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Word: auditore (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...easily re-elected. Some of them, like Representative Silvio O. Conte and Edward Boland, deserved re-election anyway, but it would do the others a lot of good if they had to campaign. Similarly, if the Republicans would nominate real candidates for the lower constitutional offices (Secretary, Treasurer and Auditor), they might at least prevent the the Democrats from running mostly hacks whose only qualifications are their ambitions. As it stands now, the voters, having heard of neither candidate, and knowing no evil of the Democrats, vote...

Author: By Donal F. Holway, | Title: Massachusetts | 11/6/1964 | See Source »

...would have sunk like a stone under a tidal wave of Volpe votes, since few Republicans would have had reason to split their tickets. There was no Ken Keating in Massachusetts. Even somebody as unknown and as vulnerable to a Democratic landslide as Elywnn Miller, the Republican aspirant for Auditor, held on to the usual number of GOP votes as he lost in the usual fashion. Lloyd Waring, the local Goldwater man, is going to be very lonely in the next two years as Saltonstall, Volpe, Brooke and Richardson all ignore him and proceed with business as usual...

Author: By Donal F. Holway, | Title: Massachusetts | 11/6/1964 | See Source »

...unknown Irishman run up a 500,000 vote margin on some equally unknown Republican in a race for Treasurer, but it is this serene confidence in victory no matter who runs that has kept the state's politics tied to the lowest common denominator. The present Auditor Theodore Buzcko, was appointed to his post after the death of his predecessor just before the primary because he was a Pole (there hadn't been any Polish constitutional officers for a while) and because he was friendly with both the Kennedy and Bellotti camps, and important asset in the strained atmosphere immediately...

Author: By Stepren J. Field, | Title: Ethnic Alliances, Bitter Feuds Mark Bay State Democrats | 10/30/1964 | See Source »

...wife gave a dinner party for their debutante daughter Nancy. Then there was a dance for about 250 youngsters under a tent on the spacious grounds of Psychiatrist George S. Hughes and his wife, who were giving it with their friends, the William F. Otterstroms (he is general auditor of the Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp.) and the Dudley Felts (he is a consulting engineer), in honor of the families' three debutante daughters. The trouble was that after the parties, 17-year-old Nancy Hitchings was killed in an automobile accident, and an indignant Circuit Court judge, Rodney S. Eielson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Youth: The Night of the Teen-Ager | 10/16/1964 | See Source »

Policing the system would present no special problems. Regularly enrolled students could buy an auditor's card for a nominal fee (like $1.50) to cover bookkeepping expenses, and their names could be added to attendance lists. For the person wishing to visit a class just once or twice, the present system of visitor's cards could be maintained...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Closed Doors | 7/12/1963 | See Source »

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