Word: count
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...worth $100 million, The Boy, Gloor said, was part of the "trilogy," of Cezanne's portraits, which also include a self-portrait and a painting of his wife. The three other stolen works are van Gogh's Blossoming Chestnut Branches, Monet's Poppies near Vétheuil, and Degas' Count Lepic and His Daughters...
...senior aide to Mass. Gov. Deval L. Patrick ’78 has been arrested and charged with one count of sexual battery for allegedly performing oral sex on a minor at a hotel in Florida, according to court documents. Carl S. McGee, who is assistant secretary for policy and planning in the Democratic administration, was a 1998 graduate of Harvard Law School and a former Rhodes Scholar. According to a probable cause document from the Lee County Sheriff’s Office, McGee was arrested at the Gasparilla Inn & Club in Boca Grande, Fla. in late December after police...
...been working so hard every day...It was really a great thrill to see her hit that today.” Cahow, freshman Katharine Chute, junior Sarah Wilson, and junior Sarah Vaillancourt each added a goal to help Harvard to the 4-0 final count against Union—a team coached by former Harvard standout and assistant coach Claudia Asano ’99. “I’m very proud of the great improvements her team has made,” Harvard coach Katey Stone said about Asano’s efforts in her first year...
...this ever-so-special year, every vote in Denver will count. As of today, Barack Obama has won 986 delegates, and Hillary Clinton 924, according to CNN. If Virginia, Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania, and Indiana vote as expected over the coming months, the margin will remain razor-thin and the nomination could be decided by how superdelegates vote. Democrats might even have a Bush-Gore disaster on their hands: Obama could win more regular delegates than Clinton, but because of Clinton’s close connections with superdelegates, she could win the nomination anyway...
...know that Howard Dean loves the Democratic Party, and that most other superdelegates only want the best for the Party. But what does it say when Party elites’ votes count so much more than the average voter’s? Moreover, I worry, maybe too cynically, about corruption in this process: What is to stop Senators Obama or Clinton from hinting at a Cabinet position in return for that last, tie-breaking superdelegate...