Word: antonios
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...Antonio...
Died. Max Reiter, 45, Jewish refugee, from Italian Fascism, who in 1938 left a successful career as conductor on the Continent (Berlin, Munich, Rome, Milan), came to the U.S. with only $40, within five years shaped the San Antonio Symphony into a major orchestra; of a heart attack; in San Antonio...
Died. Colonel Charles Franklin Craig, 78, Army expert on tropical medicine, father of the Marines' famed Brigadier General Edward A. Craig, now in Korea (TIME, Aug. 14); in San Antonio...
...There's no question of innovation, but only of clarification," protested black-haired Jesuit Father Antonio Messineo in Rome last week. Those who regarded his article in the Jesuit fortnightly Civiltâ Cattolica as something new in Roman Catholic thought, he said, were wrong. Father Messineo's conclusion had been that "tolerance is a duty of both individuals and states towards those who have accepted error and profess error." This tolerance, reasoned Messineo, rises out of the respect due to the human person and to his God-given right of exercising his reason and working...
Never Had It Better. In San Quentin, Calif., Antonio Ditardo, 76, explained why he has never applied for a parole from his life sentence: "I'm wearing a clean shirt. Almost every Sunday I get chicken. I have 500 friends here. Would I do as well outside...