Normal view MARC view

Marcos, Ferdinand E. (Ferdinand Edralin), 1917-1989 (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Marcos, Ferdinand E. (Ferdinand Edralin), 1917-1989
Used for/see from:
  • Earlier heading: Marcos, Ferdinand Edralin, Pres. Philippines
  • Ma-kʻo-ssu, 1917-1989
  • Marŭkʻosŭ, 1917-1989

His An ideology for Filipinos, c1983: t.p. (Ferdinand E. Marcos)

Political handbook of the world, 1987: p. 458-460 (Marcos elected President Nov. 1965; exile in Hawaii Feb. 26, 1986)

Chʻen, Y. Ma-kʻo-ssu fu chʻen lu, 1986.

Pʻillipʻin "2-wŏl hyŏngmyŏng", 1987: t.p. (Marŭkʻosŭ)

Washington post, Sept. 29, 1989: p. A1 (Ferdinand Marcos, d. Sept. 28, 1989 in Hawaii) p. A53 (Ferdinand Edralin Marcos, b. Sept. 11, 1917 in Sarrat, Ilocos Norte Province; father Mariano R. Marcos, mother, Josefa Edralin)

Ency. Americana, 1990 (Ferdinand Edralin Marcos; elected pres. in 1965, defeated Diosdado Macapagal; reelected in 1969; in 1971 changed the form of govt. into Parliamentary form so he can become prime minister & remain in power indefinitely; re-elected in 1981 for 6 yrs. term with rt. of reelection; d. 9/28/1989 in Hawaii)

New Yorker, Nov. 21, 2016: Letter from the Philippines, page 70 (On August 21, 1983, after three years in exile in the United States, the opposition leader Benigno Aquino, Jr., was shot dead after he landed at the Manila airport. The assassination galvanized the anti-Marcos forces, culminating in the People Power Revolution of February 1986. Disaffected military leaders staged a coup, and hundreds of thousands of protesters flooded the EDSA highway around Manila to demand that Marcos resign. Finally, Ronald Reagan, who had long seen Marcos as a valuable ally in the fight against Communism, withdrew his support. Marcos fled the Philippines for Hawaii, leaving the presidency to Corazon Aquino, the widow of Benigno.)

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