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(05/12/26 9:10am)
From 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. today, Hanover residents will vote by ballot on seven articles, including major zoning ordinances, to begin the ballot portion of the annual town meeting.
(05/12/26 9:05am)
On May 10, Dartmouth’s Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander heritage group Hōkūpa`a hosted their annual lū’au on the lawn of Baker-Berry Library. Around 1,000 students, faculty, family members and other community members attended to celebrate Pacific Islander culture with performances, lei-making and Hawaiian food, according to Hōkūpa`a co-president Chase Kamikawa ’26.
(05/12/26 8:11am)
Eli Moyse ’27 is right about one thing: Learning is inconvenient. What is even more inconvenient, though, is changing how we learn, and reckoning with what is still worth learning in the first place.
(05/12/26 1:22pm)
The U.S. Presidential Scholars Program annually recognizes 161 graduating high school seniors from a nationwide class of roughly 3.9 million students and is widely regarded as one of the country’s highest academic honors. I was selected as a 2025 U.S. Presidential Scholar. Below is the letter that I sent to U.S. Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, when I returned the medal that accompanied the award because I could not, in good conscience, continue to keep an honor conferred in the name of Donald Trump. The letter has been minorly edited according to The Dartmouth’s style guide.
(05/11/26 6:00am)
On May 8 and 9, the Hood Museum of Art hosted a collage workshop with visiting pop artist Michael Albert in celebration of “American Pop,” an exhibition on view at the Hood Museum of Art from Dec. 13, 2025 through Nov. 7 of this year. The exhibition is part of a larger series commemorating the United States’ 250th anniversary through an examination of identity and consumer culture in American works.
(05/11/26 6:05am)
Pulitzer Prize finalist Talene Monahon ’13 will debut her latest play “Wonder! A Woman Keeps a Secret” at Northern Stage in White River Junction on May 13. Commissioned by Northern Stage’s producing artistic director and Dartmouth acting professor, Carol Dunne — also Monahon’s former Dartmouth professor — the farce comedy is loosely adapted from Susanna Centlivre’s 1714 play of the same name and marks Monahon’s return to the Upper Valley.
(05/11/26 9:00am)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm and gubernatorial elections, the paper is publishing an interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth” featuring in-depth conversations with candidates for state-wide and New Hampshire district positions.
(05/11/26 12:39am)
Sununu is seeking a return to elected office nearly two decades after losing reelection to Shaheen in 2008.
(05/11/26 12:38am)
John E. Sununu, a Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, sat down with The Dartmouth on May 8.
(05/08/26 12:02pm)
Have you ever been to your undergraduate dean?
(05/08/26 12:02pm)
Re: Professor unintentionally released student information to campus in ‘test’ of Claude’s grading capabilities
(05/08/26 2:20am)
DiLorenzo is a real estate developer and owner of the Key Auto Group, a new car dealership. He is first-time candidate, competing in a Republican primary field that includes State Rep. Brian Cole, R-Manchester, and Hollie Noveletsky as he seeks to flip the district for the first time since 2019.
(05/08/26 1:54am)
A student asks a question during an event hosted by the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy on May 5 in the Hinman Forum.
(05/08/26 1:57am)
Washington Post investigative reporter Silvia Foster-Frau urged students to “support the news” and to “raise your voice” against injustice at a May 5 event.
(05/07/26 11:45pm)
Update Appended (May 8, 10:47 a.m.): This article has been updated to reflect that Canvas access was restored.
(05/08/26 6:05am)
The Hopkins Center for the Arts hosted the third annual HanUnder Arts Festival from April 23 to 25. The festival is a three-day, student-run celebration of student art. Day one showcased the variety of arts at Dartmouth, spanning practices of music, visual arts and writing. The second day centered on music and dance, including performances from singer-songwriters, DJs, drag artists, rock bands and more. On day three, the festival featured sonic art, film and theater.
(05/08/26 6:00am)
Experiencing “Billie Eilish — Hit Me Hard and Soft: The Tour (Live in 3D)” felt like witnessing the payoff of nearly a decade of Billie Eilish’s artistic evolution. I attended one of the early listening screenings for the “Hit Me Hard and Soft” album back in 2024, and returning for another early screening two years later — this time for the shot-for-IMAX concert film documenting the album tour that my wallet unfortunately forbade me from attending in person — made the entire experience resonate with me on a deeply personal level.
(05/08/26 6:00am)
“Maybe some things have changed,” Andrea “Andy” Sachs (Anne Hathaway) mumbles upon re-entering the office of fashion magazine Runway, 20 years after leaving her job as personal assistant to editor-in-chief Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep). “Some things” certainly have, and “The Devil Wears Prada 2” brilliantly captures the pressure that old-school franchises now face in a rapidly shifting digital economy.
(05/08/26 9:05am)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm and gubernatorial elections, the paper is publishing an interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth,” featuring in-depth conversations with candidates for statewide and New Hampshire district positions.
(05/08/26 9:05am)
During an event at the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy on May 5, Washington Post investigative reporter Silvia Foster-Frau urged students to “support the news” and to “raise your voice” against injustice.