Word: hatefully
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
When embattled Britain bowed to Japanese threats two months ago by closing the Burma Road, China's reaction was immediate and blazing. From the Communist Sian Jih Pao to the Ministry of Finance's China Times the whole Chinese press showered scorn and hate on the British Empire...
...began to growl louder. The speaker kicked at him. That was a mistake. Two-hundred-and-twenty-five-pound Harry Dalton caught the speaker's foot, yanked him from the stand. Then Harry Dalton took his place, delivered a 20-minute opinion on the folly of preaching hate...
...moved in on McWilliamsland. Said Harry: "I decided to find out if Yorkville was a part of the U. S." If McWilliams held three street-corner meetings a week, the Daltons held five. Harry talked about Americanism, and what it meant: freedom of religion, speech, assembly, press, not the hate-engendering, terrorizing tactics of the Mobilizers. He called his organization the New York Council for American Traditions, Inc. One night a bundle of garbage was dumped on Harry's head; another night, two bags of cement. But that kind of thing didn't faze Harry...
...judge by their recent complaints, the people of England hate the air-raid alarms more than they hate air raids. Last week the Ministry for Home Security bowed to the popular will, reduced as much as it could the time of sounding each alarm- from two minutes...
Appeasement? The Star-Times could not take this Blitzkrieg lying down. Next day, on page 1, the Star-Times struck back at Editor Coghlan. Calling the Post-Dispatch's piece a "fanatical diatribe, bred of mingled hate and fear," an effort "to win the Pulitzer Prize for Appease ment," the Star-Times bought the same space which the Post-Dispatch had taken in the New York Times and Washington Post to meet the attack...