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.
(01/28/26 7:55am)
Snow arrives on campus without regard for schedules or syllabi, slipping into the spaces students usually hurry through. Walkways narrow, buildings recede and the familiar becomes briefly unfamiliar. Between one class and the next, time stretches just enough to notice breath in the air, light in windows and the sound of footsteps softened by snow. These photographs linger in that in-between moment, where movement continues, but urgency fades, and the campus learns to move at winter’s pace.
(01/28/26 8:19am)
I often make comparisons when I travel. What’s different and what’s similar in ways of living a life? Since I’ve been living in the United States for about two years now, as I study at Dartmouth, it’s often easy to ignore how capitalism really emerged and subtly became an accepted way of life for me.
(01/28/26 8:00am)
What a storm! This weekend, I felt nostalgic for the New England winters of my childhood, watching the steady snowfall blanketing Hanover’s streets. As much as stomping across campus for my 10 a.m. class sucked on Monday, I could never hate the magical feeling of fresh, sparkling snow.
(01/28/26 8:10am)
Dear FOTW,
(01/28/26 8:15am)
The first line of Kaveh Akbar’s poem “Wild Pear Tree” goes, “it’s been January for months in both directions.” This has been the crux of my winters at Dartmouth. It has taken me a while to get used to the New England flora of forests and short brick buildings. Many times I have found myself relieved at the sight of a slab of concrete when I travel down to Boston.
(01/28/26 8:10am)
There is nothing more enjoyable than drinking a fine cup of tea. I have previously ventured into Hanover in pursuit of the finest cup of Earl Grey tea, and now I return to Hanover’s coffee shops and bakeries in search of an excellent cup of English Breakfast tea.
(01/21/26 8:15am)
Dear Freak of the Week,
(01/21/26 8:10am)
Andrew Leland is the author of “The Country of the Blind: A Memoir at the End of Sight,” a Pulitzer Prize finalist that explores Leland’s gradual loss of sight. Leland, who has eye disease retinitis pigmentosa, said he is now left with “tunnel vision,” so seeing is like looking through a “toilet paper tube.”
(01/21/26 8:05am)
As I progress through my senior year at Dartmouth, I go back and forth between feeling as though freshman year was a lifetime ago or just last week. This seems to be a universal experience among my friends, and we all reflect on how far we’ve come in different ways. Some remember the time they took ENGS 12 on a whim and instantly fell in love with the hands-on creativity of the human-centered design minor. Others reminisce about their first Hanover winter and how they have since learned to prepare for the toughest season on campus.
(01/21/26 8:20am)
What does it mean to Rho Gam? Rho Gammas — also known as “Panhellenic recruitment counselors” — are upperclass members of sororities at Dartmouth selected to guide students through the recruitment process. Rho Gams have to complete required courses designed to strengthen leadership skills and understand the underclassmen community they serve. These trainings are overseen by the Office of Greek Life and Student Societies, who also provide in-person training for Rho Gams, according to the Dartmouth College website.
(01/21/26 8:00am)
If you know me, you know that my Google Calendar is a mess. Each hour is blocked off in one-hour increments, all in the same shade of beach-towel blue. Readings for Gov. Rehearsal. Gym. Lunch with friends. Write discussion post. It all ends up looking like one giant day-long block. 9am-10pm. 11 hours. No breaks.
(01/14/26 10:01am)
The Dartmouth is bringing back a biweekly print magazine. We will print our full Mirror Mag every other Wednesday, in addition to our regular newspaper on Friday. Our daily digital coverage will, of course, continue.
(01/14/26 8:19am)
Dearest fine readers of Mirror,
(01/14/26 8:05am)
One of our previous Freak of the Week column questions posited a theory: that everyone in the world can be fit into two categories, a knight or a gnome. There are no concrete definitions for “knight” or “gnome,” and it’s purely an intuitive classification. Recently though, a cutting edge team of researchers at The Dartmouth came together to create a quiz that concretely determines whether one is a knight or a gnome.
(01/14/26 8:10am)
Throughout the finals period, students trickle out in waves; first, a few suitcases roll down dorm halls, then entire floors become enveloped in silence. Sidewalks that are typically filled with late-night conversations, hurried footsteps and constant movement become quiet, then empty.
(01/14/26 8:00am)
Hanover winter elicits a strange combination of feelings for me. As someone didn’t participate in winter sports growing up, Dartmouth in winter often feels like a playground. On any given day in the term, skiing, skating, sledding and more are at any student’s fingertips — so long as one is not drowning in assignments, social engagements and whatever else makes each week feel like a sprint.
(01/14/26 8:15am)
Dear FoTW,
(01/14/26 8:25am)
I always thought of Dr. Seuss as a guy who wrote children’s books. But at Dartmouth, his influence stretches well beyond that age range. With one short email, thousands of students spill onto the Green, armed with packed snow and winter cheer, ready for the annual snowball fight.
(01/07/26 8:00am)
Hi Mirror, it’s Leila!
(01/07/26 8:05am)
Julianna Wong ’28 in Berlin, Germany