Kerry: Experience key in campaign
With New Hampshire's Democratic primary just over three months away, there was more than the usual brightly colored leaves, apple cider and prize-winning pumpkins at this weekend's Warner Fall Foliage Festival.
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With New Hampshire's Democratic primary just over three months away, there was more than the usual brightly colored leaves, apple cider and prize-winning pumpkins at this weekend's Warner Fall Foliage Festival.
In an interview with The Dartmouth, Elizabeth Edwards discussed a life on the road, making the grade, and the perils of "yes-men."
On May 1, President Bush took to the deck of the USS Abraham Lincoln to announce the formal close of Operation Iraqi Freedom's combat operations.
On April 4, a story on the front page of The New York Times proclaimed: "It is not easy being an old lefty on campus in this war." Shelby Grantham, senior lecturer in English and faculty advisor to the student group Why War, believes this campus is an exception.
Nearly a month after U.S. warplanes opened the war against Iraq on March 19, President George Bush yesterday publicly affirmed the result: "the regime of Saddam Hussein is no more."
Yesterday U.S. forces continued thrusts into Baghdad and held on to several symbolic sites within the city in the wake of a downtown bunker-buster bombing that may have killed Saddam Hussein on Monday afternoon.
The third weekend of the war in Iraq brought mixed news to the American-led coalition-- daring urban raids into the centers of Baghdad and Basra demonstrated the dominance of American and British forces while a friendly fire incident involving Kurdish fighters showed their fallibility.
In an era when American relations with Europe have reached the point that the U.S. Congress's cafeteria no longer calls french fries by their proper name, former George Bush Sr. administration official Robert Kimmitt argued that America's relationship to Germany remains strong despite recent disagreements over the conflict in Iraq.
Dartmouth government professor and urban warfare expert Daryl Press joined such national luminaries as Maureen Dowd and Thomas Friedman on the March 26 editorial page of The New York Times to analyze the course a battle for Baghdad might take.
Baghdad was rocked by intense coalition bombing Thursday night after a day marked by explosive rhetoric from Iraqi officials inside the country and at a U.N. meeting in New York City.
Confusing and vague reports emerged from the southern city of Basra and swirling winds complicated operations on the road to Baghdad yesterday, confounding reporters and military planners alike as the war in Iraq entered its sixth day.
To the Editor:
To the Editor: