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Topic: The Dartmouth Review


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
  Dartmouth rallies for minority students - Boston.com
More than 500 Dartmouth College students, faculty and administrators rallied in support of the college's American Indian community Wednesday, a day after The Dartmouth Review published a picture of an Indian warrior brandishing a scalp with the headline, "The Natives are Getting Restless!" on Page One.
The Dartmouth Review, an independent conservative student newspaper, is not affiliated with the college and has an adversarial history with minorities.
The Review also criticized the college's apology for the scheduling of a Dec. 29 hockey game against the University of North Dakota's "Fighting Sioux," a move that drew fire from that state's governor, a 1979 Dartmouth alum.
www.boston.com /news/local/new_hampshire/articles/2006/11/29/dartmouth_rallies_for_minority_students   (912 words)

  
  The Dartmouth Review - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Dartmouth Review is a conservative, independent, bi-weekly newspaper at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire (U.S. Founded in 1980 by disenchanted staffers from the college's daily newspaper —The Dartmouth— it spawned a movement of similar right-wing independent newspapers on college campuses, and has been at the center of several lawsuits.
The newspaper continues to refer to Dartmouth's sports teams as the "Indians," the traditional school mascot that was officially discarded in the early 1970s.
Early in the 1990s, the Review was accused of anti-Semitism for the appearance of a quote from Mein Kampf in its masthead in place of the usual quote from Teddy Roosevelt.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Dartmouth_Review   (577 words)

  
 [No title]
The Dartmouth Review was begun in 1980, inspired by the prospect of a Reagan administration in Washington and the victory in a Dartmouth trustee election by conservative Dr. John Steel.
Officials at Dartmouth could not do much about the electing of Ronald Reagan, but they were outraged by the electing of Steel and proceeded to make such untoward events difficult, if not impossible, in the future.
Early on, The Dartmouth Review studied voter-registration rolls in Hanover and surrounding New Hampshire towns and discovered that of those registered Dartmouth faculty members, they were 92 percent Democrats.
www.adti.net /new_zuberi_uploaded/MISC/news_jhart101300.html   (823 words)

  
 Dartmouth, George Legge, Baron Dartmouth - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Dartmouth, George Legge, Baron ...
James II commanded him to prevent the landing of William (III) of Orange, but he took no action and later swore allegiance to William and Mary.
He was the eldest son of William Legge, Earl of Dartmouth (c.
This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Dartmouth,+George+Legge,+Baron+Dartmouth   (140 words)

  
 The Dartmouth Online
Dartmouth is unique among American universities in that the alumni have the power to elect half the members of the Board of Trustees.
As such, the most important function of any alumni governance body at Dartmouth is to ensure that the selection of these trustees occurs in a fair, transparent manner in which anyone can run and every alumnus has an equal say.
The Board of Trustees and alumni governance bodies are currently being used as a battleground for groups of all factions trying to impose their own vision of Dartmouth upon Dartmouth today, regardless of whether or not it is in the best interest of the undergraduate population.
www.thedartmouth.com /article.php?aid=2006053102010   (1008 words)

  
 The Dartmouth Free Press : The Dartmouth Review: 2002-Present
Taking a naïve and credulous view of The Review’s activities and positions since 2002 might give one the opinion that it has led the fight against a progressive administration, but the reality is that The Review has become less a news-maker and more of a news-follower.
The Review is not necessarily a great resource for Dartmouth news, but at least it has toned down its narcissistic desire to be the news.
In the April 7, 2006 issue, the Week in Review writer ecstatically reports that now men are being given preferential treatment in college admissions and, in an attempt at comedy (I hope), proclaims “a bright new chapter in which white men will be raised to the level of their female and minority peers.
www.dartmouth.edu /~thepress/read.php?id=1226   (595 words)

  
 FrontPage magazine.com :: The Dartmouth Review Pleads Innocent by Jamie Glazov
The majority of the Review’s funding continues to arrive in the form of regular small donations from thousands of alumni, who view their contribution as a form of protest against administrative molestation and the misuse of the College Fund.
Created on the model of The Dartmouth Review, with some notable exceptions, most of these conservative student newspapers survive solely through small grants from the Collegiate Network and handouts from the same institutions they are there to shake up.
These days the Review is in fact doing what it was up to in its very first issue: reporting on conservative petition candidates for the Dartmouth Board of Trustees, and staring down the barrel of an “alumni constitution” that would gerrymander trustee elections in favor of approved liberal candidates.
www.frontpagemag.com /Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=23423   (2379 words)

