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...with friends and colleagues who backed Bush. "I've sat around listening to people I normally respect talk about how they planned to vote for him, and I just want to shake them," fumed my exceedingly gentle best friend, who spent the summer registering Kerry voters in her suburban Tampa, Fla., neighborhood. But beyond mending fences, my friend had no ideas for how to work through her blues. "It's not like there's really anything you can do--other than move to another country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 2004 Election: Buck Up, Liberals: How to Get Over It | 11/15/2004 | See Source »

...voters attached to values suggests that Rove's single-minded attention to the goal of turning out 4 million more evangelical voters than in 2000 may have paid off. On the other hand, there were voters like Jeffrey Wilson, 21, a student at the University of South Florida in Tampa, a gay Catholic raised in a conservative family but registered as a Democrat, who finally went with Bush. It wasn't the war that mattered. "I think they're both for stepping things up and cleaning up the mess we've created," he said. Instead it was a matter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bush's Triumph: 2004 Election: In Victory's Glow | 11/15/2004 | See Source »

...Tampa, Fla., businesswoman Kim Goddard says the personal attention she gets at Loews Hotels--suites stocked with her favorite flowers, food and beverages and first-class treatment for friends, family and clients--is the essence of luxury. "The way they bend over backward to spoil me makes me feel like I'm the only one in the hotel," she says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Global Life: Hotel Heaven | 10/25/2004 | See Source »

...TURBOPROP LUMBERS DOWN a runway at MacDill Air Force Base, rises awkwardly into the air and heads northwest from Tampa Bay over the Gulf of Mexico. For a couple of hours, it glides through an aerial fairyland, maneuvering around sun-struck clouds that resemble turreted castles. "This isn't so bad," I say to my seatmate, Miami-based meteorologist Joe Cione, who looks at me and laughs. It's about then that I realize the pilot has executed a sweeping U-turn and pointed the plane's nose in Hurricane Ivan's direction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Into the Eye Of Ivan | 9/27/2004 | See Source »

...last week, leaving bitter lessons in its path. First, there was the reminder that hurricanes are devilishly hard to predict. Last year, meteorologists at Miami's National Hurricane Center demonstrated remarkable accuracy with their storm-landing forecasts. But on Friday, after a million people were ordered to evacuate the Tampa area, Charley slammed into the shoreline 100 miles to the south instead. The 145-m.p.h. winds twisted aluminum siding as if it were gift ribbon and snapped 100-year-old pine trees. Then, as people raced inland, the storm followed, reminding everyone that on this extremity of land, there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lessons Of Charley | 8/23/2004 | See Source »

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