The Invisible Injury: How Concussions Affect Student Lives
This article was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
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.
This article was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This article was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This article was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This article was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This article was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This column was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This column was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This column was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This column was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
This column was featured in the 2017 Homecoming Issue.
Courtesy of "Dartmouth Homecoming Folklore"
Ah, Homecoming! ’21s, get ready to run your heart out while upperclassmen scream, “Worst class ever!” It’s truly a magical experience. We, upperclassmen, expect nothing less than 121 laps. But as powerful and cultish as the bonfire already is, some of us may wish to burn certain other things. Dartbeat brings you a list of nine things to burn at the bonfire that could potentially add a ~ritual of sacrifice~ kind of feel. However, be wary that there probably is not a fund set up by alumni to bail out students who do this…
Approximately one week after I matriculated, I found myself frantically scouring the web for a Patagonia fleece and Bean boots, suddenly in love with two articles of clothing that I refused to let my mom buy for me earlier that summer. “That’s so ugly!” I said. “I’d never wear anything that crunchy.” However, as I sit here writing this in a pair of Birkenstocks, I’ve come to realize that I have been entirely brainwashed into appreciating Dartmouth’s unique crunchy-preppy-chic style. Here are some outfit inspiration boards for each ~szn~ at Dartmouth so that you, like me, can also lose your entire sense of individuality.
Lela Gannon '18 (center) stands with her brother Nick Gannon '15 (right), who graduated two years ago.
Lela Gannon '18's parents and grandfather graduated from Dartmouth in the late 1980s.