Word: either...or
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...Hollywood movies. “I’ve wanted to go to Harvard ever since I saw ‘Legally Blonde,’” said Briana D. Mcintosch, an aspiring lawyer who is also 13. “My mom wants me to go either to Harvard or to Hampton, but Hampton’s too close.” Assistant principal Zory Z. Kennon, III, who also attended the trip and managed the eighth grade teachers, said that the trip was a success. “It definitely has the old-book look...
...they perform in the election itself.” But Hopkins said that the Bradley effect is unlikely to play a major role in future elections. In his study, which was released earlier this year, Hopkins analyzed gubernatorial and U.S. Senate elections between 1989 and 2006 that featured either a black or female candidate. Using three pre-election polls per candidate, Hopkins found that the Bradley effect was last seen in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In recent years, he said, the effect has gone away. “In the last ten years of elections, I can?...
...final days before the election, Johnston will continue to work with Youth for McCain and on YouTube projects, heading to Washington, D.C. tomorrow. He will spend election night either in the nation’s capital or in Phoenix...
...sophomores Meghan Houser and Jamie Olson, and junior Stacy Carlson provided the scoring for the women’s side, which took fifth at the Heptagonal Championships.Richardson’s 17:43.0 finish was good enough to split the Tigers squad, as Princeton took the three places on either side of her.Cochran took the 23rd spot with a time of 18:27.0, while Houser was just five spots and 4.5 seconds behind at 18:31.5.Olson took the 29th spot with her 18:34.4 time, and Carlson’s 18:50.4 finish was good for 37th.The Crimson women took...
...coordination of its members' giving, according to Lawrence Noble, campaign-finance expert with the Washington-based firm Skadden, Arps. The contributions would be illegal only if the members agreed to give up control of their donations entirely or coordinated them directly with a campaign. There's no evidence of either; several people associated with the Cabinet made clear that its members make their donations without anyone's review. And yet as the National Review's Byron York has pointed out, Americans were horrified to learn during Watergate that Richard Nixon's friend Clement Stone had donated an outrageous $2 million...