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.
(07/04/25 9:15am)
Last month, the Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association sent out an email to its mailing list of about 4,000 members disputing the College’s campus-wide email account of a May 28 sit-in at Parkhurst Hall. BADA raised a broader concern about a “steady erosion of trust within the Dartmouth community” and a “failure by the administration and trustees to engage in true community building.”
(07/04/25 8:15am)
Class is in 20 minutes, and the syllabus says to read a 40-page research paper, a chapter of a book or some crazy long piece of text. There’s no way the reading is going to get done in time for class. Life got in the way. Maybe you look up a summary, maybe ChatGPT it, then just let others do the heavy lifting in the class discussion. Or, you try to get some participation credit and say something vague as you try to read your professor’s poker face while wondering whether they can tell you haven’t read it.
(06/15/25 7:25am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/15/25 8:57am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/15/25 8:10am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/04/25 7:05am)
Dear Freak of the Week,
(06/03/25 5:56pm)
At a Palestine Solidarity Coalition rally today at noon, six students began a hunger strike. Most of the students were masked and unidentifiable.
(06/03/25 8:25am)
Based on the allegation that I was present at the Parkhurst sit-in on Wednesday, I have been placed on immediate suspension from the College. I am currently banned from all Dartmouth-owned or affiliated properties. I have been provided with no evidence proving my presence at the sit-in that occurred on Wednesday, and based on the communications I received from the College, this punishment is partly based on my previous advocacy for divestment.
(05/28/25 7:05am)
Freak of the Week,
(05/22/25 9:10am)
On May 20, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy, Dartmouth Civics and Dartmouth Dialogues held an event discussing journalism in the modern world with the crew of Civics 101, a New Hampshire Public Radio podcast focused on civic education and engagement.
(05/16/25 9:15am)
Almost exactly 250 years ago, as the sun rose on a late spring day, members of the fifth graduating class of Dartmouth College awoke to the sound of distant cannon fire. Eleazar Wheelock, the College’s founder and first president, noticed it too, writing in his diary and in letters to friends of the “noise of cannon” echoing through the valley.
(05/09/25 6:00am)
Sheng Wang is a standup comedian, writer and actor known for his laid-back style and sharp, observational humor. Born in Taipei and raised in Houston, Texas, he began his comedy career performing standup in San Francisco and New York City. From 2015 to 2018, Wang worked as a staff writer, executive story editor and actor for the hit show “Fresh Off The Boat.” In September 2022, he released a Netflix special titled “Sweet and Juicy,” which finds humor in everyday, relatable experiences. Since then, he has gained popularity, performing on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” and “John Oliver’s New York Stand Up.” The Dartmouth sat down with him before his upcoming tour, which he hopes to publish as another Netflix special. Wang will be performing on tour in Hampton, N.H. on May 16.
(05/08/25 8:10am)
Elan Kluger 26’s op-ed reveals his own myopic, naive misunderstanding of the relationship between work and purpose. Kluger misconstrues criticism leveled against aspiring financiers or consultants as defensiveness masking latent “careerism.” It’s a pity you’re a cynic, Kluger. Because you’re wrong: Some people are motivated by passion.
(05/08/25 9:10am)
Over a third of the faculty have signed an open letter urging College President Sian Leah Beilock to “defend the values” of higher education.
(05/07/25 7:10am)
This weekend, while the Dartmouth campus largely let loose in sandy, flower-strewn and muddy backyards, I took a flight back to Florida. My little brother decided to graduate from college in a hasty three years, while I took a gap year. Despite our two-year age difference, he graduated a month and two weeks before me.
(05/06/25 8:11am)
Re: Beilock says “reflection does not mean capitulation”
(05/01/25 8:05am)
Exactly one year after May 1, our campus remains deeply divided. Although many of us probably wish we could put the memories of what happened on the Green that day out of our heads, doing this would be a disservice to our campus community and dishonest to our values as an institution. It is in this spirit of open discourse that I approach this column, with appreciation for the delicacy of the situation, but a deep desire for my voice to be heard regardless of the repercussions.
(04/28/25 8:26pm)
A power outage swept Hanover from around 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. today. More than 4,600 people in the region were without power, according to WMUR.
(04/24/25 9:00am)
Former United States Institute for Peace Africa Programs director Susan Stigant and University of Maryland public policy professor Michael Woldemariam said the United States must continue to pay attention to the geopolitics of the Red Sea to maintain stability in the region and prevent a humanitarian crisis.
(04/18/25 11:13am)
Over spring break, the Rude Mechanicals –– Dartmouth’s student-run Shakespeare company –– performed “The Comedy of Errors” across the Upper Valley in their first ever tour. The group also ran workshops with seven middle and high schools in the Upper Valley and greater Vermont area.