Word: socialistes
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...many of his other cousins were driving taxis in those days, and Wilhelm became thoroughly disillusioned. When Ukrainian students in a Prague beer hall raised their glasses to him with the cry "Long Live Our Vasily," he only muttered: "The fools. . . ." By that time, the Ukraine was a Soviet Socialist Republic...
Liberal observers had long hoped that the Communists and De Gaullists might hold each other at bay while the Socialists continued in power until the present European crises had passed. But too many Americans swallowed the Luce line that this was a struggle between Communism and Anti-Communism, with no middle road. The result of this misconception has been manifested in the State Department by a pro-De Gaulle, or, at best, a hands off policy, instead of a full-fledged support of the struggling Socialist government...
Tomorrow the three others will meet jointly to hear Daniel Guerin, French socialist thinker, who has been touring the country observing labor conditions and gathering material for a forthcoming book. He may be able to comment on the reversal of radical strength and the DeGaullist upsurge in his native country...
...text defines it, "is a weapon for strengthening the Soviet State and the building of a classless society. . . . Communist morality presupposes action and makes struggle obligatory. . . . The pupils of the Soviet school must realize that the feeling of Soviet patriotism is saturated with irreconcilable hatred toward the enemies of socialist society...
Died. Sidney Webb, Lord Passfield, 88, British economist, pioneer Fabian socialist, onetime Colonial Secretary (1929-31); in Liphook, England. He invented the most uninspiring political slogan of an era-"inevitability of gradualness"-and gave it to the Fabian Society, the gleam-in-the-eye which fathered the British Labor Party. His late wife Beatrice was coauthor with her husband of dozens of dogged, thorough, worthy, dull books and pamphlets. Their crowning work was the 1,174-page Soviet Communism: a New Civilization, which was the most detailed study of the Soviet Government in English, and which completely missed the point...