The Mirror Asks Ghosts of Dartmouth's Past: What Do You Miss Most About Dartmouth?
Not to depress you or anything, but the majority of Dartmouth's most famous alumni are, well, dead.
Not to depress you or anything, but the majority of Dartmouth's most famous alumni are, well, dead.
Over a period of more than two centuries, Greek letter organizations and their literary society predecessors have become intricately intertwined with Dartmouth's culture.
Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth I'm all for living in the now.
Our understanding of "Vox clamantis in deserto" is wrong. In English, the College's motto reads, "The voice of one crying out in the wilderness." However, directly translated from the Book of Isaiah in the original Hebrew Masoretic text, the actual full phrase is, "A voice crieth: in the wilderness clear a way for the Lord." Indeed, the voice itself does not reside in the wilderness it merely decrees that a path be cleared through the wilderness.
When you line up all the Ivy League school mottos, Dartmouth's doesn't quite fit in. Harvard's "Veritas," meaning truth, and Yale's "Lux et veritas," meaning light and truth, exude a certain collegiate sophistication.
Let's face it: If there were a higher power capable of silencing everything controversial or provocative that the publication produced, there is no way that The Mirror, much less The Dartmouth, would even exist. Dartmouth students are lucky we have an administration that supports students finding and using their voices.
This is the story of a voice. I've been worried about how I sound for a long time. I like to talk, and I feel like it'd be grating if I sounded dumb.
Contrary to the words of our motto, the voice of our College on the Hill is anything but singular.
Cornell: "I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study." Oh really? University of Rochester: "Better." It just goes to show you that shorter is not always, well, you know, better. Evergreen State College: "Let it all hang out." This is actually an accredited institution of higher learning. Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry: "Never tickle a sleeping dragon." You'd think that Rowena, Godric, Salazar and Helga would have come up with something slightly more spellbinding. Stephenson College: "One day I will rule the world." Noted alumni may include Mussolini, Hitler and Qadaffi.
Despite its small size, Dartmouth encompasses a variety of voices, from freshmen students to administrators.
Laura Bryn Sisson / The Dartmouth Staff "Vox clamantis in deserto." You will read this phrase approximately a bajillion times in this issue.
Blitz is without a doubt one of the most useful mechanisms we as Dartmouth students have to express ourselves.
There's a new feature on Facebook called Timeline that helps you assemble your life story on the Internet.
Women first arrived on campus in 1972 as full-time students and degree candidates to signs that read, "Co-hogs go home." At the outset of coeducation, women often found it difficult to feel comfortable at Dartmouth and even harder to voice their opinions and establish their presence on campus, according to religion professor Susan Ackerman '80, who attended the College in the late 1970s when women were still new and in the minority on campus. "Many of the organizations where women can speak as a collective didn't exist," she said. Ackerman currently serves as the chair of the religion department, and she is a member of the faculty of thewomen and gender studies program.
'13 Boy: How do you dress as a vagina? '12 Boy: I don't know. It's just a flap. '13 Girl 1: I think I'm going to switch to Timeline.'13 Girl 2: Ew.
Editor's Note: Through the Looking Glass is The Mirror's newest feature. We welcome submissions from all members of the community, both past and present, who wish to write about defining experiences, moments or relationships during their time at Dartmouth.
Although the snow purchased to build the cupcake sculpture weighed heavily on the 2012 Winter Carnival Council's $16,000 budget, the Council recouped an unforeseen $6,000 when it was unable to set off fireworks at the opening ceremony last night, Winter Carnival Council co-chair Mandy Bowers '14 said. The planned $6,000 firework show was canceled because cars were blocking the area in the Dewey parking lot where the fireworks were to be set off, according to Bowers.
After losing to the University of Vermont for the past two years at the annual Dartmouth Carnival, the Dartmouth ski team hopes to finally take first place this year.
Rebecca Xu Sweet Dartmouth, As we sit in Robinson Hall, looking out onto the Green and listening to the chainsaws shave the edges off of the giant cupcake sculpture, we can't help but imagine a Winter Candyland more like the cover of this issue.
My least favorite movie in the world sorry, cinephiles is "Citizen Kane" (1941). Maybe I'm not highbrow enough to enjoy it, but a two-hour tale about a man who pulls himself up by his bootstraps only to turn corrupt in his search for power is just not that interesting.