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(05/15/25 9:15am)
On May 12, Dartmouth Student Government hosted a panel with College President Sian Leah Beilock and other senior administrators to share updates and answer questions regarding federal government actions affecting Dartmouth. During the panel, Beilock defended several of her recent decisions — which have garnered criticism from faculty, students and alumni — and argued the state of free speech is better at Dartmouth than other campuses.
(05/14/25 7:15am)
I’ve been on for seven consecutive terms in Hanover, surviving solely on the Ivy Unlimited Plan. I’ll admit that I’ve actually come to like most of Dartmouth’s food. But I am off this term and residing at Summit, so I opted out of the meal plan and attempted to cook and sample the Upper Valley’s restaurants.
(05/12/25 9:00am)
On May 8, Jerry Hughes ’88 moderated a panel about free speech at the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy. Hughes was one of the Dartmouth students who took part in the 1986 sledgehammer attack on the shanties that were built on the Green to protest South African Apartheid.
(05/09/25 8:05am)
Kevin Demoff ’99 has been surrounded by football throughout his life. Demoff was a sports editor for his high school newspaper and he joined the sports section of The Dartmouth. After graduation, Demoff continued sports writing for Broadband Sports and later landed a role with the St. Louis Rams, who played in Demoff’s hometown of Los Angeles until 1995. Demoff is now the president of the Los Angeles Rams. The Dartmouth sat down with Demoff to discuss his time working for The Dartmouth and his career in professional sports.
(05/08/25 9:05am)
Last week, Harvard University Jewish studies professor Derek Penslar and Hebrew University sociology and anthropology professor and former human rights lawyer Yael Berda discussed “settler colonialism” — and whether the academic term can be used to describe Zionism.
(05/08/25 8:05am)
Re: Beilock says “reflection does not mean capitulation”
(05/05/25 9:00am)
At the end of April, the Dartmouth African Students Association hosted its annual “Africa Week,” to celebrate the diversity and culture of the continent. Events included an opening ceremony featuring student presentations, a karaoke and spoken word night and a gala.
(05/02/25 8:05am)
Dear College President Sian Leah Beilock:
(05/01/25 9:00am)
On May 1, 2024, 89 individuals at a pro-Palestinian protest were arrested on the Green. The protest, which began as a ‘Labor for Liberation rally’ in support of Palestinian liberation, was organized by multiple activist groups, including the student-run Palestine Solidarity Coalition.
(05/01/25 8:00am)
Re: Dartmouth only Ivy to abstain from signing letter against Trump administration funding cuts
(05/01/25 8:55am)
I was arrested a year ago today, while reporting for The Dartmouth.
(04/30/25 7:00am)
My mom is a gardener through and through. She coaxes blooms from bare stems and revives the drooping and forgotten with a few muttered words and a splash of water. Whatever weight the day lays on her shoulders — fatigue, frustration, the quiet ache of repetition — it all slips away the moment she steps into our backyard. Five minutes among her plants and her spirit lifts as if it is photosynthesizing with the leaves around her.
(04/29/25 9:15am)
Alumni are speaking out and calling for Dartmouth to stand up against the Trump administration.
(04/25/25 8:04am)
Re: Dartmouth Only Ivy to Abstain from Signing Letter Against Trump Administration Funding Cuts
(04/25/25 6:05am)
On Apr. 11, DIY Indie Rock band Frog performed at One Wheelock as the closing show for a tour showcasing their new album — “1000 Variations on the Same Song,” a concept that plays with the inherent repetition across the songwriting craft and canon. The Dartmouth sat down with Frog member Daniel Bateman to discuss the band and its latest album.
(04/25/25 10:09am)
To quote Charles B. Strauss ’34, an early student-activist and writer at the College: “The liberal college as the alumni knew it is slipping away. Its traditional sort of activity, whether at Dartmouth or at any other institution of its kind, is being repudiated more and more.”
(04/23/25 7:25am)
Somewhere in the dark woods of Hanover, there’s a graveyard of every class I didn’t take. When I buried Formal Logic, Modern Iran, the Hebrew Bible and every economics class after Econ 1 in that graveyard, I mourned the ideas I’d never study. But in my last 10-week term at Dartmouth, instead of squeezing the last drop of value out of my tuition, I’m using a rare opening in my schedule to take, well, nothing. And what have I gained from my two-course term?
(04/23/25 7:20am)
How do I turn a situationship into a relationship?
(04/21/25 6:09am)
Lethokuhle Msimang GR and Veronika Yadukha GR worked together to create “Rantau,” combining their respective prowess in poetry and ceramics. The exhibition, which was on view at the Black Family Visual Arts Center from April 9-18, explores migration, cultural liminality, loss and resilience.
(04/17/25 9:05am)
On April 15, the Dickey Center for International Understanding hosted Sudanese activist Rania Aziz for an event titled “Sudan’s difficult path to peace and democracy: an activist’s perspective.” Aziz discussed political conflict in Sudan, her role in the 2019 Sudanese protests and work as an activist away from her home country.