Transgender Truths
To the Editor: I am concerned that there is ongoing confusion regarding sexual minorities.
To the Editor: I am concerned that there is ongoing confusion regarding sexual minorities.
To the Editor: In response to the "Minus Green" (Letter to the Editor, Oct. 11), the protest of which I was a part on Monday was just that, and not a "counter-protest." Our goal was apart from simply countering the protestors who have been clustering on the corner beside the student center in recent weeks.
To the Editor: When I read Mr. Rothfarb's column (Oct. 4), I was struck by two immediate items.
To the Editor: Last week I received an e-mail from a classmate and friend that contained a link to an article by a staff columnist of "The D," Dan Rothfarb, "I Will Raise No Flag" (Oct.
I'm a conservationist. I love the outdoors, or more specifically, the wilderness. That's one reason I came to Dartmouth, to be, as Edward Abbey would have said, "beyond the wall of the unreal city." As a conservationist, I'm frustrated and confused by the amount of energy animal rights activists donate to some causes while abstaining from any involvement with others.
I sit hunched over my keyboard staring out the window at another crisp New England autumn afternoon.
To the Editor: Not only is it unfortunate that the dignity of the protest led by the Hanover High students was parodied by the pro-war "demonstration" staged in response to it, but the gratuitous coverage provided by The Dartmouth was irresponsible and inflammatory.
To the Editor: In Brian Nick's Oct. 8 editorial "Peace Without A Solution," he asserts that pacifists on campus are "dangerous" people who need to "seriously reconsider [their] position and [their] entire line of thinking." While I find myself unsure of whether or not our military actions are appropriate, I am relatively certain that Nick's sentiments are much more "dangerous" to American ideals than those he attacks.
It was my 21st birthday, a time to revel in my new freedoms. Instead I worried about freedoms I had already taken for granted and endured one of the most harrowing experiences of my life -- and nothing even happened. I was returning to New York from London with my girlfriend.
2:30, early Saturday morning. The air smelled like fall. I was walking (not inebriated), and I saw a woman sitting on the curb, staring blankly at the street.
Last week I wore a t-shirt to class that read "Beat the Hell out of bin Laden" on the front and "Whoop!" on the back.
To the Editor: It is hard to take Dan Rothfarb's cant ("I Will Raise No Flag," The Dartmouth, Oct.
In the past week -- the span of only about six or seven days -- I have fallen. Not as in "fallen down" or "fallen in love," but something much more devastating.
I just realized how rude I've been. I never introduced myself to you. My name is Anil (uh-neel say it with me) Antony (not Anthony) and I'm an '02.
The Class of 2002 is quietly ushering out an era of yesterday, and is blindly stepping into an unknown era of tomorrow.
One of the nice things about going to school here at Dartmouth is the secluded, woodsy surroundings.
Freud couldn't do it. "The great question which I have not been able to answer despite my 30 years in research into the feminine soul is, what does a woman want?" If the man with arguably the greatest insight ever into the workings of the human mind couldn't understand women, then what chance do us poor college students have?
To the Editor: I knew this kid in elementary school named Sam. He was a really big guy for his age, and because of that, a lot of kids respected him.
To the Editor: In regard to Troy Blanchard's letter to the editor (Oct. 3) calling for us to become the next "Greatest Generation," it is curious that he still managed to show up for a Fall term that began two weeks after the attacks in NYC and DC, seeing as he is an '05 and had, at the time, little invested in an academic, social life at the College. Secondly, military action of the sort following Pearl Harbor is not what will win this new "war," and any assertion that one's patriotism hinges on enlisting at the drop of a hat (or plane) is, at best, ludicrous.
Revenge. It's a word that's been tossed around frequently after the unconscionable acts of terrorism perpetuated against the United States.