  
 The Volokh Conspiracy - The Dartmouth Review Celebrates 25 Years:   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The Dartmouth Review celebrates its 25th Anniversary this year and to honor the occastion, ISI Books will be publishing an edition of the Review's greatest hits.
Dartmouth is probably the most apolitical Ivy (competing with Cornell and Penn for the title).
Tuition with room and board at Dartmouth currently stands at $41,355 per year, or $165,420 for four years assuming the school ceases its practice of raising that amount by approximately 5% each year (and ignoring the cost of books, entertainment, and summertime).
volokh.com /posts/1132350312.shtml   (1041 words)

  
 The Dartmouth Free Press : Into the Shadows
The Dartmouth Review probably could not have survived without the national publicity it received by claiming Dartmouth was trying to silence its conservative voice.
While alumni on the Review’s board had said there was evidence that an outsider was at fault, the Anti-Defamation League’s investigation found that the Hitler quote matched one from a frequently used quote book in the Review’s office and concluded that someone on the Review staff had definitely inserted the quote.
Review defenders will claim the publication is not racist; however, they certainly treat claims to accommodate difference in a grossly offensive manner, suggesting outright hostility to reasonable arguments from minority groups and others whom they clearly do not like.
www.dartmouth.edu /~thepress/read.php?id=1225   (2615 words)

  
 Review - Dartmouth College
In 1819, Dartmouth College was the subject of the historic Dartmouth College case, in which the State of New Hampshire attempted to amend the College's royal charter to make the school a public university.
Dartmouth's motto is Vox Clamantis in Deserto, "The voice of one crying out in the wilderness" (a reference to John the Baptist as well as to the college's location on what was once the frontier of European settlement).
Dartmouth is governed by its private Trustees, which include the college President, the state Governor, seven (Charter) trustees nominated by the board itself, and seven (Alumni) trustees selected by the Association of Alumni of Dartmouth College, a body created in 1854 representing over 60,000 alumni.
forum.ooen.net /viewtopic.php?t=488   (684 words)

  
 The Harvard Crimson :: News :: Reagan Note Boosts Dartmouth Review
The Dartmouth Review, a fledgling student weekly embroiled in controversy with Dartmouth College over its name and conservative editorial bent, has released a letter from President Reagan lauding its editors for their "fine efforts" on an "impressive paper."
Dartmouth administrators have criticized the Review's reporting and editorial policy, and are refusing to provide the paper with university information until its editors drop "Dartmouth" from the paper's name.
The Review stands in the mainstream of student and alumni opinion, D'Souza said, adding that its founding last spring filled a gap left by the "editorially biased" Dartmouth, the college's daily newspaper.
www.thecrimson.com /article.aspx?ref=92197   (393 words)

  
 Salon Ivory Tower | The luau wars
Ten months and several protests later, Dartmouth is still trying to live down the now-infamous "ghetto party" with promises of greater cultural sensitivity and more aggressive outreach programs.
This was, after all, Dartmouth, the inspiration for the film "Animal House" -- a campus where stories of fraternity brothers receiving oral sex from dogs and fondling a fellow pledge dressed as a bloody, post-mastectomy woman have become an integral part of Greek lore.
Following Dartmouth president James Wright's announcement last February of plans to reform the Greek system -- a plan which includes making all the houses coed -- many houses on campus are doing everything in their power to avoid anything that smells even remotely of trouble.
www.salon.com /books/it/1999/11/01/luau/print.html   (1737 words)

  
 Salon Letters | Letters to the editor   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The Dartmouth Review should never be represented as the voice of Dartmouth, or for that matter, the voice of reason.
The Review is a small independent group of students with a very conservative agenda.
I graduated from Dartmouth in June 1999, was present during the uproar that followed announcement of this party and was involved in many discussions centering around the "luau" party.
archive.salon.com /letters/1999/11/08/luau?pn=3   (967 words)

