Dartmouth women’s soccer returns to Burnham Field with a decisive win over Brandeis
The Dartmouth women’s soccer team earned a decisive 6-0 win over the Brandeis Judges at Burnham Field in Hanover on Tuesday night.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The Dartmouth women’s soccer team earned a decisive 6-0 win over the Brandeis Judges at Burnham Field in Hanover on Tuesday night.
Re: Students gather for Charlie Kirk vigil
The search for an inaugural Dean of Arts and Sciences is on, College President Sian Leah Beilock announced in a Sept. 25 email to faculty and staff. This comes after the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the Division of Undergraduate Education and the division of Undergraduate Student Affairs merged to form the School of Arts and Sciences on July 1.
Re: White House approaches Dartmouth to sign agreement for funding benefits
Swarthmore anthropology professor Sa’ed Atshan argued that aid organizations should move away from “humanitarianism” and towards a “paradigm of reparation” in an event at Steele Hall on Sept. 30.
The federal government shut down on Tuesday night, causing “reviews, award actions and routine agency communications” for researchers to be halted, according to an email to campus from Provost Santiago Schnell.
Circuit Court of Appeals Judge David Tatel “never” once talked about his blindness during a 30-year career in the second-highest court in the United States, he said at a Sept. 30 event hosted by the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy.
Re: After investigation, Hanover police contest Beilock’s announcement of swastika
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.
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.
From the pseudo-gothic “Phantom Thread” to the contained “Punch-Drunk Love,” all Paul Thomas Anderson films tend to center complex interpersonal dynamics. One of the most prolific and acclaimed directors working today, his plots range from coming-of-age films like “Licorice Pizza” to historical thrillers like “There Will Be Blood” and experimental cult classics like “Magnolia.” Besides his tendency to work with the same actors and to set his films in California, one can identify Anderson film by its use of tracking and extended shots alongside bold soundtracks and sweeping establishing frames. At their core, however, his films investigate what brings and keeps people together — and “One Battle After Another” is no exception.
From Sept. 24 to Sept. 27, the Hopkins Center for the Arts staged an experimental production of Stravinski’s orchestral ballet score “The Firebird” at the Daryl Roth Studio Theater as a “prelude” to the building’s official reopening. Unlike a traditional performance in which the original score is performed by a live orchestra, the show consisted of a “mixtape version” in the form of contemporary arrangements by Touki Delphine, the artistic collective behind the show, according to the company’s artistic director Rik Elstgeest.
This evening, the White House approached Dartmouth and eight other universities to sign an agreement in exchange for funding benefits, according to the Wall Street Journal.
From Sept. 26 to Sept. 28, stores and restaurants in Hanover experienced a surge in business from Family Weekend, during which the College invited the families of freshmen and seniors to Hanover. According to the College, 3,800 parents, siblings and other family members registered this year, more than ever before.
Re: New Hampshire abstains from new public health collaborative
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.
On Sept. 28, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its second weekly meeting of the fall term. Led by student body president Sabik Jawad ’26, the Senate discussed funding a memorial for Won Jang ’26 and increasing river safety initiatives by adding lighting and railings by the river.
Republican Gov. Kelly Ayotte signed H.B. 672 into law on Aug. 1, deregulating off-grid energy providers that do not use public power lines. This will allow them to enter commercial agreements and develop energy generation projects without oversight from the New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission.
In the spring, the Trump administration cut funding to federal research organizations such as the National Institute of Health and the National Endowment for the Humanities, affecting projects at Dartmouth. The Dartmouth sat down with vice provost for research Dean Madden, who advises and oversees research projects sponsored by the College, to discuss recent updates to federal research funding at Dartmouth and how projects will unfold.
Dear Freak of the Week,