The presiding officer at a polling station in whose ballot boxes strange things appeared at the recount, was a tall, imposing, black man. |
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The mere prospect of having to recount a personal anecdote plunges me into boredom verging on catalepsy. |
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Even after Monday night's recount result gave the seat to her opponent, she would not be bowed. |
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In their own words, child survivors recount the horrific event and the desperate weeks that followed. |
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It's important to recount the history of that story and the lessons Howard learned. |
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She could recount the story of this history-making encounter over tea while solving a mystery at the old folks home. |
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An unprecedented event in Taiwan's political history, the recount is part of the progressive and gradual evolution of democracy. |
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Blaming their own ignorance, they recount how in the past they would pump oil overboard or let oil collect in their boat's bilges. |
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He lost his seat in Dublin South East after a marathon count and recount in the last election. |
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The ability to recount such episodes was a tribute to his memory as well as a portent of his future vocation. |
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Despite this calamity they managed to recount their story without any bitterness on the pilgrim walk. |
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After a recount, word goes around that the little Moldavian, known to be a real spy, is missing. |
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The day after the election, as the recount began, his campaign was already outgunned, outmanned, and outmatched. |
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Two disgraced employees recount how their lives were ruined when they stole from their employers. |
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If you ask someone in attendance to recount these scenes you're likely to get a blank response and a claim of a lack of memory. |
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I will hereafter refer to it in the singular, so as to avoid having to recount exactly which one was pointed at what at any given moment. |
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I recount this simple event not to promote the fact that I am well thought of by a few patients. |
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One question, for example, asks them to recount in 100 words a recent stressful incident in which they averted an unfavourable outcome. |
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My wife usually puts her down, and they recount the day and say what they're grateful for. |
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I can only guess why he chose not to recount what he experienced and witnessed in those years. |
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At the risk of being a complete bore I feel a strong urge to recount our recent experience as a babysitting tag-team. |
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The extracts below from her report recount the problems she experienced in getting information for her inquiry. |
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The performers recount their story at breakneck speed, completely devoid of inflection or emotion. |
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Many election regulations specify that a recount must be performed in the same manner as the original election. |
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Royal first refused to concede and then insisted on a recount, the party looks as splintered as ever. |
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Some of them even approached the stewards to demand a recount but the stewards aren't a very forgiving bunch. |
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The recount of the events was bad enough but Trent's quotes were almost too much to take. |
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Hay is able to recount the callow 17-year-old who impressed him in training. |
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The stories don't recount this history so much as illuminate it from various angles, often obliquely. |
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She also had the exceptional ability to recall vividly small incidents in her life, and recount them without any exaggeration. |
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In view of above-mentioned I feel the recount was pure nonsense and downright contempt of our democracy. |
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This isn't a pro or con account of the night, simply a recount of a less-than entertaining performance. |
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It was the usual recount of social events, told with the sharp wit of the infamous Lady Featherington. |
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The Court instituted a constitutional rule that is party-blind and that disfavors systems with ad hoc recount standards. |
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By the time we were at the classroom door, I had finished my recount of events and Melany was frowning in thought. |
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He then proceeded to count and recount the hundreds of dollars he had with him, on a nearby desk, in full view of everybody. |
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Under state law, it is very clear that under those circumstances you've got to recount all the ballots. |
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Green Party candidate David Cobb and Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik have sought a recount of the votes in Ohio. |
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Despite the controversy over the vote recount in Florida, the next US president will soon be on the center stage. |
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But the recount he refers to was a comparison between the data in the computer and the computer printout. |
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Since the man did not see daylight in the English-language press, I am going to recount several of his more famous appearances. |
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Democrats insist that if election officials decline a manual recount of the votes, it is open to them to seek an order from a judge. |
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We glorify him when we praise him, recount his blessings to us, and thank him for them. |
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As I recount in the foreword of the book, Jack never much liked handling other folks' characters. |
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Vote counters in Florida are racing against time to complete a hand recount that could decide who is the next US president. |
