Word: neos
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...body of plump, pretty Wilma Montesi, 21, was found on the seashore sands of Ostia, near Rome, clad only in a blouse and a pair of silk panties embroidered with teddy bears (TIME, Feb. 15). Police declared that Wilma had died by accidental drowning. Months later, brash young neo-Fascist Editor Silvano Muto printed a sensational charge in his monthly magazine Attua-lita. Wilma had not gone to Ostia, he said, but to a swank hunting lodge in nearby Capocotto, where wild orgies were conducted by a Roman nobleman who ran a narcotics ring. Wilma, said Attualita, apparently passed...
Before Italy's Chamber of Deputies, Premier Mario Scelba spoke solemnly of affairs of state-taxes and governmental reform, his government's support of EDC, the dangers of Communism and neo-Fascism. But the immediate threat to his new regime involved none of these, nor did it lie within the walls of the chamber. It came from a courtroom a few blocks away, where, as Scelba urged the Deputies to confirm his Cabinet, there unfolded an unsavory story of corruption in high places, of playgirls and midnight orgies and expensive decadence revolving around the figure of a marchese...
Many books by neo-Malthusian prophets of doom have attempted to answer these questions. Most of them have been superficial, emphasizing minor and easily corrected threats to man's food supply, such as erosion of farmlands. Others have ignored the enormous possibilities of man's scientific techniques. Brown's The Challenge of Man's Future (Viking Press; $3-75) is in a different class. Geochemist Brown of CalTech is thoroughly at home in the tangle of sciences that bear on man's future on earth. He is also at home in history and sociology...
...overpopulation. Malthus was wrong in his prediction. Around him in England, as he was writing, his countrymen were developing the machine culture that permitted a new cycle of human expansion. But many scientists are convinced that in his broader sense Malthus may still be proved right. Today's neo-Malthusians maintain that catastrophe has only been postponed, that overpopulation, starvation and misery will yet catch up with industrial...
Close to half the Senators walked into the chamber firmly opposed to the new regime−the Communists and the neo-Fascists because they favor chaos and particularly hate the man who swung the policeman's billy so energetically against their riotmakers; the Nenni Socialists because, as one of their Senators confessed, the Socialist tie to the Communists "is becoming even greater;" the Monarchists because they dislike aspects of Scelba's mildly left-of-center political program...