Offers latest ranking of top schools for mathematics in New Hampshire. You can learn what the top-ranked math colleges and universities are in New Hampshire, and compare the best math colleges on TopSchoolsintheUSA.com. Search the top graduate schools in math, view school profiles, and contact information for all 2 mathematics colleges in New Hampshire.
School Rank | Graduate Mathematics |
1 | Dartmouth College Department of Mathematics Address: 6188 Kemeny Hall, Hanover, NH 03755 Admissions Phone: (603) 646-2415 Admissions E-mail: mathphd@math.dartmouth.edu Admissions Website: http://www.math.dartmouth.edu |
2 | University of New Hampshire Department of Mathematics and Statistics Address: Kingsbury Hall, Durham, NH 03824 Admissions Phone: (603) 862-2320 Admissions E-mail: Jan.Jankowski@unh.edu Admissions Website: http://www.gradschool.unh.edu |
John McCain
In 1992, John McCain was re-elected to the Senate. By this time, he had already earned a reputation as an independent politician who is not afraid to argue with the leadership of his party if he considers it necessary (in the press he began to be called a “Republican rebel”).
McCain, being a veteran and no stranger to the service, consistently opposed the involvement of the US military in various conflicts, if he did not consider such participation necessary. For example, he was against the military operation in Somalia in 1993, and he supported the US participation in the NATO operation in Bosnia only after the facts of the genocide of the Bosnian people became known. McCain also actively participated in the work of the Senate committee, which dealt with the issue of missing American soldiers in Vietnam.
In 1998, McCain was re-elected to the Senate for the third time. In September 1999, he announced his desire to run for President of the United States from the Republican Party, but the senator then lost the primary election to George W. Bush.
In 2002, Congress finally passed legislation initiated by John McCain and Democratic Senator Russell Feingold back in 1995, which seriously changed the way campaign finance is done. The passage of this law is considered one of McCain’s most important achievements as a legislator. McCain has consistently supported President Bush Jr.’s counter-terrorism policies, including the war on Iraq. In 2003, he became one of the sponsors of a bill aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.
In 2004, John McCain was once again re-elected to the Senate. During his fourth term as senator, he, among other things, initiated reforms related to immigration issues (proposing, among other things, the introduction of the possibility of legalization for illegal immigrants). Apparently because of his bitter experience as a prisoner of war, McCain very strongly opposed the torture and detention without trial in Guantanamo Bay prison of people captured on suspicion of terrorism. In 2005, Congress passed its proposed amendment to prohibit inhuman treatment of prisoners.