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He went on to reject the proposal made earlier that evening by Vice President Gore for a state-wide manual recount of the votes in Florida. |
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There will be no need for a recount or a hand count to verify the accuracy of these figures. |
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I recount this, not to boost my ego nor to base my belief in the goodwill of youth on this single and isolated incident. |
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Roberts and another member voted for the recount, but the panel's chairman Charles Burton dissented. |
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In Florida, election officials began a recount of nearly six million votes. |
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Spring himself was badly rattled by the experience of the all-night recount which saw him hang on by his fingertips. |
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A demand for a recount can only be filed by a presidential candidate who was on the ballot or a certified write-in candidate. |
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Many stories told about O'Keefe recount his daring and athletic escapes from pursuing yeomen and soldiers. |
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Some counties, including Bay County, use paper ballots that are fed into an optical scanner, so a recount is possible if there are questions. |
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Curiously enough, the magazine chose to recount the fight in the reported speech of one of the participants in the duel. |
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Can you imagine having to recount the day you were found wearing grubby underwear or even worse, you were discovered going commando! |
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The women recount stomach-churning stories of childhood slavery and abuse, rape, and immiseration. |
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Boiardo and Ariosto recount meetings with anthropophagists among the adventures of their knightly heroes. |
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Adela is put in the witness box and she is asked to recount her side of the story. |
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In the inter-breed beef competition, his Simmental stood second to a Limousin from Co Antrim exhibitor, Bernard Mairs after a recount. |
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These are only a tiny fraction of the theories given by Arab viewers but, for the sake of brevity, I will not recount them all. |
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Pupils asked two people who lived through the war in the district to recount their experiences. |
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Often and inevitably, they will recount what is said to have happened to individuals. |
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Florida law calls for a recount if the difference between candidates is less than half of one percent. |
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The accuracy of electronic voting can be tested by comparing paper records to digital votes but not to recount an entire election. |
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The High Court ordered ballot boxes sealed pending an investigation, but has not ordered a recount. |
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The book purports to recount the history of gun ownership in America and is written with a slant that is hostile to gun ownership. |
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But did you really expect I would recount my life after one lousy hello? |
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She plays Lolly, an affable inmate who listens to Piper recount her gruesome bashing of Pennsatucky, whom she believes she killed. |
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The purpose of this book about early modern Italy is not to recount the warmed-over historical facts and artistic judgements from a long line of guidebooks. |
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Tom ended his recount of the events leading up to the murder there but promised that more on the saga would be revealed on February 4 at the Boys' School. |
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Here is a recount of my experience with someone with that attitude. |
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Assuming that Hansen is sick of rehashing seemingly ancient events, however, the book's recount of the two years leading up to her arrest is outstanding. |
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In fact, the final outcome of the vote, like that of a slightly more publicized election, was delayed by absentee votes and a recount of contested ballots. |
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Let us remember first and foremost that a very close election result that even necessitated a recount of the votes is the sign of democracy rather than the contrary. |
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What is the deadline for requesting a recount or contesting the election? |
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A manual recount of the votes cast in the November 7 election is currently going on at the county's Emergency Operations Center in Plantation, Florida. |
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Republican Bill Hollowell has requested and been granted a manual recount of votes in his effort to overturn the initial result of the November 7 balloting. |
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On Friday 1,000 protesters converged on the Miami-Dade County Hall to protest the canvassing board's refusal to complete a manual recount of votes. |
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And the more she is forced to recount, the more her grasp of reality slips, or heightens, depending on your point of view. |
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There is no need to recount where one candidate has won by a landslide. |
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Wherever possible, recount personal experiences, direct observations, and specialized knowledge, and try to convey these things in layman's terms. |
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However, any experienced journal editor will recount situations where anonymised information has been recognisable to the patient or family involved and caused upset. |
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The examples of this latest explosion of hypersensitivity are too numerous to recount, but a few should suffice. |
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He demanded that the Central Election Commission seal all ballot boxes in the 13,000 polling booths around the island so that a recount could be done. |
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Merchants ran about, plunging their bejeweled fingers into their bulging leather purses in order to recount their coins every three minutes or so. |
