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Word: luize (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Last week a Brazilian air force lieutenant named Luiz Felipe Albuquerque Jr., 30, also found out. Having lifted some $35 million from Brazilians in a fantastic borrow-from-Peter-to-pay-Paul scheme (and thereby out-Ponziing Ponzi, whose operations never topped $15 million), Albuquerque found that he had gone broke. On the front page of his newspaper Diario do Rio, he printed a shattering notice: "On this date, for unforeseen reasons I am closing my commercial activities . . . Those who intuitively saw that my business would fail were right . . . I shall not run away . . . My creditors will be paid . . . Remain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: Crash of the Felipetas | 8/25/1952 | See Source »

...situation changed abruptly. In the turbulent presidential election, Governor Getulio Vargas of Rio Grande do Sul was defeated by Julio Prestes, a protégé of the incumbent President, bumbling, liberal Washington Luiz. Flanked by fellow gaúcho Oswaldo Aranha and the swashbuckling General Pedro Aurelio de Góes Monteiro, Vargas marched triumphantly on Rio. The army-including Lieut. Colonel Eurico Caspar Dutra-recognized the popular strength of Vargas' movement and backed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: Visit from a Friend | 5/23/1949 | See Source »

...democratic lines together on a sound program. He knew politics, from the ward to the chancellery, and he had seen the world-by request. His traveling days began unexpectedly back in 1930 when Dictator Vargas rode into Rio at the head of his gauchos and kicked out President Washington Luiz and cabinet, including Foreign Minister Mangabeira. For the next four years, Mangabeira lived in eleven European countries. He went back to Brazil, spurned a Vargas peace offering and had the courage to blackball the dictator for the Brazilian Academy of Letters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: Man of the Hour | 11/24/1947 | See Source »

...Entire-group" is diplomatic double-talk for attractive, 20-year-old Lidiya Leisina, U.S.S.R. citizen. Last year she married Alvaro Cruz, son of Chilean Ambassador Luiz Cruz Ocampo. Ten months ago, Ambassador Cruz told President Gonzalez Videla that he was resigning, but he stayed on, trying to get his daughter-in-law out of Russia. Holding to its standard position toward Soviet women married to foreigners (TIME, April 21), Russia refused to let her go. At week's end Russia was still saying no, Lidiya was still in Moscow, Hostage Zhukov still in Santiago...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHILE: Going, Going . . . | 11/17/1947 | See Source »

...such inadequacies many a Brazilian answers: "We must be patient." As well as the next man, Washington Luiz knows that Brazil, despite her more than 400 years of history, still has a way to go on the road to democratic freedom. The important thing is that she is well on the road...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRAZIL: After 17 Years | 9/29/1947 | See Source »

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