Word: strengthing
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...Both teams finally back to full strength...
...Social Studies. “It’s a great honor to receive tenure at Harvard,” Shelby said, “It’s obviously not an easy thing to do.” Shelby said he was drawn to Harvard by the strength of its faculty—particularly Kwame Anthony Appiah and Cornel West, who both taught at Harvard when he arrived in 2000. “The consolidation of people in African American Studies [means that] such a strong group of people is working on issues of race, identity, and black politics?...
...both campaigns traded charges of race baiting. Obama accused Clinton of politicizing Nevada's Latino vote and Clinton accused Obama of using her and her husband's remarks on civil rights out of context with black voters. Whatever the intentions the results were telling: Clinton won Nevada on the strength of Latino support and Obama won South Carolina with 78% of the black vote - although he did much better with the white vote, winning about a quarter of it, than some polls had predicted. Obama even addressed the issue head-on in his South Carolina victory speech, saying, "The assumption...
Both sets of volunteers seem unfazed by the swirling controversy, and are quick to acknowledge the strength of their opponent. With "two intelligent, hard-working elected officials," says Keith Lilly, the volunteer campaign coordinator in Obama's office, "We have our cake and we're eating it, too." Clinton's team volleys back the compliment: "I think it's pretty clear that Obama will do very well among African-American voters," says Wardally, though he expects his candidate to garner "her piece" and carry the district. A Jan. 20 statewide poll conducted by Siena College, which found Clinton leading Obama...
...told by someone close to the President that he thinks he won New Hampshire for Hillary Clinton. If so, he is wrong. Senator Clinton won New Hampshire on the strength of her bond with working women. Indeed, I would guess that she was well on her way to winning the Democratic nomination on the strength of her performance in debates - in which she routinely left Obama seeming green and tongue-tied - and the strength of the smart, nuanced positions she took on issues like health care and energy independence. But most of all, Clinton conveyed the impression that...