December 12, 2022 Editor’s Note: The following article has been edited to reflect two errors that have come to The Dartmouth Review’s attention. First, we have edited the names of example Intellectual ...
Editor’s Note: Christina Hoff Sommers is a well-known former philosophy professor and resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. She is the author of several books including Who Stole ...
What if a text that some consider to present the Word of God was actually written by a Dartmouth student? The Book of Mormon is seen as a holy text by the Latter Day Saint movement, a collection of ...
Despite their high GPAs and “impressive” participation in many face-timey organizations, Alpha Chis are truly identifiable by their concerningly obvious desperation to be A-side. They are also known ...
Looking out over our shaken campus today, it’s uncanny to recall the one short week that brought us to this point. Over five years of political and racial passions bubbling through our generation look ...
Photo courtesy of the American Institute for Economic Research. The following is an interview between Senior Correspondent of The Review Jonathan G. Nicastro (TDR) and Phillip W. Magness (PWM), ...
Twenty years ago, tragedy struck the Dartmouth community. The violent actions of two local teenagers left many around Dartmouth grieving their losses and fearing for their safety. Since the founding ...
AF: I am a recent conservative and I wasn’t really following politics while I was in college that much and this past election really woke me up. I think that was the case for a lot of people that ...
On Thursday, the Trustees of Dartmouth College were sued for $70 million by seven former and current students (including an ’18 who graduated this past Spring) in the Psychology and Brain Sciences ...
Editor’s note: On Wednesday, October 4, Editor-in-Chief Matthew O. Skrod (TDR) interviewed the acclaimed film critic and historian David Thomson (DT) about his career and his time at Dartmouth, as a ...
When studying history, it is all too easy to think that the course of human events was inevitable. From geography in Jared Diamond’s Guns, Germs, and Steel to minute institutional differences in ...
The first reported game of pong was played in the mid-1950s. However, it was a niche social activity reserved only for certain fraternities that didn’t gain mainstream popularity until the early ’70s.
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