President Who?
Bush wins! Wait, hold on a second, Gore wins! No, that's not right. After the recount, Nader wins!
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Bush wins! Wait, hold on a second, Gore wins! No, that's not right. After the recount, Nader wins!
Dartmouth should enhance communication with students who are off campus, offer more courses during Sophomore Summer and help alleviate moving problems, according to a newly released Student Assembly report on the D-Plan.
New Hampshire secured Jeanne Shaheen her place as an ex-oficio Trustee when voters elected her to her third term as governor Tuesday.
On an Election Day, which proved to be hazardous for incumbents, at least four of five Dartmouth alumni seeking reelection have held firm in their Congressional bids.
Yesterday afternoon, students across campus concentrated on CNN, eagerly awaiting the results of the Florida recount amid national media and pundit speculation.
"Charlie's Angels" is a terrible, terrible movie.
This season has not gone well for the Dartmouth football team. The team is in the middle of a disappointing 1-7 campaign that has been riddled with injuries and inconsistent play.
The Dartmouth sailing team, ranked number one in the nation, had another outstanding weekend, winning the Horn Trophy at Harvard University.
The fight over the future of the education department didn't end with the administration's decision last year not to eliminate the program, as was previously considered.
With key swing states still too close to call into the wee hours of morning, only die-hard political activists remained at the normally festive Rockefeller Center election party.
Bob Gienko, a member of the Class of 2001, despite amassing the largest number of votes among Republican candidates, was defeated yesterday in New Hampshire's 10th district in his bid for a seat on the state legislature.
Not many directors dare to make a movie about golf. It's hard work to make the game work for the cinema -- there can be drama in a golf match, but it is a drama that develops slowly, ploddingly over the four hours required by a typical 18-hole round.
The 2000 Major League Baseball season has ended with the New York Yankees repeating as World Series Champions, and it is already time to start looking towards next season. While it will be several weeks before free agents begin to stir up the market, it is already time to start thinking about what managerial decisions will do for some of the teams. Six new managers were hired last week, and all inherit ball clubs with good potential. Interestingly, four of the six have never managed in the big leagues before, and three have never managed at any level. In a game where the old-boy network often prevails, the inexperience of these six managers is rather extraordinary. Let's take a step-by-step look at the effect each of these skippers will have on his new team.
What do men's soccer teammates say about Scott Lish '03?
At 2:30 a.m., one of my roommate's last muffled comments before falling asleep was "I know what you can write about! Us! Will you write about us?" And my other roommate, brushing her teeth in the bathroom, said, "Yeah, write (gurgle gurgle) about us."
Contrary to what some may think, this year's presidential election is between two radically different candidates with very different visions for our nation. Hundreds of Dartmouth students watched the presidential debates from the Rockefeller Center or the comfort of their own rooms, and the differences on major issues such as Social Security and health care were clear. But, many Dartmouth students probably found themselves wondering how Vice President Al Gore and Governor George W. Bush differ on the issues that directly affect young people. Thankfully, these two candidates couldn't be more different.
Although the Clinton and Gore era has brought our nation to the height of its prosperity, it has neglected to bring our nation to the same peak of respect and honor. I thank Clinton and his masterful performance in facilitating the progress toward our economic success. And now that we're secure about that, it's time to turn to a different sense of security, one that Clinton has failed to uphold: our values.
On the eve of election day, assistant government professor Lynn Vavreck criticized the increased role of independent political attack ads in the current presidential campaign in a lecture last night at Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Today is climax day for the media. After months of Campaign 2000 coverage, the big moment has arrived, and the news media is determined to cash in for its final hurrah.
As the nation goes to the polls today, many Dartmouth students from New York will have already mailed in their decisions on a race that ranks second only to the presidential campaign in mass media coverage -- First Lady Hillary Clinton versus Long Island Congressman Rick Lazio for the New York Senate.