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Word: fascistes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...crowd of about 60 students and Faculty members-some representing informal groups such as "Classicists Against a Fascist Greece"-assembled outside the Club at 12:15 p.m. in anticipation of Sioris's arrival. Spokesmen for the protestors said the demonstration would be nonviolent and non-obstructive...

Author: By J. ANTHONY Day, | Title: Greek Minister Escapes Protest | 2/25/1971 | See Source »

...felt impotent and very militant. I joined a commune; I cut off ties with moderates, liberals, anyone who didn't agree with me totally. It's so easy to resign yourself to violence as the only effective way to combat a system you conceive to be fascist. Once you're committed to violence, you reinforce your own militance by shutting off all other viewpoints. You won't hear other people; you can't hear other people. The ties you establish with fellow revolutionaries bind your mind to the ethic of violence. By the time fall...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Cooling Of America: The Recantations of a Reformed Berkeley Bomber | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

After all, who but Mourad Saber sleeps with one eye open against the militarist, fascist Zionists? Who else could uncover a Central American conspiracy linking the United Fruit Co. and B'nai B'rith? Who else could resist the sensual, calculating Israeli agent Judith Hertz ("You have the body of a goddess but the soul of a devil")? Who else could interrupt an African chase to lecture streetwalkers in Lourenço Marques on the evils of colonialism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MIDDLE EAST: No Kisses for Achmed Bond | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

Permanently Grounded. In 1946, when the Elder Statesman Victor Emmanuel Orlando first heard the 26-year-old Colombo deliver a speech before the Constituent Assembly, he said: "Now there is a Colombo [dove, in Italian] that will fly." What with labor unrest and the upsurge in neo-Fascist rioting, this dove has enough problems to keep him from taking wing for a while. Still, there is a chance-an outside chance, admittedly-that for the first time since De Gasperi retired in 1953, Italy may at last have a Premier who is not permanently grounded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: Trying to Take Wing | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

...DISCREDITED ideology and an obdurate religious feud produced violence in two European countries last week. In Italy, neo-Fascist youth gangs shattered windows at the University of Milan and painted on a wall in Varese: "Long live the Duce!" They were also accused of spearheading the renewed rioting in Reggio Calabria (lower left) over whether the town is to be chosen over Catanzaro as the capital of the region. In Catanzaro, they were blamed for a grenade attack on anti-Fascist demonstrators, which killed one and injured 13. The Catanzaro incident in turn set off demonstrations and rioting in Naples...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Europe: Old Feuds, Fresh Outbursts | 2/15/1971 | See Source »

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