Word: gately
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Politics," led by James S. Hoyte, assistant to the President of Harvard University for diversity and affirmative action and former attorney; "The Emerging Republican Party in the South: A 'Gtass Roots' Perspective," led by James Lombard, former Republican leader of the Florida State House of Representative; "Barbarians at the Gate Independent ant Third Party Politics," led by R. Clayton Mulford, manager for H. Ross Perot's 1992 presidential campaign and general counsel for Perot's United We Stand America...
Such as the slow start. In Harvard's first victory of the year over Vermont, the Crimson scored three first-half goals. In the two games after that (losses to Duke and UConn), Harvard played well out of the gate but didn't put a ball in the cage--and then watched as its opponent took the momentum away for good...
...this way of thinking, folks like Patten and Martin Lee are gate-crashers at 1997's tea party. Patten has been vilified in the Chinese press, while big business tugs at his sleeve, urging him to take it easy (The Economist called the 1994 democracy debates "a distraction" from more important matters, such as building a new airport.) More conservative Hong Kong residents worry that democratic saber-rattling invites a harsher crackdown in '97 and feel the best strategy may be to cuddle up to the new motherland...
While this game was never in jeopardy, Harvard hopes to use this win as well as its fast jump out of the gate to build some momentum going forward. Last year, the Crimson got off to a 1-5 start and were never able to fully recover on its way to a 12-17, 3-4 Ivies year...
Schwarzkopf was soon back on the phone with a cautionary note. The gate was still slightly open, he told me. Some Republican Guard units and T-72 tanks could slip away. I told him to keep hitting them, and I would get back to him. I passed Norm's report to the President and the others. Although we were all taken slightly aback, no one felt that what we had heard changed the basic equation. The back of the Iraqi army had been broken. What was left of it was retreating north. There was no need to fight a battle...