Februrary 2, 2001
Volume CXXXII, Number 14

 










 

John Ashcroft: a civil rights liability
By Alex Rosati '03

   The introduction to Erik Sprague's article gave me the impression that I was about to read a flippant, uninformed piece. I was not disappointed. Equating the election to a game of Command and Conquer is silly, as the battlefield Sprague refers to was actually states' electoral votes, which have nothing to do with the geographical area Sprague seems concerned with. To continue the juvenile analogy, one could point out that George Bush certainly didn't dominate if "troop numbers" (American voters) were counted, as Al Gore won the popular vote. Sheer numbers are sadly as useless in determining the presidency as square miles, however, as Bush had the advantage in the Electoral College. The College, of course, is a system designed more than two centuries ago as part of a racist ploy to grant more power to the southern slave owners. Allowed by the Three-Fifths Compromise to count their non-voting slaves as fractional people in determining their states' representation, bigots scored a victory. On the topic of bigots, I would now like to shed some light on Attorney General Designee John Ashcroft.

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Further response to Ashcroft
By Homa Mojtabai '01

   I am writing in response to the column written by Erik Sprague, "Ashcroft is A-OK with this guy", that appeared in last week's issue of the Bowdoin Orient. The article struck me as bizarre not so much for Mr. Sprague's support of John Ashcroft but rather for the irresponsible way in which facts were presented in the article without being backed up by concrete sources. I understand that it was an opinion piece, however I do not find this reason enough to make sweeping statements without bothering to investigate their truth.

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Thanksgiving proposal
By Eric Diamon '03 - Student Executive Board

  We are writing this letter to inform students, staff, and faculty about a calendar issue that affects us all. The Thanksgiving Break for Bowdoin College begins each year after classes on Wednesday, leaving students with several difficult options. Students are forced either to travel on one of the busiest travel days of the year, skip classes and leave campus early, or simply to stay on campus for break. Many faculty recognize this inherent difficulty and cancel their Wednesday class well in advance. Others do so on the day of class because of poor student attendance.

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Mr. Gott, I disagree wholeheartedly

Response to online photo editorial