Word: granting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...seats and also capturing the Senate. And some of the places where they are now competing lie in the blood-red states where Dean has been on his lonely crusade to find blue voters. In Idaho, where President Bush won 68.4% of the vote in 2004, Democrat Larry Grant is close enough to winning a House seat that Vice President Dick Cheney and Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert have made visits to campaign for Grant's opponent. In Kansas, G.O.P. incumbent Jim Ryun had Cheney in town to raise money in his race against Democrat Nancy Boyda. Democrats...
...costing in the range of $2 to $4 million, is funded by former University President Lawrence H. Summers’ renovation grant from fall 2005 and alumni contributions to the Dean’s Fund for Undergraduate Life, Corker said...
...like Gmail or Yahoo! mail? If so, be sure to include the phrase "tags: photos_of_the_year " on a new line at the bottom of the e-mail. We're sorry, but we can only accept one photo per reader. Good luck! By submitting your photo, you hereby grant to TIME and Time.com a non-exclusive, perpetual, worldwide license to publish, distribute and exhibit the photo you submit, in any manner and in any medium, without payment to you or any third party. You represent and warrant that you have the right to grant to TIME the license granted...
...lazy to go out in the Square and get something,” Chinh H. Vo ’09 said. The original idea for a cafe in Lamont came from University Hall administrators in the spring of 2005. The funding for the cafe came in part from a grant from former University President Lawrence H. Summers, whose office gave millions of dollars to the College in September 2005 to fund social space renovations. Construction on the cafe took place over the summer. Now that Lamont includes a social space, some have suggested that it will serve as an unofficial...
...have been on campus for only a month, and yet I already have a drawer full of loose change. I grant that the quarters, dimes, and nickels come in handy for photocopiers or vending machines, but every day I find myself staring down at Abraham Lincoln and asking, “What am I going to do with you?” The reply is always silence, predictably—but also appropriately, because even the animate among us can’t come up with a good answer. Indeed, it is high time to abolish the penny from...