FACE THE ISSUE
IT MEANS A FIGHT “No man, least of all Hitler, lightly undertakes an utterly hopeless enterprise. If Hitler must still believe, whoever else does or does not, in the possibility of an Axis victory, and he is prepared to stake his own personal reputation and life on achieving it, it would be most unwise for us to think
lof Hitler merely as a bungling and ' muddle-headed amateur who will inl fallibly make a mess of his new job. He has been steeped for years in questions and problems of war. He has heard all views; he has knowledge (by report if not personally) of all new methods tried and untried. Desperate situations require desperate remedies. Hitler may have some in his mind and may now intend to apply them. We must beware and we must be ready for them, anywhere and at any time.” —Major E. W. Sheppard in the “Daily Herald.”
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Bibliographic details
Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 64, Issue 4561, 17 April 1942, Page 3
Word Count
155FACE THE ISSUE Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 64, Issue 4561, 17 April 1942, Page 3
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