The Dartmouth Review

Online Exclusives

TDR Interview: Todd Zywicki ’88

Monday, May 16, 2005

Trustee-elect Todd Zywicki ’88 tells The Dartmouth Review how he would reform Dartmouth’s academics, athletics, and social life to rebuild a new, more vibrant Dartmouth community.

TDR Interview: Peter Robinson ’79

Monday, May 16, 2005

Trustee-elect Peter Robinson ’79: When the president says that Dartmouth College is a research university in all but name...that is simply a misunderstanding of the College’s strengths and heritage.

The Lone Pine Revolution

Saturday, May 14, 2005

The election of Hoover Institution fellow Peter Robinson and George Mason University law professor Todd Zywicki to Dartmouth College’s Board of Trustees, announced Thursday, is perhaps the most significant event in the institution’s recent history.

Issue Cover

Friday, May 13, 2005
Volume 25, Issue 13

Red Light, Green* Light

In what the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) has called “a remarkable development for liberty on campus,” Dartmouth has cleared up the mystery surrounding the College’s speech code.

At Last, A More Sensible Alcohol Policy

According to the new alcohol regulations that will go into effect during the fall of 2005, there will be three tiers of social events, based on what committee member Robert Freiman ‘05 called “a continuum of manageability.”

The Well-Intentioned vs. Genocide

The most committed students at Dartmouth, convinced that they can “make a difference” by giving up cigarettes or through another futile gesture, have less time to commit their energies where they are most needed.

Babes in Boyland: When Women Were Co-Hogs

Gina’s story is of the off-the-rack variety. If the story sounds familiar, that’s because it could vaguely describe Prep or a host of other writings.

TDR Interview: Colin Campbell

Retired economics professor Colin Campbell discusses changes to the College, politics in the classroom and more.

A Brief History of Green Key Weekend

The classic Review history of Greek Key week-end, required reading for any socially-literate or historically-conscious Dartmouth student.

Neff’s So Dartmouth

Dartmouth, widely regarded as the most Old School of the Ivy League, has become undeniably New School. The egotism and self-absorption of this ethos have come to pervade campus life.

Lacrosse Makes Crimson See Red

The Indians captured the Ivy League Championship with a 10-7 victory over Harvard.

Barrett’s Mixology

Bourbon and Ice: 3 oz. bourbon whiskey; Ice cubes

The Last Word

I like the moment when I break a man’s ego.
—Bobby Fischer

Editorial

Permissible, Not Beneficial

While we certainly applaud the administration’s action, the next—and only—logical step is for President Wright and Dean Larimore to repudiate their 2001 letters.

The Man Behind the Curtain

What has the SLI, wrought? Greek culture is still substantively the same, but it has been driven underground. There, it is all the harder for the administration to exert any control over events until they boil over and re-enter the public eye.

The Week in Review

The Week in Review

Gays Protest Health

Green Key Schedule

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