The Stanford Daily

News





Comments about "Missing student found"


<< Back to Missing student found

11 Comments on this article:

Report as: spam offensive who dunn it? on 11/16/07 at 12pm

That's awesome news. Where was he though? Is he okay? What happened?

Report as: spam offensive Steve on 11/16/07 at 10pm

So where the hell does he keep going?

Report as: spam offensive Marvin L Foushee on 11/18/07 at 7am

I tried a search for the name of Nicholas Dunn '09 on Stanford Seach, and Nicholas Dunn is not listed as a student at Stanford. He has about ten underground criminal connections at the Stanford Daily, who keep putting his name into print for some oddball reason or another, but does anyone really know who Nicolas Dunn is?

This article is about as lame and insipid as it gets. It adds about enough details to a missing person story that a virtual Stanford student would get or would deserve. So, what is the point of this political stupidity and insanity? The talking heads are not talking! I dare to speak for them.

Who is John Gault?
Who is Ron Paul?
Who is Nicolas Dunn?

RON PAUL IS INSANE!

Report as: spam offensive Marvin L Foushee on 11/18/07 at 8am

"Sagar and Michael Wilkerson co-write “The Lowly Interns.” You can reach them at sagarandmichael@gmail.com. Notice whose name is first. Oh yeah."

I guess being an email boy toy for a virtual FBI agent is coooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooool these days at Stanford.

"For the Greater Jesus-Shining-Path Communist Party Good we move past our Watergate and 9/11 crimes."--Donald Rumsfeld and NIXON, INC.




Report as: spam offensive s on 11/18/07 at 8pm

His actual name listed is Nick Dunn. It's not that hard to figure out if you search via StanfordWho for Dunn and then look through the results.

Report as: spam offensive john on 11/19/07 at 8am

I know that kid, he has serious serious issues, should not be trusted

Report as: spam offensive O. on 11/19/07 at 10am

The whole thing sounds so sketchy. He was held at gunpoint at Stanford?

Report as: spam offensive peter on 11/21/07 at 7am

Students who "disappear" for a few days are pretty common. there was a WSJ article about the MIT versus a concerned paraent when her kid stopped making his daily call. MIT would not allow access to the kids room and email. MIT claimed temporary disappearances happen all the time (10%) and such violated student's privacy rights. The parent's intuition turned up right because the kid turned up dead - a likely suicide. The kid a went rafting on the ocean two months before graduation.

Report as: spam offensive deep throat on 11/21/07 at 8pm

I spoke to a friend of Nick Dunn's, who claims that this man is being suspended by the university for a whole year due to the vague circumstances surrounding his disappearances. I, for one, would like more information concerning how broadly the "fundamental standard" is applied and why exactly disappearing or being abducted at gunpoint constitute a violation thereof. The daily should do some research into this, methinks.

Report as: spam offensive King Nine on 11/25/07 at 8pm

I suspect an alien abduction, or maybe an illegal alien abduction.

Report as: spam offensive Anon on 4/04/08 at 6pm

I knew him in high school, throughout which he was a drug dealer, coke head, and a jerk. Everything about him is sketchy.




(Comments are meant to provide a constructive way for users to interact online. Please keep discussion civil, and refrain from using profanity, personal attacks, potentially libelous language, or hate speech. The Stanford Daily is not responsible for any content that appears in the comment section of its Web site. The Daily is not responsible for monitoring the board or removing comments that could be in violation of the policy. The editors of the non-profit newspaper support a free exchange of ideas, even if beliefs expressed are controversial, but The Stanford Daily Publishing Corporation claims all rights and sole discretion to delete or not delete any post for any reason at any time. If something is posted in the comment section of the Web site, the expressed view should not be understood as an endorsement by The Daily or any of its agents. All comments must comply with the “Terms and Conditions For Use” as set out in the “About us” section of the Web site, or they may be removed. By posting a comment, you attest that the material is not copyrighted and that you are fully relinquishing all rights of ownership to said content exclusively to The Daily while maintaining full responsibility for what you write.)