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Dagmar Hagelin (29 September 1959 - disappeared on 27 January 1977) was a 17-year-old Swedish-Argentine girl who disappeared during the Dirty War on 27 January 1977, and is presumed to have been arrested by security forces in El Palomar, Buenos Aires, [1] Argentina, and murdered in a case of mistaken identity. [2]
The Port of Buenos Aires (Spanish: Puerto de Buenos Aires) is the principal maritime port in Argentina. Operated by the Administración General de Puertos (General Ports Administration), a state enterprise , it is the leading transshipment point for the foreign trade of Argentina .
Vidal later in life (daguerrotype). In 1814 Emeric Essex Vidal courted Anna Jane Capper. Her father, a pluralist clergyman [c] with a private income, [d] opposed the match, probably because of Vidal's social origins; but the couple eloped and were married — at St Bride's, Fleet Street, [15] like the Vidal parents 13 years before them.
Shocking images have emerged of damage inside a Royal Caribbean cruise ship after bad weather rocked the vessel, leaving one passenger with injuries.. The damage occurred onboard the Explorer of ...
Bad weather rocked a Royal Caribbean Crusies ship near Spain on Thursday night, causing damage aboard the vessel and requiring the ship to make an unexpected stop to allow a guest to medically ...
The status of women in Argentina has changed significantly following the return of democracy in 1983; and they have attained a relatively high level of equality. In the Global Gender Gap Report prepared by the World Economic Forum in 2009, Argentine women ranked 24th among 134 countries studied in terms of their access to resources and opportunities relative to men. [6]
Two Carnival Cruise Line ships collided at the port of Cozumel in Mexico on Friday, December 20, as the Carnival Legend plowed into the back of its sister ship, the Carnival Glory, causing visible ...
Manso lived in Rio de Janeiro from 1849 to 1853, where she published The Women's Journal (Portuguese: O Jornal das Senhoras), a periodical modeled on an English magazine of the same name that, "argued against discrimination against women and supported equal education for Latin American women." [8] Back in Buenos Aires, she founded the Ladies ...