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NASA/NOAA/Goddard Rapid Response TeamBy Katie ReillyJanuary 23, 2016 1:17 PM ESTA satellite image captured by NASA on Friday night showed the size of the winter storm that continued to batter the East Coast on Saturday.The photo shows the storm white clouds stretching from New England to Florida.Another image captured on Saturday showed the movement of the storm, as it shifted North, where Washington D.C. and New York City were under blizzard warnings.American astronaut Scott Kelly also posted pictures to Twitter of the snow storm, tracking its movement from the International Space Station.Massive snowstorm blanketing EastCoast clearly visible from @Space_Station! Stay safe! blizzard2016 YearInSpace pic.twitter/oq6ewYaTPQmdash; Scott Kelly @StationCDRKelly January 23, 2016Watch Live: Astronauts Return to Earth After a Year in SpaceAs blizzard2016 passes over Chicago, the EastCoast seen in distance clearly has a long way to go. YearInSpace pic.twitter/qMrkTXo9iemdash; Scott Kelly @Statio [url=https://www.stanley-cup.it]stanley cup[/url] nCDRKelly January 23, 2016More M [url=https://www.cup-stanley.es]stanley cup[/url] ust-Reads from TIMEHow the Economy is Doing in the Swing StatesHarris Battles For the Bro VoteOur Guide to Voting in the 2024 ElectionMel Robbins Will Make You [url=https://www.stanley-cups.es]stanley cup[/url] Do ItWhy Vinegar Is So Good for YouYou Dont Have to Dread the End of Daylight SavingThe 20 Best Halloween TV Episodes of All TimeMeet TIMEs Newest Class of Next Generation LeadersWrite to Katie Reilly at Katie.Reilly@time Cqyh Critics Trash Obama s Big Foreign Policy Address
A voter marks his ballot for the Michigan presidential primary at a polling station in Warren, [url=https://www.adidas-samba-adidas.it]adidas samba[/url] Michigan, March 8, 2016.Geoff Robin鈥擜FP/Getty ImagesBy Elizabeth KingApril 26, 2016 12:00 PM EDTWe send emails instead of hand-written letters, we buy Kindles instead of books, we use iPads instead of pen and papermdash;and yet, voting is still mostly left to good old-fashioned paper.Voti [url=https://www.inkwiz.se]ugg[/url] ng technology has essentially remained at a standstill for decades. Still, some things have stayed the same even longer: the same concerns for security and secrecy that have kept paper dominant were also the driving forces behind voting policy in the early years of the United States.Prior to the Revolutionary War, votes were cast not by ballot, but by voice. Before the Revolution, voting took place at local carnivals, historian and writer Gil Troy tells TIME in an email. There, peoplemdash;who may or may not have been drunk at the time, considering the settingmdash;would call out their votes to be counted. But given how public this method of elections was and the varying states of sobriety of voters present , voting was very easily corruptible.Get your history fix in one place: sign up for the weekly TIME History newsletterYet voting remained quite public, Troy says, until the 1800s, as voters would sign their names under one candidatersquo nam [url=https://www.dunks.fr]nike dunk[/url] e or anotherrsquo on a public ballot. This method had the advantage of being easy to count and hard to falsify, but the system was better suited to