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Uruguayan and band
* Uruguayan — Pasquet, Luis ( emigrated to Finland 1974 ): ‘’ Triangle of Love ’’ ( n. d .; # 1: “ Pierrot ”; piano and brass band ).
Fattoruso has been a longtime part of both the Uruguayan and Latin American music scene, including as a member of rock band Los Shakers, and swing band The Hot Blowers, as well as Brazilian Milton Nascimento and the Latin jazz and Acid Jazz group Opa.
Rock and roll first broke into Uruguayan audiences with the arrival of British band The Beatles in the early 1960s.
Uruguayan punkabilly band Rudos Wild recorded the song for their album " Psychos With Wax!
* Tótem, an Uruguayan band formed in the early 1970s
El Peyote Asesino is an Uruguayan hip-hop and hard rock band that was active from 1994 to 1999.
* Opa ( band ), Uruguayan jazz group

Uruguayan and El
Uruguayan artists involved in canto popular included Los Eduardos, Los Que Iban Cantando, Universo, Carlos Benavides, Carlos Maria Fossatti, Eduardo Darnauchans, Anibal Sampayo, Marcos Velázquez, Alfredo Zitarrosa, José Carbajal ( Uruguayan musician ) (" El Sabalero "), Los Olimareños and Hector Numa Moraes.
*-( a ) n ( countries / continents: Africa → African, Albania → Albanian, Algeria → Algerian, America → American, Andorra → Andorran, Angola → Angolan, Antigua → Antiguan, Armenia → Armenian, Asia → Asian, Australia → Australian, Austria → Austrian, Barbados → Bajan, Bolivia → Bolivian, Bosnia → Bosnian, Brunei → Bruneian, Bulgaria → Bulgarian, Cambodia → Cambodian, Chile → Chilean, Colombia → Colombian, Costa Rica → Costa Rican, Croatia → Croatian ( also " Croat "), Cuba → Cuban, Dalmatia → Dalmatian, El Salvador → Salvadoran, Eritrea → Eritrean, Estonia → Estonian, Ethiopia → Ethiopian, Europe → European, Equestria → Equestrian, Fiji → Fijian, Gambia → Gambian, Georgia → Georgian, Germany → German, Guatemala → Guatemalan, Guinea → Guinean, Haiti → Haitian, Honduras → Honduran, Hungary → Hungarian, India → Indian, Indonesia → Indonesian, Italy → Italian, Jamaica → Jamaican, Kenya → Kenyan, / South Korea → / South Korean, Latvia → Latvian, Liberia → Liberian, Libya → Libyan, Lithuania → Lithuanian, Macedonia → Macedonian, Malawi → Malawian, Malaysia → Malaysian, Mali → Malian, Mauritania → Mauritanian, Mauritius → Mauritian, Mexico → Mexican, Micronesia → Micronesian, Moldova → Moldovan, Mongolia → Mongolian, Morocco → Moroccan, Mozambique → Mozambican, Namibia → Namibian, Nauru → Nauruan, Nicaragua → Nicaraguan, Nigeria → Nigerian, Palau → Palauan, Paraguay → Paraguayan, Puerto Rico → Puerto Rican, Romania → Romanian, Russia → Russian, Saint Lucia → Saint Lucian, Samoa → Samoan, Saudi Arabia → Saudi Arabian, Serbia → Serbian ( also " Serb "), Singapore → Singaporean, Slovakia → Slovakian, Slovenia → Slovenian ( also " Slovene "), South Africa → South African, Sri Lanka → Sri Lankan, Syria → Syrian, Tanzania → Tanzanian, Tonga → Tongan, Tunisia → Tunisian, Tuvalu → Tuvaluan, Uganda → Ugandan, United States of America → American, Uruguay → Uruguayan, Venezuela → Venezuelan, Zambia → Zambian, Zimbabwe → Zimbabwean ; cities / states: Alaska → Alaskan, Alexandria → Alexandrian, Andalusia → Andalusian, Arizona → Arizonan, Atlanta → Atlantan, Baltimore → Baltimorean, Bavaria → Bavarian, Bohemia → Bohemian, California → Californian, Catalonia → Catalan, Chicago → Chicagoan, Cincinnati → Cincinnatian, Corsica → Corsican, Crete → Cretan, El Paso → El Pasoan, Galicia → Galician, Hanoi ( Vietnam ) → Hanoian, Hawaii → Hawaiian, Iowa → Iowan, Karelia → Karelian, Kiev → Kievan, Madeira → Madeiran, Miami → Miamian, Minneapolis → Minneapolitan, Minnesota → Minnesotan, Moravia → Moravian, Nebraska → Nebraskan, Nova Scotia → Nova Scotian, Ottawa → Ottawan, Pennsylvania → Pennsylvanian, Philadelphia → Philadelphian, Pomerania → Pomeranian, Regina → Reginan, Riga → Rigan, Rome → Roman, San Antonio → San Antonian, San Diego → San Diegan, San Francisco → San Franciscan, San Jose → San Josean, Sardinia → Sardinian, Silesia → Silesian, Sicily → Sicilian, Sofia → Sofian, Sumatra → Sumatran, Tahiti → Tahitian, Tasmania → Tasmanian, Transylvania → Transylvanian, Tucson → Tucsonan, Tulsa → Tulsan, Utah → Utahn, Victoria → Victorian, Wallachia → Wallachian )
He has received honorary doctorate degrees from the Universities of Brasília ( 1985 ), Moscow ( 1990 ), Asunción ( 1994 ), Genoa and Bucharest, and, excluding short articles and studies, he has published the books entitled Alcances y aplicaciones de la nueva Constitución uruguaya Scope and Application of the New Uruguayan Constitution ( 1967 ), La nación, el nacionalismo y otros ismos Nation, Nationalism and other '- isms ' ( 1978 ), El temor y la impaciencia Fear and Impatience ( 1991 ), El año 501 Year 501 ( 1992 ), Un mundo sin Marx World without Marx ( 1993 ) y Meditaciones del milenio of the Millennium ( 1994 ).
Uruguayan Air Force Flight 571, also known as the Andes flight disaster, and in South America as Miracle in the Andes ( El Milagro de los Andes ) was a chartered flight carrying 45 people, including a rugby team, their friends, family and associates that crashed in the Andes on 13 October 1972.
That goal was scored by the Uruguayan José Perdomo on a freekick, and it has been known ever since as " El gol del terremoto " (" The earthquake goal ").
A move to El Porvenir for the 1990 season did not prove successful, as a leg injury kept him out most of the season, and he moved to Nacional of Uruguay the next season, where he won the Uruguayan Championship in 1992.
The name " Ariel " was inspired by a series of short writings called El Ariel by Uruguayan writer José Enrique Rodó that inspired generations of young Latin Americans in the first decades of the 20th century.
Álvaro Alexander Recoba Rivero ( born March 17, 1976 in Montevideo ), nicknamed " El Chino ", is a Uruguayan footballer currently playing for Primera División Uruguaya side Club Nacional de Football.
With the Uruguayan Invasion of Argentina dying down, a new wave of rock musicians arose, including El Kinto, Totem ( banda ), Psiglo, Génesis, Opus Alfa, Eduardo Mateo, Jesus Figueroa and Días de Blues, promoted by radio and television shows like Constelacion and Discodromo Show.
* The Santiago, Chile, newspaper El Mercurio broke the story that the 16 survivors of the Uruguayan plane crash in the Andes mountains had turned to cannibalism to avoid starvation.
Uruguayan artist Rhod Rothfuss began to experience with " marco irregular " paintings in 1942, late in 1944 publish in Arturo magazine your seminal text " El marco: un problema de la plástica actual " Munich-born painter Rupprecht Geiger exhibited " shaped canvases " in 1948 in Paris, France.
Uruguayan newspaper El País took over from 1986 onwards.

