Pinto | Aníbal Cavaco Silva | Freida Pinto | Ford Pinto | Gary Pinto | Aníbal Troilo | Aníbal Sánchez | Aníbal Ibarra | Aníbal Acevedo Vilá | Pinto horse | Pinto da Costa | Pinto Colvig | Palo Pinto County, Texas | Palo Pinto County | José Eduardo Pinto da Costa | Jorge Nuno Pinto da Costa | João Vieira Pinto | João Pinto | António Pinto | Anibal Ramos, Jr. | Aníbal Fernández | Manuel Pinto da Fonseca | Antonio Pinto | Aníbal Machado | Aníbal González | Ziraldo Alves Pinto | The Chosen (Ricardo Pinto) | Roger Pinto Molina | Ricardo Jorge Ferreira Pinto da Silva | Rafael Marques Pinto |
The president of Chile, Don Aníbal Pinto, the minister Don Manuel García de la Huerta, Colonel Marcos Maturana and the sculptor Jose Miguel Blanco together managed the creation of the museum, whose first director was the painter Juan Mochi.
President Aníbal Pinto named him Minister of the Interior, during which time he personally campaigned in the Arauco border to pacify a Mapuche rebellion and founded several forts to support the Malleco border.
Matias Vernengo, a University of Utah economist, identifies two main streams in dependency theory: the Latin American Structuralist, typified by the work of Prebisch, Celso Furtado and Anibal Pinto at the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLAC, or, in Spanish, CEPAL); and the American Marxist, developed by Paul A. Baran, Paul Sweezy, and Andre Gunder Frank.