Word: uriburu
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Within ten minutes the formal resignation was in General Uriburu's khaki pocket. Within 30 minutes Argentina's "Pink House" was overrun by a merry mob. Portraits of Dr. Irigoyen were hurled from the windows, burned. Two busts of him were dragged forth, one decapitated, the other paraded through the streets in a coffin with the placard: "He's finished...
Black Derby. In his famed and battered old black derby, Dr. Irigoyen, sick to the point of lethargy, was rushed by friends in a motor car to the city of La Plata, some 35 miles from Buenos Aires. Arrested there by troops of General Uriburu, the old man took off his hat, stood fiddling with it before the officer who had arrested...
...Ballots Rule!" Meanwhile slim, wiry General Uriburu, by this time "Head of the Provisional Government." was orating from a balcony of the "Pink House": "Fellow countrymen, the Army . . . true to Democratic tradition . . . has performed its duty! . . . Now it is up to you to fulfill the mission begun by the National Army. The Saenz Pena electoral law has given you the most powerful arm of Democracy [voting by secret ballot]. . . . Let us now sheath our swords and let ballots rule...
...before the secret ballots had opportunity to show their potency, if any, the streets of Buenos Aires were again bullet-spattered. It was the night after the new Uriburu cabinet had been sworn in. Avenue de Mayo was a river of paraders and merrymakers glittering in the light from ten thousand windows. Suddenly from sidestreets groups of soldiers attacked. No one knew why. Women screamed. Men cursed. Confusion. But next morning it appeared that Pampas Lord Uriburu was still, for a while at least, Lord of All Argentine...
...relieved. El Hombre signed with Viscount D'Abernon in Buenos Aires last year a $38,880,000 mutual trade agreement highly advantageous to Britain, distinctly menacing to U. S. trade. Does that still stand? Worried, the London Daily Herald, organ of James Ramsay MacDonald, called up General Uriburu to ask. Over a radio telephone span of 7,000 miles the General answered slowly, loudly in English...