Letter to the Editor: Blame It On the Boogie: Get Rid of the Barnes Dance
Re: Boogie Wonderland: In Defense of the Barnes Dance
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Re: Boogie Wonderland: In Defense of the Barnes Dance
Re: ‘We’re not a political organization,’ Beilock tells matriculating students
In conversations with friends, I recently discovered that the four-way intersection at East Wheelock and South Main Street is an infrequently discussed yet polarizing part of campus life. It’s not the intersection on its own, but specifically how the traffic lights work — some people love it, some people hate it and most everyone can’t understand why someone would feel differently than they do about it.
On Sept. 3, former U.S. Sen. John E. Sununu posted a cryptic tweet on his unverified, obscure X page: “Don’t call it a comeback…” The post linked to a Politico article reporting that the former senator is weighing a run for Senate in the upcoming midterm elections. Could Sununu, a member of a powerful New Hampshire political family, be tacitly confirming his intention to run? Although his gambit for the Senate seat may seem out of the blue, he might just be the best candidate for the job if he positions himself as a firmly anti-Trump Republican.
Today, Charlie Kirk was supposed to be here at Dartmouth.
Re: Weeks before planned Dartmouth visit, Kirk assasination reverberates around campus
Re: ‘We’re not a political organization,’ Beilock tells matriculating students
Students at Dartmouth are once again being threatened with punishment for standing up against injustice. The Valley News reported last week that protests have already broken out over the administration’s handling of the Gaza conflict and calls to divest from weapons manufacturers. Instead of listening, it seems that the school is trying to silence them, with College President Sian Leah Beilock telling students that the College is “not a political organization.”
Re: ‘We’re not a political organization,’ Beilock tells matriculating students
We expect our universities to be havens for ethics, not just academics; we expect them to cultivate judgment and conscience, not just grant degrees and high-paying corporate jobs. This past week, those ideals were skinned and gutted in a dormitory kitchen, alongside a dead bear.
Re: Swastika drawn on floor outside Jewish student’s dorm room
There are both visible and invisible transformations that take Dartmouth by storm in the fall. The leaves change in a stunning and dramatic fashion, and the weather gets cooler. Under the surface, especially in the first couple weeks, campus is also wrapped in a powerful tension. Sophomores are preparing to — or are already in the process of — rushing their respective Greek houses of choice. By the end of week three, each respective fraternity and sorority will have a brand-new crop of members. As a member of a fraternity, this is an anticipatory time: It’s exciting to meet potential new members and work with my brothers to shape a class that we feel reflects both individual and house values.
Re: Kluger: If You Like Ideas, Not People, Transfer
Δεν ξεχνώ. Never forget.
I needed lunch. It was early September 2023, and I was one month into my new job as a professor at Dartmouth. I asked a colleague to join me. She couldn’t come, but she warned me, “The ’27s are here now, and it’s gonna be much slower getting around campus while they figure it out.”
Charlie Kirk died in one of the most grotesque ways imaginable: a lone assassin’s bullet to his neck, fired before a crowd of thousands at Utah Valley University. The shooting, which was horrific and effectively ruled out any chance of survival, was filmed and viewed by millions on social media almost instantly.
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.