Q&A with professor Christopher Sneddon
To Christopher Sneddon, water is not only the source of human life, but also the source of many human conflicts.
To Christopher Sneddon, water is not only the source of human life, but also the source of many human conflicts.
Today’s “Links between Financial Markets and the American Economy” symposium will feature debate from three distinguished panelists on recent and prospective changes to the financial system.
Activists should abstain from Greek leadership.
Funding the Institute for Energy and Society with Irving Oil money was a major blunder.
One of Dartmouth’s many libraries, Rauner Special Collections Library blends the intellectual with the emotional.
Not even receiving two degrees in the laws of physics could keep Enrique Martinez Celaya from resisting the pull of art.
The performance, which took place in Sarner Underground this past Friday, featured electronic musician Jessy Lanza along with opening band Home Body.
“Bridget Jones’s Baby” (2016) opens with a familiar scene: Bridget Jones, alone on the couch with an egregiously large glass of wine and Jamie O’Neal’s rendition of “All By Myself” blasting aptly in the background.
In this week's Just a Bit Outside, Sam Stockton '19 compares Colin Kaepernick's recent protesting to the presence — and absence — of African-American players in Major League baseball.
This past Sunday was far from a lazy one for Phil Claudy ’18. While most students were sleeping in, Claudy was racing in the IRONMAN Chattanooga Triathlon in Tennessee.
In this week's Hot Takes, Max Zhuang '19 gives a rundown of some of the most tragic events that have happened in the sports world, including the death of Miami Marlins pitcher Jose Fernández.
This past week, orienteers from the United States and Canada traveled to Hanover for the 2016 North American Orienteering Championships, which began on Friday and concluded yesterday.
This week, The Dartmouth sat down with Quinn Cooney ’19, a long distance runner that led the men's cross country team to a win at the Dartmouth Invitational with a first-place finish in the 8-kilometer course.
In week two of the Weekend Roundup, Sam Hussey '20 and Danielle Okonta '20 give a rundown of Big Green sports, including the football team's win over the College of the Holy Cross.
After reaching the NCAA tournament last year for the first time in Dartmouth history, Taylor Ng ’17 and Kristina Mathis ’18 enter this fall ranked 10th in the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Division I Preseason Doubles rankings.
For the five students participating in the pilot program of the theater department’s Experiential Term, partnering with theater company Northern Stage, days are spent working with theater professionals in West Lebanon and soon, New York City.
But as I left Spaulding Auditorium Saturday night, having just seen Damien Chazelle’s “La La Land” (2016), I felt something I had not felt in some time: the need to rejoice!
With her trusty X-Acto knife, a love for color and a distinct penchant for productivity, Celeste Jennings ’18 has already started to make a name for herself in the world of design.
Expectations may seem a given for an artist familiar with the spotlight, but Cécile McLorin Salvant says otherwise.
Dartmouth’s endowment posted a 1.9 percent investment loss for the fiscal year that ended June 30, 2016, according to a press release on Friday by the College.