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...dictatorship, and costing the government heavily in prestige. Rojas' answer, made in an impromptu speech at the opening of an exhibit of public works: "I ask myself how the government can be losing prestige? Formerly Liberal governments persecuted Conservatives and many Conservative authorities persecuted Liberals, while today every Colombian knows-morning, noon and night-that the armed forces vigilantly guard his life, his honor and his property." Critics of this state of affairs, he said, were "intellectual guerrillas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COLOMBIA: Going Strong | 12/26/1955 | See Source »

...American high schools in the Colombian cities of Bogotá, Barranquilla and Cali, run by U.S. and Colombian Protestants, are among the country's best. But henceforth, Roman Catholic parents who send children to the American schools will be liable to excommunication. Crisanto Cardinal Luque warned them of the church's extreme penalty in a pastoral letter read last week to Colombia's 11 million Catholics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Hemisphere: Church v. Schools | 12/26/1955 | See Source »

Everyone knows that Christopher Columbus discovered America, but did he really? A Colombian diplomat and historian, Germán Arciniegas does not ask the question in his Amerigo and the New World, but the reader is bound to. Columbus boldly sailed through the curtain of fear and superstition that had kept men from trying the dread Atlantic crossing. But he died believing that he had reached Asia, never accepted the fact that the New World was really another continental land mass. The first man to name it the New World was the Florentine navigator and businessman Amerigo Vespucci; at least...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Who Discovered America? | 8/22/1955 | See Source »

Beclouding his promise of an election in 1958, Rojas Pinilla told the newspaper Diario de Colombia that his government would continue until Colombians-who ran a pretty good working democracy from 1910 to 1946-become "politically civilized." Then he announced that the Constituent Assembly, Colombia's make-do Congress, would not sit this year. "A Parliament," he explained, "is the greatest achievement of democracy, but when it becomes a tribune for libel, it must be closed." The last and plainest word came from the government's radio bulletin, which all Colombian stations are forced to carry. After...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COLOMBIA: The Army Digs In | 6/27/1955 | See Source »

...dawn in Callao, but were speedily put down by the army at a cost of 100 killed. The government promptly outlawed the party. Less than a month later, Odria, by then convinced of his mission, seized power in a military junta. Haya took asylum in Lima's Colombian Embassy, became the world's most celebrated refugee before Odria freed and exiled him last year (he now lives in Belgium...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PERU: Progress to Prosperity | 6/13/1955 | See Source »

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