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Word: salvadore (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Carlos has served a twelve-year stint with the Yellow Cab Co., working nights. He claims no divine source of inspiration in choosing the job. After emigrating from El Salvador 20 years back, he found himself in need of work. Getting his taxi license, known in cab jargon as a "hacking license," was the obvious choice. "No matter how bad the economy is," he says, "you can always get a job as a cab driver." It is steady work, which he enjoys mostly because of the variety of people he meets...

Author: By Toc. Berkman, | Title: Fifteen Minutes: Life in the Driver's Seat: Confessions of a Cambridge Cabbie | 3/2/2000 | See Source »

Roselia Jaquerano, who came to the U.S. from El Salvador 15 years ago and owns a boutique in East Cambridge, says that she has not found the tension to be quite so subtle...

Author: By Daniela J. Lamas, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Cambridge's Neighborhoods: East Cambridge Struggles To Keep Personal Touch | 3/1/2000 | See Source »

...while her store has been fairly successful, Jaquerano says her daughter's attempt to open a bakery down the street was thwarted because she is from El Salvador...

Author: By Daniela J. Lamas, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Cambridge's Neighborhoods: East Cambridge Struggles To Keep Personal Touch | 3/1/2000 | See Source »

...jump full force into the whole of literature since the Book of Genesis. Durang has always been something of the Tom Stoppard of absurdist drama, but in The Idiots Karamazov he outdoes himself. Insert famous femme fatale Anas Nin, lover to the likes of Henry Miller, Gore Vidal and Salvador Dal, a few scenes from Eugene O'Neil's Long Day's Journey into Night, and references to everything from Macbeth to Robert Anderson's Tea and Sympathy, and you have one of the most delightful literary travesties this side of Rozencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead...

Author: By David Kornhaber, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Idiots' Guide to Literature | 12/17/1999 | See Source »

...demonstrators of yesteryear opposed military intervention in places like Vietnam, El Salvador and Nicaragua on the grounds that the real problem in these places was not communism but poverty. And the solution was not war but economic assistance. As Senator Christopher Dodd said in a nationally televised 1983 address opposing President Reagan's request for military aid to El Salvador, "We must hear the cry for bread and schools, work and opportunity, that comes from campesinos everywhere in this hemisphere." Well, it turns out that the best cure for the poverty the left so agonized about then is precisely what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Return of the Luddites | 12/13/1999 | See Source »

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