paul@phs.UUCP (Paul C. Dolber) (10/29/84)
There are two NR articles which may be of interest to those following the Dartmouth Review business: 1. Fossedal, G.A. and D. D'Souza. 1981. Dartmouth's Restoration. National Review 33:1071-1097 (Sept. 18, 1981). [It's really not that long; many hops, skips, jumps, and advertisers.] Fossedal was the first editor of the DR; D'Souza was editor at the time of this NR article. Interesting reading. 2. Marcus, P.N. 1983. "Right On" on the campuses. National Review 35:1200-1201 (Sept. 30, 1983). Marcus is, or was at the time of the article, president of the Institute for Educational Affairs. Regards, Paul Dolber @ DUMC (...duke!phs!paul). PS: If you dig up the Sept. 30, 1983 NR, don't miss "But can Juanito really read?", p. 1196. It deals with the manner in which illiteracy is eradicated in new Communist regimes [oops! new regimes which, in the opinion of the author of the piece, are Communist regimes! wouldn't want to ruffle any feathers!]. Examples: According to C. Dickey of the Washington Post, re: Nicaragua: "Now Alvarado can sign his name and sound out such sentences in the basic government-supplied primer as 'The violin is new' and 'The guerrillas vanquished the genocidal National Guard.'" According to the New York Times (1961), re: Cuba: "Instead of 'a' for apple, the primer has 'a' for 'agrarian reform.' The 'c' stands for 'cooperatives of the peasants.'"