  
 College Review: Dartmouth University
Dartmouth's 200-acre campus is beautiful and fits in perfectly with its surroundings.
One interesting aspect of the college is the Dartmouth Plan (commonly referred to as the D-Plan), which divides the year into four quarters, including a summer term.
Dartmouth strongly encourages students to take advantage of the flexibility of the D-Plan and study off campus for a term or two, with one possible disadvantage is that students must spend the summer after their sophomore year on campus.
www.teenink.com /Past/1992/3011.html   (812 words)

  
 Rodkey and the Lampoon   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Their mission: to distribute a look-alike takeoff of the Review titled "Spring Fashion Issue," featuring photos of Adolf Hitler posing in the woods in preppy garb and articles mimicking the conservative themes, the personal attacks and the inflammatory style for which the Review has become known.
Inside the parody issue, the Dartmouth president, James Freedman, is assailed as a "poo-poo head," the Democratic Party is characterized as the party of the elderly kept alive by "Medicaire," and fictitious editorial writers apologize for publishing passages of "Mein Kampf" but hail its "rhetorical flair unsurpassed in German literature since Nietzsche."
Kenneth Weissman, the Review's editor in chief, then asked the Dartmouth administration to condemn the parody for its play on fascist themes, a request that was denied because Harvard, not Dartmouth students, were the instigators, said Alex Huppe, a Dartmouth spokesman.
home.hawaii.rr.com /snlcn/franken/lampoon.html   (598 words)

  
 Dartmouth Rallies for Minority Students
The Dartmouth Review, an independent conservative student newspaper, is not affiliated with the Ivy League college and has had a sometimes adversarial relationship with minority students.
Dartmouth, founded in 1769 as a school for American Indians, graduated fewer than 20 American Indians during its first 200 years, the same time its catalog of Indian mascots -- featured on canes, sports uniforms, even songs and art depicting natives lapping rum -- increased.
The publication Tuesday of the Review, with its inflammatory cover art and several articles mocking American Indian students and the college, sparked the latest round of campus soul-searching.
www.softcom.net /webnews/wed/af/Adartmouth-native-americans.R4UX_GNU.html   (664 words)

  
 FindLaw - Agreement - Dartmouth College and DrKoop.com Inc.
Not less than 30 days before the annual anniversary date of this Agreement, Dartmouth and DKC shall agree on a "Schedule A" for the upcoming year of the Agreement, setting forth the Dartmouth Content to be provided during such year and the schedule for its delivery.
Dartmouth will adhere to these guidelines unless they are changed by mutual consent.
Dartmouth shall grant no other licenses to use the Deliverable Content, and the license shall be exclusive except that Dartmouth shall retain for itself and its academic affiliates the right to use the Deliverable Content in connection with non-commercial academic, patient care, and research activities.
contracts.corporate.findlaw.com /agreements/drkoop/dartmouthcontentagree.html   (2935 words)

  
 The Dartmouth Online
At the College, campus publications including the Dartmouth Free Press and the Dartmouth Review both printed copies of the cartoons in recent issues.
While the Dartmouth Review is an independent entity, the Dartmouth Free Press is funded by the Committee on Student Organizations, a group that receives its funding from mandatory student activities fees.
Unlike at Dartmouth, the cartoons sparked a round of protests at the University of Illinois, which caused the paper's board of directors to suspend Editor-in-Chief Acton Gorton and Opinion Editor Chuck Prochaska Tuesday afternoon.
www.thedartmouth.com /article.php?aid=2006021701010   (678 words)

  
 The Social Affairs Unit - Web Review: The history of the Dartmouth Review has confirmed Christie Davies in his ...
The Dartmouth Review pleads Innocent is the inspiring story of a conservative student journal that took on the oppressive left-liberal administration at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, an American Ivy League University founded in 1769, and won.
The Dartmouth administration got their biggest slap in the face in the twenty first century, when they failed to strip the alumni of their governance rights and then saw their "official" candidates lose elections to the board of trustees to outsider candidates, who actually believed in education and in liberty.
James O. Freedman, President of Dartmouth 1987-1998, the man who did most to persecute the Dartmouth Review, must be watching in fury as his false teeth grind together in their glass of water beside his bed.
www.socialaffairsunit.org.uk /blog/archives/001403.php   (2406 words)

