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Word: marxist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...more prominent among these was Juliusz Katz-Suchy, in 1951 the churlish chief of Poland's U.N. delegation. In anti-American invective, Katz-Suchy seemed to be the match of any of his Russian or other Iron Curtain colleagues; occasionally he even spiced his Marxist denunciations of the U.S. as warmonger, slavemaster and cannibal with quotations from Shakespeare. But U.N. colleagues who knew him insisted that there were symptoms of Western infection noticeable in Katz-Suchy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN RELATIONS: The Unhappy Shakespearean | 12/29/1952 | See Source »

After the last bitter defeat by Paraguay in the Chaco war (1932-35), Bolivians took up ideas of social revolution from both right & left. Marxist socialism penetrated the universities. Officers of the defeated army organized totalitarian dictatorships. One dictator, pro-Nazi President Gualberto Villaroel, was overthrown after World War II in a fashion so violent that all the world remembers him-hanged from a lamp post before his palace. The downtrodden tin miners, finding a leader of their own in a magnetic, Marxist-minded ex-soccer star named Juan Lechin, rallied to his union and fought bloody battles with company...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOLIVIA: Republic up in the Air | 12/15/1952 | See Source »

...been able to control and even use him. But back of Lechin are Communist labor leaders, who also plan to use him. Such Marxists are spreading the word among Bolivia's Indians that land reform is next, and a restlessness has already been noted on the altiplano. If Paz shoots the nationalist wad and fails, the door to Marxist revolution may be blown wide open. And if the Reds sneak in, Bolivia will indeed be back on the map of the world's trouble spots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOLIVIA: Republic up in the Air | 12/15/1952 | See Source »

...economist who had just been promoted from a high school teaching post to the University of Belgrade. In answer to my questions on his profession, he began to praise Tito as "the hero and leader of our people" and methodically continued with a doctrinaire exposition of Marxist economic theory. In spite of my attempts to interrupt his logic, he proved he had swallowed whole the official line. On a more practical level, he explained, "we have introduced an incentive wage for the worker. According to his production, he receives up to forty percent more pay in coupons which he must...

Author: By Jonathan O. Swan, | Title: Behind Tito's Curtain | 11/19/1952 | See Source »

...national independence. When 18, Giap was jailed by the French for a few months and then allowed to study at the top French academy in Hanoi, where he took a doctorate in political economy. A teacher remembers him as: "passionate and sentimental." Somewhere along the line he got a Marxist education too. When the Popular Front brought left-wing parties together in 1936-39, he played along with the Socialists, but as soon as war came, he skipped across the border into South China to join the Communist Party...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BATTLE OF INDO-CHINA: Comrade Van | 11/17/1952 | See Source »

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