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Word: antifasciste (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Teutonic. But readers will find grim, retroactive amusement in Author Kirst's account of the hasty changes made in a German town as U.S. tanks approach: an old Nazi triumphantly reveals that his housekeeper is half Jewish; panicky Gauleiter and Kreis-leiter are sheltered in hospitals; a satisfactory "antifascist" working man is thrust into jail ("Wouldn't you like another blanket, Herr Freitag? Two more perhaps?") in the hope that the American conquerors will rescue him and make him burgomaster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Survivor | 7/8/1957 | See Source »

...fiery and excitable Sicilian of tradition, but deliberate and controlled to the point of pedantry. "He's one of those rare Sicilians who doesn't need to use his hands when he speaks," says one colleague. He and his family were well known as antiFascist, but medical skills were needed, and he worked in a navy hospital during World War II. At war's end Dr. Martino entered politics by joining the revived anticlerical Liberal Party. As vice president of the unruly Chamber of Deputies, he showed surprising skill at handling Communist quibbling and obstructionism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Cool Sicilian | 10/4/1954 | See Source »

...recent times for his shifting and often unsavory political alliances with both Fascist and Communist causes. In Strange Deception, Malaparte, who now claims to have renounced all forms of politics, has made a completely unpolitical movie which he describes as "a Christian film." It is neither pro-nor antiFascist, neither pro-nor antiCommunist; instead, with an almost religious fervor, it voices a profound compassion for the sorrow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Two Imports | 6/1/1953 | See Source »

Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, 61, archbishop of Bologna. A jovial and unpretentious man who six years ago was still a parish priest, Lercaro is now the most popular bishop in Italy. A wartime antiFascist, he made a postwar reputation in such Communist strongholds as Ravenna and Bologna, where he took the sting out of the Reds' propaganda by putting his weight behind social reforms. Hard-working as any Communist, he put on a spectacular Catholic youth festival in Bologna's Margherita Gardens (called the "Red Gardens") last month, outfacing Bologna's Red mayor (TIME, March 30). Lercaro feels...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Rome & the Future | 4/20/1953 | See Source »

...Cardinal Archbishop of Bologna, Giacomo Lercaro, 61, known as the most unconventional cardinal in the college and one of the most papábile (Italian for papal timber). Only six years ago, jovial, friendly Giacomo Lercaro was a mere parish priest, but one who had distinguished himself as an antiFascist. During the war he preached outspokenly against the Germans, aided partisans and sheltered refugees so effectively that eventually he was forced to flee for his life to a monastery cell. In 1947, when the Communists were riding high, the Vatican made Father Lercaro an archbishop and packed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Cardinal's Comeback | 3/30/1953 | See Source »

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