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Word: dependance (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...said that student organizations which depend on voluntary contributions often suffer financial difficulties and cited Philips Brooks House as an example...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MassPIRG Petitioning Gains Approval of 30% of Students | 3/11/1972 | See Source »

...they dispense not only with expensive salesmen but with the "load," or sales commission, that regular mutual funds charge; such loads usually run about $8.50 for each $100 invested. By contrast, a no-load fund charges only a management fee of 50? per $100 or less. The no-loads depend upon newspaper ads that invite potential investors to write or telephone for a prospectus, plus word-of-mouth recommendations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MUTUAL FUNDS: The Rise of No-Loads | 3/6/1972 | See Source »

DURING the past three years the pattern of the military conflict has been largely determined in Hanoi and Washington, which are also playing the dominant role in negotiations. The stability of the political settlement which eventually results in South Viet Nam, however, will depend primarily upon the extent to which it reflects the social and political forces within that country rather than on external influences, either military or diplomatic. Hence, there is good reason to encourage the early inauguration of a political process within South Viet Nam in which all significant political groups can participate and to allow that process...

Author: By Samuel P. Huntington, | Title: Viet Nam: The Bases of Accommodation | 2/23/1972 | See Source »

...accepted, however, they may provide some basis for accommodation and an eventual compromise settlement. The military strengths and weaknesses of each side are manifest in each day's news reports and will no doubt shape the outcome of the negotiations. The success of that outcome, however, may well depend on the extent to which it reflects the political and social strengths and weaknesses of both sides. These are less obvious but more fundamental than the military factors...

Author: By Samuel P. Huntington, | Title: Viet Nam: The Bases of Accommodation | 2/22/1972 | See Source »

...fact which does not seem likely to change for some while, if indeed it ever does. In a politically reintegrated South Viet Nam, there would probably be a fairly steady population drain from them into more prosperous rural and urban localities. The achievement of such political reintegration clearly will depend, however, upon the recognition and acceptance of Viet Cong control of local government in these areas. It is here that accommodation in the most specific sense of the word is a political necessity...

Author: By Samuel P. Huntington, | Title: Viet Nam: The Bases of Accommodation | 2/22/1972 | See Source »

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