  
 ARMAVIRUMQUE: THE NEW CRITERION'S WEBLOG
The book's working title is "The Dartmouth Review Pleads Innocent: Twenty Five Years of Being Threatened, Impugned, Vandalized, Sued, Suspended, and Bitten at the Ivy League's Most Controversial Conservative Newspaper." The book records an important recent chapter in the history of the American conservative movement, written by the generation of conservative writers who lived it.
The formation of The Dartmouth Review sparked a renewal of the acrimony in the fall of 1980.
The name of this publication is The Dartmouth Review, not The Review." The ribbing between Fossedal and Green's Committee continued right into the new year, culminating in The Dartmouth Review's CCSC issue several days before Fossedal's public trial.
www.newcriterion.com /weblog/2005/11/dartmouth-review-pleads-innocent.html   (1536 words)

  
 Christianize Dartmouth? National Review - Find Articles
I was both pleased and grateful when Dartmouth's Hillel group last week voted to co-sponsor my appearance tonight, and honored that the Roth Center has planned a reception for me after my talk.
I had written that in seeking to amend past injustices to Jewish students, Dartmouth ought not to feel any need to forswear its own traditional mission, which is (was?), to use the freighted word I so innocently used a few weeks ago, to Christianize its students.
Sure, one correspondent observed, it is true that as recently as in 1946 Dartmouth President Ernest Martin Hopkins reiterated his understanding that the continuing obligation of Dartmouth was to encourage Christian (Protestant) belief in its students.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m1282/is_n5_v50/ai_20443610   (760 words)

  
 Fartlog: 04/01/2005 - 04/30/2005   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
We at Fartlog and The Dartmouth Revue firmly oppose the demolition of the River Cluster.
Review was, and remains, the most literate of Dartmouth's publications." Apparently, he is not aware of the glaring typo that was featured in its latest issue.
Please purchase a REAL Dartmouth sweatshirt here and help Fartlog finally complete the humilation and subjugation of the savage native races of America, while at the same time pretending that the liberalist conception of property that we hold dear can somehow be reconciled with the fact that all of our land is stolen.
fartlog.blogspot.com /2005_04_01_fartlog_archive.html   (7540 words)

  
 The Dartmouth Review: Interview with a Cannibal
Dartmouth Review President Kevin Hudak '07 sat down to lunch recently with Mark Nuckols Tu '06, who claims to be the founder and CEO of Hufu, Inc., a new company that will market tofu designed to look and taste like human flesh.
TDR: One would think it would be tough to market a food that is designed to taste like human flesh.
Dartmouth College could be a very treacherous place were cannibalism permitted.
dartreview.com /archives/2005/05/09/interview_with_a_cannibal.php   (1230 words)

  
 Dartmouth Review Offers Peace Pipe -- It's Fine, We're All Friends Now - IvyGate, the Ivy League blog
The editors of the Dartmouth Review posted letters today apologizing for their recent cover depicting a scalp-wielding Native American.
In one letter, Editor-in-Chief Daniel Linsalata '07 says the cover was meant to be "hyperbolic, tongue-in-cheek commentary" directed at the Dartmouth Native American community's leadership, not the community itself.
he (and the review) likes to inflame and excite, and doesn't really care what the consequences are, least of all other people's feelings.
www.ivygateblog.com /blog/2006/12/dartmouth_review_offers_peace_pipe_its_fine_theyre_all_friends_now.html   (664 words)

  
 At least the Review is honest
The Review is most famous for what has frequently been referred to as its "shock tactics." In 1982, the newspaper ran a column in "fl English" titled "Dis Sho' Ain't No Jive, Bro," which insinuated illiteracy on the part of fl students.
I went around for nearly a week feeling generally content with the thought that in comparison to Dartmouth, MIT is a liberal, open-minded, non-discriminatory community.
And this, according to my friend, is the real atrocity -- this state of "forgetting." At Dartmouth everyone is racially aware, people constantly discuss minority issues, minorities know the source from which most of the racism stems and students openly discuss how to combat the discrimination.
www-tech.mit.edu /Issue/V110/N39/stone.39o.html   (848 words)

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