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(10/14/25 8:10am)
Four weeks ago, when Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension from his late-night show dominated headlines, a less-watched yet infinitely worse television controversy unfolded. Brian Kilmeade, co-host of Fox & Friends, suggested euthanizing homeless people who don’t want to accept government assistance. He wasn’t fired or even suspended. But he should’ve been. Not doing so sets a horrible precedent.
(10/14/25 8:00am)
A White House “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education” landed in Dartmouth’s inbox earlier this month, alongside letters to eight other universities, including Brown University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology — schools the administration has labeled “good actors.” The agreement offers preferential access to federal grants if universities adopt a 10-point framework governing nearly every aspect of academic life: admissions, hiring, tuition, governance and even endowment use.
(10/10/25 8:15am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/10/25 8:05am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/10/25 8:00am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/10/25 8:10am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/09/25 8:05am)
Over a year ago, Dartmouth College leadership called in police to arrest 89 students, faculty and community members during a protest calling for divestment from Israel, claiming it was enforcing a policy against erecting encampments. The decision sharply divided the community, leading to faculty censuring College President Sian Leah Beilock and the student body voting “no-confidence” in her leadership. After this wave of discontent, in December 2024 the College formulated its “institutional restraint” policy, limiting the administration and academic departments to only making statements “when confronted with issues directly relating to Dartmouth’s mission.”
(10/09/25 8:00am)
Theodor Geisel, better known by his pen name Dr. Seuss, is an illustrious figure in Dartmouth’s history. A legendary illustrator, cartoonist, medical school namesake and children’s author, the member of the Class of 1925 had a lengthy and fruitful career spanning eight decades.
(10/07/25 8:00am)
Re: Israeli hostage describes time in captivity during Chabad and Hillel event
(10/07/25 8:14am)
Dartmouth is among the nine campuses “invited” last week to preview the Trump administration’s latest protection racket: The federal government has promised that colleges that sign the compact will receive “preferential treatment” for federal funds, most of which the government is already required by law to provide to universities. In response, College President Sian Leah Beilock has promised us that she will “always defend our fierce independence.” While heartening, her message did not pledge to reject the compact. This pledge is what we are asking for now, urgently. At stake is open-ended federal control over the form and content of higher education, expressed in nakedly ideological terms.
(10/07/25 8:10am)
In the aftermath of the GOP’s decisive victory in 2024, I wrote a column arguing that Democrats could appeal to working-class voters again by embracing big government populism and targeting the ultra-rich ruling class as the root of the layman’s problems. Since then, Zohran Mamdani’s upset victory in the New York City mayoral primaries seems to have indicated a shifting tide in Democratic party politics in favor of this exact form of populism. Some have been quick to point to Mamdani’s recent victory as proof that this is the party’s future; writing for The New York Times, historian Timothy Shenk recently declared economic populism the winning strategy for Democrats, citing the key to Mamdani’s victory as “a scorching economic message delivered by political outsiders standing up to the powerful.”
(10/03/25 8:05am)
Re: Students gather for Charlie Kirk vigil
(10/03/25 8:00am)
Re: White House approaches Dartmouth to sign agreement for funding benefits
(10/03/25 8:30am)
Re: After investigation, Hanover police contest Beilock’s announcement of swastika
(10/03/25 8:30am)
Over the weekend, College President Sian Leah Beilock announced that a second swastika had been drawn outside the dorm of a Jewish student. Shortly after, The Dartmouth reported that the Hanover Police Department did not believe that it was a swastika, and described it as “positive and non-threatening.” That report was followed by a letter to the editor titled Admin, Do Your Due Diligence, calling out the administration and saying that it “needlessly” put the Jewish community on edge.
(10/03/25 8:15am)
In case you missed the news yesterday, the Trump administration has formally reached out to Dartmouth to sign an agreement and join the new “Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education.” Signing on would come with requirements. The Wall Street Journal described some of the requirements as outlined by the Trump Administration – Dartmouth would have to “ban the use of race or sex in hiring and admissions, freeze tuition for five years, cap international undergrad enrollment at 15%, require that applicants take the SAT or a similar test and quell grade inflation.” In exchange, Dartmouth would receive funding preference.
(10/02/25 8:00am)
Re: New Hampshire abstains from new public health collaborative
(10/02/25 8:05am)
My colleague David Blanchflower pointed out last month that, while college-age students used to have the highest mental health around the globe, they now have the lowest.
(09/30/25 8:15am)
Re: After investigation, Hanover police contest Beilock’s report of swastika
(09/30/25 8:09am)
In recent messaging, Dartmouth’s leadership has emphasized institutional neutrality. The College, they suggest, should avoid entanglement in political controversy, focusing instead on education — perhaps exclusively.