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Word: marxist (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Italian government. After months of dickering, while the nation marked time under a caretaker Cabinet, the Christian Democrats finally were ready to conclude their marriage of convenience-or perhaps inconvenience-with Nenni's left-wing Socialists. It was the first time in 16 years that a doctrinaire Marxist party would share power in any major West European Cabinet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Italy: Marriage of Inconvenience | 12/6/1963 | See Source »

Other speakers at the meetings were the Rev. William Howard Melish, a personal friend of DuBois, and Herbert Aptheker, an authority on Negro history, a Marxist scholar and the recipient of all DuBois' personal papers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Socialists Hold DuBois Memorial: Nkrumah Praises Negro Leader | 11/21/1963 | See Source »

...wonderfully open, eloquent and touching letters records his astonishment at learning that his old Princeton classmate, Edmund Wilson, a man whom he regarded as his literary conscience, was suddenly to be heard expounding Marxist sociology. "Up Mallarmé!" was Fitzgerald's reaction to the dawn of a decade that was to be hostile to his esthetic creed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bigger Than the Ritz | 10/18/1963 | See Source »

...with Growth Stocks. British socialism is more Methodist than Marxist. Its leaders have always had fervent faith that in freedom and social justice Englishmen can build the New Jerusalem of William Blake's vision. It was Britain's hunger for a better-ordered world that swept a Labor government to power in 1945. In the wilderness since 1951, Labor has fought ceaselessly to shape the coherent contemporary philosophy that might earn its passage back to power. It did not succeed because its leaders always came up with dreary, dogmatic formulas that were remote from the everyday lives...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: The Road to Jerusalem | 10/11/1963 | See Source »

Jeweler in the Rough. Kabylia discontent was tailor-made for a disenchanted native son, Hocine Aït Ahmed, who shared a French prison with Ben Bella but is now among the several revolutionary "chiefs" who have been elbowed aside by the strongman. A dreamy Marxist, Aït Ahmed, 37, opposed Ben Bella's outlawing the Communist Party last year. Then last June, on the floor of the National Assembly, Aït Ahmed denounced the government's arrest of an independent chief and Ben Bella critic, leftist Mohammed Boudiaf. Repairing to his Kabylia village of Michelet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Algeria: The First Revolt | 10/11/1963 | See Source »

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