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.
32 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(10/03/11 2:00am)
Mateo Romero '89 photographed 10 Native American Dartmouth students and alums dancing in their tribal regalia at the College's annual Pow-Wow in 2009. He then enlarged the images and painted over them in bold acrylic brushstrokes. The result, "The Dartmouth Pow-Wow Suite," is a colorful series of portraits that capture the vibrancy of the dance, currently on display in the Hood Museum of Art.
(05/19/11 2:00am)
"Undue Influence" is an evocative fusion of modern dance and theater that addresses the issue of sexual assault in a college campus environment.
(04/27/11 2:00am)
It was Glover's sophomore year when she ended her career as a dancer. As Glover searched for another creative outlet, her mother suggested slam poetry. Slam poetry is a combination of writing and performing, a middle ground between rapping and reciting. More so than other forms of writing, slam poetry is meant to be heard the poet delivers her or his poem, often speaking to a rhythm accompanied by hand gestures.
(04/13/11 2:00am)
Cholnoky, a studio art intern at the College, said that her brothers also provided the inspiration for her art exhibit on display in Barrows Rotunda from March 30 to April 18 a large blue fort entitled "This Is My Fort Oh Who Cares."
(03/28/11 2:00am)
These bizarre and baffling images, along with many others, are all displayed on the aptly-named "Black and WTF" blog. Black and white pictures have a naturally creepy quality about them, even when depicting ordinary subjects. Maybe those women are proudly displaying a mattress soaked with some innocuous substance. But, to the casual viewer, that dark shade appears to be blood, and without color, it remains uncertain. "Black and WTF" pays homage to the days of black and white photography while offering no explanations for the strange images. Like the images themselves, the blog keeps it mysterious.
(03/03/11 4:00am)
In the age of iTunes and Youtube, music sharing among college students is nothing short of inevitable. Dartmouth students are no exception from starting their own music blogs to blasting music at fraternities, students experiment with many different methods of sharing their favorite tunes. While the practice often begins as a hobby, it can quickly turn into a lifestyle, a legacy or even a business.
(03/02/11 4:00am)
From Dartmouth Idol competitors to a cappella group members, musical theater veterans to up-and-coming composers, Dartmouth draws scores of talented young musicians to its snowy hills. Blame it on the constraints of the D-Plan or the DJ-dominated basement scene, but for whatever reason, these students rarely join forces to form long-lasting campus bands.
(03/01/11 4:00am)
When students open their inboxes to find a blitz about a fraternity foam party, they typically react with either enthusiasm or indifference certainly not terror. However, for Matt Knight '11, also known as DJ Postman, the announcement of a foam party inspires more trepidation than excitement.
(01/10/11 4:00am)
A man sits on a bench in a city, gazing pensively into the distance. He wears a blazer and slacks, monotonous navy disrupted by his brightly colored socks.
(11/22/10 4:00am)
The Wall-Stiles is a quartet that defies genre with its eclectic blend of folk and rock. The members consist of bass player Dave Barthel, who is also a database administrator at the College; fiddler and back-up singer Nate Hamm, who is currently earning an earth sciences Ph.D.; lead singer and guitarist Brough, who works as a special instructor in the geography department; and drummer John Foster. All have vastly different backgrounds and musical experiences that contribute to the dynamic of The Wall-Stiles.
(11/01/10 3:00am)
On the Sept. 16 episode of "The Daily Show," Stewart initially announced his plans to hold a "Rally to Restore Sanity" in response to conservative pundit Glenn Beck's "Restoring Honor" rally that occurred on the Mall in August. Later that evening on "The Colbert Report," Colbert told audiences about his counter-rally, the "March to Keep Fear Alive." The two comedians agreed to merge their rallies after event-licensing issues supposedly almost derailed Colbert's rally.
(10/19/10 2:00am)
The book opens in a location that is hopefully familiar to readers on this campus. Deck, back for his five-year reunion, is gazing "at the campus quad, the Green, and beyond it, the eternal phallus of Baker Tower, our axis mundi." This sentence sets the tone of the rest of the book: simultaneously descriptive, accessible and casual in its use of genitalia references to describe an otherwise solemn and innocuous landmark.