Word: fiat
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...recognition was long overdue. Catini, little known in the U.S., is a whopper of a corporation by any standard. It is Italy's No. 2 corporation (after Fiat), and one of the world's top ten chemical firms. It has 60.000 employees. 167 plants and mines, 60 subsidiaries. 200,000 stockholders, assets of more than $600 million. From the Alps to Sicily, it straddles Italy's economy, producing 57% of the .country's aluminum (35,000 tons), 89% of its pyrites (1,200,000 tons), 80% of its bauxite, 64% of its phosphates, the majority...
...Italians that her country frowned on foreign aid for Communist-dominated enterprises, helped open the eyes of Italian businessmen to the fact that they did not have to accept supinely the Communists' control of labor unions. Italian business leaders, led by Vittorio Valletta, president of the big Fiat auto works, began to speak out plainly against Communist labor domination. Result: the Communists were ousted from dominance in Fiat's big Turin plant and scores of other factories; in the last two years the Italy-wide ratio of Communist to non-Communist union membership has decreased from...
...opposed to forceful action yet reported gloomily that the British and French seemed in dead earnest about closing in on Nasser. Italy sent Ambassador Giovanni Fornari flying to Cairo with an urgent appeal to Nasser to soften his stand, sweetened it with a hint of big Italian construction help (FIAT) on the Aswan...
...between 600,000 and 700,000 miles and pierced the sound barrier, The Netherlands' Queen Juliana returned home from a vacation on Corfu, where she and her husband visited King Paul and Queen Frederika of Greece. Once home, Bernhard gave his daughter, Princess Beatrix, her first auto, a Fiat sedan, for passing her high-school final exams. Then, at the horse show in Rotterdam, he saw another daughter, Princess Irene, tie for fourth in the National Junior Championships, and with Juliana watching from the stands, took second place himself in horse training...
...night last week prosperous Nino Cottone, 52, returning home late, gently backed his little Fiat station wagon into the drive of his summer villa. He had just locked the car when he was bowled along the driveway by two streams of machine-gun bullets. As his family and friends poured out of their houses, Nino painfully lifted up his bullet-ridden body and stumbled to the threshold of his villa, where, leaning against the door, he died on his feet as a good Sicilian should...