Word: totality
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Three-pointers: Barton 4, Phillips 2, James, Bazelak. Fouled out: None. Total fouls: Harvard 19; Dartmouth 15. Assists: Harvard 6 (Gielen 4); Dartmouth 9 (Randall 4). Turnovers: Harvard 13; Dartmouth 11. Rebounds: Harvard 46 (Mohler 10); Dartmouth 39 (Palmer...
Three-pointers: Hayes, Keffer 2, Kosh, Duncan, Neely. Fouled out: Neely, Greene. Total fouls: Harvard 17; Dartmouth 22. Assists: Harvard 16 (Duncan, Hayes 4); Dartmouth 15 (Neely 6). Turnovers: Harvard 13; Dartmouth 13. Rebounds: Harvard 47 (Duncan 12); Dartmouth 55 (Walter...
...Without Aristide's presence, say many political observers, his legions of adherents among Haiti's disenfranchised youth would probably turn to more violent and extremist movements. Already the country is bristling with talk of total revolution from the bottom up. Aristide and his supporters say they are actually a modifying influence and favor only "active nonviolence." The priest's political and religious philosophy is a homegrown variant of liberation theology, which advocates grass-roots social reform and a "people's church," with a lesser role for the ecclesiastical hierarchy...
...series of campaign laws that Congress passed in 1974 in the wake of the Watergate scandal. Designed to keep fat cats at bay, the legislation permits individual donors to give a maximum of $1,000 to any one candidate and gifts to multiple candidates in federal races that can total no more than $25,000 a year. Companies are not allowed to contribute directly to campaigns, but they, along with labor unions and other organizations, can set up political-action committees that solicit donations from employees or members and give the money to selected politicians. A PAC can donate...
...candidates. Such gifts are not covered by federal election laws and can thus be unlimited. This type of contribution, known as "soft money," is the fastest-growing area of campaign finance. In 1980 the two major parties took in only $15 million in soft money; this year the total will be more like $100 million, evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans...