The Dartmouth Review The Dartmouth Review The Dartmouth Review 25th Anniversary Gala

Monday, August 16, 1999

Hula No More: Lu'au Called Racist

Alpha Chi Alpha Fraternity and Delta Delta Delta Sorority are racist and ignorant, some students are saying, because of a social event they planned for last weekend.

Students Object, The CFSC Rolls Over

The CFSC discusses and responds to AXA's and Tri-Delt's Luau party: "At this point, I do not know what else to say."

Policing Thought Crimes on Campus

When it's all over Dartmouth will have an entire freshman class without a single difference of opinion on racial, ethnic, and religious issues.

Alan Keyes on Liberty and Morality

M. Ryan Clark interviews former Ambassador Alan Keyes.

The Final Descent: Hemingway's Last Years

In the vestibule of his home in Ketchum, Idaho, at 7:30 AM on July 2, 1961, two shot-gun blast ended the life of Ernest Hemingway. He was 61, physically and mentally shattered, and looked and acted 90. Reynolds tells the familiar story in enormous detail, much of it new.

'The Body' Writes a 'Book'

Bradford Stanley reviews Jesse Ventura's I Ain't Got Time to Bleed.

A Sculler and a Gentleman

Dartmouth's freshman heavyweight crew coach Will Scoggins, coach of several Olympians and national title-holders, called Steve Simmerman the man he has most underrated in his entire career.

Editorial

Chilling Free Expression

The lu'au was harmless fun. Most students, understandably, dismissed the allegations of prejudice as frivolous, the latest example of a small group of students looking for racism where it wasn't.

The Week in Review

Week in Review

Subscribe To the Dartmouth Review