Word: tomorrows
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Fresh off of an upset of No. 3 Boston College, the Harvard men’s hockey team will head to upstate New York to take on No. 11 Cornell tomorrow night and Colgate on Saturday...
...Lawrence. Now it’s back to quizzes for the Crimson. Harvard (3-1-0, 3-1-0 ECAC) hosts a pair of traditionally soft conference foes at Bright Hockey Center this weekend. First up is Colgate (2-6-1, 2-0-0) at 7 p.m. tomorrow night. The Raiders, to their credit, knocked off league rivals Brown and Yale two weeks ago and pushed No. 2 Mercyhurst in a pair of non-conference tilts last weekend. The puck drops at 4 p.m. on Saturday, as the Crimson meets Cornell (1-4-1, 1-1-0). The Big Red?...
...Weston’s hands,” he said. Today’s vote will only determine whether to exclude debt service on the bonds from Proposition 2 1/2, a statewide law approved in 1980 that limits the tax burden that municipalities can impose. A town meeting tomorrow will determine whether or not to actually approve the purchase...
...Markey (D-Mass.) in 2004 and took 21 percent of the vote. A member of the Senate since 1962, Kennedy won 73 percent of the vote in his last election. Apart from the governorship, the attorney general is the only statewide office that is likely to change hands tomorrow. Republican Larry Frisoli, a former Cambridge vice mayor, and Democrat Martha Coakley, the veteran Middlesex County district attorney, are vying to replace outgoing Attorney General Thomas F. Reilly. Coakley, who is heavily favored in the race, may continue the trend of Middlesex district attorneys becoming state attorneys general. Both Reilly...
Even before it starts tomorrow morning, the 2006 election is already shaping up as one massive lab experiment in how we cast and count 80 million votes or more. When you figure that most of us will have the chance to make anywhere from 20 to 25 choices at polling stations - on statewide races, local elections, constitutional amendments, local options and your county library and community college board elections - we are talking about tracking and tallying upwards of 2 billion different decisions. It's a wonder...