Word: casey
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Joshua H. Billings ’07, Casey N. Cep ’07, Brad M. Smith ’05, Parvinder S. Thiara ’07, Ryan R. Thoreson ’07, and Elise D. Wang ’07 were among the 32 scholars chosen from a pool of 896 candidates. The six will begin study at Oxford University next October...
...Casey N. Cep ’07, an English and American Literature and Language concentrator in Pforzheimer House, is a Crimson arts editor, an editor for the Harvard Book Review, and serves as president of The Harvard Advocate. She is currently working on a novel about the Maryland Eastern Shore for her senior thesis...
...remarkable Harvard-Yale contest, senior wideout Corey Mazza will be difficult for the Bulldogs to miss this time around. Mazza, who leads the Crimson receiving corps in every category, has only been kept out of the end zone in two games this year. Yale cornerbacks Paul Rice and Casey Gerald will answer the call to shut down Mazza, and should expect man-coverage thanks to the premium the Bulldog defense will surely put on stopping Clifton Dawson. It won’t be Mazza’s last edition of game, however–despite his senior status...
...Highlighting their religious values may have helped Casey and Strickland. But in the heated race to replace outgoing Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, Rep. Harold Ford of Tennessee showed up in some of his campaign ads in a church and was one of many conservative Democrats who emphasized their faith - and still lost. A strong, forceful position against the war, as the liberal bloggers called for, helped get a bunch of Democrats elected to the House and Senate. On the other hand, in a blue state like Connecticut, Ned Lamont, one of the bloggers' favorite candidates, lost...
...Given the variety of interpretations of last week's election, almost any 2008 Democrat candidate could justify a White House run. Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack, who announced last week he will seek the White House, has emphasized a commonsense, centrist approach highlighting personal values that candidates like Casey won on. Of course, Gore could look at the victories of Brown and others as proof positive that the party can win with an unapologetically liberal candidate who is strongly opposed to the war in Iraq and President Bush's handling of the war on terror...