Another decree, dictated on May 31, 1974, by the government of Juan Perón, stated that Canning Avenue changed its name into the present one as a tribute to Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, Argentine journalist, nationalist writer and essayist.
Qué soon attracted prestigious contributors from Argentine intellectual life such as Arturo Jauretche, Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, Jorge Sabato and Arturo Frondizi.
Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, an Argentine writer, journalist, essayist and poet
Raul Malo | José Raúl Capablanca | Tito Ortiz | Raúl Castro | David Ortiz | Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz | Raúl Alfonsín | Raúl Juliá | Raul Julia | Raúl di Blasio | Raúl Ramírez | Raúl Prebisch | Raúl Mondesí | Raúl Labrador | Raul Boesel | Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz | Raúl Reyes | Raul Morales | Raul Hilberg | Raul Blanco | José Ortiz | Jorge Ortiz de Pinedo | Antonio Ortiz Mayans | Rubén Ortiz Torres | Ruben Ortiz Torres | Raúl Velasco | Raúl Soldi | Raúl López | Raul Gardini | Raul Domingos |
In his book Los Malditos (Spanish, "The cursed ones") he analyzed the history of some people usually being relegated to a second plane by other historians, such as Manuel Ugarte, Arturo Jauretche and Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz.
Ultimately, with the return of democracy, Canning was again renamed to Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, by a December 29, 1985, ordinance.
He reinforced his close relationship with his former companion of elementary school Homero Manzi, as well as Arturo Jauretche, Raúl Scalabrini Ortiz, and tango and theater composers Armando Discepolo y Enrique Santos Discépolo, representatives of tango culture and the new nationalistic ideas; and the Argentine-German neurobiological tradition active at the neuropsychiatric hospitals later known by the names of two disciples of Christfried Jakob, Drs.