Word: p
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...toll, and the kids were excited that I won’t be at meetings every night,” he said.Monday’s meeting included the swearing-in of all nine councillors, including new member Craig A. Kelley, who won a seat over incumbent David P. Maher in the November elections.After the councillors took the oath of office, the first order of business was the election of a mayor.Five council members initially voted for Reeves. In addition to Reeves and Sullivan, they included Marjorie C. Decker, Anthony D. Galluccio, and Timothy J. Toomey.The other four councillors initially...
...final meeting of its 2004-2005 session, the Cambridge City Council bid adieu to its lone departing member before sparring over details of a proposed West Cambridge community center. Three-term councillor David P. Maher—whose father, William, also served on the Council in 1966—was the only member who failed to retain his seat in November municipal elections. Political newcomer Craig Kelley is set to replace Maher at the Council’s first meeting on Jan. 2. Councillor Timothy J. Toomey Jr. led the Council in thanking Maher for his service and presenting...
...prevalent complaints about the temperature, Matthew P. Stec, Manager of Facilities for the Office of Physical Resources, said that the buildings were heated according to Harvard’s policy—between 68 to 72 degrees Farenheit—but suggested that the CGIS’ glass walls might make the rooms feel colder than they really...
...Kevin P. Kiley ’07 is a social studies concentrator in Winthrop House. He is the Chair of the IOP Fellows Committee. Ashwin Kaja ’07 is an economics concentrator in Kirkland House. He is the Director of the IOP Skills Program...
...there is a boundless and vague phrase that, not unlike the “necessary and proper” clause taken to mean that Congress can legislate basically anything, leaves it open for debate: “the executive Power,” with a capital ‘P,’ “shall be invested in a President of the United States of America.” Depending on whom you ask, this phrase is either the justification for fairly extensive powers, or a truism meant only to open the second article, no more, no less...