
Jeremy Turley
Reporter at The Flatwater Free Press
Reporter for the @flatwaterfreep. Mizzou mafioso. Built by @inforum, @AJC and @CoMissourian. Friend of p-dogs. Signal: @FlatwaterTurley.18
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
omahadailyrecord.com | Jeremy Turley
Dave Richardson got his first taste of voting when his aunt Marjorie lifted him up to the polling booth and let him fill in the bubble next to Adlai Stevenson’s name on her 1952 presidential ballot. For an 8-year-old infatuated with politics, it was “just like ice cream” — even though his chosen candidate fell short of winning the White House. Now 80, the lifelong Omahan hasn’t missed an election since he came of legal voting age.
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4 weeks ago |
journalstar.com | Jeremy Turley
Dave Richardson got his first taste of voting when his aunt Marjorie lifted him up to the polling booth and let him fill in the bubble next to Adlai Stevenson’s name on her 1952 presidential ballot. For an 8-year-old infatuated with politics, it was “just like ice cream” — even though his chosen candidate fell short of winning the White House. Now 80, the lifelong Omahan hasn’t missed an election since he came of legal voting age.
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1 month ago |
apnews.com | Jeremy Turley
Dave Richardson got his first taste of voting when his aunt Marjorie lifted him up to the polling booth and let him fill in the bubble next to Adlai Stevenson’s name on her 1952 presidential ballot. For an 8-year-old infatuated with politics, it was “just like ice cream” — even though his chosen candidate fell short of winning the White House. Now 80, the lifelong Omahan hasn’t missed an election since he came of legal voting age.
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1 month ago |
flatwaterfreepress.org | Jeremy Turley
Dave Richardson got his first taste of voting when his aunt Marjorie lifted him up to the polling booth and let him fill in the bubble next to Adlai Stevenson’s name on her 1952 presidential ballot. For an 8-year-old infatuated with politics, it was “just like ice cream” — even though his chosen candidate fell short of winning the White House. Now 80, the lifelong Omahan hasn’t missed an election since he came of legal voting age.
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1 month ago |
standard-journal.com | Jeremy Turley
Dave Richardson got his first taste of voting when his aunt Marjorie lifted him up to the polling booth and let him fill in the bubble next to Adlai Stevenson’s name on her 1952 presidential ballot. For an 8-year-old infatuated with politics, it was “just like ice cream” — even though his chosen candidate fell short of winning the White House. kAm}@H g_[ E96 =:76=@?8 ~>292? 92D?’E >:DD65 2? 6=64E:@? D:?46 96 42>6 @7 =682= G@E:?8 286]k^AmkAmvC@H:?8 FA[ “x H2D E@=5 E92E E9:D G@E:?8 E9:?8 H2D 2?
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If you live in Omaha, it might feel like election season has lasted more than a year. That's because we hold city elections 6 months after the intense fight for the 'blue dot.' An unlikely coalition, concerned about low turnout, wants to change that. https://t.co/SbcurCbwIX