Word: enrico
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...DIED. Enrico Berlinguer, 62, secretary-general since 1972 of Italy's Communist Party (P.C.I.), the largest and most influential in the Western world, and builder of "Eurocommunism," a Western democratic Marxism; of a stroke; in Padua, Italy...
...more complex. The vote seems to have expressed a judgment of protest, or condemnation." Around the corner, a block away at the Communists' modern, red stucco headquarters, there were scenes of jubilation. As a youthful crowd of 2,000 gathered under umbrellas in a pelting rain, Party Leader Enrico Berlinguer declared, "We shook the tree. Others are gathering the fruit, but no matter; it is the beginning of the end of Christian Democratic predominance. For the first time there is a possibility of a majority of democratic parties without the Christian Democrats." True enough, but so far that possibility...
...expected to shift voting patterns only slightly. The Christian Democrats have acquired a prestigious first-time candidate in Guido Carli, 69, who headed the powerful Bank of Italy for 16 years. His party will most likely command close to its traditional 38% of the vote. The Communists, under Enrico Berlinguer, have steadily been losing ground since reaching their high of 34.4% of the vote in 1976. Some polls predict 27% or 28% in next week's count. Socialist Leader Bettino Craxi, who forced the elections by bailing out of the last coalition government, had hoped to engineer major Socialist...
...groups-on defense, politics and economics-where the experts engaged in stimulating, sometimes heated, debate. At a final plenary meeting, members of the groups shared conclusions. The sessions were supplemented by freewheeling conversation over coffee, cocktails and meals. "It's just remarkable the people who are here," observed Enrico Jacchia, director of the Italian Center of Strategic Studies. "If we'd had some more meetings like this in the past, we would never have had a dispute over sanctions," said U.S. Trade Ambassador William Brock, referring to last year's dispute over the Soviet gas pipeline...
...over the Reagan Administration's hard line toward Moscow, also feel uncomfortable about leaving out the British and French forces. Among them are a number of Socialist politicians, including West German Social Democratic Arms Spokesman Egon Bahr and Denis Healey, deputy leader of the British Labor Party. Says Enrico Jacchia, director of the Italian Center for Strategic Studies in Rome: "A large part of public opinion in Europe feels that the French nuclear force exists, and the effect of saying it should not be counted causes confusion. People think the Americans are playing a trick...