Word: audisio
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...commanded by blue-jawed Walter Audisio, Communist executioner of Benito Mussolini (TIME, April 7, 1947). Audisio rushed up to Tomba, cried: "If you are a gentleman, come outside in the garden." Tomba declined, but the fracas became a free-for-all; even a Communist woman deputy, Laura Diaz (known to her admirers as the "Joan Crawford of Parliament"), joined in, whacking at bearded Christian Democrats. Contestants ripped out stenographers' desks, used them as clubs. Three deputies had to be treated for injuries. It was the worst riot in the loo-year history of Parliament...
...have the impression that I was shooting a human being," said Audisio, as he launched into his story, which added little to previous reports of the killing (TIME, May 7, 1945). "When a man faces death, he should have the dignity to meet it. Mussolini only trembled." He answered the charge that he and his fellow Partisans had refused confession and last rites to the Duce: "Was I to worry about Mussolini's soul after all I knew of his life...
...Then Audisio turned to the present: "I've spoken as one whose only desire is to be a good soldier. . . . We Communists, we Partisans should be ashamed that there are still persons in Italy who question the purity of the people's sacrifices. . . . We have no fear of civil...
...Audisio's career began in the dirty northern industrial town of Alessandria, where he grew up in a squalor he swore to escape. He rose to the top of his class in school, got a job making Borsalino hats (which are to Stetsons what Isotta Fraschinis are to Oldsmobiles); during the depression he lived squalidly in a tiny apartment with his wife, a seamstress. He was arrested for Communist agitation and when he got out of jail after five years, things were even worse ("We lived on boiled milk and boiled potatoes...
What heroic luster this story had was tarnished by the party's attempts to peddle it to the newspapers. The Communists first charged $100 for one of Audisio's photographs, then went down to $35, still found no takers. Both A.P. and U.P. refused to bid for "exclusives," but Overseas News Agency came through with 50,000 lire ($133) for a special bylined article-which did not turn out to be very special. When an Overseas man asked Audisio for more information, the bookkeeper answered: "I can't sell all my secrets at once...