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.
(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.
(01/29/26 10:30am)
The College approached a student to promote Evergreen.AI — the College’s wellness artificial intelligence project — in an op-ed in The Dartmouth and edited the article before submission to the paper.
(01/29/26 10:00am)
Dartmouth Student Government student wellness programs are progressing this term with the installation of treadmills in the library and a textbook sharing program, senators said during Sunday’s DSG meeting.
(01/27/26 10:05am)
On Friday evening, about 85 Dartmouth students and community members gathered for a candlelight vigil mourning Renée Nicole Good.
(01/29/26 10:05am)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm and gubernatorial elections, the paper is launching a new interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth,” featuring in-depth conversations with major national and statewide candidates in New Hampshire.
(01/27/26 10:10am)
With Super Bowl LX around the corner, students and faculty members have mixed reactions to the growing influence of sports gambling apps on professional sports and campus culture.
(01/27/26 10:00am)
In a lecture on Jan. 22, Davidson College sociology professor Oscar Cornejo Casares ’17 spoke about the experiences of undocumented immigrants and argued that the formerly undocumented face continued social consequences after gaining legal status.
(01/26/26 10:00am)
Hanover businesses have reported slower business and reduced services due to a nationwide snowstorm, which is expected to bring 12 to 18 inches of snow to New Hampshire, according to the New York Times. Bernice A. Ray Elementary School, Frances C. Richmond Middle School and Hanover High School will be closed on Jan. 26 due to the storm, according to WMUR.
(01/23/26 10:00am)
On Jan. 15, Laxman Bist ’23, Bryanna Entwistle ’23 and Josué Godeme ’26 were named Dartmouth’s 13th, 14th and 15th Schwarzman Scholars. They will receive full scholarships to participate in a one-year master’s program in global affairs at Tsinghua University’s Schwarzman College in Beijing, China.
(01/23/26 10:10am)
Jan. 5 marked the 250th anniversary of New Hampshire’s adoption of its first state constitution — the first of the 13 colonies to adopt a constitution and form an independent state government. In light of the anniversary, students, faculty members and state historians considered the state’s unique history, culture and political identity.
(01/29/26 10:10am)
Rep. Maggie Goodlander, D-N.H., is under investigation from the Department of Justice after appearing in a video that urged military personnel to “refuse illegal orders.” Goodlander appeared in the video alongside five other Democratic members of Congress who have all previously served in the military or intelligence community.
(01/22/26 10:10am)
On Jan. 20, following an American military operation that captured Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, the Dickey Center for International Understanding hosted a talk on energy security and the “future of Venezuela.”
(01/22/26 10:00am)
In recent weeks, Iranian citizens across the country have taken to the streets to protest against Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the Iranian regime. The protests, which began in late December, were sparked by an increase in inflation and the collapse of the Iranian rial. Ezzedine Fishere — a distinguished fellow of Middle Eastern studies — said that they reflect deeper systemic issues within the country.
(01/22/26 10:05am)
Over winter break, the College re-organized the atrium of the Zimmerman Fitness Center, the workout hub for non-varsity athletes. The changes — including new decor, moving workout machines and upgrading electrical capabilities — prompted mixed responses from students.
(01/22/26 10:15am)
South Main Street, running right through Hanover, is usually buzzing with pedestrian, car and bicycle traffic. Town officials say that parts of the street are aging and in need of an upgrade.
(01/23/26 10:05am)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm and gubernatorial elections, the paper is publishing an interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth,” featuring in-depth conversations with major national and statewide candidates in New Hampshire.
(01/20/26 10:05am)
Presidential historian Richard Norton Smith advised community members to be “optimistic about the future” at a Rockefeller Center for Public Policy event on Jan. 14.
(01/20/26 10:10am)
Former climate scientist Andi Lloyd ’89 returned to campus in October 2025 as co-pastor of the Church of Christ at Dartmouth College following a 25-year career as a biology professor at Middlebury College. Lloyd researched climate change in Alaska and Siberia before leaving Middlebury to study at Yale Divinity School and becoming ordained in the United Church of Christ in 2022. The Dartmouth sat down with Lloyd to reflect on her career path and the connections she sees between climate and theology.