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Word: fifteen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Fifteen percent of the state's 3.5 million registered Democrats are Black, and voter registration drives have added more than 200,000 minority voters to Democratic rolls in the past year...

Author: By Paul DUKE Jr., SPECIAL TO THE COMMON | Title: Jackson Courts New York Minority Vote | 4/2/1984 | See Source »

...Fifteen hundred tickets will be reserved for Harvard students and sold at Holyoke Center, and the remainder may be purchased through Ticketron, he added...

Author: By Jean E. Mayer, | Title: Council Raises Enough Money To Make R.E.M. Event Definite | 3/10/1984 | See Source »

...most countries, durability is usually a sign there's a gun behind the ballot box or lollipops in front of it. Trudeau was the sweetest of candidates, a perennial choice but a bit of a Catch-22. Fifteen years brought few political alternatives. Conservative leaders Robert Stanfield and Joe Clark were no match; what are molasses and oatmeal compared to the Jesuit-trained, Bhagavad-Gita believing wooer of Margaret, flower child and Rolling Stone groupie...

Author: By Nicholas J. Mcconnell, | Title: Farewell Pierre | 3/5/1984 | See Source »

...have sections because "lack of attendance is abominable," something has gone wrong in the system. Weekly meetings between the professor and section leaders, written down ideas for section topics, and new material best taught in a small setting will not stop a few section leaders from reading fifteen page papers in five minutes but will make such incompetence more unique and provide all section leaders and students with common goals and a sense that sections are important and necessary in a large lecture course. Ed Spillane...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Teaching Fellows | 2/29/1984 | See Source »

...contrast to only recently emerging statistical studies, such as that of Bowers and Pierce, legal arguments which suggest that differential treatment of suggest that differential treatments of this sort is inconsistent with prescribed constitutional standards, have, in fact, haunted death row appeals and Supreme Court decisions for close to fifteen years now. As a result, both the issue of capital punishment and the Court itself, are left today with a legacy of ambiguity, irony and, above all, hypocrisy...

Author: By Rurry T. Fisher, | Title: Judging Color | 2/24/1984 | See Source »

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