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Carved out of the wilderness 580 miles north of Rio, Brasilia was the creation of President Juscelino Kubitschek, who started building Brazil's new capital in 1957 as one sure way of opening up the country's interior. The "Capital of Hope," he called it. His successors felt no such attachment. Recoiling from the dust, disorder and frontier-town isolation, Janio Quadros called it "the cursed city," spent much of his time huddled in the palace projection room, guzzling Scotch and staring at Liz Taylor movies. Joao Goulart studiously avoided the unfinished capital for months on end. Construction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: A Capital Becoming a Capital | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

Apartments Wanted. Brasilia started regaining momentum with the revolution that ousted Leftist Goulart 14 months ago and installed Castello Branco in his place. The new President has no love for the raw new city either. As a friend says: "In Rio the President works and rests. In Brasilia he only works." Nevertheless, he seems determined to finish what Kubitschek started. "The consolidation of Brasilia," says Castello Branco, "requires only time and money-mainly money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: A Capital Becoming a Capital | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

...revolutionary government has set aside $73.5 million for Brasilia. The biggest need is apartments: more than 10,000 civil servants and their families are still without decent housing. The government is building 2,000 apartment units on its own, has let a contract with private builders for four other 800-apartment "superblocks," and is offering builders a five-year tax holiday if they will put up housing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: A Capital Becoming a Capital | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

View from Rio. To enliven the city's leisure hours, new movies, bowling alleys and a municipal theater are being built; green parks are replacing vacant lots. A fine new hotel rivals anything in Rio, and a 55,000-seat stadium is nearing completion for Brasilia's five professional soccer teams. The biggest push comes from the city folk themselves, who have formed 29 social clubs. "The government built buildings," says Maurice Shashoa, owner of the Terrace Club, "but it didn't make a capital. That's what we're doing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: A Capital Becoming a Capital | 7/9/1965 | See Source »

...political and economic disarray, Brazil remains a huge, vigorously growing nation that is learning to take advantage of its universal resources. One day recently, President Castello Branco flew 350 miles south from Brasilia to preside over two impressive ceremonies. At a construction site on the Rio Grande River in Minas Gerais, a mighty dynamite blast signaled the start of work on the Estreito Dam, which will generate 800,000 kw. of power when it is finished in 1969. A few hours later and 44 miles away, Castello Branco witnessed the completion of Latin America's biggest hydroelectric complex...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Hemisphere: Turning on the Power | 6/11/1965 | See Source »

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