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...Salvadoran neighborhood in Pico-Union, a Japanese restaurateur has opened a place called El Libertad El Salvador, and serves teriyakiburgers. All over the city and county, in fact, the ethnics have bumped up against each other and produced some vivid, only-in-L.A. mongrels. Gutierrez & Weber...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Los Angeles: The New Ellis Island | 6/13/1983 | See Source »

...Shultz, the U.S. remains committed to a "sophisticated but I think very correct" set of policies in connection with war-torn El Salvador. That policy, Shultz reiterated last week, contains four elements: 1) increased aid in developing the economy and democratic institutions; 2) military assistance aimed at strengthening the Salvadoran army so that it can keep the guerrillas at bay long enough for the first goal to produce results; 3) support for negotiations to broaden participation in the democratic process, notably in the elections now scheduled for late 1983; and 4) encouragement of multilateral talks in which other countries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Central America: Making Peace at Home | 6/13/1983 | See Source »

Comparisons with Soviet behavior, protests over covert action and the latest bureaucratic maneuvers in Washington have tended to obscure the fact that Marxist-led insurgents in countries like El Salvador are as adept as the U.S. and their clients in their use of firearms. A faction of the Salvadoran rebels reaffirmed that fact last week. Having taken credit for the May 25 assassination of U.S. Military Adviser Lieut. Commander Albert Schaufelberger III in the capital of San Salvador, the so-called Popular Forces of Liberation (F.P.L.) warned that the guerrillas would now step up armed attacks against military...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Central America: Making Peace at Home | 6/13/1983 | See Source »

...recent dismissals of Undersecretary of State for Central American Thomas O. Endears and U.S. ambassador to El Salvador Dean Hinton show, such a change in policy is not in the cards. Both Endears and Hinton advocated a double-tracked plan of continued military aid to the Salvadoran government and negotiations with the guerrillas--better, certainly, than no talk at all. Now guns will do the only talking for American diplomacy in El Salvador...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Discarding the Past | 6/9/1983 | See Source »

...Nicaragua, the Administration is concerned that the Sandinista regime is a Soviet lackey and has been supplying arms to the Salvadoran leftists. On both counts, the Administration is probably not far from the mark. Tragically, though, American policy may have been what pushed the Sandinistas into the Soviet camp. When he came to power, Reagan cut off all aid to Nicaragua, which was forced to turn elsewhere--i.e. to the Soviet Union--for economic assistance. Then word began to leak out that the Administration had okayed CIA plans to overthrow the fledgling regime. The Sandinistas initiated a significant military build...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Discarding the Past | 6/9/1983 | See Source »

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