Social justice awards honor community members
On Jan. 25, the College hosted its annual Martin Luther King Jr. Social Justice Award ceremony as part of its Martin Luther King Jr.
On Jan. 25, the College hosted its annual Martin Luther King Jr. Social Justice Award ceremony as part of its Martin Luther King Jr.
Coming July 1, the Asian and Middle Eastern Studies program and the Asian and Middle Eastern Language and Literature department will be restructured into two separate departments: the Asian Society, Culture and Language department and the Middle Eastern Studies department.
In 1972, Larry Gonick dropped out of his mathematic graduate program at Harvard University to become a professional cartoonist.
We admire athletes for their physical strength, grace and agility, but what we often overlook is the mental strength that is reqired from athletes under high pressure situations.
We often equate sports rivalries with divide; they can create tension between teams and incite conflict among fans.
For many Dartmouth students, articles of clothing are items of practicality, convenience and self-expression.
Last Friday, Matt Wray, associate professor of sociology at Temple University, delivered a talk titled “What’s Up with White People?
The Hanover Area Chamber of Commerce announced three new members to its Board of Directors for 2018.
Postdoctoral fellow Suzanne Lye specializes in classical literature and mythology. However, her journey to becoming a classics professor was a “long, winding road,” according to Lye.
Fourteen athletes and one coach in the 2018 Winter Olympics are affiliated with Dartmouth — the most ever Olympic participants for the College in a single Games
Miles Wright ’18, co-captain of the men’s basketball team, scored his 1,000th career point against Cornell University this past Friday, making him the 29th Dartmouth player to reach the milestone.
Perhaps it was fate that Dartmouth and the University of Vermont would come to rival each other in skiing.
Women’s hockey has faced a tough schedule in the past two weeks, playing both Eastern College Athletic Conference foes and top talent in the country.
The Harvard Crimson recently published an article entitled, “Wide Open Road for Men’s Basketball in Battle for Ivy League.” The article touched on some important points, including Harvard University’s men’s basketball team’s then-undefeated conference record and the Crimson’s non-conference losses to the College of the Holy Cross, Manhattan College and California State University at Fullerton.
Skiing dominates the competition at the University of Vermont Winter Carnival, men's tennis sweeps against Indiana University and University of Louisville and more in this week's roundup.
The owner of the West Lebanon Domino’s pizza franchise has filed an application for a building permit to open a new Domino’s pizza restaurant in Hanover.
In a Jan. 10 blog post, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education downgraded Dartmouth’s speech code rating from “yellow light” to “red light.” In an email statement, Samantha Harris, vice president of policy research at FIRE, attributed the downgrade to the College’s Acceptable Use Policy, which she said “bans broad categories of speech, a great deal of which would be entitled to First Amendment protection at a public university.” FIRE is a nonprofit group focused on protecting civil liberties on college campuses.
The College’s new visual identity, including a redesigned logo and a new communications framework, has sparked impassioned responses from students and alumni since its release on Jan.
The New Hampshire House is considering a bill that would eliminate a statute allowing out of state students to automatically be considered residents of the state for voting purposes.
Last July, four Dartmouth students made a historic first ascent of Mount Xanadu’s western wall in the Arrigetch Peaks region of Alaska.