Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(02/03/26 9:46am)
Since assuming office, President Donald Trump and his cabinet of curiosities have made it their mission to eliminate the government agencies that keep our nation afloat. One of the agencies caught in Trump’s crosshairs, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, has experienced mass layoffs, with 6,000 employees fired in 2025. The onslaught doesn’t stop there. DHS Secretary Kristi Noem has recently outlined a plan to cut the agency in half, reducing on-call recovery staff by 41% and surge staffing by 85%.
(02/03/26 9:31am)
The American Dream is the promise that this country is supposed to offer to every citizen. It is the promise of owning a home, obtaining a stable job and raising a family. However the reality is that the “American Dream” only works when there is an America that is on your side.
(02/03/26 10:20am)
On March 23, a new course selection system called “Courses @ Dartmouth” will debut, according to a presentation made during a Dartmouth Student Government meeting on Sunday.
(02/03/26 10:15am)
Since the start of the year, several academic initiatives have begun work on bringing Israeli scholars to campus. Dartmouth Kalaniyot has recently begun facilitating scientific research collaborations between the College and Israeli universities. Additionally, an anonymous donor is funding a new program that will bring visiting Israeli politics professors who are affiliated with Israeli universities to Dartmouth’s government department.
(02/03/26 10:00am)
Access to paid family and medical leave remains uneven in New Hampshire, despite the introduction of the New Hampshire Paid Family and Medical Leave program in 2023, according to a recent paper by sociology professor Kristin Smith titled “The New Hampshire Voluntary Paid Family and Medical Leave Program: Did the program increase coverage?” Smith’s paper finds that less than 3% of New Hampshire’s workforce has joined the program. As policymakers continue to debate the future of paid leave in the Granite State, The Dartmouth sat down with Smith to discuss her findings, the barriers limiting participation in the program and what paid leave reform could look like moving forward.
(02/02/26 6:05am)
Men’s hockey beat Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 3-1, on Saturday night, following a 4-2 victory over Union College on Jan. 30.
(02/02/26 7:09am)
Now that the Academy has released its ironclad grip on the Oscars contenders on Jan. 22, it is time to discuss Joachim Trier’s “Sentimental Value.” The staggering nine nominations — unprecedented for a Norwegian film — acknowledge the remarkable script and direction, stunning performances and tender yet gripping story. In short, “Sentimental Value” may be a perfect movie.
(02/02/26 10:00am)
Bernice King, daughter of Martin Luther King Jr., denounced distortions of her father’s legacy amidst the current political climate at the Martin Luther King Jr. Day keynote speech on Jan. 28.
(01/30/26 9:30am)
A glance at the “2028 Presidential Election” Wikipedia page reveals an interesting dynamic. It may seem premature to speculate on the outcome of an election more than two years away, but it does let the imaginations of the politically curious run wild. Wikipedia lists potential candidates from both parties and groups them into two camps: individuals who have expressed an interest in running and those whose candidacies have only been speculated about by the media.
(01/30/26 10:00am)
(02/02/26 7:14am)
From Jan. 15 to 18, the Hopkins Center for the Arts hosted illusionist and mentalist Scott Silven and presented his performance piece “Wonders” to sold-out audiences at the Daryl Roth Studio Theater. “Wonders” blends a standard magic act with theatrical composition in a way that provokes a unique sense of awe, inspiring not only intrigue about the world and its surroundings, but insight into yourself and those around you.
(01/30/26 6:04am)
Hot Take: Women’s basketball will break its five-game losing streak at home this Friday versus Brown University.
(01/30/26 6:09am)
Few players embody the spirit of Dartmouth football like captain and tight end Chris Corbo ’26. After a stellar career with the Big Green in which he notched 86 receptions, 912 yards and 13 touchdowns and earned a 2024 All-Ivy First Team selection, Corbo has transferred to the Georgia Institute of Technology to use his postgraduate eligibility to make plays for the Yellow Jackets in the competitive ACC.
(01/30/26 6:14am)
Despite glimmers of hope, Dartmouth men’s basketball fell 79-69 to the Columbia Lions on Jan. 24. The team is now tied for second in the Ivy League, along with Harvard and Princeton who share the same 3-2 conference record.
(01/30/26 10:00am)
Institute for Arctic Studies director Melody Brown Burkins will represent the United States at the “Science 7,” which is a global coalition of science academies that contributes expertise to G7 summits. The group is drafting a statement on Arctic policy issues in preparation for the G7 conference in June. The G7 is an intergovernmental organization comprising seven of the world’s largest industrialized countries.
(01/30/26 10:10am)
Buddy T’s Grill & Sports Bar — whose name pays tribute to the late Dartmouth football coach Buddy Teevens ’79 — opened at 7 Lebanon St. on Jan. 14. The restaurant replaces Dunk’s Sports Grill, which occupied the location for four years and closed on Sept. 28, 2025.
(01/30/26 10:20am)
In the past year, 13 New Hampshire police agencies, including Grafton County Sheriff’s Office, are cooperating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire.
(01/30/26 10:05am)
On Jan. 28, former Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan urged bipartisan cooperation and said students should “disagree agreeably” at a Rockefeller Center for Public Policy event.
(01/30/26 10:15am)
New Hampshire state legislators have proposed more than 1,140 bills in the first few weeks of the legislative year, covering issues from education policy to firearms regulation, according to the Concord Monitor.
(01/30/26 9:00am)
Admission to Dartmouth, or any top college or university, takes intelligence, diligence and ambition. But an invitation to attend Dartmouth is more than a reflection of those qualities. Every acceptance letter from Dartmouth is a bet. A bet on you and your potential to succeed, or, as the Admissions Office puts it, to “be extraordinary.”