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(10/29/25 7:00am)
One of my closest friends is a big hugger. If you asked me for an example of a person whose primary love language was physical touch, I would immediately direct you to her. This trait of hers, however, caught me a bit off guard when we first became friends during our freshman fall. If you asked me then for an example of a person whose primary love language was definitely not physical touch, I would have pointed to myself.
(10/29/25 8:00am)
Re: Emeritus Columbia professor Rashid Khalidi criticizes U.S. role in Gaza conflict in virtual talk
(10/28/25 8:15am)
President Sian Leah Beilock has rightly rejected the Trump administration’s coercive Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education. The compact was a deal with the devil, deceptively designed to enhance institutional quality through federal investment. It demanded a price no free institution of learning should pay — the surrender of academic independence in exchange for government dollars. Accepting such terms would have not only violated Dartmouth’s proud tradition of self-governance, but Dartmouth would have ceded corporate rights we won in Dartmouth College v. Woodward.
(10/28/25 9:00am)
At the sixth Dartmouth Student Government meeting of the term on Oct. 26, the Senate discussed endorsing a proposal to create a committee of students, dining representatives and administrators to inform operational decisions and offer feedback to Dartmouth Dining Services. The proposal came from DSG’s own dining advisory council.
(10/28/25 9:05am)
On Oct. 22, “Parks and Recreation” producer and “Brooklyn 99” co-creator Dan Goor encouraged students to “do something that interests [them]” rather than corporate recruiting in an event at the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy.
(10/28/25 9:10am)
Three former ambassadors discussed the United States’s renewed interests in the Central American and the Caribbean region at a Dickey Center for International Understanding event titled “Global Crossroads: The Americas, the U.S., the UN, and a new Chapter of Diplomacy?” on Oct. 2.
(10/28/25 9:25am)
The war in Gaza is a “genocide” and a “destruction of the international order,” pro-Palestinian activist Mohsen Mahdawi told community members at Dartmouth on Oct. 23. The event, entitled “Mohsen Mahdawi @ Dart,” was co-hosted by the Palestine Solidarity Coalition of Dartmouth Students and the Arab Student Association. Approximately 50 community members attended the event.
(10/28/25 9:20am)
New Hampshire overdose deaths fell by 33.4% in 2024, reaching the lowest level in a decade, according to a new study by the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute. Faculty and students within the Dartmouth community credited significant increases in New Hampshire’s substance-use treatment funding and discussed the science of combating addiction.
(10/28/25 9:15am)
On Oct. 21, VTDigger editor-in-chief Geeta Anand ’89 reflected on the challenges facing journalists today — from social media’s influence to declining trust in news coverage — and called for renewed investment in local, independent news.
(10/27/25 6:05am)
Documentary film director, journalist and gender rights activist Shiori Itō visited Dartmouth from Oct. 6 to Oct. 10 for a week of exhibitions in Baker-Berry Library and Loew Auditorium and public talks. Itō, whose work deals with domestic and sexual violence, also hosted a screening of her 2024 documentary “Black Box Diaries” — which was nominated for Best Documentary at the 2025 Academy Awards.
(10/27/25 5:05am)
The 60th annual Head of the Charles Regatta took place on a picture-perfect fall weekend in Cambridge, Mass. from Oct. 17 to Oct. 19. At the prestigious event, Dartmouth rowing produced one of its strongest collective performances in recent history. The Big Green earned multiple medals and finished second overall in team points for the MacMahon Cup — presented annually to the club, school, college or university with the highest overall score at the races — behind Princeton and ahead of Harvard.
(10/27/25 5:00am)
Under the Friday night lights, Dartmouth dominated in all three phases of the game to take a 49-3 victory over Columbia University, the team’s biggest margin of victory since 2013.
(10/27/25 9:30am)
The Hanover Selectboard revised a police ordinance to comply with the New Hampshire ban on sanctuary cities at their biweekly meeting on Oct. 20. The new directive will take out any mention of Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
(10/27/25 6:00am)
The Hopkins Center for the Arts had a star-studded reopening weekend, with performances from Yo-Yo Ma to Renée Elise Goldsberry. Creative alumni Rachel Dratch ’88, Chris Newell ’96, Alexi Pappas ’12 and Sharon Washington ’81 conversed in a panel led by Hop Howard Gilman ’44 Executive Director Mary Lou Aleskie on Oct. 18. This discussion, named “Arts are Essential” was part of the celebration of bringing the arts into as many students’ lives as possible.
(10/24/25 8:00am)
(10/24/25 5:05am)
Women’s ice hockey started off the season with two games against the Holy Cross Crusaders last Friday and Saturday. The Big Green lost 3-2 on Oct. 17 and 2-0 on Oct. 18.
(10/24/25 5:10am)
There’s nothing quite like football played under the Friday night lights. After two straight Dartmouth wins and a historic Ivy League rivalry on tap, the energy is sure to be high in Buddy Teevens Stadium for a showdown between 1-4 Columbia University and the 4-1 Big Green.
(10/24/25 6:05am)
On the weekend of Oct. 10, the College announced that they would replace the Homecoming bonfire with a laser light show on the Green due to a state-wide burn ban. While this change meant that the Class of 2029 did not experience the weekend in its traditional form, it gave student DJs an opportunity to perform.
(10/24/25 6:15am)
As the Class of 2029 circled the light show on Homecoming weekend, I found myself at a different show: a performance by local band “Moondogs” at Sawtooth Kitchen, Bar and Stage. With an experimental music style featuring a slower pace, their versatile performance distinguished them from the more predictable sound of other indie psychedelic rock bands.
(10/24/25 6:10am)
For campus Broadway buffs and “Hamilton” fans, the evening of Oct. 17 was a night to remember. Renée Elise Goldsberry, the actress and singer who originated the role of Angelica Schuyler in “Hamilton” on Broadway, visited Dartmouth as part of the reopening weekend of the Hopkins Center for the Arts for an “evening of song.” Goldsberry’s 90-minute show was the first live performance on the newly-renovated David A. Graves Stage in Spaulding Auditorium at the Hop.