Word: st
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...minutes before polls opened at 6:30 a.m., it was still pitch dark along Cleveland's streets and difficult to see the campaign signs or even the "Vote Here" ones. But those who always vote at St. Mary's Romanian Orthodox Church on Cleveland's far west side knew exactly where to go. By 6:20 a.m. the parking lot was filling up quickly and an almost all-white crowd of 30-some voters had formed. All across Cleveland, polls opened on time and short lines formed immediately...
...past elections, Daryn Smalley, a 32-year-old financial trainer at the Cleveland Clinic, took his time, sauntering into St. Mary's in the late afternoon. Today is different. He's here to vote for Barack Obama. "I wanted to get in as early as possible and avoid the rush," Smalley said. Maria Wright, 55, is a grandmother used to voting early on Election Day. She isn't too excited about this year's choices for president. "I don't like either of them," she says and has resorted to picking John McCain. "He's just the lesser...
...Harvard, this Canadian rookie trio accumulated impressive competitive experience, displaying their talents under highly competitive conditions for club teams. Kennedy played for the Toronto Junior Aeros, while Lok and Baumgartner were teammates on the Richmond Pacific Steelers, which Baumgartner captained in the 2007-08 season.Kennedy made her name at St. Mildred’s-Lightbourn School as a three-time captain of the hockey team and was named the High School Athlete of the Year in her senior year. If early signs are any indication, she is already adapting well to the college level of play. During the Crimson?...
Harvard is the only Ivy League school that does not provide standard cable access in its dorms. Only dormitories at 10 and 20 DeWolfe St. and Pforzheimer House’s Jordan complex are currently equipped with cable...
...seen Obama bring the full power of his oratory to the biggest possible crowd his campaign can build. That is, until this week. As the long campaign nears the end, the campaign has stopped shying away from such huge audiences, and the crowds have been stunning: 100,000 in St. Louis, 75,000 in Kansas City, 100,000 in Denver, 45,000 in Fort Collins, Colorado, 50,000 in Albuquerque. "We want to see and touch and talk to as many people as possible," says David Axelrod, Obama's top strategist. "This is momentum time." And for anyone...