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Word: miguel (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

NADINE GOODMAN 39, MEXICO: Social worker Master's degree in hand, Goodman moved to San Miguel de Allende in 1981 to learn Spanish. Once there, the American saw a desperate need among local teenagers for sex education and health care. With a $7,000 grant she founded CASA, a counseling center and maternity hospital. Today its staff of 100, including 60 peer counselors who distribute birth control to surrounding villages, serves 50,000 people a year. Says Goodman: "It's important that these women have access to family planning, can build self-esteem and get the care they deserve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook, Feb. 19, 1996 | 2/19/1996 | See Source »

...dealer named Pacifico Castrellon and rented a three-story house in the Lima suburb of La Molina. She registered as a journalist, and her neighbors knew her only as a quiet gringa with a radiant smile. Berenson and Castrellon, Peruvian police say, were sent together to Peru to meet Miguel Rincon, second-in-command of the MRTA. Castrellon and Rincon, investigators told journalists, both have implicated Berenson. Castrellon says he and Berenson smuggled arms to the guerrillas through Central America; Rincon names her as his "foreign collaborator" in MRTA activities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LORI BERENSON: ACCOMPLICE TO TERROR | 1/22/1996 | See Source »

...more may soon be answered. Five hundred years after her fateful climb, the Inca maiden has returned to the world below the clouds. Her frozen body, along with those of two other youths, was discovered almost by accident last month by anthropologist Johan Reinhard and his Peruvian guide Miguel Zarate. Her tissues and bodily fluids were still intact. Researchers have found the mummified corpses of other Incas who were sacrificed, and four years ago, the freeze-dried remains of a 5,000-year-old man turned up in the Tyrolean Alps. But none were nearly as well preserved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Archaeology: RETURN OF THE ICE MAIDEN | 11/6/1995 | See Source »

...formidable drug hierarchy. Behind bars after 15 years of activity were billionaire Cali kingpins Gilberto Rodriguez Orejuela and Jose Santacruz Londono. Botero's national police director, General Jose Rosso Serrano, is said to be on the trail of the two remaining major Cali mobsters, Rodriguez's younger brother Miguel and Helmer "Pacho" Herrera...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ROCKED BY SCANDAL | 8/14/1995 | See Source »

...mention prosperity. DEA officials estimate that the Rodriguez brothers oversee 80% of the cocaine trafficking in the world, with profits of about $7 billion last year, and say that they have also begun to make deep inroads into the heroin market, previously dominated by Southeast Asian drug lords. Although Miguel remains at large, the Colombian government crowed over Gilberto's arrest. "This is the beginning of the end of the Cali cartel," announced President Ernesto Samper Pizano. A press conference at police headquarters in Bogota, where Rodriguez was paraded about like war booty, had the air of a New Year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: KINGPIN CHECKMATE | 6/19/1995 | See Source »

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