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(7 hours ago)
The partial opening of the renovated Hopkins Center for the Arts on Sept. 15 has provoked mixed feelings from students and staff members. Some said they are frustrated with the incomplete construction, while others expressed excitement about access to the new facilities.
(7 hours ago)
On Sept. 21, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its first weekly meeting of the fall term. Led by student body president Sabik Jawad ’26, the Senate unanimously passed the Student Issues Task Force resolution to design and administer the student issues survey. It also discussed potential changes to standard operating procedures, special Senate elections and dining issues.
(8 hours ago)
Re: ‘We’re not a political organization,’ Beilock tells matriculating students
(8 hours ago)
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.”
(7 hours ago)
A wide swath of central New Hampshire, including Hanover, is currently facing its most extreme drought since 2000, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
(09/22/25 9:00am)
In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assasination, legacy media organizations — including the New York Times — have published news stories and analysis on modern American “polarization.” Since 2022, government professor Sean Westwood has studied the topic through surveys and computational models. His recent research has focused on political opinion, media misinformation and democratic norms in the United States. The Dartmouth sat down with Westwood to discuss his work and the future of American democracy.
(09/22/25 8:10am)
After 15 minutes of drilling their blocking to perfection, the Dartmouth Volleyball team gathered on the Leede Arena sidelines in their end-of-practice routine. Rather than a speech from head coach Kevin Maureen Campbell and the rest of the coaching staff, players were given the chance to reflect on practice themselves. This conversation, a deliberate end to every practice, replaces a typical coach-athlete dynamic with a space where everyone is equal, Campbell said.
(09/22/25 8:05am)
With their victory over Sacred Heart University on Saturday, the Dartmouth Women’s Rugby brought their record to an undefeated 3-0.
(09/22/25 8:00am)
Down one point late in the fourth quarter, Dartmouth sat on the one-yard line with a chance to take the lead.
(09/22/25 6:00am)
A wistful feeling I can’t quite place stirs in me at the arrival of fall: the shortening days bring thoughts of the open road, a desire to wander. The words of Isabelle Eberhardt are fitting.
(09/22/25 6:05am)
James Wan’s 2013 horror film “The Conjuring” dramatized the exploits of real-life paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren in a thrilling and uncommonly poignant horror film. Since that initial installment, the series has expanded into a full-blown cinematic universe, with films like “Annabelle,” “The Nun” and their respective sequels.
(09/19/25 9:00am)
You might recognize them from “The Wolf of Wall Street”: Bloomberg terminals are the go-to platform for everything in finance and economics, from news to options pricing to networking. Dartmouth has 12 of the computers that typically cost upwards of $20,000 annually. Administrators did not disclose how much the College pays in total for the subscriptions.
(09/19/25 5:10am)
After celebrating its second consecutive Ivy League Championship, shared with Columbia University and Harvard University, Dartmouth football went back to work with a new goal: finding fresh minds.
(09/19/25 8:10am)
Re: ‘We’re not a political organization,’ Beilock tells matriculating students
(09/19/25 8:00am)
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.
(09/19/25 8:04am)
Re: Swastika drawn on floor outside Jewish student’s dorm room
(09/19/25 6:00am)
The Dartmouth Chamber Orchestra is the only student-run, audition-free orchestra on campus, providing an open and collaborative environment for students to play memorable music for almost 30 years. About 25 to 30 undergraduate and graduate students are typically part of the group each term, according to current DCO President Shahzeb Tayyab ’27.
(09/19/25 6:05am)
Attempting to strike a balance between a character-driven narrative and an action-based odyssey, Darren Aronofsky’s gritty thriller “Caught Stealing” mostly succeeds.
(09/19/25 9:15am)
Superior Court Judge David Ruoff in New Hampshire ruled that the state’s special education funding is “constitutionally insufficient” on Aug. 18.
(09/19/25 9:05am)
Dartmouth student groups reserving the Class of 1966 Lodge — a large Dartmouth Outing Club cabin located approximately 10 minutes away from campus on Moose Mountain — will no longer be able to reserve it for free. The new policy, which took effect on Sept. 17, requires that undergraduates pay a flat rate of $250 per night.