Word: chriss
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...late comic Chris Farley. The actor shares Moore's blocky build but not his politics: in real life, Farley is a Republican. So are the actors who play three ghosts who visit Malone to awaken his patriotism--Kelsey Grammer as George Patton, Jon Voight as George Washington and Chriss Anglin as Republicans' favorite Democrat, John F. Kennedy. Conservative country singer Trace Adkins shows up as the angel of death, and Bill O'Reilly plays another imposing figure: himself. To persuade Malone, the ghosts frighten him with visions of classic liberal villains--zombie ACLU lawyers staggering into court, Ivy League professors...
...Chriss Dodd, the head ofthe Senate Banking Committee, pulls in 1 more percentage point in national polling numbers than you do. Instead of trying to get people to come see him, Dodd goes where the people are. On a Friday night he's buying a buffet of Irish stew and soda bread at Jameson's Bar in Waterloo and walking around like the perfect dad at his daughter's wedding...
...first quarter: Chriss Wynn takes the opening Harvard kickoff all the way to the Crimson 49-yard line. A bad start for Harvard...
Harvard’s budding “rhetorical Doctor Frankensteins” learned the tricks of the trade Friday from the first woman chief of the White House speechwriting office. Institute of Politics (IOP) fellow Chriss A. Winston, President George H. W. Bush’s onetime head speechwriter, took a few dozen undergraduates on a two-hour tutorial about how to “take a colorless, passionless, humorless lump of words and somehow mold that into a speech that has life and lift.” Having a clear core message—“preferably...
...profile Republican candidates,” said Jeanne Shaheen, the institute’s director and a former New Hampshire governor who herself arrived as a resident fellow at Harvard after losing a Senate bid. The other fellows include Carl M. Cannon, a White House correspondent for National Journal, Chriss A. Winston, the former overseer of White House speechwriting, and James Baker of the U.S. Department of Justice’s National Security Division. Lamont, who said he attended events at the Institute of Politics as a Harvard undergraduate, said many of the highlights of his campaign came from meeting...