Word: salvadors
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...would just like to tell you how much I appreciate your comprehensive reporting and editorials on the issues concerning the crisis in El Salvador. They are of great value considering the dearth of any reporting at all in the Big Press, and have the strength and courage to address the real problems in this new age of red-baiting...
...policy successes. Relations with the European allies, bumpy at best during the Carter years, are much improved. The Secretary believes that disagreements with Japan and China are being smoothed over. Thanks to U.S. military and economic assistance, he is overly eager to assert, leftists have been thwarted in El Salvador and the junta headed by José Napoleón Duarte appears stronger. Haig, and indeed White House aides, claim that they deserve more credit for the unglamorous but essential jobs of improving relations with Canada, Mexico and especially Jamaica, whose new moderate government is supposed to serve...
...when the current round of hostilities began. It is a sad fact that there is an IRA. History shows, though, that oppressed people will fight if they must for their dignity and freedom, and the Irish are no different in this regard than the citizens of Zimbabwe or El Salvador...
...good feelings; at least it would have been fodder for a sociology paper. But the intelligentsia seems determined to alienate this source of support. The Real Paper, for example, which is very big on women taking back the night and happy to see people marching for justice in El Salvador, decided to interview State Rep. Marie Howe, an Irish patriot recently returned from a trip to Ulster. The paper asked her, among other things. "Wasn't the trip itself mainly a publicity stunt?" "Did you present yourself primarily as a Massachusetts legislator?" "It's clear you support...
...senior class committee Tuesday voted to endorse the Commencement protest proposed by several members of the Harvard/Radcliffe Committee on El Salvador (COES) by wearing green and white sashes during the ceremonies. After an hour-long meeting and a "very heated" discussion, the committee members agreed by a 12-9 vote to approve the sash protest, symbolizing objection to brutality in Central America and Atlanta. The decision was made despite doubts several members had about the committee's right to take an official stand on a political or social statement. They agreed, as individuals to endorse the protest and a refugees...