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(05/15/25 8:05am)
Recently, I attended a Political Economy Project lecture by Daniel Di Martino, titled “The High Prices of Free Things: How Socialism Destroyed Venezuela.” The central thesis of the talk was basic: that state socialism, and this model of governance alone, is to blame for the poor social and economic conditions in Venezuela. I believe this assertion is fundamentally wrong. The speaker’s attempted use of the failed state of Venezuela to fearmonger against progressive movements in the United States was in bad faith and factually dishonest.
(05/15/25 8:00am)
Over the past 18 months, the genocidal onslaught on the Palestinian people in Gaza has reached unfathomable levels. No food or medicine has entered for over two months. An Israeli minister recently announced what has already been clear policy: an intention to entirely destroy and annex Gaza.
(05/13/25 8:00am)
To the Editor-in-Chief, Charlotte Hampton,
(05/09/25 8:30am)
Last week, exactly one year after 89 students were arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest on the Green, students once again set up an encampment on College property to call for divestment and other administrative reforms.
(05/09/25 8:06am)
The precedent that the College had set up to this point was very clear: an encampment was the red line. For students to take up permanent space on this campus that, we are told, is our “home for four years” was the threshold the administration had set for immediate arrest, first in October 2023, and then again at a much larger scale on May 1, 2024. These were the rules of the game that student protesters accepted going into the Palestine encampment last week.
(05/09/25 8:10am)
Recently, the Student Workers Collective at Dartmouth has been one of the most prominent activist groups on campus. From the encampment in front of Parkhurst last week to recent rallies on the Collis Patio, they have taken stances on contract negotiations and the Israel-Palestine conflict. Although I think that a combination of pressing social issues can often be powerful and effective tools to help raise awareness, there is a time and place for them. In the case of SWCD, the fusion of being pro-Palestinian and fighting for higher wages for dining workers wrongly compares the struggle of Dartmouth students with those suffering in Gaza, intentionally or not.
(05/08/25 8:10am)
Elan Kluger 26’s op-ed reveals his own myopic, naive misunderstanding of the relationship between work and purpose. Kluger misconstrues criticism leveled against aspiring financiers or consultants as defensiveness masking latent “careerism.” It’s a pity you’re a cynic, Kluger. Because you’re wrong: Some people are motivated by passion.
(05/08/25 8:05am)
Re: Beilock says “reflection does not mean capitulation”
(05/08/25 8:05am)
As a freshman during spring term 1972, I attended my first protest against the Vietnam War in front of the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory near campus. Although a few other protesters had committed to performing acts of civil disobedience during the protest — namely, by blocking the driveway entrance to CRREL — I was only there to lend vocal and moral support. After the Hanover police had removed and arrested the half-dozen or so protesters who had physically blocked the entrance and refused to move, the protest looked like it would be very short-lived unless others threw themselves into the breach. So I was moved to do so and quickly found myself in the paddy wagon headed to Hanover’s jail.
(05/08/25 8:05am)
Re: Beilock says ‘reflection does not mean capitulation’
(05/06/25 8:50am)
On Green Key last year, after another day of dangerous, unplanned, regretful decisions, I told Won sternly: “If your world ends, so does mine.”
(05/06/25 8:03am)
College President Sian Leah Beilock:
(05/06/25 8:11am)
Re: Beilock says “reflection does not mean capitulation”
(05/06/25 8:05am)
Re: One year since May 1 protests and arrests
(05/06/25 8:24am)
Re: One year since May 1 protests and arrests
(05/02/25 8:05am)
Dear College President Sian Leah Beilock:
(05/02/25 8:55am)
We read the piece in The Economist yesterday morning about Dartmouth’s “sensible policies” and “savvy politicking.” The article praises how College President Sian Leah Beilock has protected our campus from President Donald Trump’s attacks on top universities and fostered balanced dialogue. It’s ironic, of course, that The Economist’s story was published exactly a year after the College facilitated the arrest of 89 community members.
(05/02/25 8:00am)
If I had a dollar for every time an opinion writer complained about our college graduates becoming only financiers and consultants, I would be so wealthy that I would not contemplate taking one of those jobs. Just last week, Eli Moyse ’27 offered a sharp and well-argued addition to the genre. But that genre is still a relatively tired one. So instead of complaining, I would like to offer our financiers and consultants some praise.
(05/01/25 8:00am)
Re: Dartmouth only Ivy to abstain from signing letter against Trump administration funding cuts
(05/01/25 8:05am)
Exactly one year after May 1, our campus remains deeply divided. Although many of us probably wish we could put the memories of what happened on the Green that day out of our heads, doing this would be a disservice to our campus community and dishonest to our values as an institution. It is in this spirit of open discourse that I approach this column, with appreciation for the delicacy of the situation, but a deep desire for my voice to be heard regardless of the repercussions.