Word: electionã
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...amount of time haggard, harried Harvard undergrads have devoted to campaigning, reporting, and generally gossiping about this election??akin to a middle-school class president election on amphetamines—is absurd. Through student publications and blogs such as Cambridge Common and Team Zebra, this year’s election has received more press coverage than the Lewinsky scandal...
...with a year’s campaigning experience behind him, the 24-year-old British entrepreneur, along with running mate Adam Goldenberg ’08, has been projected as one of the election??s frontrunners from the start...
Anene said that he was against military recruiters’ presence on campus—an important issue in last year’s UC election??because of their "non-progressive stance on issues like homosexuality...
...ballots. At least one out of every 400 votes are accidentally cast for a candidate other than the one the voter intended to support, the working paper says. The paper, posted on the Kennedy School’s Web site last week, used information from the 2003 California recall election??in which 135 candidates, including porn star Mary Carey, the diminutive Gary Coleman, and the ultimately successful Arnold Schwarzenegger, vied for the governorship. California, among other states, lists candidates’ names in an order that changes from district to district. The 157 variations provided...
Forecasting is always a dangerous habit for opinion journalists. A quick perusal of the predictions made by leading conservatives in the week before the election??“Santorum can pull it out!” “Allen will never lose!” “What backlash?”—shows just how inaccurate one can be. Yet it still seems safe to say that this year’s tailgate, a huge part of the Harvard-Yale experience, will be a major disappointment...