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| | | Review | The History Teacher, 34.1 | The History Cooperative |
 | | At the same time, Rockwell, through his revisionist denial that the Holocaust had occurred, helped to spur the rebirth of far-right organizations in Europe that defiantly identified with the Nazi terror; he acquired even greater prominence on the European continent than at home. |
 | | Although he struggled to make his neophyte political organization viable, Rockwell ultimately acquired considerable success in garnering adherents, financial backing, and, most important, Cold War America, the 1960s, and race and prejudice, as among those for which Simonelli's book could be useful. |
 | | To his credit, Simonelli draws on a series of personal collections, interviews conducted with Rockwell family members and compatriots, university archives, the papers of such groups as the American Jewish Committee and B'nai B'rith's Anti-Defamation League, and the FBI's file on his subject. |
| www.historycooperative.org /journals/ht/34.1/br_15.html (567 words) |
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