Word: danilo
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Novak Deirdre A. O'Dwyer Kathleen M. O'Toole Elizabeth C. Oelsner Dara B. Olmstead Noah D. Oppenheim Matthew T. Ozug Edwin T. Pankau Irwin G. Park Michael S. Passaportis Jonathan M. Patton Tamin M. Pechet Maura M Pelham Joshua E. Penzner Richard A. Perez Joshua A. Perry Danilo Petranovich Mei Pin Phua Lindsay J. Pindyck Giselle J. Pinto Nicholas J. Pinto Peter D. Platt Luke C. Platzer Rachel W. Podolsky Eli A. Poliakoff Gabriella L. Pollack Taylor L. Pollack Courtney F. Powell Ignacio Prado B. Aviva Preminger Alexandra Price Jennifer L. Pusey Due M. Quach Lexer I. Quamie Erica...
...humanitarian considerations played a role in the thousands of torture sessions that occurred in Chile during Pinochet's regime. The charges against Pinochet are most serious. If he is not brought to trial, humanity will lose the opportunity to resolve a great misunderstanding: the confusion between ideology and fascism. DANILO ZIMBRES Sao Paulo...
...DANILO PEREZ Central Avenue (Impulse) Perez, a pianist, is after a kind of musical Creole, mixing straight-ahead bop with motifs from Cuba, Brazil and his native Panama--all at once! Central Avenue may not be the year's most coherent album, but it's emblematic of the new, more supple, more eclectic brand of fusion that's enriching jazz...
Another kind of agenda is advanced by Danilo Perez's Central Avenue (Impulse!), one of the fall's most passionate and enjoyable albums. Perez wants to broaden the Latin jazz palette beyond Cuba to embrace the entire hemisphere. And why stop there? In one cut, the 32-year-old pianist works in motifs from his native Panama as well as Brazil, Cuba, the Middle East (via Spain) and, thanks to the contributions of a tabla player, India. Perez sees a pendulum effect at work: after a period of retrenchment, jazz, as it often has been in the past...
After an internal re-examination of the piece by seven reporters and editors, Ceppos concluded that the series "did not meet our standards" in several respects. The story fingered Nicaraguan drug supplier Oscar Danilo Blandon Reyes as the pivotal figure who funneled money from the L.A. crack trade to the contras, but failed to note that Blandon (who later became a U.S. government informant) testified that he stopped sending money to the contras in 1982, well before he began trafficking drugs in L.A. Moreover, Ceppos admitted, the assertion that "millions in profits" from drug dealing went to the contras...