Word: toto
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...word screed against technology, the same document the terrorist mailed on June 24 to the New York Times, the Washington Post and Penthouse (which had previously offered to publish it). Since then, both papers have been fretting over the bargain the Unabomber proposed: publish the tract in toto within three months--and promise to make space available afterward when requested--and he will stop sending the lethal package bombs that have killed three and wounded 23 over the past 17 years. Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione, meanwhile, took out a whiny full-page ad in the New York Times last week...
...expand terminals and payments to farmers whose commodities sell below set prices. To ensure that Congress doesn't pick and choose -- a process in which the strongest special interests would see their favored scams survive -- Shapiro wants a bipartisan commission whose recommendations Congress would have to accept "in toto or not at all. Spreading the pain, like the military base-closing committee did," he says, "is the best way to guarantee that the job is done right...
Aristide: The little talk by FRAPH leader Toto Constant was a critical statement. If people like him can be coerced into demanding reconciliation rather than death, we are moving toward justice. Like others who have spread violence, he too must face justice and the law. In politics each has a right to express himself, Toto Constant as well. But justice will slice through lies and hypocrisy and arrive at the truth...
Emmanuel "Toto" Constant was known to American reporters in Haiti as an elegant dresser, a man who spoke perfect English and claimed to hold degrees in physics and mathematics from Canadian universities -- while still believing fervently in voodoo -- and, so he said, a onetime diplomat with the Haitian mission to the United Nations. He was also the head of a gang of thugs unusually vicious even by Haitian standards, the FRAPH. Those letters are the initials of the French words for Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti, but to most Haitians they stand for murder, torture and beatings...
Then, suddenly, it's over. Fried goat is served, and the crowd chants in Creole, "Toto for President! Without Toto, Haiti can't have a life!" As the last cheer fades, Constant heads off into the night. It is the end of another day on the campaign trail...