Friday, May 30, 2003A look back at Peter CataldoSome of you may remember the anti-Semitic scrawlings from the fall of 1999 alleged to be the work of Peter Cataldo '00, who was evicted from his dorm room and thrown off campus.I have posted here (and, yes, this is in a readable font and everything!) an interview I conducted with Cataldo in 2000 that never saw the light of day because our editor at the time was afraid to pursue the story. TDR really screwed up on this one, and it's no consolation that everyone else did too. I still think it would be interesting to find out what really happened administratively (and w/r/t to the the racial threats, as well, though I doubt that will ever be fully solved) and why due process, which I realize the College isn't obliged to follow, got thrown out the window. And if anyone knows how all of this ended up (e.g., what Cataldo's up to now), please leave a comment. Update: Some readers left a few good comments, as well as a link to Cataldo's personal website; click the above link and scroll down to read them. For what it's worth, "Scooter" sums my position well: Cataldo had a lot of problem and maybe should have been on medical leave anyway, but that is no excuse for the way that the matter was handled by the College. Disciplinary procedures exist for a reason, and it appears that they were overlooked entirely in Cataldo's case. If it could be proven that Cataldo was indeed the author of the threats attributed to him, both criminal and disciplinary action would be entirely appropriate. But Cataldo was deemed guilty and practically expelled before that level of process could be reached. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 1:24 AM (0 comments) Thursday, May 29, 2003Re: Big Brother on the hill - Green TerrorThat's really an awful privacy violation.So, this is the bounty of GreenPrint? More printing than under the old Kiewit system, less convenience, and the perpetual threat of fees. Score one for the eco-nazis. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 9:07 PM (0 comments) Wednesday, May 28, 2003Big Brother on the hill - Green TerrorIt is important to note that more and more professors assign web based course readings in PDF format, thereby forcing many students of history, political science and the liberal arts in general to print on their "accounts" what used to be a departmental burden. It would be interesting to know if departments/profs are consciously taking note of this new way of shifting costs to the college level. In any event, this was sent to a friend of mine...she was number seventeen of the twenty-five in case you were wondering.
Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by JR at 2:51 PM (0 comments) Tuesday, May 27, 2003Jere Daniell, Man of DartmouthThere's a factually scant but nevertheless interesting article in today's D on Jere Daniell, a salty professor emeritus of history at the College. I took a class on colonial America with him way back when, and I always thought he was a very interesting man. Dartmouth educated himself, he's a real link to the Dickey era. Some may wince at this, but I think it's quite appealing. He always struck me as that flinty type of northern New Englander, probably liberal when it comes down to it, but certainly tethered -- liberal, that is, more out of generosity than out of ideology.Besides, who could quarrel with a man who advises, sagely: "Don't read The New York Times. I haven't bought a Sunday New York Times in 30 years, and I've thrived." Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Emmett at 3:44 PM (0 comments) Emmett M. Hogan, BMOCHere's a good article in The Daily Dartmouth on my speech yesterday. (Note the use of the word "adjudicatory" -- not "adjudicable," which, as I mentioned in my speech, is a non-existent word found only in the Student Handbook. Heh!) I would point out that FIRE has not enjoyed a victory in the courts against speech codes...yet. That will come in time. Also, alas, I did not say that the speech codes at UCLA and at Harvard University are "among the worst offenders." Indeed, they are -- sadly -- quite typical, and it is for that reason that I chose to give them as examples.Thanks to everyone who came; I was thrilled, especially, to see so many old faces. I hope that, if I didn't convince, at least I provoked. And isn't that what a liberal education is all about? Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Emmett at 3:10 PM (0 comments) Sunday, May 25, 2003More Shameless Self PromotionThis is reminder that I will be speaking on campus tomorrow, Monday May 26, at 4pm in Rocky 1. I will be addressing free speech in higher education, with a particular emphasis, naturally, on Dartmouth. I would be delighted if you could come; I promise it will be very interesting...Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Emmett at 11:28 AM (0 comments) |
Dartlog ToolsHanover NewsDartmouth LinksNota BeneArticles of note—culled from the Internet by TDR. Grim. How important is the libretto? 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. Dartmouth BlogsFavorites
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