Word: states
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Then, last night, in a second floor dining room of Memorial Hall, the students held a dinner discussion with State Representative Mark J. Carron--the week's first "official" event...
Carron said he felt that Bradley would be a strong candidate for Massachusetts voters because of the state's strong liberal leanings. Bradley falls further to the left of Gore on a number of issues...
Tonight, Bill Bradley week continues with a dinner discussion with State Representative Paul Demakis (D-Cambridge), from 5:30 to 6:45 p.m. in the Quincy House private dining room. The discussion is open to all students...
...which was designed to send the state a signal--Al Gore has finally figured out he has to work for its vote. Now running even in a primary race that he had once expected to be a blowout, Gore this week will give New Hampshire voters--and the nation--their first opportunity to compare him side-by-side with the surprisingly strong insurgent Bill Bradley. Until now, Gore has largely refrained from criticizing Bradley and his proposals directly. But in a feisty interview with TIME on Friday, Gore made clear he is ready to engage the battle...
Ssshhh. Don't tell Congress, but nobody's taking this overthrowing Saddam thing very seriously. Iraqi oppositionists report for military training in the U.S. this week, following a weekend conference in New York sponsored by the State Department, but neither the opposition nor Washington has a serious strategy for overthrowing the Iraqi dictator. "This is pretty much a charade," says TIME Pentagon correspondent Mark Thompson. "President Clinton adopted the Iraq Liberation Act for domestic political reasons, as a way of showing the U.S. was doing something about Saddam without actually doing anything significant. People in the Pentagon believe that unless...