowski, who was then 16. "I spent May 8 drinking champagne with my mother and grandfather on the balcony. My mother, who was in the Bekennende Kirche [an anti-Nazi Protestant splinter group], said, 'It was we who won the war, the church and the powers of goodness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: V-E Day: There Was Such a Feeling of Joy | 4/12/2005 | See Source »

...difficulty in proving whether such novels are implicitly pro-Nazi or anti-Nazi, Ryan admitted, is that under Nazism no explicit literary dissent in Germany was possible. Authors instead could either physically exile themselves or undergo “inner emigration,” a retreat into one’s own artistic world to combat the horrors of the world without. Modern readers must judge the validity of many authors’ post-war claims that their work under Hitler contained subtexts of anti-Nazi dissent, even when the texts themselves suggest otherwise...

Author: By Laura E. Kolbe, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Fascism's 'Flaming Motor' | 3/18/2005 | See Source »

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