Word: fascistically
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...week's end Marshal Rodolfo Graziani reviewed the joint Nazi-Fascist force. A German officer shouted: "At the beginning of Italian-German cooperation on African soil, we swear to make the greatest effort for a joint victory for Great Germany and Great Italy. Long live Great Italy! Long live Great Germany...
Last week Italy ejected Chicago Daily News Correspondent John Thompson Whitaker, third able Rome representative of his paper to be told in the past 27 months he must go. Fascist officials found genial Tennessean Whitaker's dispatches "displeasing." They could not have liked much better the Daily News's general treatment of Fascist Italy and of Benito Mussolini. Il Duce was recently cartooned in the News puking over the side of a ship into the Mediterranean while the Führer rushes up with a trayful of seasickly dishes tagged "Spanish Hot Tamales, Greece, Turkey, Hungarian Goulash...
...experienced and tactful correspondents. . . . Whitaker had won the friendship of Count Ciano, Mussolini's son-in-law and Italian Foreign Minister, Marshals Graziani and Badoglio and other Italian notables. . . . Although Whitaker was strongly democratic in his personal convictions, he was at great pains in his dispatches to reflect Fascist policies and views accurately. . . . Whitaker was frequently denounced as a pro-Fascist in letters from Daily News readers...
...used to the tactics of the Washington strategists for war. Again and again they have smothered genuine anti-fascist sentiments for keeping out of war, and have identified us with the already discredited Lindberghs and Vern Marshalls. But this is Cambridge and we are still going through the motions of a composed search for truth. If the Student Council does not mean us to take its library literally as a War Library, but intends it for part of our education, it should correct its choice of books. For when the frenzy of Washington jingoism succeeds in permeating the Yard there...
...terror. Hence the U. S. and England, thinks Rauschning, may be able to assimilate the essential parts of the revolution without a total surrender of liberties. But he warns that if England and the U. S. try to fight the revolution with revolutionary methods, they will soon find themselves fascist dictatorships. Says he: "Managed currency and concentration camps differ only in degree." A planned economy always includes the secret police who will enforce...