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Deep Cuts: Coming of Age
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
Girl groups bring punk to Dartmouth
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
Q&A with Dartmouth Decibelles president on new album ‘Decisions’
On May 10, student a capella group the Dartmouth Decibelles released their new album “Decisions.” It is the sixth album created by the Decis and is a culmination of three years of recording, featuring singers going back to the Class of 2022. The Dartmouth sat down with Decis president Eliza Goodyear ’26, who has been part of the historically-female group since her freshman year.
Sylvie Benson ’25 sings for the trees
Rays of pale red and blue light filter through the room and onto the audience’s faces. The sounds of murmurs and hushed conversations sweep throughout the crowd. On the stage, the band untangles the wires of their instruments. The crowd quiets as the band begins to play. At the forefront of this scene is Sylvie Benson ’25, a singer-songwriter and guitarist who has made a major mark on campus music during her four years at the College.
Q&A with Ulla-Britt Libre ’25 on her creative nonfiction thesis
Ulla Libre ’25 has spent the last year conceptualizing, developing and crafting her creative writing thesis on the forced sterilization of women in Denmark in the 60s. The nonfiction piece — supervised by creative writing professor Jeff Sharlet — explores the history and stories of the spiral case, wherein the government ordered non-consensual fitting of intrauterine devices in Inuit women and girls. Libre spent three weeks abroad in Greenland and Copenhagen, conducting interviews and research for her thesis. Her writing grapples with the question of choice and autonomy through personal narratives — both others’ and her own.
‘A place of welcome for anyone who writes creatively’: An off-campus writing space opens its doors
Dartmouth’s Creative Writing Program is previewing the Literary Arts Bridge, a new off-campus space for creative writing, which it expects to fully open by the fall. During its soft opening this spring, the space has hosted a few small events, including talks with Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Héctor Tobar and The Yale Review editor Adam Dalva.
Langan: Guy does "Fight Club" but in real life
Eloise Langan '27 reassures us that it's okay if you don't understand it yet — it may take a few rewatches.
Langan: Guy starts a podcast
Q&A with Wynn Johnson ’26 at the Book Arts Workshop
Wynn Johnson ’26 — a psychology and French studies major from Kansas City — was introduced to the Book Arts Workshop while working on her final project for an introductory women, gender and sexuality studies class she took her freshman year. Johnson began to spend more time at Book Arts before starting to work there. In addition to working at the Book Arts Workshop, Johnson has always had an interest in writing, frequently journaling and producing personal pieces of work. The Dartmouth sat down with Johnson, who is one of eight student workers at the workshop, to discuss her journey in Book Arts and how it has shaped her creative endeavors.
The New Critic emerges as a pulpit for the young and perceptive
In an intellectual wilderness where young voices are too often neglected, a voice cries out: “The New Critic,” a new independent literary journal serving as a catalyst for discourse among America’s youth. Founders Tessa Augsberger ’26, Rufus Knuppel ’26 and Elan Kluger ’26 partnered with Swarthmore College junior Milla Ben-Ezra to establish this outlet for critical expression. The first publication of The New Critic, titled “Pulling the Veil from the Void” by Knuppel, was released on May 5.
What We’re Reading: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Kurt Vonnegut
Charlotte, Editor-in-Chief: “Original Sin” by Jake Tapper ’91 and Alex Thompson
Q&A with student band Read Receipts
On April 25, student band Read Receipts won Battle of the Bands — a showdown between five student bands bidding for a spot on the Green Key mainstage — for the second year in a row. Read Receipts opened for Jay Sean and A$AP Ferg on Gold Coast Lawn this past Friday.
‘PoemCity Anthology 2025’: An ode to Vermont’s community of poets
Each year in April, the Kellogg-Hubbard Library in Montpelier, Vt., publishes an anthology to celebrate the work of Vermont poets and holds several events for its “PoemCity” celebration of National Poetry Month. This year’s PoemCity events highlighted the poetic voices of farmers, members of the LGBTQIA+ community and Julie Pellissier-Lush, an Indigenous Mi’kmaq poet. The book, published on April 6, 2025, includes work from elementary and middle school students as well as adults.
Hood Museum hosts Korean contemporary artist Choe U-Ram for an artist talk
Members of the Dartmouth community gathered in the Hood Museum of Art’s Gilman Auditorium on May 15 to listen to Korean contemporary artist Choe U-Ram reflect on his artistic journey. His art is featured in the exhibit “Attitude of Coexistence: Non-Humans in East Asian Art,” which has been displayed at the Hood since November 2024.
A Celebration of the Past: Jane Austen at 250
In 1775, in a village in Hampshire, England, an author was born who would go on to be among the most influential and beloved in the world. In the state of New Hampshire this year, fans of Jane Austen are celebrating her 250th birthday in high style.
From A$AP Rocky to A$AP Ferg: A look back on Green Key headliners
Green Key weekend began over a century ago as an informal series of fraternity parties, but today, it is Dartmouth’s signature spring celebration. From its earliest roots in 1899 — when the Class of 1900 threw “Spring Houseparties” with sports, dances and a prom — to the riot and cancellation of the Green Key Ball in 1967, the weekend has always been a celebration of the spring.
Langan: Guy experiences ego death
Thunderbolts Image

Hopkins Center and OPAL spotlight Asian filmmakers in AAPI Heritage Month film series
The Hopkins Center for the Arts and the Office of Pluralism and Leadership is hosting a film series in celebration of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. The program, in its third annual iteration, features seven movies representing regions across Asia and the Pacific Islands.