Word: nola
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Though the new ruling military junta had feared trouble on May Day, the day of traditional celebration of workers' solidarity passed without mishap. Car horns in the capital honked the happy rhythm of "Spín-Spín-Spínola" to honor the head of the junta, General António de Spínola, 64, and 200,000 people jammed a soccer stadium to hear speeches by leftist leaders newly returned from exile. THANK YOU, ARMED FORCES, read one banner paraded in the stadium. The only somber note was the continued hunt for members...
When African rebels began challenging Portuguese rule in Angola in 1961, Spínola once again was an early volunteer. Brought home after three years, his chest festooned with ribbons and medals, he was made second in command of Portugal's National Republican Guard, a paramilitary police force. In 1968 he was sent back to Africa as commander in chief and military governor of the territory of Portuguese Guinea, where he served until he returned to Lisbon last summer to receive the Order of the Tower and the Sword with Palm, Portugal's highest military honor...
...Guinea, Spínola created a MacArthur-like aura around himself. His bushy eyebrows, the flashing monocle in his right eye-an adornment he picked up in Berlin-the gloves, and the riding crop he invariably carried were as well known to Portuguese troops as MacArthur's corncob pipe had been to Marines and G.I.s in the South Pacific. Unlike MacArthur, however, he believed in cultivating the enlisted man, and he would pop from his helicopter in hazardous spots to see personally how the fighting was going...
Though Spínola had worked in Guinea to involve the native population in the affairs of government-a sign perhaps that his own thinking was changing-few Portuguese were adequately prepared for the heretical turnabout of ideas in his book, Portugal and the Future, which came out last March and became Portugal's overnight bestseller (200,000 copies). In words that had an eerie echo of the arguments against U.S. involvement in Viet Nam, Spínola said what many in the country had been thinking: Portugal cannot win its African wars, and some political accommodation must...
Probably no one but Spínola could have said such a thing and escaped confinement in Caxias prison. But not even the staunchest right-wingers could fault his patriotism, bravery or adherence to accepted Portuguese values. Indeed, Spínola is a man whose character is conservatism itself...