Word: vora
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...four candidates in the race for the Presidency, two were moralizers and two materialists, General Juarez Távora and Right-Winger Plinio Salgado, both considered deeply religious, vowed to clean up corruption. Juscelino Kubitschek and rich, Falstaffan Adhemar de Barros, both M.D.s, former state governors and practical politicians, vowed to raise living standards. Barros ran well ahead of Kubitschek in the big cities; Kubitschek piled up his plurality in the inland towns and farm villages, where the P.S.D. machine operated most efficiently, and where most of the voters had laid eyes on no other presidential candidate. The final count...
...city votes from Rio and São Paulo, gave Millionaire Politico Adhemar de Barros a temporary lead, but Kubitschek forged slowly ahead after reports began coming in from the inland states, notably Minas Gerais. The count early this week: Kubitschek 2,277,000, Army General Juarez Távora 2,112,000, Barros...
...General Juarez ("Fight the Thieves and Hoodwinkers of the People") Távora, 56, favorite of army officers and intellectuals. Table-thumping Távora has an odd assortment of parties behind him: the conservative National Democratic Union, the anticlerical Socialists and the staunchly Roman Catholic Christian Democrats...
Doctors & Actors. Brainy General Távora would undoubtedly win the presidency if voters were counted only in the northeast, where he appeals both as a native son (born in the state of Ceará) and as a man of principle and piety (his cousin is the auxiliary bishop of Rio). Outside the northeast, Távora has apparently failed to capture much working-class support, despite 1) his promise to impose profit sharing on employers and 2) campaign help from one of Brazil's most gifted demagogues, São Paulo Governor Janio Quadros, who took a leave...
...General Juarez Távora (whom the army likes): "Legality above all personal interests or passions...