Greeks Must Improve
To the Editor:
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To the Editor:
All members of the Dartmouth Community are bound by a code of honor, which demands that we each hold ourselves as well as each other accountable for our actions. When one's "friend" sexually assaults someone, says something hateful or organizes a celebration of bigotry, there is an obligation, based on both the Dartmouth Honor Principle and natural human law, for one to confront those individuals, sanction the parties responsible and inform the community so that we can all learn and grow from this experience.
In recent issues of The Dartmouth, the decline of early African-American applicants to the Class of 2003 has dominated the headlines and the reasons for this decline have been debated. Recently, I have discovered why many minority students feel threatened by the environment at Dartmouth and therefore do not wish to even apply for acceptance.
Kenji Hosokawa's column "Interracial Relationships," January 19] has disturbed me in many ways. First of all, he falsely claims that race has been a problem in American society after "the demise of the 'evil empire.'" For when the first white northern European imperialists set foot on Plymouth Rock in the 17th century, racial diversity was imposed on North America and the natives living there.
To the Editor: