Word: sweepingly
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...more coming." Here are some selections from the growing menu. THE CLIFF: With its terracotta-tiled terrace and wood decking, this Mediterranean restaurant, tel: (66-77) 414 266, was the first to raise the bar for Samui's dining scene when it opened in 2004. Perched high above the sweep of Lamai Bay, it's run by South African owner-chef Bradley Munns, who cut his teeth setting up gastronomic establishments in Bangkok. Munns uses plenty of imported ingredients to create mouthwatering dishes like the house speciality, Portuguese charcoal-grilled piri-piri chicken. GREEN OLIVE: Attached to a boutique resort...
...KERRY The Massachusetts Senator's lame, might-have-been-offensive joke at the troops' expense drew outrage from both the right, who had forgotten how much they hated Kerry, and the left, who had forgotten how much they hated Kerry. It wound up making little difference in the Democratic sweep: he can't even lose an election anymore...
...state that handed George Bush the electoral votes he needed to win a second term in 2004. Democratic Congressman Ted Strickland was elected Ohio Governor over Republican Ken Blackwell, the secretary of state, in a top-of-the-ballot race that both sides expected to drive a Democratic sweep of that bellwether state. And Democratic Congressman Sherrod Brown defeated incumbent Republican Senator Michael DeWine...
...quite going our way, and we weren’t being very positive.” A fourth-place finish at Sprints for both varsity eights left even more in doubt, as the Crimson failed to reach the winners’ dock after a one-two varsity sweep in 2005.But in the two weeks separating Sprints from IRAs, the Crimson settled into permanent lineups. Stability replaced unpredictability, and a new attitude overtook Newell Boathouse.“We just started to bring out the positive in everything that we were doing in May, and it started going really well...
...there is a place to measure growing Republican desperation over maintaining control in the U.S. Senate, it is surely Tennessee. The state was supposed to be a Republican sweep, but Democrat Harold Ford Jr. is unexpectedly running neck and neck with Republican Bob Corker and stands a fair chance of becoming the first black Southerners have popularly elected to the U.S. Senate. Indeed, Tennessee hasn't seen so much national political attention since President Bush beat Vice President Al Gore in his home state. Bush has come calling twice, helping Corker raise $2.1 million, as have U.S. Senators Lamar Alexander...