

Copyright©2001
The Hanover Review, Inc.
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Editorial:
Don't Touch the Bonfire
The Week in
Review
Lest
the Old Traditions Fail
by Alston Ramsay
A tradition
lives. Two Dartmouth students rushed the football field at the
Homecoming game on Saturday.
Sex
Rules?
by James S.C. Baehr
Students were
disgusted, offended, and embarrassed, and the administration says the
event was meant to be educational. Though the College has experimented
with different types of sex education programs recently, this year’s
has been the most controversial.
Homecoming:
A Sober Perspective
by Bruce Gago
The towering inferno,
the screaming of alumni and upperclassmen, wild freshmen touching the
flames—the atmosphere left many afterwards with a driving desire to
party, dance, and socialize. Homecoming night was fantastic, and I
thought about what I could do afterwards. It would be a fun night.
A
Traditional Education, Online?
by Alexander Talcott
In an April 2000 application to the
State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, Richard Bishirjian
stated, "The vision of YorktownUniversity.com is to establish a
presence on the Internet for scholarship on free enterprise, market
economics and the history and philosophy of education, religion, and
culture."
THE VIEW FROM
DARTMOUTH:
Sports: Columbia
Hands Indians Homecoming Loss
by Joseph S. Marucheck
BOOKS, MUSIC, AND
HUNTING:
An Odd Trip to the Market by Darren Thomas
On Romantic Comedy
and Drug Abuse by Stefan Beck
Tracking the
Pheasant by T. Henry Camp


by Gordon Haff
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Far better it is to dare mighty
things, to win great triumphs, even though
checkered by failure, than to rank with those
poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer
much, because they live in the gray twilight that
knows neither victory nor defeat.
Theodore
Roosevelt
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