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Word: fascistically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Army, Correspondent Davis reported on its bankruptcy by telling how Roberto Farinacci's Fascist Party plotters undercut the Old Guard and ousted Marshal Pietro Badoglio. Correspondent Whitaker added: "The Fascists have deliberately spread lies about the corruption of Badoglio. He isn't corrupt. He is merely a very old man. . . . Graziani is a sick man, suffering, perhaps, from cancer of the throat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: The Fall of Rome | 4/14/1941 | See Source »

...some utopian revolution," and it is hard to disagree with him, much as one might like to. Maybe it makes me an undemocrat too--but as I see it the moral of the Spanish struggle is not that the democratic forces, the people, turned their bare breasts against the fascist tanks, but that the people lost. Dutch students may riot, yet Hitler crushes Holland with barely a contemptuous glance in their direction. You do not win this war by snowballing brown-shirted legions, as the Czech people did, not so long ago; you win by bombing the Nazi armament works...

Author: By Alan B. Ecker, | Title: THE HARVARD PROGRESSIVE | 4/12/1941 | See Source »

...happened, up to the night of March 26, to dissipate this fear. It had grown with each day's events. That very day Japanese Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka had arrived in Berlin, to be greeted by the envoys of all the little countries which had succumbed to the Fascist Alliance-the latest of them Yugoslavia. Though Great Britain had dared to send a big expeditionary force to the Balkans, that night the Balkans seemed lost with the capitulation of Yugoslavia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: YUGOSLAVIA: Freedom Takes A Bastion | 4/7/1941 | See Source »

...South America's only Popular Front Government, with concomitant Rightist dissatisfaction. It contains South America's oldest, most firmly established German minority (in the southern lake country, where Baron von Thermann went on his vacation). And Chile's extreme Rightists think highly of Chile's fascist-minded onetime President General Carlos Ibanez del Campo, who now lives in restless exile in Mendoza, just over the Andes in Argentina. Baron von Thermann's plane stopped at Mendoza on his way to Santiago...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHILE: A Heavy Suitcase | 4/7/1941 | See Source »

...College, looked Red. Its chairman is liberal Author-Editor Ordway Tead (Harper). After five hours' debate, the board emerged with a unanimous and unprecedented resolution: "It is the purpose of the Board of Higher Education not to retain as members of the collegiate staffs members of any Communist. Fascist or Nazi group or society, or to retain any individual who, or member of any group which advocates, advises, teaches or practices subversive doctrines or activities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Schools v. Reds | 3/31/1941 | See Source »

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