DDS Bites
By Chris Houpt | April 18, 1997The forum held by Dartmouth Dining Services last Wednesday night on the future of the meal plan epitomizes the dysfunctional nature of the current meal system.
The forum held by Dartmouth Dining Services last Wednesday night on the future of the meal plan epitomizes the dysfunctional nature of the current meal system.
Alongwith resolutions, champagne and college bowl games, awards presentations are a New Year's fixture.
When SAT scores were sent home last week, one student in Laguna Hills, California had reason to be happy -- he got a 1,600.
Ruling in a seemingly trivial landlord-tenant dispute last week, New York judge John DiNoto acceded to America's slide toward disorder.
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.
A large group of black men made the news on Monday. Remarkably, they were not a gang, a music group or a football team.
Not since the debate over gays in the military has America infused an issue with such profound and divisive meaning as it has with the O.J.
Wentworth is the name of a hall, Dresden is somewhere in Germany, and, for better or worse, America has but one Connecticut, a couple states down the river. And Dartmouth is the College on the Hill, symbolized by Baker Tower and distinguished by interminable winters.
AbiolaLapite's column "Good Education" (Sept. 25, 1995) presents a faulty view of educational goals.
Pascalwrote, "Plurality which is not reduced to unity is confusion; unity which does not depend on plurality is tyranny." The tension between plurality and unity lies at the center of Dartmouth's multiculturalism debate.