Word: peroneal
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Cracked Front. Perón had won a victory. He quickly won another. The U.S. State Department was trying to form a united hemisphere front against the regime of Peron's stooge, anti-U.S. Vice President Edelmiro Farrell (who had forcibly replaced President Pedro Ramirez). U.S. Ambassador Norman Armour was instructed to "refrain from entering official relations" with Farrell. British Ambassador David Kelly got the same order. Latin nations were supposedly "consulting...
Troops alerted all over Buenos Aires. At Campo Mayo were 18,000 men who, with the ist and 2nd Infantry Regiments, were ready to strike for the colonels. For the President the nth Cavalry, the 3rd and 4th Infantry stood to arms. Two top colonels, Juan Domingo Peron and Eduardo Avalos, and War Minister Edelmiro Farrell conferred with President Ramirez at his residence. Ramirez backed down, agreed to sacrifice his Foreign Minister and Presidential Secretary. Later he denied that he had considered declaring...
...Army. The colonels had won again, at least temporarily. But their attempt to give Argentina an orderly, unified military government was floundering worse than ever. Knots of opposition, as yet ineffective but nonetheless significant, began to appear. Some of the army's generals began to look askance at Peron's strutting colonels. For want of a better leader some anti-totalitarians were turning to former three-day President Arturo Rawson.*Pro-Allied but indecisive, he had often proved disappointing...
...Neighbors. Little, liberal, democratic Uruguay (pop. 2,000,000) has nervously watched the development of aggressive, Fascist-like nationalism in neighboring Argentina. The group of Army jingoes called "The Colonels," led by Colonel Juan Domingo Peron and nominally headed by President-General Pedro Ramirez, has defied the U.S., the United Nations, its Latin neighbors. Almost certainly "The Colonels" instigated the revolt of Gualberto Villarroel in Bolivia (TIME, Jan. 3., et seq.}. Probably the Argentine junta has plotted similar moves in other countries, will plot again...
...actual strength is unknown; national reactions to outside pressure are always uncertain. But, a total embargo against Argentina might interrupt the happy moneymoon of prosperity, make the present regime intensely unpopular, force Peron from power-unless it infuriated the proud Argentines, turned them still further away from...