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...discussion dealt with international involvement in environmentalism and development, focusing particularly on the 1992 United Nations conference in Rio de Janeiro. It was the final event of a day-long symposium sponsored by the Kennedy School Energy and Environment Student Interest Group and the International Development Interest Group...

Author: By C. REBECCA Suk, | Title: Environmental Experts on Panel Look to 1992 Conference in Rio | 3/2/1991 | See Source »

...Border Patrol thinks Operation Desert Storm may explain why the number of Latin Americans caught trying to cross the border from Mexico declined dramatically in late January. In Laredo and Del Rio, Texas, border arrests were down as much as 40%, compared with the same month a year ago. Arrests in Yuma, Ariz., decreased 30%. Immigration officials say Mexico is rife with rumors that the U.S. government is drafting illegal aliens and shipping them off to fight in the war. The prospect of combat hasn't deterred some Mexican nationals already living in the U.S., however, from trying to join...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Careful, Tio Sam Might Want You | 2/25/1991 | See Source »

...both books underscore, the Protestant Gospel offers Latin Americans new hope and spiritual solace within close-knit local churches, amid the dispiriting realities of everyday life. Speaking for millions of fellow believers, Nilza Costa, a Pentecostal chambermaid in Rio de Janeiro, says, "I am happiest when I am in church, praying, singing, surrounded by the love of Jesus." Says Ricardo Araujo, a Sao Paulo construction worker who has joined the Baptists, "Without Jesus, I was nobody, but I have found myself through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Battle for Latin America's Soul | 1/21/1991 | See Source »

...Pentecostal group, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God. Its authoritarian bishop, Edir Macedo de Bezerra, 45, began preaching in 1977 to a dozen curiosity seekers in a rented room above a funeral parlor; today his flock is 2 million strong. The movement filled a 150,000-seat Rio stadium twice last year, opens one new church a week, and has added a $45 million Sao Paulo TV channel to its 14 radio stations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Battle for Latin America's Soul | 1/21/1991 | See Source »

While there is much talk about their political meddling and impact, most Evangelicals appear to succeed because they usually preach a purely spiritual message. Henrique Mafra Caldeira de Andrada, head of the Protestant program at Rio's Institute of Religious Studies, thinks Catholic advocates of the social gospel failed to realize that "these people were hungry for more than just food. The Evangelicals met the peoples' emotional and spiritual needs better." Or, as Brazil's top Baptist, the Rev. Nilson Fanini, puts the paradox, "The Catholic Church opted for the poor, but the poor opted for the Evangelicals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Battle for Latin America's Soul | 1/21/1991 | See Source »

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