Word: dominican
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Soon gangs of unemployed youths were throwing rocks at stores accused of price gouging. As the rock throwing gave way to looting, the Dominican Republic was plunged into the worst rioting the country has seen in 19 years. President Salvador Jorge Blanco quickly dispatched armored trucks and helicopters to back up police. Soldiers fired into the crowds. According to newsmen on the scene, several agitators suspected of looting were summarily executed. In a battle that lasted two days, 55 were killed, 400 wounded and 5,000 arrested. Property damage ran into millions of dollars...
...against Jorge Blanco, 57, began to grow in January 1983, when he announced the austerity program. The strict measures were imposed on the country by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as the price for a three-year bailout loan of $430 million that a faltering economy desperately needed. The Dominican Republic is plagued by 30% unemployment, rising inflation that may hit 60% this year and a $2.5 billion foreign debt. Politicians on all sides felt that the measures placed an unfair burden on the lower classes, whose earning power has decreased by 50% in the past three months...
Jorge Blanco made a state visit to Ronald Reagan in early April, hoping to secure U.S. support in persuading the IMF to soften its conditions when new loan negotiations began this month. But because the Dominican Republic is a democracy and has no leftist guerrilla threat, Reagan praised its stability and offered no more than the $135.7 million U.S. aid package already approved for this year and eased restrictions on an additional $34 million in direct cash aid. The Dominican Republic now stands to gain $40 million dollars, mostly from a 2.8?-per-lb. duty exemption on its sugar exports...
...ideals remain significant even though the contingencies of the real world sometimes force the U.S. and other countries to ignore them. France helped overthrow Emperor Bokassa of the Central African Republic in 1979, for example, and the U.S. played a role in deposing the governments of Guatemala (1954), the Dominican Republic (1965) and Chile...
...emerges from San Francisco's Sacred Heart convent in shorts and T shirt and jogs for a minimum often miles. But for Sister Marion Irvine, 54, her 5½ years of long-distance running is more than just healthy outreach to the postwimple age. Last December, the Dominican nun covered the 26-mile 385-yard course at the California International Marathon in Sacramento in 2:51.01. Thus by a scant .15 sec., she qualified for the Olympic trials, the oldest woman in the world to make the grade. Sister Marion is now training with her coach to compete...