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(04/27/26 9:00am)
On April 26, student body president candidates Ikenna Nwafor ’27 and Sudiptha Paul ’27 and student body vice president candidates Maggie de la Fuente ’27, Thomas Mitchell ’27 and Julia Zichy ’27 spoke about Dartmouth Dining, health and wellness, transportation and Dartmouth Student Government transparency in a debate hosted by the Elections Planning and Advisory Committee.
(04/27/26 5:05am)
On April 25, the Dartmouth Diabetes Initiative held their second annual Diabetes Dash 5K run. The Initiative was co-founded by Kyriakos Papasavas ’28 and Coston Autry ’28 to raise awareness about diabetes on campus.
(04/27/26 5:00am)
This weekend, the Big Green walked away with a series win against Harvard University after winning one game each on Friday and Saturday.
(04/27/26 6:00am)
Leo Tolstoy’s “Anna Karenina” begins with a famous maxim: “Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” The dramatic events of each unhappy family often turn into great stories. In “Lázár,” Swiss author Nelio Biedermann builds a novel out of that sense of unhappiness. Biedermann, who grew up middle-class in Zurich, descends from a lineage of Hungarian aristocrats who lost everything when Hungary became a communist regime. He draws on his family’s true stories as inspiration for “Lázár,” which was published in the United States earlier this month.
(04/27/26 6:05am)
The majority of director Antoine Fuqua’s biopic of Michael Jackson, “Michael,” is built from a small set of scenes repeated and slightly reworked to fill out the runtime. Jackson endures abuse or manipulation from his father. Jackson has a conversation in which someone tells him how special or talented he is. Jackson exhibits childlike innocence and/or wonder. Jackson comforts sick children. Jackson has an epiphany that leads to his next great hit. Jackson performs that hit. After the first 20 minutes or so, this cycle essentially becomes the rest of the film. The structure begins to feel almost musical in its looping, rhythmic repetition, cycling through familiar beats with only minor variation. Is it a passable diversion? Sure. Does it justify telling this story as a narrative feature film? Not even a little bit.
(04/24/26 3:15am)
Vincelette prepares his defense as Town Manager Robert Houseman gives testimony. Vincelette, a 69-year old veteran and Hanover resident, chose to serve as his own legal representative.
(04/23/26 9:57pm)
A copy of the Valley News pictured in CVS on April 23.
(04/24/26 8:05am)
I speak for a lot of us when I say this academic year has not been kind. With Kate’s, Enzo’s and Ryan’s passings, death has been brushing past us in ways none of us were prepared for, leaving marks on this community that will not simply fade with the season. I want to speak on behalf of my own experience navigating Enzo’s passing, not because I think my grief is the loudest in the room, but because I hope something in it reaches whoever needs it most. I also want to share how I plan to move forward, make meaning out of the meaningless and carry Enzo’s legacy into the world the way he always deserved.
(04/24/26 6:05am)
On April 13, Netflix released a documentary titled, “Noah Kahan: Out of Body.” Directed by Nick Sweeney, the film traces Kahan’s rapid rise as a singer-songwriter from posting songs on TikTok to playing two sold-out shows at Fenway Park in 2024 as part of his “Stick Season: We’ll All Be Here Forever” tour. The documentary, which takes place over one-and-a-half years, is both a celebration of success and an honest portrait of an artist struggling to find his place.
(04/24/26 6:05am)
On April 18, the Institute for Black Intellectual and Cultural Life hosted “A Celebration of ‘Sinners’” in honor of the one-year anniversary of director Ryan Coogler’s critically acclaimed film. Instead of hosting a traditional screening, the IBICL, in collaboration with the Hopkins Center for the Arts, presented a multi-part program featuring dance, discussion and music inspired by the film.
(04/24/26 5:00am)
Clark Gilmore ’24 never planned to play baseball for life. At five years old, he swore he would never even play the game. Yet, nearly two decades later, he’s turned his passion into a career that’s taken him from Dartmouth to the University of Notre Dame, and now onto the national stage of Banana Ball.
(04/24/26 5:05am)
Most people train for years to master one racket sport. At a recent national tournament, two Dartmouth players competed in four — back-to-back.
(04/24/26 9:10am)
The New Hampshire Supreme Court ruled on April 15 that the Town of Hanover must pay attorney fees to the Valley News for violating New Hampshire’s right-to-know law by denying the newspaper’s request for the arrest records of two Dartmouth students.
(04/24/26 9:05am)
On March 27, Benjamin Singer ’27 was awarded the Goldwater Scholarship by the Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation for his research in mathematics. The scholarship recognizes college sophomores and juniors who “aspire to become this nation’s next generation of researchers in science, engineering and mathematics.”
(04/24/26 9:15am)
Housing prices in Grafton County continued to rise in early 2026, even as the rate of price growth slowed compared to previous years, a March report by the New Hampshire Association of Realtors found. The median price for a single-family home in New Hampshire reached $530,000 in March, a one percent increase since the start of the year and the smallest annual increase since 2023. At the same time, first-quarter data from this year indicates that prices are still trending upward overall, having increased 3.9% since March 2025.
(04/24/26 9:05am)
On March 16, all five members of the Hanover Selectboard and town manager Robert Houseman filed civil stalking petitions against Hanover resident David Vincelette ’84 for comments he made at a Selectboard meeting on Feb. 23.
(04/24/26 9:25am)
Remembered for his boundless curiosity, exceptional musicality and limitless kindness, Enzo La Hoz Calassara ’27 inspired those around him to pursue what they love and to connect with the world around them.
(04/23/26 9:05am)
On April 21, Hillel at Dartmouth and the Rohr Chabad Center co-hosted a vigil on the Green for Yom HaZikaron, an Israeli national holiday that remembers victims of terror attacks and fallen soldiers. Approximately 30 people attended, according to Dartmouth Safety and Security officer Don White.
(04/22/26 10:02pm)
Twenty strips of rotting beef jerky arranged in the shape of a smiling face rest on the dedication site of the Black Family Visual Arts Center on April 8. The installation, titled "Something Rotten: Ah man, the guy loved jerky. You didn’t know?," was co-created by Erik Siegel ’26 and Roan Wade ’25.
(04/24/26 3:15pm)
Re: ‘Playing volleyball here was a nightmare’: Inside the Dartmouth women’s volleyball team’s culture