Word: costa
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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BELL TELEPHONE HOUR (NBC, 6:30-7:30 p.m.). Focusing on the traditional, Florence Henderson hosts "Christmas Through the Ages" with Soprano Mary Costa, Baritone Sherrill Milnes and musical comedy stars Anita Gillette and Bruce Yarnell...
...laws, he simply decreed them. When politicians irked him, he suspended their political rights. When Congress balked two months ago, he simply dissolved it. As a result, Brazilians have been wondering what will come after next March 15, when the military's hand-picked President-elect Artur da Costa e Silva takes office. More of the same? Or a gradual return to democracy? Last week they got their answer when Castello Branco released the proposed draft of Brazil's first new constitution since...
...would simply formalize one-man rule in Brazil. As in Costa e Silva's election, future Presidents would be chosen by Congress, and the President would have sweeping powers, including the right to declare a "state of siege" and suspend Congress, as well as the right to issue "decree-laws" that would be submitted to Congress only after they had gone into effect. As for Congress itself, it would be barred from tampering with the budget, interfering with salary raises, and from delaying passage of various other types of presidential bills. In matters of "national security," the new constitution...
...share of private industry has been estimated to have increased to as much as 50%. And the national-identity issue is an increasingly emotional rallying point. With his military support, Castello Branco never had to worry about such gripes from the voters; newly elected President Artur da Costa e Silva is not so lucky. He is now painstakingly studying the economy. When he takes over in March, his common sense may well want to follow the current course, but his political sense might overrule...
...explicitly endorsed by the U.S. Episcopal General Convention three years later, and has since been accepted practice in the church. Hines said that the Episcopal Church is sponsoring more than 15 experimental birth control clinics in the U.S. and abroad. Six of them are in nominally Catholic countries: Costa Rica, Mexico, Guatemala and the Philippines...