A New Challenge Facing Choice
Ruling in a seemingly trivial landlord-tenant dispute last week, New York judge John DiNoto acceded to America's slide toward disorder.
Ruling in a seemingly trivial landlord-tenant dispute last week, New York judge John DiNoto acceded to America's slide toward disorder.
Arianna Huffington rose from the ashes of her husband's embarrassing 1995 attempt to buy a California Senate seat to publicly trash one of her husband's hardest campaigners -- Bob Dole.
To the Editor: I am suspicious of the Conservative Union at Dartmouth's scheduling of the D'Souza-Masters debate at the same time as Hardcore Porn [forum] at the Hop.
I felt both empowered yet slightly unnerved when the deputy head of foreign affairs for the Ministry of the Environment said, "that's a really good point!" to one of my suggestions and meant it in earnest.
To the Editor: Last night, the group known as Women of Color United held a discussion at the Women's Resource Center.
Sunday night's debate between leading conservative intellectual Dinesh D'Souza '83 and GovernmentProfessor Roger Masters provided an example of the potential for productive public discourse at Dartmouth. Masters and D'Souza faced off on whether racism is a big problem in American, an issue that affects every member of the Dartmouth Community.
To the Editor: I was rather surprised to hear about last week's anti-gay incident in a Gold Coast dorm.
Today's vote is the most devastating and appalling attack on a woman's freedom to choose in the history of the House," Kate Michelman, the president of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League, said in a statement.
To the Editor: There have been several incidents of hate crimes taking place on this campus over the past week.
To the Editor: In response to recent publicity surrounding the "rash of homophobic activity" at the College, I would like to attempt to place these events in perspective.
Dartmouth teaches us many things, but perhaps most importantly, it teaches us the ability to think and act as educated and informed human beings.
To the Editor: There are very few situations in which violent and abusive acts solve anything, and in countless cases, that violence usually ends up worsening any problems it endeavored to solve in the first place.
To the Editor: Although I had originally hoped not to be named, I feel compelled to correct a statement attributed to me in Friday's issue of The Dartmouth ("Rainbow Alliance plans response to rash of 'homophobic' activity," Oct.
To the Editor: I am writing in regard to the recent homophobic incident that has taken place on campus.
To the Editor: I was very disappointed to note that the article in Tuesday's edition ("Students celebrate Halloween early") which included a review of the Oct.
Undergraduate Advisor is a position that entails a great deal of power on this campus. Like teachers, professors and other mentors, we UGAs have the ability to have a positive impact on minds equally bright, though less experienced than our own.
I must admit that I hadn't been thinking much about foreign policy lately. But something I saw in the news last week made me stop and think.
To the Editor: Although I thought that the article, "With Canada remaining intact, students are happy," (Nov.
Last week The Dartmouth editorialized that Kappa Chi Kappa's decision to revert to its historical name of Kappa Kappa Kappa damages the Dartmouth community because of the name's initials ("Change to Tri-Kap is Insensitive," Oct.
Social protest at Dartmouth is a bit like a dandelion poking its yellow head up between the used condoms and McDonald's wrappers of an inner city gutter: It is so refreshing to see life's signature under such circumstances that the last thing you want to do is hold out for an orchid. Thus it is in the spirit of encouragement and constructive suggestion -- not criticism -- that I would like to address two of Dartmouth's more recent tempests-in-a-plastic-cup.