Uruguayan and de
* 1976 – Gonzalo de los Santos, Uruguayan footballer
* 1892 – Juana de Ibarbourou, Uruguayan poet ( d. 1979 )
In 1851, the Argentinian caudillo Justo José de Urquiza turned against Rosas and signed a pact with the exiled Unitarios, the Uruguayan Colorados and Brazil against him.
* Club Nacional de Football, Uruguayan football team
* Formation of the Uruguayan Football Association ( Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol or AUF )
* Water and Land Management on the Uruguayan Coast of the Río de la Plata
Seeing the success of the tournament, a boardmember of the Asociación Uruguaya de Fútbol or Uruguayan Football Association, Héctor Rivadavia, proposed the establishment of a confederation of the associations of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Uruguay, and on July 9, independence day in Argentina, CONMEBOL was founded.
The head snaps are totally foreign to Argentine and Uruguayan tango, and were introduced in 1934 under the influence of a similar movement in the legs and feet of the tango from the Rio de la Plata, and the theatrical movements of the pasodoble.
Ballroom tango steps stay close to the floor, while the Rio de la Plata Tango ( Uruguayan and Argentine ) includes moves such as the boleo ( allowing momentum to carry one's leg into the air ) and gancho ( hooking one's leg around one's partner's leg or body ) in which the feet travel off the ground.
After a season without a title, highlighted at the international level by obtaining greatest goal-difference in a Libertadores tie, against Everest of Ecuador, 14 – 1 overall ( 5 – 0 and 9 – 1 ), Peñarol won the Uruguayan championship in 1964 and 1965, reaching and losing the Libertadores final in the latter year ( to Independiente de Avellaneda ).
Factional disputes within Uruguay led Argentine leader Juan Manuel de Rosas to support his friend the deposed Uruguayan president Manuel Oribe in the civil war between the Blancos ( supporting Oribe ) and the Colorados.
The town is also the unnamed setting of the Uruguayan novelist, Cristina Peri Rossi's " The Ship of Fools " ( La nave de los locos ).
He was a member of the ' Generation of 45 ', a Uruguayan intellectual and literary movement: Carlos Maggi, Manuel Flores Mora, Ángel Rama, Emir Rodríguez Monegal, Idea Vilariño, Carlos Real de Azúa, Carlos Martínez Moreno, Mario Arregui, Mauricio Muller, José Pedro Díaz, Amanda Berenguer, Tola Invernizzi, Ida Vitale, Líber Falco, Juan Cunha, Juan Carlos Onetti, among others.
The Parliament, having a majority of representatives from the Frente Amplio since 2005, approved a law regarding sexual and reproductive health ( the law was known as " Ley de Salud Sexual y Reproductiva "), which initially contained an article about legalising abortion, which is banned under Uruguayan legislation since 1938.
In 1976 there had been plans to send great part of the Uruguayan Tupamaros ( MLN-T ), the Chilean Movimiento de Izquierda Revolucionaria ( MIR ) and the Bolivian National Liberation Army ( ELN ) to fight alongside the ERP and Montoneros in Argentina, but the plans failed to materialize largely due to the military coup.
* Joaqu % C3 % ADn Su % C3 % A1rez de Rondelo # Designer of Uruguayan flag
Paulina Luisi was the first Uruguayan woman to receive a bachelor ’ s degree in 1899 and later the first female physician and surgeon that graduated from the Medicine School of the Universidad de la República ( University of Uruguay, 1908 ).
She founded the Consejo Nacional de Mujeres ( National Women Council ), the Alianza de Mujeres para los Derechos Femeninos ( Women alliance for women's rights ), and the Uruguayan and Argentine branches of the International Abolitionist Federation.
He would make his Uruguayan Primera División debut with Liverpool de Montevideo in 1939.
Juan José de Amézaga Landaroso ( 1881 – 1956 ) was a Uruguayan political figure.
A music troupe playing Uruguayan Candombe in the " Desfile de Llamadas, through the Sur and Palermo neighborhoods, Montevideo ( Uruguay ).
Juan Zorrilla de San Martín ( 1855 – 1931 ) wrote epic poems about Uruguayan history.

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