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Stephanie Freeman

Torch Debate: Will Conservatives Rally Around McCain?

He'll Need Reinforcements
Stephanie_freeman_web The Mac is undoubtedly back. Currently, the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee for President, Senator John McCain, has received endorsements from former Presidential candidates Mitt Romney, Rudy Giuliani and Fred Thompson, former President George H.W. Bush, and countless current and former state governors and members of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate. With a lead in the polls in each of the states that are holding primaries in the next few weeks, it is merely a matter of time before McCain goes from being his party’s presumptive nominee to its actual one. So while the Democrats are still struggling to pick their presidential nominee and may have to wait until their convention in August to determine who it will be, McCain stands ready to be the face of a united party. However, whether the party will truly unite behind him is still up for debate.

Continue reading "Torch Debate: Will Conservatives Rally Around McCain?" »

Torch Debate: We Like Mike

Stephanie_freeman_web Despite spending months in the single digits of nearly every poll of likely Republican voters in Iowa and being outspent 20 to 1 by former Massachusetts governor and political rival Mitt Romney, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee garnered the support of 34% of the state’s Republicans, securing him a win in the first caucus in the nation. This first place finish certainly brought Huckabee some much desired national attention, but also left millions across the nation with the question, “Who exactly is this guy?” Many are now claiming to have the answer. 

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MoveOn, Gray Lady

Stephanie_freeman_web It took just 286 words and a black and white photograph of the senior American military commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, to place The New York Times, the nation’s inimitable “Gray Lady,” in the center of a heated controversy over the current penchant in politics for personal attack ads and the ethical standards of modern media. 

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CA: Flunking Out of the Electoral College

Stephanie_freeman_web The state with the largest amount of electoral votes could soon be changing the way in which those votes are awarded to candidates on election night, just in time for the 2008 presidential election. The Republican-backed group Californians for Equal Representation has recently submitted a proposal to include an initiative on the June 3, 2008 state ballot that would replace California’s current winner-take-all system with one that allocates electoral votes based on the popular vote in each congressional district. 

Continue reading "CA: Flunking Out of the Electoral College" »

ERA: Isn't That Cute?

Insanity has been defined as doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results. If this definition is correct, then one should certainly begin to question the reasoning powers of Sens. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass. and Barbara Boxer, D-Calif, and Reps. Carolyn Maloney, D-N.Y. and Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., who recently announced their plans to introduce the Women’s Equality Amendment, which is merely a new name for the failed Equal Rights Amendment, in the United States Congress.

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No Undergraduate Left Behind

Say the phrase “standardized testing,” to practically any one of the millions of students on college campuses across the nation and you will surely get a look of contempt and irritation. After all of the PSAT, SAT, ACT, AP and IB exams that students must take just to gain admission to college, most students have had enough. And it would seem that continuing to test students in such a manner once they entered an institution of higher learning would be pointless; students would likely be inundated with generic general education requirements whose sole aim would be to prepare them for upcoming standardized tests. It seems obvious that this would be nothing but a tremendous waste of time. Unfortunately, Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings and her Commission on the Future of Higher Education are of a different opinion, as shown by a recent report issued by the Commission.

Continue reading "No Undergraduate Left Behind" »

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  • Will He Stay or Will He Go?
    Perhaps it's not very timely, given that John McCain's about to be the Republic Party's nominee, but I still found this Paul Shanklin song from Rush Limbaugh's website today hilarious.-Check out the rest

LETTER FROM THE EDITOR

  • With the publication of this issue, I conclude my year as Editor-in-Chief of this fine newspaper feeling a great sense of pride.

    First of all, I am grateful for such a talented, enthusiastic, staff, and owe my sincere thanks for all of the efforts that you put into this publication. I am proud of you for what you have done and how you have done it, and I hope that you’ve enjoyed working for The Torch as much as I have enjoyed seeing all of you improve it and craft it into what it is today. You have made my job easy.

    I also would like to send my appreciation all those readers, subscribers, and donors who have supported The Torch – and those who have disagreed with us – both this year, and in years past. I think that you, too, should feel proud to be a part of something unique at Vanderbilt, which, thanks to you, has grown year after year.

    This paper’s two Associate Editors, Katherine Miller and Mike Warren, deserve a special note of gratitude. An entire page is not enough to convey their talents and the contributions they have made to The Torch, but I know their influence has been clearly visible this year, and will no doubt continue to be so over the next two years. More importantly, though, as fortunate as I am to have them as coworkers, I feel even luckier to call Katherine and Mike my close friends.

    In closing, I have tried my best to fulfill this paper’s mission statement, and to make it enjoyable to read and to work for. This year has been a tremendous learning experience, and I hope that I have succeeded in these goals more times than not. Thank you for the chance to make my mark on something I have grown to love. I look forward to next year, and can’t wait to see what Katherine will do next year to make The Torch burn brighter.

    -Douglas H. Kurdziel

THE TORCH: NOW IN COLOR!


  • Thanks to our generous subscribers and donors, we reached our Fall fundraising goals! Our second issue this semester (on racks Wednesday, February 27) features a full color front and back pages and a redesigned masthead. Look for the Torch website to see a few design changes itself next month. Thanks again to our subscribers and donors for their fantastic support.

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