Word: sao
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Latin Americans have long complained that the Alliance for Progress is less an alliance than a series of bilateral aid agreements between the U.S. and 19 hemisphere nations. The U.S. now agrees, and at an Alianza meeting in Sao Paulo last November, an eight-man inter-American executive committee was set up to act as a clearinghouse between the U.S. and its Alianza partners. Last week in Washington, the Inter-American Economic and Social Council of the OAS chose Carlos Sanz de Santamaria, 58, Colombia's Finance Minister, to boss the committee...
...live in cities, and the percentage is rising as more and more people seek to escape the unemployment and near starvation of the countryside. Four of the world's 13 largest cities are in Latin America; Buenos Aires counts 7,000,000 people, Mexico City 5,500,000, Sao Paulo 4,300,000, Rio de Janeiro 3,700,000. Ten Latin American cities already have populations of more than 1,000,000 and by 1980, according to U.N. estimates, 16 others will top the million mark...
...Cart & by Truck. Colombia's five largest metropolitan areas average 6% annual growth, while the country's population as a whole gains only 3% annually. Sao Paulo accepts 5,000 newcomers each day. They arrive in donkey carts, on buses and flatbed trucks, hungry, weary and expressionless. Some cannot write their own names; in the Andean countries many of the migrants speak only an Indian dialect. But they hope for food and jobs, have heard of new factories, schools and hospitals in the big cities. Above all, there is the knowledge that things cannot get worse...
...midst of its sixth Cabinet crisis in 18 months-and President Joao Goulart was engaged in another of those nimble political maneuvers by which he solves nothing but somehow survives. Out as Finance Minister went Carlos Alberto Alves Carvalho Pinto, 53, the able onetime governor of Sao Paulo state, who resigned in anger after six hopeless months of struggle against Brazil's wild inflation (about 85% in 1963), its fleeing capital and its immense foreign debt. In to cope with the same problems came Ney Galvao, 60, a smalltime provincial banker whose only previous claim to fame...
...which has always had an affinity for mystics. In these troubled days for Brazil of squabbling politicians, wild inflation and widespread cynicism, there is a longing for someone to save the country, and this longing makes Zarur a possible candidate for the 1965 presidential elections. A recent poll in Sao Paulo and Rio gave Zarur 6% of the vote and fourth place among presidential candidates-trailing only ex-President Juscelino Kubitschek, Governors Carlos Lacerda of Guanabara State and Adhemar de Barros of Sao Paulo State. Even before the poll, claim Zarur's lieutenants, Kubitschek offered him second place...