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of course, the tightening grip of fascism. The "March on Rome" of October, 1922, had made little impression upon those foreigners who filled the bars and the restaurants three years later, and the carabinieri, everywhere to be seen racing in pairs in their napoleonic capes and hats added only a touch of opera to the splendor of the Eternal City which was meaningless to the exodus of foreigners unskilled on dictatorships. "If you persist in wise cracking, we'll all end up in the quest?nca? an irritated Italian proclaimed one evening. But the students were beginning to travel more regularly, the fleas were being exterminated and a train schedule was taking on a certain meaning 'and when I heard Mussolini addressing in the Roman Stadium I saw him as a symbol of virile government, crude and obvious but still perhaps the logical issue of such long lasting senescence. And in fact the crowd in the Stadium that afternoon applauded frantically and little old ladies sobbed. "Come