Word: repeatly
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After that, however, the booters began to find their cohesion. They upset the University of Connecticut, a regional power which won the national title in 1981 and had been to the national tournament 11 of the last 12 years, and against whom the Crimson will hope to repeat Sunday afternoon in the second round of the playoffs...
There they could do nothing except repeat horror stories of the chaos and carnage that had swept through more than 80 cities. In a camp set up in the Gandhi Memorial Higher School in Delhi, one Sikh survivor after another described how friends and loved ones had been murdered. "My three sons were burned alive," quietly began Amrik Singh, a sad-eyed man whose gray beard had been forcibly shaved to a silver stubble by a mob wielding knives. "They came to my house. They dragged my sons out. They put petrol on them and set them on fire." Near...
...entertaining our boys in Managua by Christmas. However, even the Reagan administration probably knows better than to seriously consider a Grenada style invasion in Nicaragua. The problem is not that we are on the verge of a Latin American Vietnam, but rather that our own administration seems determined to repeat some of history's mistakes...
This idea of human savagery is further reinforced by Richard Peaslee's songs. Set to lilting tunes resembling those of Kurt Weill's, the words are as bitterly ironic as Brecht's. Throughout Marat/Sade, the singers repeat the refrain: "Marat we're poor/And the poor stay poor,/Give us a rise and we don't care how,/Give us a revolution...now!" The link between mass revolt and sexual lust is the theme of another rollicking song: "And what is the point of a revolution/But general copulation?" On the word "copulation", the singers perform a neatly-choreographed little wind...
...commission wants banks to be more careful about collecting too much loose cash. It seeks to make laundering a federal crime, with jail terms of up to ten years and fines of as much as $1 million for repeat violators. It calls upon the banks to police themselves, for example, by designating a bank officer to be accountable for completing federally required transaction reports instead of delegating the job to lower-level workers...