Verbum Ultimum: Bigger Isn’t Always Better
Dartmouth must think carefully before it increases student body size.
Dartmouth must think carefully before it increases student body size.
The opioid crisis is destroying lives just next door. We need real solutions.
What does a play written 2,500 years ago and a suburb of St. Louis have in common? The upcoming Theater of War production of “Antigone in Ferguson” at the Hopkins Center for the Arts draws parallels between the events of the ancient Greek play by Sophocles and those in Ferguson, Missouri surrounding the death of Michael Brown in 2014.
Officials stated that Travis Frink of Warwick, Rhode Island “admitted” that he shot his mother, Pamela Ferriere, at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center on Tuesday in an affidavit released Wednesday.
President Donald Trump’s Sept. 5 order to end the Obama-era policy of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals raised alarm for the College’s students with DACA or undocumented status.
Morton Hall reopened this August after construction was finished on the residence hall following the Oct.
Antifa’s violence delegitimizes its views and helps its opponents.
China reminds us of the value of searching for objective truth.
Betsy DeVos’ changes to the sexual assault portion of Title IX is understood by many as a deterioration of an already flawed system for survivors of sexual trauma on college campuses.
Modern social media detracts from true friendship.
It’s awkward. People are arguing. You’re looking around, unsure of whether or not this is supposed to be happening. And then they all burst into song.
The College's endowment reached an all-time high value of $4.96 billion dollars for the fiscal year 2017, which ended on June 30.
A 70-year-old woman was killed at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon Tuesday afternoon, prompting an active shooter alert and the evacuation of the hospital.
College officials are “evaluating the operation of the course and considering options for the future” as part of an institutional effort to redirect about $20 million from administrative costs to the “core academic mission,” according to an email statement to The Dartmouth from College spokesperson Diana Lawrence.
When I first came to Dartmouth, I encountered the typical unknowns: what I wanted to study, how to schedule a meeting with my dean, how to do my laundry, how to order pasta at Collis.
Jaden speaks with members of Dartmouth's NAD's community about determining their native history.
Upon arriving to Dartmouth, many students worry about how to survive in “The Middle of Nowhere, USA” — or, as we more commonly refer to it, the town of Hanover.
In keeping with the issue's theme of Origins, Cappy explores the rise of the novel.
Chae Kim '18 describes her interpretation of many American aspects after growing up in South Korea.
Annette, Lauren and May, The D's most intrepid editor team, reunite for the first Mirror issue (with the theme of Origins) of the term!