Word: latinizing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Latin America looms large in this issue. In addition to the Punta del Este story, written by David B. Tinnin, there is a cover story on Brazil's President Costa e Silva (with eight pages of color photographs), written by Philip Osborne and edited by Edward Jamieson. All told, 27 TIME reporters, photographers, writers, researchers and editors worked on these stories...
...charge of our extensive coverage at Punta del Este was Montana-born William Forbis, an old Latin America hand who was our man in Central America two decades ago. He then was called to New York, where he wrote Latin American news and, after becoming a senior editor, was in charge of various sections of the magazine. Three months ago, he moved to Rio de Janeiro as chief of bureau and senior South American correspondent. We asked Bill about his new duties, and he cabled...
...Professionally, it's been tough. New country, new language, new customs, all the logistic difficulties that go with Latin American life. The saving grace is the people, particularly the Brazilians-open, kind, lively and human. For the newsman with a problem, they go out of their way to provide a solution...
...Lyndon Johnson strode into a huge reception in the San Rafael Hotel on the final night of the historic Punta del Este conference of hemisphere chiefs, Latin American leaders surrounded him and embraced him in one passionate abrazo after another. When they finally turned him loose, their wives besieged him for autographs. "This has been so beautiful," sighed Brazil's President Arthur da Costa e Silva. Said Mexico's Gustavo Diaz Ordaz: "President Johnson is showing heart for Latin America...
...Punta del Este meeting was undeniably a personal triumph for Lyndon Johnson, who had seized on and promoted the idea for a conference that would open a new era of Latin American economic cooperation. It was Johnson's first trip ever to South America and his first opportunity to meet Latin American Presidents, many of whom had been prepared to dislike him. But Johnson proved far more charming and disarming, far more simpatico than most of them had expected-and they were won over. Even more important, the U.S. President sounded a clarion call that none of them could...