1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(10/31/25 8:30am)
In an era of declining trust in higher education, College President Sian Leah Beilock stands out for saying less. Her rhetoric is often confident, polished and calm, yet sparing in commitment. She avoids offense, diffuses tension and speaks in statements so clean and tempered they seem engineered to endure and resist reinterpretation. It is a way of using language that fills the page yet leaves no position to dispute, no quote to age poorly. She has made linguistic restraint an art form.
(6 hours ago)
“Since Trump won, Democrats have been unmoored.” Is anyone else tired of saying this yet? The same analysis of the Democratic party has been trod out over and over since November of last year. It follows a similar script every time — no one has a clear answer for the rhetoric of the Trump administration, and no one is “leading the party.” In a way, this is true. On the national level, it seems like Democrats are constantly caught on their back heel, with no strong voices in Congress that are able to command as much attention as Trump and his allies.
(10/31/25 5:10am)
The men’s soccer team faced the University of Pennsylvania at home on Oct. 25, seeking a third consecutive Ivy League win. Despite a lively first 45 minutes from the Big Green, neither team managed to pull ahead. However, two second-half goals from the Quakers sealed the deal, and they left Burnham Field with a 2-0 victory over Dartmouth.
(10/31/25 5:05am)
We may now be in a “marathon boom” with more aspiring runners influenced by social media, run clubs and general wellness, according to NBC News. There has been a growth in runners and the number of participants in races, increasing the demand for marathon participants, particularly in the world’s seven most coveted races in London, New York, Berlin, Chicago, Tokyo, Boston and Sydney.
(10/31/25 5:15am)
In the 118th rendition of one of the oldest rivalries in collegiate football, Dartmouth will travel to Cambridge, Mass., this Saturday to take on the Harvard Crimson.
(10/31/25 6:05am)
From Oct. 2 to Oct. 19, Shaker Bridge Theatre in White River Junction, Vt., put on “Eureka Day,” a 2018 play by Jonathan Spector that follows a private elementary school board as it deals with a mumps outbreak. Given the significant population of unvaccinated students, the board disagrees and fractures over the right approach to the issue. With standout performances from the Shaker Bridge Theatre cast, “Eureka Day” is a mostly effective play that explores the negative underside of making decisions by forced consensus.
(10/31/25 6:00am)
The Hopkins Center for the Arts hosted cellist Yo-Yo Ma for the world premier of “We Are Water: A Northeast Celebration,” a multi-medium performance including music, storytelling and poetry from both Western and Indigenous traditions.
(10/31/25 9:10am)
William “Bill” Crosby Platt, senior writer in Dartmouth’s Office of Communications, was known for his curiosity, enthusiasm and devotion to both his family and his work. Platt, 64, died following a long illness at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston on Sept. 17, according to his obituary.
(10/31/25 9:05am)
On Oct. 29, human rights lawyer Nicholas Opiyo described a “steep decline in democratic practices” in Uganda in a Dickey Center for International Understanding event. Approximately 65 people attended the talk, which was titled “Lessons from a Democracy Defender,” according to Dickey Center events program manager Judith van Rhijn Jackson.
(10/31/25 9:00am)
College President Sian Leah Beilock and Geisel School of Medicine professor Carrie Colla ’01 were elected to the National Academy of Medicine on Oct. 20.
(10/31/25 4:00am)
(10/31/25 4:08am)
(10/31/25 4:08am)
(10/30/25 8:05am)
Every group of friends has a “digital camera friend,” that one person that always has a digital camera on them, ready to deploy whenever needed. For months, I have been the digital camera friend. I love taking pictures, preserving memories and looking back on my memories in my shared albums —“shalbums,” as I call them — for when I miss particular moments in my life.
(10/30/25 8:15am)
Tucked away on the second floor of the Berry Library, the Jones Media Center is a valuable tool for campus creatives. Students can borrow production equipment, book an editing suite or even record a podcast. But I love the JMC for a different reason: its extensive collection of high-quality CDs.
(10/30/25 9:15am)
Artificial intelligence has reshaped the job hunting process. Major corporations — citing a shift toward artificial intelligence — are leading a trend in layoffs, with over 900,000 workers dismissed nationwide this year through September, according to CBS News. Job postings on the campus recruiting platform Handshake have reduced by 15% over the past year, while the number of applicants has risen by 30%, according to CNBC News.
(10/30/25 9:05am)
From Oct. 26 to Oct. 28, Dartmouth and the United Nations Development Program hosted a three-day symposium on mental health titled “A Global Turning Point: Why Youth Well-Being Is in Crisis — and What We Must Do About It.” The event series, which was free and open to the public, included nature activities such as hikes to Gile Mountain and paddling on the Connecticut River, as well as eighteen panels featuring a wide range of speakers at the Hanover Inn and the Hopkins Center.
(10/30/25 9:00am)
On Sept. 23, Iman Ahmad ’27 became the third Dartmouth student to be awarded an Obama-Chesky Voyager Scholarship for Public Service. Every year, the scholarship program — co-founded by Barack and Michelle Obama and Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky in 2022 — awards 100 scholars a $50,000 scholarship and funds a “summer voyage” to work and travel abroad during junior summer.
(10/30/25 9:10am)
On Oct. 25, community members celebrated Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights. Approximately 200 people attended the annual candle lighting on the Green, according to attendee and Dartmouth India Association vice president Olivia Tak ’28.
(10/29/25 4:05pm)
Dearest readers of Mirror,