Recognizing ROTC
To the Editor: Apart from the many letters and columns in The Dartmouth recently on the merits of the U.S.
To the Editor: Apart from the many letters and columns in The Dartmouth recently on the merits of the U.S.
I don't really know what to say about what happened on Sept. 11. I still can't even begin to allow myself to comprehend the magnitude of everything that happened; the magnitude of everything that was taken away from us.
To the Editor: I'm dismayed to see that Sean Donahue '96 is so misguided (Letter to the Editor, Sept.
Steaming chicken rice, fresh from the rice cooker. That was my last (and most vivid, admittedly) image of Singapore as I left that sunny island in South East Asia for the small town of Hanover in New England.
On Thursday, Sept. 13, I cried. I cried in front of my parents, my sister, and 15 other complete strangers dining at the same restaurant as us.
Life hasn't changed for the lizards. Not for the Cuban Anoles or the iguanas or the geckos.
Dartmouth College takes pride in the variety of backgrounds represented by its student body and staff.
To The Editor: For the past couple of weeks, I, like many other New Yorkers, have lived in shock, horror and fear that something so heinous could happen to my city and country.
Ah, fall. A time of unbridled optimism. A new year, new classes to take, new people to meet, new experiences to seek.
I have to admit that I am somewhat puzzled by some of the editorials that I have read in these pages since the massacre of some 6400 innocents from 60 different countries that occurred in New York City and Washington D.C.
To the Editor: I've read many of the pro-peace editorials recently and I find that I'm asking myself, "Do these people realize the gravity of the threat posed against the U.S.?" Do they know that the FBI has recently turned up evidence that show these Islamic radicals are planning a biological/chemical attack using crop-dusting aircraft to deliver the deadly blow? Do they know that previous reports have linked bin Laden associates to attempts to acquire the amount of uranium necessary to make a "dirty" nuclear weapon, designed to spill out massive amounts of cancer-causing radiation?
To the Editor: I was very disappointed to read three consecutive letters to the editor in the Sept.
To the Editor: I write this for the students, whose minds have historically been open, and whose voices we've historically listened to. I am a tired American today.
The whole thing is pretty bizarre, really. I know I'm only one in a million who share in the addiction, but I can trace my involvement with Diet Coke back to before my birth.
Having spent substantial parts of the last two years in Alaska and Southern Africa, I was excited when my friend, Meg'n (she requested that I disguise her name pretty good, huh?) asked whether I would be interested in camping in the woods for the weekend.
To the Editor: I was very disappointed to see that despite the fact that your own poll (September 24) showed that a quarter of Dartmouth students were not in support of any military action, this viewpoint was entirely ignored in the most recent issue of The Dartmouth.
To the Editor: September 11th's terrorist attacks in Washington and New York brought us all a horrifying reminder of the tremendous suffering that occurs when a city is bombed.
To the Editor: As a Dartmouth alumna returned to pursue an MD/PhD, I am struck by how Dartmouth with different faces remains the same, ever and never changing.
As another grand year kicks off here at Dartmouth, we would be inclined to examine the broader concerns of student life, the overarching issues that touch us all.