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...fails to benefit some 200 prisoners, most of them Basques, who were jailed under last year's decree law against terrorism, which led to the execution of five left-wing guerrillas in September. Nonetheless, most opposition leaders chose to emphasize the amnesty's positive aspects. As one Socialist leader put it, "This moment offers great hope. It would be a tragedy to waste...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SPAIN: Dismantling the Dictatorship | 8/16/1976 | See Source »

...distinguished family from Alsace, settled in the then French territory of Algeria in the 19th century. Yves, who was born in the port city of Oran, still feels drawn to the silky, sun-baked lands of North Africa-no longer to the Algeria of his childhood, now an austere socialist state, but to laissez-faire Morocco. There, at his magnificent Arab-style palace in the ancient fortress city of Marrakech, the designer talked at length last week with TIME Paris Bureau Chief Gregory Wierzynski about his aims, his dreams and his worries. Wierzynski 's report...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: Living for Design: All About Yves | 8/16/1976 | See Source »

Riding High. Berlinguer, his prestige buoyed by the Communist advance in last month's election (TIME, July 5), also spurned Soviet-style rule for Italy. "The models of socialist society followed in Eastern Europe," he asserted bluntly, "do not correspond to the peculiar conditions and orientations of the broad popular masses in the West." He insisted that Italian Communism was committed to economic development in both the public and private sectors. Such heresies so infuriated a Soviet journalist watching the proceedings on closed-circuit TV that he turned to Nickel and tagged Berlinguer with the ultimate Communist insult...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMUNISTS: The Last Summit: No Past or Future | 7/12/1976 | See Source »

Minority Government. The task of forming a government will go to Socialist Party Leader Mario Scares, 51, whom Eanes has promised to name Premier. Although the Socialists won only a 35% plurality in the spring parliamentary election, Scares plans to form a minority government rather than create a coalition with either the badly humiliated Communists-whom Eanes emphatically does not want in the government -or the parties to the right. He may be forced, however, to leaven a predominantly Socialist Cabinet with a few independents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PORTUGAL: Opting for the Ramrod | 7/12/1976 | See Source »

...were accusations of neofascism and worries about a new generation of "ugly Germans." In Paris, Sorbonne Political Scientist Alfred Grosser, a moderate leftist, deplored West Germany's "atmosphere of intolerance, surveillance, snooping and denunciation." A Swedish television report blasted the "socalled radicals' decree and its implications." French Socialist Leader François Mitterrand even set up a Committee for the Defense of Civic and Professional Rights in West Germany...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: The Radicals Issue | 7/5/1976 | See Source »

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