Thursday, July 11, 2002We're #1Dartmouth's Stephen Brooks and William Wohlforth in Foreign Affairs: "If today's American primacy does not constitute unipolarity, then nothing ever will. The only things left for dispute are how long it will last and what the implications are for American foreign policy." Full text here.Also: Dartmouth's Rajesh Aggerwall on Bush's compensation from Harken: below-prime loans "are not unique, but are by no means widespread." From the Washington Post. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 2:30 PM Comments Post a Comment (we enforce our comments policy) |
Dartlog ToolsHanover NewsDartmouth LinksNota BeneArticles of note—culled from the Internet by TDR. Nothing thrills a classical music crowd more than a new piece of music that doesn't make them physically ill. "Irony, it turns out, does cross the Hudson River." You don't say. Child rape, pt. II. Moral Hypocrisy What's worse: killing someone, or raping a child? Did Aristotle steal his works from the Egyptians? A theory rebutted. Dartmouth BlogsFavorites
Advertisement |
|
Copyright © 1996-2008 The Dartmouth Review |
|