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(07/25/25 6:05am)
Webster Avenue was unrecognizable on July 19. The usual quiet sidewalks and parked bikes were replaced with laughter, thumping bass and a crowd of Dartmouth students, locals and visiting families reveling in the glorious chaos of Dartmouth Streetfest during Family Weekend.
(07/25/25 5:00am)
(07/18/25 6:01am)
“Call it a combination of keen attention and ‘a profound indifference’ (to borrow Camus’s words) or a combination of intense emotion and an equally intense apathy. The fact is, there is no word for this state I’ve found myself in, in which lucidity and opacity are one and the same.”
(07/18/25 5:00am)
This summer, you can't take Connor Federico-Grome ANYWHERE.
(07/18/25 5:00am)
(07/18/25 6:15am)
Written and directed by James Gunn, “Superman” serves as the launchpad of the DC Universe, a new franchise that overhauls the most recent batch of films based on DC Comics characters. Introducing this new universe, the opening text explains that “metahumans” were discovered over three centuries ago, ushering in an era of superpowered beings. Wisely avoiding retelling the titular character’s well-known origin story, Gunn dives headfirst into action: Superman (David Corenswet) crash-lands somewhere in the Arctic, battered and bleeding after losing his first battle.
(07/18/25 11:46am)
Mindy Kaling ’01 is rewriting the script on what a college theater space can be. In June 2025, the award-winning writer, actress and producer donated a gift to fund the Mindy Kaling Theater Lab, which will be located in the newly renovated lower level of the Hopkins Center for the Arts adjacent to the Warner Bentley Theater.
(07/11/25 8:05am)
A group of Dartmouth students is putting up an original piece of theater called “Be the Boy” at The Tank in New York City next month. The performance is part of the LimeFest theater festival for emerging artists.
(07/11/25 8:00am)
At a school full of traditions like Dartmouth, it’s no surprise that sophomore summer — a quintessential Dartmouth experience — contains many of its own. For one, the opportunity to join a summer performance group is a highly anticipated part of many students’ Dartmouth experience. Dance, a capella and comedy groups all host open auditions for students on campus and welcome dozens of new members for the term. For existing members of full-year groups, the chance to perform in a new ensemble allows them to explore new artistic styles and expand their creative boundaries.
(07/11/25 5:00am)
(07/04/25 4:05am)
(07/04/25 8:00am)
“28 Years Later” is the daring third installment in the post-apocalyptic horror franchise that includes “28 Days Later” and “28 Weeks Later.” The film sees the reunion of director Danny Boyle and writer Alex Garland, who collaborated on the original “28 Days Later” as well as the sci-fi thriller “Sunshine.”
(07/04/25 6:05am)
Maybe you’ve seen them on your TikTok feed, dancing like the animations from Phineas and Ferb or dressing up as the Winx Club fairies for Halloween. Or maybe you’ve seen them competing on the hit Netflix talent competition reality show “Debut: The Dream Academy,” in which they tackled building full performances from scratch in just a few days.
(06/15/25 5:00am)
(06/15/25 6:00am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/15/25 6:05am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/02/25 5:55am)
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.
(06/02/25 6:00am)
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.
(05/30/25 6:10am)
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.
(05/30/25 6:41am)
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.