Wednesday, September 03, 2003Educational sanctionsTwo gems from the new ORL booklet. First, Cutter Shabazz's official title is "The Shabazz Center for Intellectual Inquiry," which may be common knowledge.Second, and a bit disturbing, one of the possible sanctions for breaking ORL's rules: "Educational sanctions may be imposed for students who would benefit from further learning about their behavior or from a project that allows them to contribute positively to their community. Examples of such sanctions include: community service, organizing a program, doing a survey, attending a presentation, and similar projects." Wow... Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Alston B. Ramsay at 10:44 PM (0 comments) Tuesday, September 02, 2003UMich back to raceI wonder how much of a difference this question makes in admissions...Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 1:25 PM (0 comments) Monday, September 01, 2003Don't expect on-campus recruiting for these gigsThe San Diego Chicken mascot makes $300,000/year??That and other neato jobs here Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by alex at 12:52 PM (0 comments) Now this would be a gutIn Britain, a ridiculous Shakespeare exam for 14-year-olds:Here Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by alex at 12:23 PM (0 comments) Sunday, August 31, 2003So much for Dean's populism getting more people involvedKey facts from an article-1- Two-thirds of Democrats still can't name one of the candidates in the field for President. 2- Somehow, 40% of Democrats are satisfied with the field, which means that at least 7% of Democrats are happy about the field despite not knowing who any of these people are. 3- Half of all Democrats wanted more choices despite the fact that most of them likely do not know who their choices are. Are they all pining for Hillary or something? 4- Howard Dean isn't doing nearly as well overall as polls in the early states suggest, though at least he's not John Kerry, who's stuck back there with Al Sharpton. 5- So far, Howard Dean has failed as a populist candidate because he hasn't gotten more people interested in the primaries. My big question is how 53% of Democrats have decided who they support in the primaries when twenty percent less of them can actually name one of the candidates. Does the caller just read off a bunch of names after the respondent has already answsered the question about being able to name a candidate, and then the respondent decides based on who has the prettiest name? Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by John Kalb at 4:23 PM (0 comments) |
Dartlog ToolsHanover NewsDartmouth LinksNota BeneArticles of note—culled from the Internet by TDR. 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. Now you, too, can be Facebook friends with the new Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. Chris Matthews wants to know what Neville Chamberlain did in '38. Glum optimism. Dartmouth BlogsFavorites
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