Word: julio
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Chile received prompt regrets from the German Government. Vice Admiral Julio Allard, Commander in Chief and Director General of the Chilean Navy, announced himself satisfied that there had been "no deliberate intent" to sink a Chilean ship, explained: "Inasmuch as the ship was proceeding without lights . . . the submarine could not know under what flag the Tolten was navigating." While the Chilean Government drafted a note protesting to the U.S. for the fatal order to extinguish lights, reportedly serving formal notice that Chilean ships would under no circumstances run blacked out, Ambassador Rodolfo Michels Cavero in Washington demanded another ship...
...troops to danger points in Montevideo. He postponed the Presidential election scheduled for March 29. He announced that a Council of State would govern-and prepare a new reform to remedy the 1934 reform-until a plebiscite and the postponed Presidential election are held. He accepted Minister of War Julio A. Roletti's resignation because of "ill health," gave the post to Foreign Minister Alberto Guani "temporarily"-i.e., long enough for wise old Alberto Guani to make sure of the Army's loyalty...
Senhor Aranha, U.S. Under Secretary of State Sumner Welles, Argentina's Foreign Minister Enrique Ruiz Guiñazú, Chile's Juan Bautista Rossetti, Peru's gaunt-jowled Alfredo Solf y Muro and Ecuador's pink-cheeked Julio Tobar Donoso, each to his own taste, drank up. Still rumpled and tired, the six men filed out to a bronze-studded table in the Itamaraty Palace's Saláo de Baile and before glaring camera lights and sleepy-eyed newsmen signed a protocol which settled-after 113 years of intermittent border warfare-the last major...
Before the President's plane had decanted him in Cuba, Panama was abuzz. When he heard that Don Arnulfo was gone, onetime Police Chief Colonel Manuel Pino rubbed his hands. With two other veteran politicos, Julio Fabrega and Leopoldo Arosemena, he had been planning for a month to seize the police force and set up a junta...
Three weeks ago a Portuguese mission headed by onetime Foreign Minister Julio Dantas left Brazil. Although it was ostensibly a cultural mission, it had conferred with the Foreign Office, with the War Ministry and with President Vargas. Of more than cultural significance was a parting statement by Deputy João do Amaral, especially designated by Portugal's Dictator António de Oliveira Salazar to be a member of the mission. Said he, in effect...