Student Spotlight: dancer and choreographer Angie Lee ’17
While the performance aspect is often regaled as the climax and culmination of a dancer’s hard work, choreographer and dancer Angie Lee ’17 has a different perspective.
While the performance aspect is often regaled as the climax and culmination of a dancer’s hard work, choreographer and dancer Angie Lee ’17 has a different perspective.
Every year, graduating seniors studying with a professor in the music department have the option to perform a senior recital.
Diane, 11:30 a.m., May 21. In a few hours “Twin Peaks” will debut a third season after a 25-year absence, now as “Twin Peaks: The Return.” It would be an understatement to say that I am tense with anticipation. At moments like this, one is drawn to reflect: What was it about “Twin Peaks” that made it so special?
The U.S. arms deal with Saudi Arabia makes America complicit in war crimes.
The College can improve by offering more creative outlets to students.
Social media isn’t an effective way to maintain friendships.
Native American studies professor N. Bruce Duthu ’80 announced today in a faculty-wide email that he has declined his appointment as the next dean of the faculty of arts and sciences.
The 2016-2017 school year featured several exciting moments for Dartmouth sports. This year’s top moments include historical wins for the Big Green, NCAA tournament berths and top finishes in major competitions.
Daniel Benjamin, the Director of the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding at Dartmouth, was sworn in as a member of the Council of the U.S.
Since its founding in 1991, Dartmouth Emergency Medical Services has made strides in outreach and coverage.
Troy Crema, Wyatt Omsberg, Folarin Orimolade, Fabian Stocek and Beau Sulser are the nominees for Male Athlete of the Year.
Taylor Ng, Foreste Peterson, Cha'Mia Rothwell, Frankie Sands and Courtney Weisse are the nominees for Female Athlete of the Year.
When Plumb Marigold, fictional Olympic hopeful and the protagonist of the just-released indie film “Tracktown,” laces up her shoes to run, the world watches. People stare. They whisper.
For most standout high school athletes, the next step after graduation is obvious: college sports. But some students of the Mormon faith, like Big Green football players Tanner Aiono ’20 , Justin Call ’16 and Anders Peterson ’20 choose to put off college for two years to serve a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
At the end of every season, regardless of the sport, pundits sit down and analyze the postseason, seeking to identify playoff trends that might inform the coming regular season. This process tends to lead to lots of articles in the vein of “How the Atlanta Falcons’ Super Bowl Run Changed the National Football League.”
Think Dartmouth: a school in a picturesque college town, charming but remote. A quintessential college campus, with a clock tower, a college green and a set of neatly matched, colonial-style academic buildings.
At the beginning of her sophomore summer, Angelina Lionetta ’18 was worried about one of her upcoming classes.
Freshman year is a time for many adventures, but above all, it is a time of learning. For some students, living at college is the first time they’ll be away from home.
When College President Phil Hanlon first arrived at the College in 1974, it was his first brush with what would become a life in academic learning and institutional improvement.
Many students have become blasé to the “hookup culture” on college campuses. For Dartmouth, the phrase falls into the same categories of “Greek life” and “drinking culture” — things students don’t seem to question after a couple weeks on campus.