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...glory of these intellectuals, Viereck writes, was their early opposition to fascism, while the shame is their long collaboration with communism. The book stresses the similarity between the two totalitarian systems--the word "communazi" is, I am afraid, Viereck's way of emphasizing this--but does not bother to explain why one system was accepted and the other fought. Instead by means of some dialogues with a ludicrous stereotype named Gaylord Babbitt, Viereck creates a phony example of a deluded intellectual, and proceeds to rip into his artistic, economic, and political beliefs...

Author: By Michael J. Halberstam, | Title: The Past Is Glory, the Present Shame | 3/26/1953 | See Source »

...fine conspiratorial flavor, which was quite in keeping with the business at hand-a radio interview with burly, gap-toothed Jan Valtin (real name: Richard Julius Herman Krebs), who has been hiding out fearful of lethal attention from the GPU and Gestapo ever since he spilled bushels of Communazi beans in his best-selling Out of the Night...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: In Again, Out Again | 4/7/1941 | See Source »

When the train of history makes a sharp turn, said Lenin, the passengers who do not have a good grip on their seats are thrown off. Last week the Communist Limited had just about completed the dizzy turn from the Communazi Pact to the Battle of Britain, and U. S. literary liberals were spattered all over the right of way. As the Red Express hooted off into the shades of a closing decade, ex-fellow travelers rubbed their bruises, wondered how they had ever come to get aboard. Observers wondered if they had learned enough to switch to the democratic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Revolt of the Intellectuals | 1/6/1941 | See Source »

last week. So was everything else which indicated intensified Communazi penetration in Latin America. Reason for this concern was bluntly put by T'.e United States News: "The Germans even now are invading Latin America." So were the Italians. In much of Latin America, they and their commercial interests outweigh the Germans in potency and numbers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs, Jun. 17, 1940 | 6/17/1940 | See Source »

...idyllic. Beside savagely marching, stiffly saluting Nazis, Fascists, Reds, the blotchy, jerky old jingo shots from World War I looked like throw-backs to a simpler, sweeter time. Beside tough Dictators Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, the sword-rattling Kaiser and autocratic Tsar looked like kindly, slightly fuddled grandfathers. Beside the Communazi conquerors of Poland and the Moscow pact-makers (shown first as outlaws, later as dictators over a combined 240 millions of lives) the Versailles Treaty-makers (Clemenceau, Lloyd George, Orlando) looked unworldly and Utopian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Revival: Oct. 9, 1939 | 10/9/1939 | See Source »

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