Check this out and compare W&M to Dartmouth which is the home of a racist, conservative newspaper that is famous for its anti-black screeds:
Welcome · William & Mary Multicultural Student FAQs 1. What kind of students will I find at William and Mary?
At William and Mary you will find a collection of bright, curious minds coming from very different walks of life with their own set of values and beliefs. Our undergraduate student body is 18% students of color; our students hail from 48 states and 51 foreign countries; and each student carries with them a wealth of unique experiences and a strong sense of determination to make real their dreams.
2. What do students do on campus for fun?
Never judge a book by its cover. At William and Mary, students work hard, but they play hard ,as well. Of course there are parties, but there are lots of other social outlets on campus: Tribe football and basketball games are popular, newly released movies are often brought for campus showings, open mic nights, karaoke, performances by student organizations, and there are a number of interesting exhibits in our campus art museum, the Muscarelle. A few of our bigger annual events include a back to class cookout, Homecoming Step Show, and a Fall Formal. Williamsburg is also known for its amazing restaurants, great outlet shopping, and of course Busch Gardens. All that said, take a look beyond the cover and come and see us for yourself.
(for information on Campus Visits click here)
3. What is it like to be a student of color on campus?
College, of course, is what you make of it; but when college is "home away from home", it is important that your environment be supportive of both personal and academic/professional ambitions. And, it is our goal to provide precisely that kind of environment. You may not find all of the conveniences of home (particularly the savory homecooked meal), but you will find a close knit multicultural community that contributes a great deal to making William and Mary a phenomenal institution. Our Office of Student Affairs works diligently to promote cross-cultural awareness on campus and to create an environment supportive of diversity of all kinds
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And Dartmouth:<<
http://mediamatters.org/items/200406080008>>"Distort D'Newsa" now a CNN analyst
Controversial right-wing pundit and author Dinesh D'Souza has a new title
-- "CNN analyst." On June 5, during coverage of former President RonaldReagan's death, D'Souza (known by some as "Distort D'Newsa," according to1985 and 1991 articles in The Washington Post) appeared on a CNN breakingnews segment; on June 6, D'Souza appeared on three CNN programs: LouDobbs Tonight, American Morning, and Anderson Cooper 360. On the lattertwo programs, the anchors -- Soledad O'Brien and Anderson Cooper,respectively -- identified D'Souza as a "CNN analyst."
As an undergraduate in the early 1980s at Dartmouth College, D'Souza
gained national notoriety as co-founder and editor of the conservative
newspaper The Dartmouth Review. During D'Souza's tenure as editor of theReview, according to a September 22, 1995, article in The WashingtonPost, "
he off-campus newspaper published aninterview with a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan, using a mockphotograph of a black man hanging from a campus tree, and 'outed' atleast two gay student."
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