In vilified France, complex emotions
PARIS " To Americans unfamiliar with its surroundings, the Saint Germain des Prs neighborhood " a busy crossroads at the center of the French capital " possesses several culture shocks.
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PARIS " To Americans unfamiliar with its surroundings, the Saint Germain des Prs neighborhood " a busy crossroads at the center of the French capital " possesses several culture shocks.
2004 presidential candidate Howard Dean castigated fellow Democrats for "mimicking" the Bush administration's domestic and foreign policies in front of more than 250 supporters at the Hopkins Center Friday evening.
The College's Board of Trustees is slated to focus on tuition fees, affirmative action and facilities planning at its quarterly meeting, set to conclude Saturday.
Mobility: for a growing number of Upper Valley residents, it's never been more difficult.
As fiery Capitol Hill debates over the possibility of U.S.-initiated war in Iraq continue to intensify, Sen. John E. Sununu, R-N.H., addressed a substantially less-politicized issue in a speech yesterday evening in 105 Dartmouth Hall: furniture selection.
In a growing battle against the Bush Administration's drive toward war in Iraq, millions of enlivened marchers converged on the streets of 350 cities worldwide to protest a preemptive U.S.-led attack.
Although even more Democrats are expected to join the robust pool of presidential candidates by the end of the month, this year's large playing field -- and the motives behind its entrants' decisions to run -- have yet to buck historical trends for a party attempting to regain the White House, experts say.
A criminal investigation on local, state and federal levels is underway to examine allegations of illegal Election Day activity by a senior official within the New Hampshire Republican Party.
ATHLETICS
As we climbed to the top of Baker Tower to take the cover picture for this year's Winter Carnival issue, a new perspective of the snow-covered Upper Valley became evident. Below us, students scurried to and from classes as the sun shone warmly over campus for the first time in weeks. Much about Winter Carnival has changed over its 93-year history, yet this year has seen the revival of a tradition that had faltered during the tenure of current students at the College -- the colossal snow sculpture. And the success of Gandalf has not been the only result of student activism on campus in the recent months. Throughout December, students mobilized to protest the elimination of the swimming and diving teams, eventually securing the programs' reinstatement.
President George W. Bush pushed forward with heated rhetoric calling for Saddam Hussein's ouster yesterday evening, declaring that the Iraqi dictator can no longer be allowed to "dominate, intimidate, or attack" his own people, the United States or its allies with torture and weapons of mass destruction.
By the end of this week, corporate downsizing will have consumed a significant portion of Dartmouth students' limited grocery options.
Thousands of anti-abortion protesters stormed the nation's capital yesterday -- the 30th anniversary of the Supreme Court's landmark Roe v. Wade ruling -- to urge the federal government to turn back the controversial decision.
Four Yale University students died Friday and Saturday from injuries sustained when their sport utility vehicle collided into a jackknifed tractor-trailer on Interstate 95 in Fairfield, Conn.
On what initiated the race to save Dartmouth's swimming and diving teams, key negotiators point to a packet of printouts.
Presidential contender and Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry railed against the Bush administration's foreign policy and stressed the importance of grassroots activism to a crammed and enthusiastic Rockefeller Center crowd Friday evening.
In his first Dartmouth visit since he declared his 2004 presidential aspirations, Sen. John F. Kerry, D-Mass., will speak tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Rockefeller Center's Hinman Forum.
An unidentified intruder burglarized multiple rooms in Silsby Hall Sunday evening, stealing projectors, computers and monitors from the government seminar room and from "smart" classrooms used by several departments.
It's a concept steeped in history: limiting investments to businesses that conform to one's particular ethical standards. Seventeenth-century Quakers avoided companies that conflicted with their religious beliefs, as did 19th century groups of Christian investors who shied away from firms that dealt in alcohol and pornography.
The Republican Party's renewed control of both Congress and the White House will propel President George W. Bush to pursue an ambitious legislative agenda come January, political analysts have predicted.