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Word: nacfulness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Playing in weather more appropriate for skiing than for soccer, the Crimson (4-0-0 overall, 2-0-0 Ivy) dominated the Wildcats (3-3-1, 2-1-0 NAC) to maintain the team's perfect record...

Author: By Ted G. Rose, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Glory of Locker-Soccer Continues: Shutout of UNH | 10/1/1992 | See Source »

Efforts like Tyler Rullman's, holding Pennsylvania star guard Jerome Allen scoreless on 0-for-8 shooting and Ron Mitchell's forcing probable NAC Player of the Year and NBA prospect Hartford center Vinnie Baker into scoring all his points from the perimeter are becoming a norm...

Author: By John B. Trainer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: An Open Letter to the Team | 2/6/1992 | See Source »

...week or so the previous fall, the NAC had mobilized for a series of marches, pickets and confrontations. There was, after all, a war on. On April 15, the NAC's "Bobby Seale Brigade" split off from a peaceful anti-war rally of about 60,000 in Boston and paid a visit to Harvard Square. A game of sorts ensued there; more than 200 people were injured, windows were smashed, stores (including Saks Fifth Avenue on Holyoke St. and the Harvard Pro) two buildings and two police cars were gutted with fire as guerilla warfare invaded Mass...

Author: By James G. Hershberg, | Title: Ten Years Ago This Spring | 6/5/1980 | See Source »

...NAC (the November Action Coalition, SDS's now-defunct rival on the left), and Afro argued that the "abstract technology" aspect of the Cambridge Project was just a blind for counter-insurgency research. An SDS booklet read as follows...

Author: By Marion B. Lennihan, | Title: Social Science for Social Control? | 12/13/1971 | See Source »

...political demarcation between NAC and Weatherman, which had never been precise, blurred through the Spring of 1970. NAC sponsored a riot in Harvard Square following the April 15th Moratorium. The political goal of breaking all those windows in Harvard Square, if there was any at all, must have been to affirm with some violent deed the words, "Solidarity with the Vietnamese." Dick wrote a piece the day before the action in Harvard Square called, "Stay in the Streets." He wrote...

Author: By Lynn M. Derling, | Title: Men Are What They Do | 10/6/1971 | See Source »

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