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(05/15/26 8:15am)
Dartmouth has long served as an excellent testing ground for musicians on their way to global stardom, and Green Key weekend, with its guaranteed audience of 3,000 “spirited” students sprawled across Gold Coast Lawn, has hosted more than its share of them. In an era of fractured musical tastes, the spectacle of an entire student body gathering to hear a single act feels increasingly rare. While that shared experience often feels more special than the music itself, it certainly helps when there is a good lineup.
(05/15/26 6:05am)
Putting together this list was much harder than I expected. As someone who listens to a pretty wide range of music, I have always found corporate indie pop-rock to be one of the most frustrating genres imaginable because so much of it sounds engineered to be universally inoffensive instead of driven by genuine artistic intent. Between the endless hand-claps and “woo-ooh-oh” refrains, it is obvious that Grouplove — currently consisting of lead vocalists Christian Zucconi and Hannah Hooper, lead guitarist Andrew Wessen, bassist Daniel Gleason and drummer Benjamin Homola — is trapped in the sonic amber of the early 2010s indie-pop boom. But buried beneath all of that hyperactive, Tumblr-era optimism are flashes of genuine vulnerability, infectious hooks and bittersweetly straightforward lyrics that give the band’s chaotic sound far more character and sincerity than I first expected.
(05/14/26 10:48pm)
(Front) Thomas Weaver, Oscar Rempe-Hiam, (back) Haley Rodriguez and Will Sanchez sit on a tree stump on at the intersection of Wheelock and Main Street on May 13.
(05/15/26 7:05am)
As students progress through their Dartmouth careers, the phrases “coffee chats” and “superday interviews” often grow more and more familiar. As early as sophomore year, many find themselves recruiting for summer internships that will hopefully yield return offers for their post graduate careers.
(05/14/26 2:39am)
At a May 8 Rockefeller Center event, NYU law professor Maggie Blackhawk discussed colonialism’s role in shaping constitutional law, arguing for a “mature constitutionalism” of “self-determination and sovereignty” rather than “citizenship and rights.”
(05/14/26 9:20am)
Remembered by friends and teammates for his intellectual curiosity, quiet generosity and attentiveness to others, Ryan Lafferty ’26 left a lasting mark on the international debate community and the people closest to him.
(05/14/26 9:15am)
Three current and two former Evergreen student employees who have worked in writing training dialogues have been given pseudonyms so they may speak candidly about their experiences. Quinn, Charlie, Olivia and Rebecca said they used AI to write dialogues as project assistants. Georgia, who was a content reviewer for Evergreen, said she did not use generative AI in her work. Quinn, Charlie and Olivia are still employed by Evergreen; Rebecca and Georgia said they voluntarily left the project. Numerous Evergreen student employees declined to comment.
(05/14/26 9:10am)
On May 9, Dartmouth’s Native American Program hosted the 54th Annual Dartmouth College Powwow on the Green, the theme of which was “Honoring the Women Who Carry Us.” Events included the War Cry Contest, the Round Dance, Men’s and Women’s Traditional and General Dances and more.
(05/14/26 9:05am)
On April 29, former history department postdoctoral fellow Charnan Williams filed a lawsuit against the College and several senior faculty members. In the complaint, which is publicly available, Williams alleged “race discrimination, sex discrimination, retaliation, hostile work environment, conspiracy to deprive [her] of her civil rights, civil conspiracy, breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach of institutional policies and intentional infliction of emotional distress.”
(05/14/26 9:00am)
At a May 8 event hosted by the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy, New York University law professor Maggie Blackhawk discussed the centrality of American colonialism and Native American history to legal understandings of the United States Constitution.
(05/14/26 8:10am)
“If every person on earth put their biggest problem in a hat,” I asked my friend, expecting a good conversation, “would you keep yours or draw a new one?”
(05/14/26 8:15am)
The Dartmouth has published opinions since 1799. In that time, the section has served as a forum for the defining debates for each generation of students — on war, on civil rights, on the obligations of an elite institution to the world beyond its gates — precisely because we have understood, at our best, that ideas untested by opposition are not ideas at all, but assumptions in fancy clothing. In 1970, when this campus was convulsed by the debate over ROTC and the Vietnam War, these pages published arguments from every corner of the political spectrum, not because the Editorial Board agreed with all of them, but because it understood that the argument itself was the point. We have, at various moments in our history, been that kind of publication. Today, we are no longer at our best.
(05/13/26 7:15am)
I’m incredibly lucky to have found my passion at a young age. It was pretty simple: At around the age of eight, I proclaimed to my parents and teacher that I was drafting my first book. Even at that age, I had no illusions about the brutality of the publishing world. I’d probably have to finish two, maybe even three, hard-fought drafts before inevitably submitting to the slush pile at Penguin Random House – the publisher of “The Phantom Tollbooth,” my favorite book at the time – and signing a six-figure, upmarket debut deal.
(05/13/26 7:10am)
A few days ago, during a lull in my lab experiments, I took the elevator up two floors to see one of Dartmouth’s corpse flowers, “Morphy,” which finally bloomed. Posters advertising the event had been multiplying in the hallways, taped crookedly between notices about seminars and safety trainings until they began to feel less like announcements and more like a quiet insistence that something was happening just above me that I was supposed to notice. I had been moving through the building on autopilot for weeks, but this was a nice change of pace.
(05/13/26 7:05am)
Dear Freak of the Week,
(05/13/26 7:00am)
Course election season always sparks a background stress. The courses that you take each term have the potential to make or break an entire 10 weeks. I don’t know if I’ve ever been fully satisfied with what I’ve taken in any given term.
(05/13/26 7:20am)
When I was 10 years old, my favorite place in the entire world was under a blanket fort, where I would read for hours on end. To my mother’s dismay, I would meticulously rearrange the living room to make space for my pillows and books in between the couch and ottoman. I was lost to a world that only words on a page could bring.
(05/12/26 11:00am)
Today, Hanover will vote on the the articles of the town warrant at the annual town meeting. Voting will take place at Hanover High School in two phases: first, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., by secret ballot for articles 1 through 7; then, at 7 p.m., with public debate and placard voting for articles 8 through 23. Shuttles sponsored by the Dartmouth Student Government will run every hour on the hour from Baker-Berry Library to Hanover High School starting at 7 a.m.
(05/12/26 2:07am)
A sample ballot on the town's website.
(05/12/26 9:00am)
On May 10, at the seventh weekly Dartmouth Student Government meeting of the spring term, senators discussed the closure of Cafe @ Baker after the spring term and the College’s plan to switch to Outlook/Microsoft-only support for future student email accounts.