Word: fascistically
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Conscription Never. Quebec had been the only province that voted No, by an almost solid block of votes from its French-Canadian majority. The French Canadians had thus turned the rest of Canada against them. Loud-mouthed Maurice Duplessis, onetime Fascist follower, now opposition leader of the Quebec Legislature, tried to capitalize on the anti-conscription sentiment by storming: "That promise of the Government is not one that can be annulled by a majority...
Last year the Crimson printed an ad of Laurence Dennis, noted fascist, but at the same time ran an editorial against him. A week ago the Crimson announced that it was to cooperate with the Post in a poll by which that magazine hoped the Post in a poll by which that magazine hoped to raise its slipping circulation. It seems to us that the Crimson should follow the precedent of the Laurence Dennis case by speaking out against the Satevepost and any other spokesmen of appeasement whose ads it may print. Allen Barton '45. Didi Rudd '45. Sam Stuart...
...side (although a February FORTUNE poll showed only 4.4% of citizens against Lend-Lease to Russia) were the old suspicions, the old fear (now a tool of Axis propaganda) that a victorious Russia would be as bad as or worse than a Fascist Europe...
Furthermore, any diversion of South African troops to Madagascar might be followed by increased pro-Nazi sabotage inside the Union itself. In recent months "dynamitards" of the fascist Ossewa Brandwag-"Ox Wagon Fireguard" (TIME, Feb. 10, 1941)-have blasted high-power transmission lines feeding the great Rand gold mines and the South African railways, have cut telephone & telegraph lines wholesale and even found support among the Union police. Now the Union of South Africa has a death penalty for such acts, but if Madagascar is taken by the Axis, the Union's violent pro-Nazi minority may cause...
When the Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact passed its first anniversary last week, Tokyo noted the day in stony silence, Moscow with a stern warning. "It is necessary," said the Communist mouthpiece Pravda, "that the Japanese military and Fascist cliques, whose heads have been turned by military success, realize that their prattle about an annexationist war in the north may cause damage, first and most of all, to Japan herself...