The Greatest Hypocrisy
By Meylysa Tseng | June 2, 1998One of the biggest things I came to realize from my off-terms in Washington, D.C. had nothing really to do with my internships.
One of the biggest things I came to realize from my off-terms in Washington, D.C. had nothing really to do with my internships.
It was my junior fall when I joined the Voices advisory board. I was eligible because I had attended three of the Voices events.
I've been trying to get a friend of mine to pick up her violin and play some duets with me. She's very reluctant and very concerned that her playing isn't good enough.
I've literally seen people cringe when I've started talking about race. It's almost as if the subject is just not something normal people discuss.
Kenji Hosokawa's column ["Higher Education for the Leisure Class," The Dartmouth, March 2] was very hurtful to many students.
In honor of one of my ancestral homelands, I'd like to bring your attention to Taiwan. Though a small, little island off the coast of Asia, it is the 14th largest economic power in the world.
I'm writing in response to the many harsh things I have heard said against political correctness, a phrase I believe has been abused for too long on college campuses.
I think everyone in the audience of the Alpha Chi Alpha discussion Monday night had the same thing on their minds.