Word: moros
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...either lets them peter out or attacks them from the side. Thus Marcos has adopted a strangely non-confrontational approach to the Moslem insurgency movement in the southern Philippines. He refused to allow the military an untrammeled hand in putting down the revolt and agreed to recognize the Moro National Liberation Front. Then he undercut its leadership by coaxing Moslem local field commanders into surrendering with generous amnesty conditions and promises of "utmost autonomy" in the Moslem areas...
...government. As a result of their stunning triumphs in regional elections last summer (TIME, June 30), leftist administrations now control every major Italian city except Rome and Palermo. At the national level, although theoretically the largest opposition party, the Communists tacitly support the Christian Democratic government of Premier Aldo Moro. In fact, Moro's weak coalition Cabinet faces a bedeviling paradox: the Socialists, who are supposed to support the government, are increasingly at odds with it, while the opposition Communists help to keep the coalition on its feet. With only a touch of exaggeration, one Communist official boasts...
...keyed, pragmatic approach of the Italian party's Secretary-General Berlinguer. In order to allay fears that Communist participation in a national government would mean revolutionary upheaval, he has gradually been moving toward an understanding with the ruling coalition, headed by Christian Democratic Premier Aldo Moro...
...nations that account for roughly 70% of the non-Communist world's production and trade: U.S. President Gerald Ford, French President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, Japanese Premier Takeo Miki, West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, British Prime Minister Harold Wilson and Italian Premier Aldo Moro. Their purpose: to discuss ways in which their countries can cooperate to lift the industrial world out of its worst business slump since the 1930s...
...high as 1.7 million next year. That is the price the country has had to pay to get down its ruinous rate of inflation -which has fallen from 24% last year to 9.8% in September-and repay its foreign debt. With prices moving more slowly, Prime Minister Moro's government has recently enacted a $6 billion recovery program, and there is a good chance that the Italian economy will begin to climb slowly in mid-1976. The pace of any economic risorgimento will depend on two things: whether the often inefficient bureaucracy can get the expansionary program moving quickly...