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This season's replacement soap opera for the Buttafuocos of Long Island is the Bobbitts of Manassas. There is Lorena Bobbitt, the Ecuadorian-born manicurist who could go to prison for 20 years if she is found guilty of what the lawyers call "malicious wounding." Then there is John Wayne Bobbitt, who, although acquitted of marital sexual assault last week, may never, as they say, be whole again. Despite the bloodletting, the Bobbitts are less Greek tragedy than downmarket War of the Roses. The onetime bouncer and the struggling beautician had been trapped with each other under the same roof...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Swift Sword of Justice | 11/22/1993 | See Source »

...Ecuadorian Ambassador to the United States said last night at Dudley House that the key to "modernization" for his country is to switch from an authoritarian to a more democratic government...

Author: By Nicholas Corman, | Title: Ecuador Backs Democracy | 10/5/1993 | See Source »

...ambassador also criticized an Ecuadorian law which makes it illegal to create a new university in Ecuador without the approval of the 17 other universities. "That's stupid. It's not human. We have to change that," he said...

Author: By Nicholas Corman, | Title: Ecuador Backs Democracy | 10/5/1993 | See Source »

...South America large areas of the Amazon Basin have been reserved for the exclusive use of Brazilian, Ecuadorian, Peruvian and Venezuelan Indians. The rights of tribes to conduct their own affairs, form their own councils and receive royalties for mining activities on Indian lands are gradually being recognized...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Struggling to Be Themselves | 11/9/1992 | See Source »

...believe in our capacity to organize, not in the government's goodwill," says Valerio Grefa, leader of the Indians of the Ecuadorian Amazon. Similar sentiments have stirred tribes from Mexico to Chile and have even inspired some armed guerrilla movements that make the struggle for Indian rights part of their ideology. After initial anger and confusion, governments have begun to respond. In Peru, Amazonian Indians have reclaimed 5 million acres of traditional lands, using $1.3 million in assistance from Denmark. Colombia's 60 Indian tribes have won title to more than 2.5 million acres...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Struggling to Be Themselves | 11/9/1992 | See Source »

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