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My father's non-Muslim friends recount proudly incidents and anecdotes of maulvis and madrasas much in the same manner as we remember our school and teachers. |
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What's more, it leaves behind paper ballots that can be checked in case a manual recount is needed or if someone suspects that the computer has miscounted. |
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If the recount would have continued on Dec. 9, Gore would not have picked up enough overvotes to overtake Bush. |
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He went on to recount campaigning on a rainy Friday night when he had to push himself to keep going. |
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It is an indelible part of his CV, a blot on a distinguished public career, a piquant episode for the more mischievous obituarists eventually to recount. |
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After organizing a blue-ribbon committee to protest the fraud and demand a recount, he held massive demonstrations throughout the city and went to court. |
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All we are saying down there, as I understand it, is that you can't take a slice of it, recount it until it comes out your way, and then ignore the rest of the contest. |
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The original sin, in my view, was Gore's attempt to recount just the votes in a few heavily Democratic counties. |
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Will correspondents use them to present an unsanctioned, less filtered account of events as they unfold, or will they just recount colorful background stories? |
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Though a recount is likely, Grothman had a 215-vote lead in the initial tally. |
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Some, especially those written for a pre-teen audience, recount happy memories, playing stickball in the vacant lot and bubblegum-blowing contests. |
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In a herstory book about our movement where race politics have been so acute, let us not recount old struggles without including the voices of all involved. |
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They also know a paper trail exists in case a recount is required. |
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Wild horses, however, would not persuade me to recount the precise sequence of events that led up to this happy, if somewhat indecorous, conclusion. |
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I cannot recount the number of times I have called up friends in the police and asked for constables to be sent to the trouble spots to bail me out. |
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In setting the scene for my post I would love to recount a tale of blissful youth, a text-book joyride throughout early adulthood culminating in a fulfilled maturity. |
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The counties and cities of Georgia had chosen their own voting machines for the last time, and Georgians had lost their ability to recount their votes in contested elections. |
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During the Florida recount, there was a familiar ring to news about manhandled punchcards and devoured chads. |
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The Loores is a lengthy exegesis on Old Testament prefigurations of Mary and a detailed recount of the life of Christ. |
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It seems nannyish to recount yet again the catalogue of diseases associated with smoking and drinking. |
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Baum would later recount the actual story in an article, but the short story is told from the point of view of the actor playing the ghost. |
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Suetonius's purpose was not a historical recount of events, though, but rather an evaluation of the emperors themselves. |
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I recount this not to bewail my fate, or to dwell in the past. |
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One could even do the recount piecewise, starting with the most questionable regions. |
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Old Romanian folk songs recount a white monastery on a white island with nine priests. |
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Gore, which ended the electoral recount during the presidential election of 2000, was especially controversial. |
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The Florida results were contested and a recount was ordered by the court, with the results settled in a court decision. |
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The only counting area to declare a No result was Monmouthshire, which was announced following a recount. |
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Some stories recount Timorese ancestors journeying from the Malay Peninsula or the Minangkabau highlands of Sumatra. |
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The election was very close and the loser demanded a recount. |
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He did not recount what this scene was, and commentators have offered a variety of speculations. |
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This example is preserved in traditions known as hadith, which recount his words, his actions, and his personal characteristics. |
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Witness also the hundreds of Jataka stories that recount past lives of the Buddha and his companions, which are taken literally by some Buddhists. |
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Horatio promises to recount the full story of what happened, and Fortinbras, seeing the entire Danish royal family dead, takes the crown for himself. |
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With an almost imperceptible touch, the narrator connects up this oneirism of names with the premonitory signs of the vocation that Remebrance is said to recount. |
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Late in the 2nd century BCE, Roman sources recount the migrating Germanic people of Gaul, Italy and Hispania who invaded areas considered part of Imperial Rome. |
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I reply a bit tiredly, but I'm game as he hasn't asked me to recount one to him in a while, and I'm loathe to relinquish our mutual passion for tale-telling. |
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It turns out the drink has a startling effect on the peculiar padre, causing him to recount an earlier life that has unexpected and life-changing consequences for the Fisks. |
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To describe them in full, and to recount minutely the ideas held by the Japanese rustics concerning them, would be to compile an octavo work on dragonology. |
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