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...seemed like just another Christmas dance in Goa's capital city of Pangim. Still dressed in their jungle-green combat uniforms, 300 Indian army officers of the conquering "Black Cat" 17th division shuffled in time to the music. Patiently the 300-man stag line waited to dance with the only women who had been inveigled to attend the dance-three lonely Goan girls. "They don't like us," said an Indian officer. "They don't want jungle green here. They want white skins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Morning After | 1/5/1962 | See Source »

Despite Indian assertions that the Goan people were delighted with their "liberation," Indian troops elsewhere in Goa were received with similar muted enthusiasm. No welcoming arches or banners were strung over the streets, and the few Jai Hind (Hail India) slogans painted on official buildings had mostly been slapped on by the Indians themselves, not by an exuberant citizenry. Fraternization between the Indians and the Goans was almost nonexistent. Armed Indian infantrymen, their weapons slung over their shoulders, went sightseeing on near-deserted streets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Morning After | 1/5/1962 | See Source »

Into the vacuum left by the exit of the Portuguese have swept five boisterous, brawling political parties, each hopeful of attracting Indian favors by horror stories of subjugation under the Portuguese. One political leader, J. M. D'Souza of Goa's National Union Party, claims that the Portuguese civil authorities kept a collection of whipping canes, allowed their prisoners to pick the cane with which they were to be beaten. The Portuguese sometimes administered the beatings themselves, he said, but sometimes they were given by native Goans disguised in black masks against the wrath of their victims...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Morning After | 1/5/1962 | See Source »

Lipstick & Minesweepers. Whatever the local politicians might eventually accomplish in Goa, the immediate problems were economic. Goa's virtually duty-free status sent swarms of Indian soldiers into shops stocked with inexpensive foreign luxury items seldom seen in India because of the government's stringent import restrictions. Shopkeepers did a brisk business in transistor radios, cameras, electric appliances, cosmetics, perfumes, wines. In one Pangim shop alone, Indian soldiers bought 1,400 Max Factor lipsticks. Truckloads of refrigerators were purchased by army officers for shipment home. But the days of the modest boom are numbered. High on the agenda...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Morning After | 1/5/1962 | See Source »

Already considerable progress has been made in getting Goa's administration back into working order. Finance Ministry officials are drafting a new budget that will bring the former colony under the economic supervision of the central government, and the State Bank of India has taken over Goa's Banco Nacional Ultramarino. Goan policemen, who had vanished when the Indian troops first appeared, were back on the job wearing their Portuguese uniforms. An Indian postal official arrived in Goa with $3,000 worth of Indian stamps, and Indian telegraph and telephone authorities wrestled with the problem of replacing Goa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Morning After | 1/5/1962 | See Source »

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