Word: luxemburgers
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Against Germany & Italy: Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia, Greece, Luxemburg, Norway, U.S.S.R., Yugoslavia...
...Casey has seen this war in all its peculiar phases and helped mightily in making the News foreign coverage the best in the U.S. During the days of the Bore War he waddled in a taxicab through the Siegfried Line, spent many a pleasant afternoon on a terrace in Luxemburg dreaming up antics for a French flier he referred to as "Albert le Screwball." He fled before the Nazis in France, was in London during the worst bombardments. The wheeze of his laughter was never stilled whether he was jaunting in Ireland, following the British in North Africa and Ethiopia...
Typical of the use to which the Nazis have put radio transmitters of occupied countries is their reorganization of French stations. Radio Luxemburg, popular in England before the war because of its light music, is now heavy with Wagner and lesser Teutonic gutturals, relieved occasionally by newscasts to Britain. Allouis (Radio-Paris) not only relays news in German for Nazi troops in France, but also spoonfeeds propaganda to the Spaniards...
...Belgium, Czecho-Slovakia, Greece, Luxemburg, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Yugoslavia,Free France...
Nothing so maddens Marxists as to have Marxism called a religion (hence by their definition, opium). Nevertheless, Marxism has its bible (Das Kapital), its god (dialectical materialism), its pope (Stalin), saints (Marx, Engels, Lenin), martyrs (Liebknecht, Luxemburg), doctrine (communist "line"). As in other religions, heresies and schisms occasionally crop up. Heretics are sometimes exiled, often handed over to the secular arm (shot), always excommunicated. Most serious heresy in the eyes of Stalinist true believers is Trotskyism, whose heresiarch is Leon Trotsky, now an exile in Mexico. Trotsky's heretical sect styles itself the Fourth International (5,000 communicants). Until...