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Examples

  • The women's team defeated CSU-Pueblo 6-3, winning at No. 2 and No. 3 doubles and then getting straight-set victories by Victoria Sargent (No. 3), Kaitlan Sera (No. 4), Amber Armendarez (No. 5) and Cyndle Curfman (No. 6).

    GJSentinel.com allen.gemaehlich@gjsentinel.com 2010

  • McLaughlin and her daughter Kaitlan listen as Republican gubernatorial nominee and Knoxville

    theleafchronicle.com - Local News 2010

  • McLaughlin and her daughter Kaitlan listen as Republican gubernatorial nominee and Knoxville

    theleafchronicle.com - Local News 2010

  • Kaitlan Sering, his twenty-two-year-old granddaughter, once lived for drugs.

    Forensics & Faith 2008

  • Desperate, Kaitlan flees to her estranged grandfather.

    Forensics & Faith 2008

  • The mostly native crowd at the Grand Street Auditorium was enamored with Mr. Hoch, cheering him on with shouts of "go home" to Kaitlan, the entitled newcomer, who was forced to sell t-shirts when her allowance was reduced from $5,000 to $1,000 per month.

    Home | The New York Observer 2008

  • The mostly native crowd at the Grand Street Auditorium was enamored with Mr. Hoch, cheering him on with shouts of "go home" to Kaitlan, the entitled newcomer, who was forced to sell t-shirts when her allowance was reduced from $5,000 to $1,000 per month.

    Home | The New York Observer Nicole Brydson 2008

  • There's Robert, the intoxicated host of a Brooklyn block party; Marion, an older black woman lamenting the high cost of almond croissants; Kaitlan, a white newcomer selling t-shirts on Bedford Avenue; Francque, a French realtor selling luxury condos; Launch Missiles Critical, a rapper threatening to move to Canada; Stuart, a Jewish developer; El Dispatcher, a Hispanic dispatcher for a car service; and Kiko, a Puerto Rican-Polish man recently released inmate who tries to work on a neighborhood movie set.

    Home | The New York Observer 2008

  • There's Robert, the intoxicated host of a Brooklyn block party; Marion, an older black woman lamenting the high cost of almond croissants; Kaitlan, a white newcomer selling t-shirts on Bedford Avenue; Francque, a French realtor selling luxury condos; Launch Missiles Critical, a rapper threatening to move to Canada; Stuart, a Jewish developer; El Dispatcher, a Hispanic dispatcher for a car service; and Kiko, a Puerto Rican-Polish man recently released inmate who tries to work on a neighborhood movie set.

    Home | The New York Observer Nicole Brydson 2008

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