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Argentina and 1946
Juan Perón, President of Argentina from 1946 to 1955 and 1973 to 1974.
Peronism associated with the regime of Juan Peron in Argentina from 1946 to 1955 and 1973 to 1974, was strongly influenced by fascism.
Between 1943 and 1946, the de facto President of Argentina was Edelmiro Farrell, whose paternal ancestry was Irish.
More recent uses include: by France during the First Indochina War ( 1946 1954 ), the Algerian War ( 1954 1962 ), the Portuguese Colonial War ( 1961 1974 ) and the Western Sahara War ( 1975 1991 ), The Six-Day War by Israel ( 1967 ), in Nigeria ( 1969 ), India and Pakistan ( 1965 and 1971 ), Turkey during the invasion of Cyprus ( 1974 ), by Morocco during the Western Sahara War ( 1975 1991 ), Iran ( 1980 88 ), Brazil ( 1972 ), Egypt ( 1973 ), Iraq ( 1980 88, 1991, 2003 2011 ), Angola ( 1993 ), Yugoslavia ( 1991-1996 ), and by Argentina ( 1982 ).
Between 1946 and 1950, Argentina, Chile, Peru, and Ecuador extended their rights to a distance of 200 nautical miles to cover their Humboldt Current fishing grounds.
María Eva Duarte de Perón (; 7 May 1919 26 July 1952 ) was an Argentine political leader, the second wife of President Juan Perón ( 1895 1974 ) and served as the First Lady of Argentina from 1946 until her death in 1952.
In 1946, Juan Perón was elected President of Argentina.
Propaganda poster of the first Five-Year Plans of Argentina | Five-Year Plan ( 1946 1951 ) promoting the nationalization of public services
* The Political Economy of Argentina, 1946 83, Macmillan, 1988.
For example, Argentina would be the first ( and so far only ) team to win three consecutive titles by winning the championships of 1945, 1946 and 1947.
She was loaned to Canada from 1946 to 1948, then sold to Argentina and renamed ARA Independencia in 1958.
After a short stay in Schochwitz, he fled with his family to Argentina in early 1946.
Dr. Leonardo Senkman of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem says that " the reopening of post-war European emigration to Argentina during the first Peron Presidency in 1946 pushed up the net immigration figure to 463, 456 persons between 1947 and 1951 ..." the highest in thirty years.
During World War II, she supported and edited from Argentina in collaboration with her friend and translator Pelegrina Pastorino, the anti-Nazi magazine " Lettres Francaises " directed by Roger Caillois and in 1946 she was the only Argentinean who attended the Nuremberg Trials.
Its decline, however, was slowed by both an era of relative prosperity in Argentina, as well as milestones such as the inaugural of the Hotel Claridge in 1946, the Torcuato di Tella Institute's Florida Street center in 1963 ( which became a hub of Buenos Aires ' avant-garde and pop art scene during the 1960s ), and the 1971 conversion of the street into a promenade.
His destinations included Tahiti ( 1933 ); United States, Japan, and China ( 1934 and 1937 ); Italy, Spain, Sudan ( now Mali ), Niger, Upper Volta, Togo and Dahomey ( now Benin, 1935 ); the West Indies ( 1936 ); Mexico ( 1937, 1939, and 1957 ); the Philippines and Indochina ( now Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, 1938 ); Guatemala and Ecuador ( 1939 ); Senegal ( as a conscript, 1940 ); Argentina ( 1941 ), Peru and Bolivia ( 1942 and 1946 ); and finally Brazil ( 1946 ).
Scholars of Argentina identify two distinct party systems, one in place between 1912 and 1940, the other emerging after 1946.
From this point on, Santillán lived rather more obscurely, founding several more journals, and continuing his scholarly work, including extensive collaboration on the Gran Enciclopedia Argentina, and critical analyses of the labour movement and Peronism: Why We Lost the War: A Contribution to the History of the Spanish Tragedy ( 1940 ) later made into a film by his son, Francisco Galindo The Crisis of Capitalism and the Mission of the Proletariat ( 1946 ), the section on Argentina in The Labour Movement: Anarchism and Socialism Vol.
After arriving in Rome in 1946, Pavelić used the Vatican " ratline " to reach Argentina in 1948, along with other Ustaša, Russian, Yugoslav, Italian, and American spies and agents all tried to apprehend Pavelić in Rome but the Vatican refused all cooperation and vigorously defended its extraterritorial status.
Priebke escaped from a British prison camp in 1946 and fled, first to the Tyrol and then back to Rome, whence, using false papers supplied by the Vatican " rat line ", he emigrated to Argentina.
:* Pikelinia Mello-Leitão, 1946 ( Argentina, Colombia, Galapagos )
Julie Covington ( born 11 September 1946, London ) is an English singer and actress, best known for recording the original version of " Don't Cry for Me, Argentina ".

Argentina and
* 1828 Uruguay is formally proclaimed independent at preliminary peace talks brokered by Great Britain between Brazil and Argentina during the Cisplatine War.
* 1947 A British South American Airways Avro Lancastrian airliner crashes into a mountain during a flight from Buenos Aires, Argentina to Santiago, Chile.
* 1925 Jorge Rafael Videla, Argentinian politician, 43rd President of Argentina
* 1582 Spanish conquistador Hernando de Lerma founds the settlement of Salta, Argentina.
* 1806 Santiago de Liniers, 1st Count of Buenos Aires re-takes the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina after the first British invasion.
* 1982 Falklands War: Argentina invades the Falkland Islands.
* 1950 Argentina becomes a signatory to the Buenos Aires copyright treaty.
* 2007 Airport police officer María del Luján Telpuk discovers a suitcase containing the undeclared sum of US $ 800, 000 as it goes through an x-ray machine in Aeroparque Jorge Newbery in Buenos Aires, Argentina sparking an international scandal involving Venezuela and Argentina known as " Maletinazo ".
His goal in the 3 1 group win over Argentina was his 25th for England in just 38 appearances, but his individual success could not be replicated by that of the team, which was eliminated in the quarter final by Brazil, who went on to win the tournament.
England defeated Argentina 1 0 the game was the only one in which Charlton received a caution and faced Portugal in the semi finals.
* 1956 Tony Leon, South African politician and Ambassador to Argentina
* 1983 Dissolution of the Military Junta in Argentina.
* 1906 Imperio Argentina, Argentine actress and singer ( d. 2003 )
* Frederick J. Stimson, Ambassador to Argentina ( 1914 1921 ), Assistant Attorney General of Massachusetts
* 2004 A fire in the República Cromagnon nightclub in Buenos Aires, Argentina kills 194.
* 1983 Democracy is restored in Argentina with the assumption of President Raúl Alfonsín.
The team under Bobby Robson fared better as England reached the quarter-finals of the 1986 World Cup, losing 2 1 to Argentina in a game made famous by two goals by Maradona for very contrasting reasons, before losing every match at the Euro 88 tournament.
He resigned following investigations into his financial activities and his successor, Glenn Hoddle, similarly left the job for non-footballing reasons after just one international tournament — the 1998 World Cup — in which England were eliminated in the second round again by Argentina and again on penalties ( after a 2 2 draw ).
* 1951 The first Pan American Games are held in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
* 1953 Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, President of Argentina
* 1904 The United Kingdom sells a meteorological station on the South Orkney Islands to Argentina, the islands are subsequently claimed by the United Kingdom in 1908.
* 1816 Rossini's opera The Barber of Seville premieres at the Teatro Argentina in Rome.

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