Word: nazidom
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...Paris this was interpreted as British reluctance to take sides for or against Nazidom-even after the "clarifying talks" of Hitler with Sir John and Captain Eden. It was. Frenchmen angrily declared, just one more case of perfidious Albion's persistence in trying to maintain in Europe a "balance of power'' with herself as the fulcrum...
...Minister of Soviet Russia. Smarter than "Maxie" they do not come. Knowing perfectly well that every member of the British ruling classes hates him and Stalin, Comrade Litvinoff stage-managed Captain Eden's visit in a way to win reluctant sympathy for Bolshevikland and turn the tables against Nazidom...
...Youth Movement had been proudly nonpolitical, but as its members came of age more & more of them felt the impossibility of staying out of politics. Lilo Linke joined the Young Democrats, plunged with her customary energy into the hopeless fight to stem the rising tide of Nazidom. She became secretary to Ernst Schwarz, a Jew high in the councils of the party, finally his sweetheart. But she soon saw the Democrats were getting nowhere. "Not for a moment did I consider turning Communist, but I knew that the truth must lie somewhere in that direction." She left the party, joined...
...French Ambassador was received with studied discourtesy by German Foreign Minister Konstantin von Neurath when he called to protest. On a similar errand the Italian Ambassador was received with the deference Il Duce demands, gets. Considering that words are not enough to impress Hitler, Mussolini this week treated Nazidom to the spectacle of an Italian mobilization. Not calling it by that name, II Duce sent pink mobilization cards out in quantities sufficient to put some 1,000,000 soldiers and militia under arms by April...
...infuriated Frenchmen. They are resigned to "perfidious Albion" in the traditional role of Justice, upholding Europe's balance of power-with the British Lion couchant on the fulcrum. But even by his closest friends Sir John has long been considered a sincere friend of France, sincerely appalled by Nazidom. In London, as well as in Paris last week, an unflattering impression prevailed that Sir John saw his mission to Berlin in a light so dazzling that out of it he might emerge with the Order of the Garter. Few Englishmen and no Frenchman or Italian believed him when...