A Love Letter to the Sun, Part III
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
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This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key Edition special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
During my junior year college tour trip, I allowed my dad to drag me two hours north of Boston because he told me that he had “never met anyone from Dartmouth who didn’t love it.” Well, I have. I’ve been one of those people, too. During my first two terms here, not only did I not love Dartmouth. I hardly even liked it.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
This Green Key, Evan Kaye '25 poses a question that can define your weekend.
On May 10, the history department hosted a teach-in panel about past protests on Dartmouth’s campus. Three history professors highlighted several protests in Dartmouth’s history that resulted in peaceful reactions from the administration.
I, like most of the Dartmouth student body, bore witness to the night of May 1 as state police descended on nonviolent protesters on our Green, throwing an elderly woman to the ground and arresting, among others, two Dartmouth reporters. Unlike many others, though, my initial reaction was not shock. I’ll admit that it was surreal seeing a place I have come to associate with afternoon naps and scenic sunsets swallowed by such violence, but it did not come as a major surprise to me.
College President Sian Leah Beilock coordinated with police to preemptively suppress a nonviolent student protest on May 1, all in the name of campus safety and free speech for all. Her authorization of riot police, armored cars and violent arrests threatens to usher in a new era of authoritarian leadership on campus that upends decades of precedent. The College’s leadership, including faculty, has traditionally viewed peaceful protest as an opportunity to educate as well as to practice and model restraint, even in the presence of encampments. Restraint and education are particularly important when the world is on fire.
Re: College President Apologizes for Community Harm