Word: candidateã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Council (UC) presidency is a difficult and painstaking process. But all it takes to get on the ballot is to find 150 people to sign their names and write down their e-mail addresses—it doesn’t even matter if the students have signed another candidate??s petition. Finding signatories is something most candidates do in an hour...
...University extends; our next president must understand the importance of this power. Weighing these other factors will be one of the most critical judgments that he or she will have to make. We find two criteria that are particularly undervalued in the current system. The first is a candidate??s teaching ability. The second is the need to hire professors whose academic specialties are underrepresented at the University...
...Nobel Peace Prize, according to the BBC. Kennedy School of Government Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy Robert I. Rotberg and a team of researchers are creating an index to evaluate former heads of state from 48 sub-Saharan African countries. That index will quantify a candidate??s efforts on providing security, rule of law, economic opportunity, political freedom, educational services, health services, infrastructure development, and empowerment of civil society, Rotberg said. “It will almost certainly raise the thinking in African heads of state about how best to leave office, which presumably helps limit the extent...
...definitely thinking” about a run for president.INSIDE OUTThroughout this yearly ritual, only one thing will remain certain: All bets will be off.Take Tim R. Hwang ’08, who said he will seek the signatures needed to run “as a completely outsider candidate?? for UC president. Hwang said he planned to run under a “dismantle the UC” campaign that would make House Committee members the UC’s representatives.This year’s frontrunners have worked with each other significantly longer than last year?...
...felt absolutely bad about the U.S. candidate??not that he lost, but that he would have been bad news for Nicaragua,” Womack said. “It would make a few people in the United States and a few people in Nicaragua nice little bundles of money but would not do anything in general for Nicaraguan life or working people...