Orleck: From Buddhist Monks to Riot Police: A Reflection on the Last Week at Dartmouth
History professor Annelise Orleck looks back on the circumstances behind her arrest on May 1 and the lessons she learned from it.
History professor Annelise Orleck looks back on the circumstances behind her arrest on May 1 and the lessons she learned from it.
The presidents of Chabad and Hillel share concern for student safety and campus discourse in the wake of the May 1 protest and arrests.
Arrests didn’t stifle free speech, but an unwillingness to listen has.
The protests on the Green and the aims of these students were antisemitic and hurtful.
Jewish identity should not be weaponized to justify the violence against students.
The College Administration was successful in protecting campus and promoting free speech.
One alumnus calls for the resignation of the College President and any sympathetic administrators after the College’s response to the May 1 protest.
Members of The Equinox and The Clock write in support of student journalism.
College President Sian Leah Beilock addresses the “pain” caused by her administration’s response to last week’s protest.
The undersigned Dartmouth faculty call on the College to adopt a position of institutional neutrality in light of recent events.
The endowment is always going to be a political tool; the question is toward whose political vision it will be directed.
The administration’s response to student encampments should be praised as a symbol of Dartmouth taking the “road less traveled.”
A group of Dartmouth alumni argues that the College invited an excessive use of force and has a convoluted process for divestment.
Protesters should look to the Vietnam War protests in 1969 and 1970 to learn how to be more cooperative and respectful of the College and their peers.
More than 50 faculty members wrote in support of Beilock's response to the May 1 protest.
We stand with The Dartmouth in its demands that President Beilock apologize for the arrests of its reporters and work with law enforcement to ensure charges are dropped.
College President Sian Leah Beilock’s attack on free speech has threatened the institution of Dartmouth College.
In the face of peaceful protest, the College administration chose to break its obligation to the community by bringing police violence to Hanover.
The Dartmouth Outing Club was not involved in the decision to use the vans, which are College property.
Former opinion editor Spencer Allen ’23 condemns the arrests of 90 people at the Gaza Solidarity Encampment and urges College President Sian Leah Beilock and the College to listen to their community.