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Last week, much of Hawaii celebrated President-elect Obama's victory. He won 72 percent of the vote in his native state. Only the District of Columbia gave Obama a higher percentage of the vote. Edmund C. Moy, the U.S. Mint director, said it was bittersweet day because the Hawaii quarter marks the end of the wildly popular 50-state quarter program. The congressional program, started in 1999, circulated new quarters honoring a different state every 10 weeks in the order the states joined the union. The program began with Delaware. Moy said 147 million people were collecting the coins from each state. The Mint plans to follow the current program with coins for the District of Columbia and five U.S. territories: Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands. ___ On the Net:
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