Threat to Alumni Representation on the Board of Trustees
To the Editor: The Letter to the Editor of Bill Dean '89, president of Dartmouth's Alumni Council ("Alumni Representation on the Board of Trustees," April 8), is very misleading.
To the Editor: The Letter to the Editor of Bill Dean '89, president of Dartmouth's Alumni Council ("Alumni Representation on the Board of Trustees," April 8), is very misleading.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is celebrated every year. Washington and several other states have official holidays on Martin Luther King, Jr.
This Monday, the administration, led by Dean Larimore, announced the possibility of moving Greek rush back to Fall term from the winter.
At first glance, Dean of the College James Larimore's recent decision to consider allowing the movement of fraternity, sorority and coed rush to sophomore fall seemed a welcome and overdue departure from the policies the administration has pursued since the 1999 announcement of the Student Life Initiative.
To the Editor: There are a lot of alumni, young and old, who are still extremely disappointed in the administration's handling of the library system and the swim team, and Mr. Scherr's spin doctoring will not cover up those failures.
To the Editor: Your April 1 article, "From outside, Rodgers campaigns on change," contains an error that needs to be corrected.
Barry Scherr's reply ("The Administration Strikes Back," April 6) to my column (The "Administrative Life Initiative," April 2) is a model of subtle dissimulation that merits an effort at deconstruction. For instance, Provost Scherr knows my background well enough to know that it has more intellectual and experiential depth than being the co-owner of the River Valley Club, one of my companies. The basis for my critique of the College's undisciplined administrative spending comes from my education at the Yale Law School, my years in London as a management consultant at Bain and Co. and my business relationships in 40 countries over the last two decades. That said, this kind of background is not necessary to recognize that Jim Wright's administrative spending growth of 57.5 percent over the past five years, in an environment that had inflation of only 11 percent, is an example of mismanagement. I would welcome an effort by Provost Scherr to deal directly with the substance of my criticism: He dismisses the almost $10 million increase in the administrative budget as inconsequential in the context of an overall College budget of more than $400 million, but he ignores Jim Wright's attempt to cut the swim team to save $200,000.
To the Editor: I was disappointed to read your article on the porn king (The Dartmouth, April 2). I found it especially ironic that this article was printed beside an article on the Panhellenic Council, a group which is, at least in theory, concerned with the promotion of women.
Late last week, I got on the 8:00 a.m. bus to go my office in downtown Seattle as usual. I sat down at my usual seat and starting reading my usual Harvard Business Review.
When did Diet Coke become a men's drink? When I was growing up, you didn't touch Diet Coke. It was a diet-conscious, weight-watching, Slim-Fast alternative.
At the beginning of 2004, President Bush was loudly scolded by an assortment of conservative institutions ranging from the Heritage Foundation to the National Review to Rush Limbaugh's radio show for his profligate domestic spending.
To the Editor: I have known Joe Asch ("The Administrative Life Initiative," April 2) for a long time, and I am sure he recognizes, as the owner of the River Valley Club, the difficulty of managing the finances of a complicated institution in a volatile economy.
To the Editor: Your article concerning Bill Asher ("At Dartmouth, porn king alumnus led 'ridiculous life,' April 2) contained an error.
At the end of last term, the College announced a $22 million donation from an alumnus to establish a new institute for computational science.
Lies. Stealth. Cover-ups. Refusal to admit wrongdoing. All of these closed-door tactics have come to quintessentially characterize the Bush administration over the past several months. Two weeks ago, Richard A.
The College received good news when Vermont governor and former presidential contender Howard Dean agreed to come to Dartmouth as a visiting fellow of the Rockefeller Center.
As I walked through the College's new Human Resources office on Lebanon Street last year, I commented to the director's assistant how nice the offices looked.
Gay marriage is an issue that merits discussion, and Chris Langevin's letter to the editor (The Dartmouth, March 31) represents an earnest attempt to address the issue.
To the Editor: While Ben Taylor, in his op-ed "Mixed Message on Iraq" (The Dartmouth, March 30), was right in calling for greater efforts to engage the hearts and minds of ordinary Muslims in the Middle East, his main assertion that it was a "blunder" to close down a radical newspaper in Baghdad was ridiculous. Let's review the reason why Al Hawza was ordered to halt its production for 60 days -- incitement of violence.
To the Editor: Chris Langevin's letter to the editor (The Dartmouth, March 31) is off the mark.