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(07/11/25 8:20am)
I would never have thought that I could feel the slightest bit of embarrassment for receiving financial aid. In fact, I don’t think anyone should feel that way when working towards a four-year degree at an Ivy League institution.
(07/11/25 7:05am)
I’ve been hooking up with someone repeatedly this term who I’ve hooked up with in the past. I enjoy hanging out casually, but I’m worried the other person is more invested than I am. I don’t see it going anywhere in the long run. At what point should I stop seeing my former scheme?
(07/11/25 7:00am)
A little goal of mine this summer is to explore every building on campus I’ve never been in before. Not just poke my head in, but actually be there, setting up camp with my laptop, drinking bad coffee in a forgotten lounge, watching the light move through unfamiliar windows. Dartmouth is tiny but still vast; I want to see how the campus feels when I let it surprise me.
(07/11/25 5:04am)
The Dartmouth men’s heavyweight rowing team recently returned from the iconic Henley Royal Regatta in England, marking the culmination of an incredible season filled with hard-fought victories and silverware. The crew captured their first Olympic Axe against Yale in the first weekend of the spring season and ended the season with a bronze medal in the Intercollegiate Rowing Association national championships. Captaining the exceptional varsity eight was Billy Bender ’24, whose leadership helped bring the Big Green to new heights. A standout athlete who represented the United States at the 2024 Paris Olympics in the men’s pair event, Bender spoke with The Dartmouth about what it takes to compete at the highest level in men’s rowing and what’s next for him and the team.
(07/10/25 1:18pm)
Dartmouth has ended its partnership with the China Scholarship Council, an international exchange program funded by China.
(07/11/25 5:00am)
(07/11/25 8:55am)
Filmed and edited by Alesandra Gonzales '27
(07/04/25 7:01am)
My hands shake. Not dramatically, but persistently, a faint tremor humming through everything I do. It shows up in the obvious places first: holding a pen, threading a needle, pipetting in lab. But it also sneaks into moments I wouldn’t expect, when I’m reaching for a cup of water, or holding the steering wheel at a stoplight. My hands have always been this way, and it’s been long enough that it’s simply become part of me. When I fumble for something or knock a glass over, the explanation rises to my lips instantaneously: “Yeah, sorry, my hands are really shaky.”
(07/04/25 6:00am)
Temperatures may be getting warmer and campus emptier, but outdoor sports and recreation remain at the heart of Dartmouth’s campus every summer. Whether it be joining a spikeball game on the Green, leisurely tossing a frisbee on a frat lawn or competing in an intramural sport, classic summer sports have returned to Dartmouth.
(07/04/25 6:05am)
Dartmouth team captain and All-American Thomas Woolson ’17 will return to Hanover as the Head Coach of Men’s Alpine Skiing, replacing JP Daigneault.
(07/04/25 4:05am)
(07/04/25 9:00am)
As another summer rolls around in Hanover, campus is once again gearing up for construction. This year, Crosby Street and Thompson Arena are both closed for major construction projects.
(07/04/25 9:05am)
On June 13, Israel launched a series of strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, causing Iran to respond with a barrage of missile attacks on Israeli soil. A 12-day conflict between the two countries, which included American involvement, proceeded until a ceasefire entered into effect on June 25. The Dartmouth sat down with government professor Jeffrey Friedman, who specializes in foreign policy decision making, to discuss the Iranian nuclear program, the recent Israeli and American strikes and possible future developments.
(07/04/25 9:15am)
Last month, the Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association sent out an email to its mailing list of about 4,000 members disputing the College’s campus-wide email account of a May 28 sit-in at Parkhurst Hall. BADA raised a broader concern about a “steady erosion of trust within the Dartmouth community” and a “failure by the administration and trustees to engage in true community building.”
(07/04/25 9:10am)
On June 16, Matthew Catrambone ’26 and Samuel Terry ’26 were found guilty for providing alcohol to people under the age of 21 and were each fined $930 at Lebanon District Court, according to the Valley News. Catrambone pleaded guilty and Terry pleaded no contest. A no contest plea means that a defendant neither disputes their charge nor explicitly admits guilt, but allows the court to treat them as guilty when sentencing.
(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.
(07/04/25 8:15am)
Class is in 20 minutes, and the syllabus says to read a 40-page research paper, a chapter of a book or some crazy long piece of text. There’s no way the reading is going to get done in time for class. Life got in the way. Maybe you look up a summary, maybe ChatGPT it, then just let others do the heavy lifting in the class discussion. Or, you try to get some participation credit and say something vague as you try to read your professor’s poker face while wondering whether they can tell you haven’t read it.
(07/04/25 8:11am)
In May, President Donald Trump announced his decision to bar international students from attending Harvard University, which came after the university refused to comply with policy changes demanded by the president. The order preventing Harvard from enrolling international students marked an escalation in a saga that has pitted the Trump administration against numerous private, elite universities across the country. These attacks are misguided policies that fail to recognize the importance of international students, not only to the universities that they attend, but also to the United States.
(07/04/25 7:05am)
I’m sitting at my desk in my messy room the morning I leave for sophomore summer. Soon, I won’t have to explain to my friends at home why I’ll be gone until August — and that no, poor academics aren’t the reason I’ll be in school this summer. I am required to be on campus! But I am excited about it!