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Michael P. Shea, a mid-career student at the K-School and spokesman for the Committee to let El Salvador be El Salvador, said yesterday that the Committee recently sent letters to Reagan and to entertainer Frank Sinatra, who starred in the show, commending them both for their recommendation that Russia stay out of Poland, but suggesting that the U.S. do the same in El Salvador...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: K-School Group Asks Reagan For TV Show on El Salvador | 3/16/1982 | See Source »

Most of the Committee's 15 members are enrolled in the K-School's mid-career program. Many have had experience in government and have a special interest in Central American issues, Shea said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: K-School Group Asks Reagan For TV Show on El Salvador | 3/16/1982 | See Source »

...Salvador is "closer to home," Shea said, adding that the committee considers Reagan's policy of attacking Soviet intervention in Poland while supporting American involvement in El Salvador inconsistent. "We want to draw a parallel," he said, adding, "President Reagan is clearly confused about Central America--we want to educate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: K-School Group Asks Reagan For TV Show on El Salvador | 3/16/1982 | See Source »

Director Constantin Costa-Gavras (Z, State of Siege) builds Missing around the arrival in Santia go of Herman's father Edmund (Jack Lemmon), who joins Horman's wife (Sissy Spacek) in a frustrating quest to find out what happened to his son (John Shea). Basing his narrative largely on Thomas Hauser's 1978 book, The Execution of Charles Horman (reissued in a new paperback as Missing), Costa-Gavras shows the pair running up against a phalanx of American diplomats who profess to be helping but who know all along that the Chilean military authorities have already murdered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Missing: Fact or Fabrication? | 3/8/1982 | See Source »

...press spokesman, the normally sedate Michael Shea, called the peeping Tom photographs "the worst sort of taste." It seems the prying paparazzi of the British press offended the royal family by capturing the straw-hatted Diana, Princess of Wales, vacationing on a Bahamian beach. The telephoto-lens pictures, taken by enterprising photographers from a nearby beach, were plastered all over the Sun, Britain's largest selling daily, and the Daily Star. It was a picture of a standing Diana in a strapless bikini, revealing her gently rounded royal tummy, that offended regal sensibilities most. The next...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Mar. 1, 1982 | 3/1/1982 | See Source »

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