Photo Essay: 2011 GOP debate
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The Oct. 11 Republican presidential debate took over campus, with students, professors and community members carousing with candidates, politicos and journalists. From protests on the Green to candidate-frequented watch parties, The Dartmouth was there to document.
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Tuesday was a big night for Dartmouth. As I meandered across the Green, I could feel the buzz emanating from the Bloomberg stage, the assorted news vans and Michele Bachmann's tour bus. Whether you were a Democrat, a Republican or even a reasonable person preferring to stay above the oftentimes-juvenile poop flinging that is primary-election season, you got that feeling.
The 5'9" Savage has outhustled and outwitted her opponents en route to nine goals and 21 points in Dartmouth's first 12 games. She ranks second in both categories, trailing only co-captain Kelly Hood '12, the Big Green's all-time leader in goals.
The U.S. District Court of Providence ordered Brown University to release fundraising records in a case regarding a student who claims he was wrongly accused of rape and forced to leave Brown, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The former student, William McCormick III, was charged with sexual misconduct towards another student and suspended in 2006, later leaving the university permanently, according to The Chronicle. McCormick issued a lawsuit against the university, his accuser and his accuser's father a graduate of and donor to Brown. McCromick alleges that the father used his contributions to the university to influence the handling of the claims, The Chronicle reported. Brown has objected, holding that the father should turn over financial records, according to The Chronicle.
"There is nothing to prevent Congress, let's say, from creating interest in lands ownership interest or some sort of firm connection to lands that have to be respected by private parties and by the states," Duthu said.
Regardless of partisan affiliation, College students were pulled into national political conversation on Tuesday night as they watched the Republican primary debate from Spaulding Auditorium, at the College-sponsored watch party in Leede Arena or from their rooms with laptops streaming DarTV. The day after the debate, following the mass exodus of candidates, journalists and political pundits, many students interviewed by The Dartmouth said they felt proud of their school and were happy to have been given the opportunity to engage in the democratic process.
For the first time since 2007, administrators at the Tuck School of Business chose not to participate in The Aspen Institute's "Beyond Grey Pinstripes" project an independent ranking of business schools citing the "cost in time and effort" required by the survey, as well as problems with the methodology used to rank schools, Tuck's Assistant Dean for Strategic Initiatives Penny Paquette said in an email to The Dartmouth.