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Word: fascistes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...followed on the recording by a man calling himself General Field Marshal Cinque (which he pronounced sin-cue). He said that Hearst, editor of the San Francisco Examiner and executive-committee chairman of the news-paper-and-magazine chain founded by his father, was "the corporate chairman of a fascist media empire." Furthermore, Mrs. Hearst, a regent of the University of California, had helped invest university funds, he said, "in corporations that have interest and do gain profit from robbery, oppression and genocide." As usual, the S.L.A. statement was filled with far-left jargon and was accompanied by the group...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CRIME: The Ordeal of a Political Prisoner | 2/25/1974 | See Source »

...particular, which obliterates its source with such effectiveness--and to such little artistic effect--contrasts strongly with The Conformist, for which Bertolucci reordered Alberto Moravia's novel in order to rebuild it on the strongest of visual terms. In The Conformist, Bertolucci presents the same anti-bourgeois, anti-fascist feelings that make up the moral tone of Moravia's novel; in Partner, there is no moral stance aside from the platitudes uttered...

Author: By Richard Shepro, | Title: A Sense of Death | 2/21/1974 | See Source »

...speech that seemed to be aimed at Washington as well as at Castro, Brezhnev told the rally that Soviet weapons in Cuba were not "for attacking anyone but for defending your revolutionary gains." He warned Latin American leftists that despite "the fascist coup in Chile," Moscow was opposed to the use of subversion as a political tool. "Revolution feeds not on somebody's subversion or propaganda," he declared, "but on realities, on the unbearable conditions in which people have to live. The Soviet Union has always considered to be criminal any attempt to export counterrevolution. But neither are Communists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DIPLOMACY: Bienvenido, Brezhnev! | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

...Eastwood himself, he makes a halfhearted attempt, in MAGNUM FORCE, to clean up Dirty Harry, that law-and-order fascist manqué whom you hated to hate a couple of seasons back. Once again, as in the 1971 film named for him, Detective Harry Callahan (Eastwood) is confronted by a series of apparently motiveless, definitely psychopathic murders. This time, it turns out, they are not the work of an isolated madman but of a self-appointed death squad, members of Harry's own San Francisco police department who have grown impatient with the delays and niceties of the rule...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Quick Cuts | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

...dust, dust" of change. Change can almost overwhelm even, those who accept the prophets' castigating words, who accept responsibility for their actions and say, however reluctantly, that that's meaning enough. There's Zeinvel Gardiner, an intellectual who's survived 20 years of turmoil in Poland including stays in fascist and Stalinist prison camps, who turns up in Paris with a new wife, determined to start a little magazine to tell people the truth. Zeinvel's wife is less optimistic than...

Author: By Seth M. Kupferberg, | Title: Singer Suffers Uncertainty | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

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