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SICILY.—Danilo Dolci, an architect and engineer, visited Sicily on an aesthetic and scientific pilgrimage seven years ago. What kept him in Sicily—Sicily is now his home—was the wretchedness of the people, a condition to which Dolci draws attention in a book reviewed on this page. The picture, from the book, gives an idea of living conditions in the slums of Palermo.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19600430.2.16

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume XCIX, Issue 29192, 30 April 1960, Page 3

Word Count
61

SICILY.—Danilo Dolci, an architect and engineer, visited Sicily on an aesthetic and scientific pilgrimage seven years ago. What kept him in Sicily—Sicily is now his home—was the wretchedness of the people, a condition to which Dolci draws attention in a book reviewed on this page. The picture, from the book, gives an idea of living conditions in the slums of Palermo. Press, Volume XCIX, Issue 29192, 30 April 1960, Page 3

SICILY.—Danilo Dolci, an architect and engineer, visited Sicily on an aesthetic and scientific pilgrimage seven years ago. What kept him in Sicily—Sicily is now his home—was the wretchedness of the people, a condition to which Dolci draws attention in a book reviewed on this page. The picture, from the book, gives an idea of living conditions in the slums of Palermo. Press, Volume XCIX, Issue 29192, 30 April 1960, Page 3