Why Robert Frost Had to Transfer to Harvard
Ah, the Dartmouth winter. Sloughing through my third Hanover freeze, I find myself pondering a number of observations I've made over the years about this dreary season.
Ah, the Dartmouth winter. Sloughing through my third Hanover freeze, I find myself pondering a number of observations I've made over the years about this dreary season.
To the Editor: I would like to correct the statement attributed to me in yesterday's article about the Committee of Chairs meeting held on Monday February 12.
You would never think of James Bond and French nuclear testing as having any similarities. I guess that's why the man in Congressional Research Service game me a funny look as I asked him for all the reviews of "Golden Eye" that they had on Lexis/Nexis.
There is nothing quite like writing a newspaper column. The pressure to be profound on a weekly basis is tremendous.
To the Editor: I am writing concerning Dave Hemmer's column entitled "Race Should Have No Place in Dartmouth Admissions" [Feb.
For the first time in what seems like years (but is really only 16 months), a term is taking place at Dartmouth, and I'm not there to see it.
One of the most welcome reliefs from academic drudgery is also a simple one: reading for pleasure.
Like many people on this campus, I recently saw Goldeneye, the new James Bond movie. It was, in essence, like any other James Bond movie -- the unadulterated sexism, the rampant male chauvinism.
To the Editor: In an article on declining attendance at Dartmouth sporting events, Dick Jaeger posits that attendance is down because Dartmouth students have many more social options than we did three years ago [Feb.
In Bill Clinton's State of the Union address, he called for implementation of the "V-chip" in every television across the nation.
So what's up with BlitzMail at Dartmouth? Not getting a blitz is equivalent to walking around campus with a big red "L" plastered to your forehead?
The presidential primaries are here. Is it my imagination or has the race for the president become a joke?
Ivy League schools get a lot of hype. Sure, you get lots of education, lots of "culture," lots of delicious cafeteria food, and lots of bills.
The proposal by the Dartmouth administration last year to create freshmen dorms to stimulate intellectualism on campus was a valiant attempt in spite of its failure.
In the wake of the rally and town meeting and the general campus furor over the recent racial attacks, I think the response has been generally positive.
To the Editor: The latest edition of The Dartmouth Review, one of the College's supreme right publications, states that I "ranted about the mythical systematic oppression of blacks in this country and proposed multiplying the SAT scores of black students by a factor of 1.2 in admissions decisions" in my column, "In Defense of Affirmative Action," which appeared in The Dartmouth on Feb.
Freedom of religion and separation of church and state: these are two of the most fundamental principles on which this country was founded.
Alexandre Kojeve, the great Hegelian philosopher, used to say that all the Sturm und Drang of the intellectual world ultimately spills over to the political world.
Thursday, February 8th, 11:14 A.M.: Having handed in my last midterm paper, I am ready for the weekend to commence.
Now that we've reached the fifth week of the term and midterms are upon us in full force, the time is fast approaching for us to once again choose classes for next term.