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Wednesday, February 4, 1998

An Interview With Gennifer Flowers: On First Indiscretions

Flowers: That was his whole theory —if we stick together and deny it, everything will be okay. I was really more concerned about it than he was, but he just felt if everybody went on record denying it, he could keep the story covered up. Obviously it didn't work.

Campbell on Presidential Rumours

Review: Has the composition of the Trustee Board changed appreciably since the Freedman selection?

Campbell: I think that if anything it's probably become a little more political. I think over the years going way back to the Dickey period I think there was a tendency in the early period to select successful and prominent alumnae, particularly from business.

Me and the Conspiracy

Visiting a mostly black public school. in Harlem last week, the First Lady, wearing a cheerful yellow outfit, leaned over the desk of a tyke who was making letters with a crayon. "Learning how to spell," she said, "is a lot easier than stopping people from hating you."

CCAOD: The SA Responds

On Monday, February 2, the Student Assembly presented a counter-report to last fall's controversial recommendations on alchohol use drafted by the College Committee on Alcohol and Other Drugs (CCAOD).

Dartmouth Goes to Nagano

Dartmouth men and women have been in every Olympics since the series' inception, and the upcoming games are no exception. What follows is a profile of some of the women who will be representing the United States in Nagano.

Editorial

Deny, Deny, Deny

It's quite possibly the best rapid response team in American political history. First assembled in Arkansas, honed to perfection in the early 90's, they are the Navy SEALS of political rescue. Whatever may happen, the Clinton White House has done a frighteningly effective job of saving their boss, no mean politico himself, over the last six years.

We Have a Name: On the New Dartmouth President

Freedman's Presidency was fundamentally flawed because, as popular as he was amongst the faculty, he absolutely refused to understand the culture, present or traditional, of Dartmouth's campus and so fundamentally misunderstood the p[ace and its people. Freedman may have been an adept administrator, but he was a lousy campus politician.

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