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DeWine and used
DeWine attacked McEwen with charges used against him in his last two campaigns.

DeWine and campaign
McEwen finished second with 11, 663 ( 25 %), Brinkman was third with 9, 320 ( 20 %), and DeWine, who spent $ 1 million on his campaign, finished a distant fourth with 5, 467 ( 12 %).
DeWine amassed a campaign treasury larger than all his rivals combined, raising over $ 750, 000.

DeWine and on
DeWine has held numerous offices on the state and federal level, including one term in the Ohio Senate, four terms in the United States House of Representatives, one term as Lieutenant Governor of Ohio, and two terms in the United States Senate from 1995 to 2007.
DeWine focused his attention on the most experienced candidate, McEwen.
( McEwen did not live in the second district until April 11, when he bought a condominium in Anderson Township ; but DeWine did not live in the district until he bought a home there on April 6.
DeWine also questioned McEwen's record on taxes, sending out mailings criticizing McEwen's vote on May 24, 1982 in the 97th Congress " in support of a Democrat budget that raised out taxes by $ 233 billion.
DeWine currently serves as a judge on the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas, where he hears felony criminal cases, and civil cases involving amounts in excess of $ 15, 000.
DeWine took his seat on the bench in January 2009 after defeating Kathy King in the March 2008 Republican primary and easily winning the November 2008 general election against opponent Norma Holt Davis.
That seat was vacated by U. S. Representative Sherrod Brown, Democrat who replaced Republican Senator Mike DeWine in the U. S. Senate after defeating him on November 7, 2006.
Despite being far outspent by DeWine, on June 14, 2005, Schmidt finished first in the Republican primary, with 31 percent of the vote.
Never the most conservative of Republican senators, DeWine angered supporters of President George W. Bush by his participation in a deal to avoid the " nuclear option " to filibusters on Bush's nominees to federal courts.
DeWine focused his attention on the most experienced candidate, Bob McEwen.
DeWine criticized McEwen's bouncing of 166 checks on the House bank, a major factor in his 1992 defeat.
DeWine also questioned McEwen's record on taxes, sending out mailings criticizing McEwen's vote on May 24, 1982, in the 97th Congress " in support of a Democrat budget that raised out taxes by $ 233 billion.
The Daily News said Schmidt's attacks on Senators Mike DeWine and George Voinovich – Schmidt had asked " what kind of men do we have in Washington representing us right now?
( Meese campaigns for him ; DeWine on his lobbying )
In October 2005, Hackett said he would seek the Democratic nomination in 2006 to challenge incumbent U. S. Senator Mike DeWine ; however, he dropped out of the race on February 14, 2006, and said that he would return to his law practice.
Hackett announced on February 13, 2006 that he would withdraw from the race, because national party leaders had decided that Sherrod Brown had a better chance against DeWine.

DeWine and has
Richard Michael " Mike " DeWine ( born January 5, 1947 ) is an American lawyer and politician who has been Ohio Attorney General since 2011.
" Rival candidate Pat DeWine, a Hamilton County Commissioner and the son of Senator Mike DeWine, the same day questioned McEwen's post-Congressional career as a lobbyist, issuing a press release saying " no one who has ever served in Congress ought to be allowed to become a lobbyist.
DeWine also tried to depict McEwen as a carpetbagger, asking in television advertisements " If Bob McEwen really cares about us, why has he spent the last twelve years living in Virginia?
Along with Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine, Fedor has also introduced the safe harbor bill, which would prevent a young person with being charged with prostitution if they were victims of human trafficking.
And DeWine tried to depict McEwen as a carpetbagger, asking in television advertisements " If Bob McEwen really cares about us, why has he spent the last twelve years living in Virginia?

DeWine and John
John McClelland, a spokesman for the Ohio Republican Party said, " It's vitally important to the Republican Party as a whole, so I think that's why you see the president coming to Ohio to support Mike DeWine.

DeWine and Glenn
Instead, Glenn defeated Lieutenant Governor Mike DeWine to keep his seat, though his percentage was reduced to a career low of 51 %.

used and memorable
Much of the material from their vaudeville act, including Lucy's memorable seal routine, was used in the pilot episode of I Love Lucy.
In their book, Vanuatu by Jocelyn Harewood and Michelle Bennett, is this memorable passage referring to the 1920s: " Drunken plantation owners used to gamble ... using the ` years of labour ' of their Melanesian workers as currency.
For example, in trying to assist the learner to remember ohel, the Hebrew word for tent, the memorable sentence " Oh hell, there's a raccoon in my tent " can be used.
In at least two instances alternate takes were used: Taylor's memorable " Goddamn you!
In another memorable moment, the 1986 " Enemies and Paranoia " episode used the word " Free " as a trigger phrase for red slime after the studio was taken over by Russian Communists.
" Like many characters, Mrs. Krabappel has a memorable catchphrase, used often in the series: her derisive laugh (" HA!
A memorable incident occurred, to that end, as Peckinpah's crew were consulting him on the " gunfire " effects to be used in the film.
Since the poems used must be memorable for ease of use by an agent, there is a temptation to use well-known poems or poems from well-known poets.
When John Steinbeck's epic novel, The Grapes of Wrath, was made into a movie, director John Ford used Santa Rosa for the memorable train scene.
The final issue featured a memorable upside down cover with a foot imprinting on the logo, intended to be reminiscent of the imagery used by Monty Python.
A slogan is a memorable motto or phrase used in a political, commercial, religious, and other context as a repetitive expression of an idea or purpose.
Advertising slogans are short, often memorable phrases used in advertising campaigns.
Some slogans are created just for specific campaigns for a limited time ; some are intended as corporate slogans, to be used for an extended period ; some slogans start out as the former, and find themselves converted to the latter because they take hold with the public, and some are memorable many years after their use is discontinued.
Winkless composed some of the memorable Kellogg's cereal jingles, including the " Snap, Crackle, Pop Fugue " and " The best to you each morning ", and also co-wrote ( with Hoyt Curtin ) " The Beautiful Calliopa ", a song used on the series.
The chain rose to prominence throughout the Tri-State Region as much for its prices as for its memorable radio and television commercials, featuring a frenetic, " crazy " character played by radio DJ Jerry Carroll ( who copied most of his shtick from early TV-commercial pioneer, used car and electronics salesman Earl " Madman " Muntz ).
The commercials were so memorable that HBO's news parody series Not Necessarily the News created a parody TV commercial featuring a caricature of Oliver North ( from the then-infamous Iran-Contra affair ), known as " Crazy Ollie ", selling used weapons at bargain prices.
Many of the core values of Burning Flipside are borrowed from Burning Man, and the same short, memorable terms are used for them, namely :< ref name =" CNET_2006 "> Terdiman, Daniel.
The Fraser Auditorium is also used for special events and conferences, but a student's most memorable visit will likely be for convocation ceremonies, held within the auditorium each spring.
The animations used the same distinctive colourful cut-out paper look as McKee's other works, such as Mr Benn, and one memorable aspect was that the characters ' legs would rotate outwards when walking until they were at right-angles at the sides of their body.
* In a broader sense, the term victory title is sometimes used to describe the repeatable awarding of the invariable style of Imperator ( Greek equivalent Autokrator ; see those articles ), which is the highest military qualification ( as modern states have awarded a non-operational highest rank, sometimes instituted for a particular general ), but even when it marks the recipient out for one or more memorable victories ( and the other use, as a permanent military command for the ruler, became in fact the more significant one ), it does not actually specify one.
The gang come close to finding one in the memorable first story, " The Dirtiest Business " when they attempt to rescue teenage Russian telepath, Pavla who is being used by the KGB for espionage work.
Marcus Antonius, c. 83 B. C .– 30 B. C., Roman politician and soldier gave one of the most memorable speeches in history, dramatized by William Shakespeare in the play Julius Caesar ; Shakespeare used Antonius's famous opening line " Friends, Romans, countrymen, lend me your ears ".
In Chang, he used this technique to create a memorable finale featuring an elephant stampede.
In fiction, a false protagonist is a literary technique, often used to make the plot more jarring or more memorable by fooling the audience's preconceptions, that constructs a character who the audience assumes is the protagonist but is later revealed not to be.

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