Word: auguste
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...doing it boldly, following nobody's rules but his own. "The other guys are allegedly making up their minds," Biden told TIME last week." I've been around too long to be coy. My objective is to run." He'll spend 15 days in August in Iowa, going to the state fair (he prefers funnel cakes to fried Twinkies), speaking to the trial lawyers association there and campaigning for gubernatorial candidate Chet Culver and other Democrats on the ticket. And when he's not in Iowa, he'll still be running for President. Biden's schedule in August includes attending...
...concerted effort by the international community to intervene diplomatically to stop the violence. Rice and her aides hope to see the Security Council act this week and to have a cease fire and the international force's boots on the ground in south Lebanon no later than mid August...
...however, the Cuban government insists that Raul's hold of the reins is temporary, perhaps just a few weeks or months until Fidel is back on his feet. In all his 47 years in power, Fidel, who turns 80 on August 13, has never ceded power like this to anyone. And when asked why, if Fidel really is still alive, he would so uncharacteristically let aides make such an important announcement rather than do it himself, reliable official sources in Havana insist that convalescence from his intestinal surgery requires that he do absolutely nothing but lie still in the following...
...might be financially advisable for some candidates to do as Mrs. Gephardt did and rent a place in the state. Edwards has made six trips to the state this year, and Biden plans to spend 15 days there in August alone. "If you don't end up exceeding expectations in Iowa, it's over," Biden told TIME, emphasizing the importance of the caucuses...
...prime-time speech from his Texas ranch in August 2001, Bush announced that federal money could go to researchers working on ESC lines that scientists had already developed but no new lines could be created using federal funds. "There is at least one bright line," he declared. The speech was a political and scientific landmark. It gave Democrats that rare gift: a wedge issue that split Republicans and united Democrats, who declared themselves the party of progress. Five years later, with midterms looming, they hope to leverage the issue as evidence that they represent the reality-based community, running against...