Word: chichiness
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...Panama (pop. 880,000), after a couple of years of unprecedented stability under the lamented President José ("Chichi") Remón, is again providing notable political eruptions of its own (see below...
...country's people, torn from sleep by the high drama, heard the evidence on their radios. When the clerk finished, Panamanians struggled to grasp an appalling accusation. According to the confessed triggerman, the highest plotter in last fortnight's race-track assassination of President Jose Antonio ("Chichi") Remón was none other than José Ramón Guizado, Remón's Vice President and legally installed successor as President of Panama...
...Chichi joshed and chatted. The President's bodyguards, knowing that he hated to have them too conspicuously at hand, fell to playing dominoes. The sudden equatorial nightfall left the group pinpointed alone under brilliant fluorescent lights. At the table, ice tinkled in glasses; outside the stands, a black Dodge sedan crunched to a stop...
...Work. In office, Chichi Remón had paid up the government's bills, enforced income-tax collections, outlawed the Communist Party, negotiated a favorable overhaul of treaty relations with the U.S. over the great canal that bisects Panama. Who wanted to assassinate him? If the Communists had engineered it, the job must have been carefully organized from outside; Panama's local Reds were not up to such a slick, professional gang-style killing...
Vice President José Guizado, 55, who moved up to the presidency, is a millionaire contractor, educated at Nashville's Vanderbilt University, and another good friend of the U.S. But he is in poor health and lacks Chichi's tough-minded energy. Remón's death thus created a vacuum in politics as well as at the head of the National Guard. Arnulfo Arias, if he is freed, may seize the chance to whip up his followers for a new try at the presidency. Guard officers will have to recalculate their loyalties. Between political demagoguery...