Dartmouth's Swimming and Diving Teams Should Receive More Coverage
To the Editor:
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
5 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
To the Editor:
On November 13, a bulletin was posted by the Women's Resource Center: a "Call for Volunteers" for Planned Parenthood of Northern New England.
A column was run last term ["College Should Promote Intellectualism," Feb. 1, 1996] which examined intellectualism at Dartmouth in light of the proposed additions to the East Wheelock cluster. Although the column brings a number of good observations to the front, the author's arguments in support of intellectualism are both largely stereotypical and inherently un-intellectual.
To the Editor:
Itis unfortunate that the very system we are governed by is irrevocably cloaked with skepticism and distrust. Politics in the modern day, and politicians in particular, are constantly subjected to ridicule, cynical conversation,and other negative forms of societal discourse which in general reflect a growing dissatisfaction with our nation's government.I say this is unfortunate because what society collectively believes is a direct product of its own people.In addition, the reverse is also true.Once an idea becomes fact, society begins to instruct mankind.This perpetrates the idea -- in this case, that politics are corrupt -- whether it is true or not.The question, then, is raised: how can this country change the way its people feel about their government?