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Word: fascists (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Mosley rally on the same street last week, the script was little changed. First came some 30 members of Mosley's neo-Fascist Union Movement, chanting: "Jews out! Jews out!" When Leader Mosley appeared, the jeering crowd surged toward him and knocked him to the ground. Struggling to his feet, the 65-year-old sometime M.P. mounted an open truck amid a hail of rotten fruit and heavy English pennies (which were seldom so wasted in Depression days). Before he could open the meeting, the brawl was on. Within minutes, Mosley was led away under heavy police escort, while...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: Lebensraum for Oswald | 8/10/1962 | See Source »

...arrested by the Republicans and sentenced to death, but was released in a routine exchange of prisoners. He quickly joined Franco, was soon commanding a corps on the Pyrenees front. At the end of the war, Munoz Grandes, at Franco's behest, became secretary-general of the Fascist Falange, specifically to integrate the freewheeling Falangist militia into the Spanish army...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: CARETAKER AFTER FRANCO | 7/20/1962 | See Source »

...turn, he denied Benkhedda's charge that he and his friends hoped "to establish a fascist military dictatorship." All he wanted, protested Ben Bella, was a "socialist regime that takes into account the economic needs and fundamental aspirations of the people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Algeria: Battle of the Bens | 7/20/1962 | See Source »

...chief negotiators had more trouble with extremists in their own organizations than with each other. Chief spokesman for the S.A.O. was blond Jean-Jacques Susini, 28, former student leader and a longtime fascist ideologue. In one argument with another S.A.O. leader, ex-Colonel Yves Godard, who insisted on a die-hard policy. Susini pulled out a pistol and threatened to kill him, and then ordered Godard out of Algeria...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Algeria: Rearguard Action for Terror | 6/29/1962 | See Source »

Nowhere in the Western world, save Cuba, does a government own and run so many businesses as in Italy. The practice took hold during the Fascist corporate state days of Benito Mussolini, and has been kept alive by a strange coalition of left-leaning politicians and swashbuckling economic bureaucrats anxious to expand their empires. Almost every time an Italian rides a train, plane or ship, lights up a cigarette, salts his food or gasses up his car, he is patronizing a government monopoly. And pretty soon he will be doing so whenever he switches on the lights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Italy: Shock Treatment | 6/29/1962 | See Source »

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