

The first time is special. Make it count.
This school is housed on two seperate campuses and enrolls students from Pre-K to High School. Its mission is to "encourage our students to wonder, to inquire, and to be self-reliant, laying the foundation for a lifelong love of learning." The cost? More than $27,000 a year.
The Maret school is located in the heart of D.C. and houses K-12 all on one campus. The school was founded in 1911 and prides itself on being "organic, fluid, not limited to clocks, schedules, and facilities." Tuition here will run about $26,000 a year.
Based entirely on Quaker values, Sidwell Friends School is where Chelsea Clinton attended while her father was in office. Their philosophy: "Above all, we seek to be a school that nurtures a genuine love of learning and teaches students "to let their lives speak." This is the most expensive of the three school, running about $29,000 a year.














Photos courtesy of wthefilm.com and georgebushdouble.com.
Photos courtesy of talentbookingusa.com.
Tuleh
Monique Lhuillier





Web trends on Yahoo Buzz showed that most people wanted to dig into the policies and character of our next president, searching for details like “barack obama biography.” “Barack Obama” is the third most-searched term of the year, right after pop and gossip sensation Britney Spears and the blowing up of the World Wrestling Entertainment stage. More people searched Obama's name than any other politician.
As more young people are getting information from multiple “nontraditional” sources of news, it is no surprise that online news searches have buoyed to the top. People searched anything and everything: from biographies (“mccain bio”) to families )“bristol palin”) to the ridiculous (“obama girl” or “tina fey hot”) to fashion spotters (“michelle obama view dress”).
Among other top politician searches were Hillary Clinton, George W. Bush and Ron Paul. Rumors about Mike Huckabee’s squirrel-eating habits and Mitt Romney lashing his dog to the roof of a car spread on the Internet. With one click people discovered the truth through “factcheck.org” and “snopes.”
Ongoing events of spitfire here and there provoked a fury of searches. People typed in “john mccain letterman” as soon as David Letterman responded angrily to McCain’s talk during the late show. And when the Republican nominee called Obama “that one” in a debate, hits for that moment were boosted.
As Election Day loomed closer, people became mini-experts on the campaign. Searches such as “politico,” “fivethirtyeight,” “real clear politics,” “election map,” and “gallup poll” showed people wanted to be informed.
The whole campaign process generated the force of a rock star’s electricity, as more people aimed to be as educated as they could about the senator from Illinois.

Ange-Marie Hancock, a political science professor at the University of Southern California, is an expert in race relations and comments that talk about race and Obama, a half-black, half-white child raised by white grandparents, were unavoidable. Obama's election has certain ramifications and ripples all across the globe.
Let bygones be bygones. At least that seems to be the case for President-elect Barack Obama and just-nominated Secretary of State Hilary Clinton.