Word: changeã
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...statement released Wednesday, Harvard spokesman Robert P. Mitchell said there are “no current discussions about or plans for change?? in the ownership of the land, which was given to Harvard in the 1927 will of former Boston mayor Nathan Matthews...
There’s no question at this point that the 2008 election will be about “change.” But, if “change?? is going to happen, we as Democrats have to come to terms with the hard truths of American politics...
...rest of the Democratic field. That difference is his emphasis on change as the unifying theme of his campaign. Certainly, other candidates in recent weeks have attempted to appropriate the theme of change. In Saturday’s Democratic debate, Hillary Clinton used the word “change?? 23 times; John Edwards used it 14 times...
Once again, the Iowa caucuses provide evidence for the power of this message: Of the majority of caucus-goers who said that “change?? was the single most important issue for them, more than half voted for Obama, compared to 19 for Clinton and 20 for Edwards. Moreover, Obama won decisively among the unprecedented 57 percent of caucus-goers who had never attended a caucus before. The record turnout in Iowa, especially among the formerly politically apathetic, shows that his campaign is already starting to achieve its aims...
...candidates claim to represent change??some by talking a good line, others by waving their résumés. But only one candidate, Mass. Gov. W. Mitt Romney, can deliver. With experience to prepare him and vision to guide him, Romney will be the president who rolls up his sleeves and gets the job done...