Difference between revisions of "1994 PAC"
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President Clinton received a 2.6 approval rating on a 5-point scale. 73% of participants wanted more gun control laws. 65% opposed legislation of violence on television. 77% wanted stricter immigration laws or stricter enforcement of existing laws. 76% endorsed the use of military force by the United Nations. 53% opposed U.S. intervention in Bosnia, Haiti, or Rwanda. | President Clinton received a 2.6 approval rating on a 5-point scale. 73% of participants wanted more gun control laws. 65% opposed legislation of violence on television. 77% wanted stricter immigration laws or stricter enforcement of existing laws. 76% endorsed the use of military force by the United Nations. 53% opposed U.S. intervention in Bosnia, Haiti, or Rwanda. | ||
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| + | [[File:1994pac.gif|thumb|Results released by the tournament]] | ||
{{Browse box|Tournament = 1994 [[Panasonic Academic Challenge]] | {{Browse box|Tournament = 1994 [[Panasonic Academic Challenge]] | ||
Revision as of 17:34, 10 February 2021
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| Champion | Thomas Jefferson | |
| Runner-up | Rufus King | |
| Third | Dupont Manual | |
| Fourth | ||
| Fifth | ||
| Sixth | ||
| All-America Team | -- | |
| Lawson Fite, Hudson's Bay | Daniel Gulya, Fargo North | |
| Matthew Morris, Dupont Manual | Jeffrey Olson, East Lake | |
| James Rogers, Montgomery Blair | Seth Sternglanz, Ward Melville | |
40 states and four territories participated from June 10-12.
The winners got $2500 scholarships, gold rings, and Macs. The second-place team received $1500 scholarships and gold rings. Third-place team members each got a $500 scholarship and a gold ring.
Herff Jones awarded $2000 scholarships and a medallion to each member of the All-America Team.
Survey
For the third year, tournament participants were surveyed on current issues.
President Clinton received a 2.6 approval rating on a 5-point scale. 73% of participants wanted more gun control laws. 65% opposed legislation of violence on television. 77% wanted stricter immigration laws or stricter enforcement of existing laws. 76% endorsed the use of military force by the United Nations. 53% opposed U.S. intervention in Bosnia, Haiti, or Rwanda.
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