Student Assembly Committee Seeks to Fill Gaps in the Curriculum
To the Editor:
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To the Editor:
To the Editor:
Congratulations. You have just been elected Student Assembly President.
To the editor:
Not long ago, I met a man at a meeting. He was good-looking and seemed nice, and, since we attended similar events and had common interests, we chatted for awhile. Minutes later, after the requisite conversation covering names and majors, we began to discuss the FSP he had gone on in a recent term. Then I realized just who I was talking to. This man had raped an acquaintance of mine. It all matched, the name, every detail. Why had I not realized this before? What should I do in this situation? Should I confront him with these allegations? What would he say? After all, here in front of me was someone I had reason to believe was a rapist, someone who had hurt an individual that I knew personally. And I had no idea what to do next.
There are approximately 45 weeks left of my Dartmouth experience. That is roughly 315 days, 7,560 hours, 453,600 minutes or 27,216,000 seconds. Something to that effect -- I am not great with math. But the point is that I have this time, and that with my time, I can choose to do many things: I can choose to study biology or learn about sculpture; I can choose to eat lunch with friends or answer calls to the local domestic violence hotline; I can choose to value people or believe that I am in some way better or smarter than those around me; I can choose to feel cheerful or be snippy. This list could take the rest of this article, and this paper and every issue of The Dartmouth that is published from now and for the next 315 days until I graduate. And it still wouldn't be done.
To the Editor: