Word: santiagos
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...week's end exiled factions of both right and left were still trooping back from abroad. The staff of urbane, British-mannered tin baron Carlos Victor Aramayo came up from Argentina. Jose Antonio Arze, head of the strong P.I.R. (Leftist Revolutionary Party) arrived from Santiago. Somewhere between their two groups, Bolivians might find representative government. Promised the Junta: "We will call elections and then turn over our power to a government chosen by the people...
Died. Juan Antonio Rios, 57, Chile's middle-of-the-road, opportunistic President (1942-46) who was elected with leftist support as a lesser evil than ex-Strong Man Ibáñez, under wartime stresses maintained a reasonable Right; of cancer; in Santiago (see LATIN AMERICA...
...Peru, housewives were being turned away from empty-shelved butcher and bakery shops; if the Government acceded to Hoover's request for a 40% cut in local food consumption, it might well write its own downfall. By the time Hoover got to Santiago, he announced flatly that he expected no help from Chile...
...Russo-Argentine decision to kiss and make up caught Chile's Communists short. The day before the announcement, Santiago's Communist El Siglo damned Argentine "maneuvers to tie Chile to the train of a Nazi-Perón war." The day after, El Siglo praised Perón's democratic action, headlined: RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA WILL HELP ARGENTINA FREE ITSELF FROM IMPERIALISM...
Bright-painted vivas flecked the white walls of Santiago. Banners shouted bienvenida (welcome). From Santiago's Los Cerrillos airport to the Plaza Constitution, palm fronds and the hammer-&-sickle festooned the streets. All day and far into the torchlit night, 8,000 cheering Chilean Communists gave the first Soviet diplomat in Chilean history a pointedly ideological welcome...