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(05/08/26 5:00am)
Engineering professor and former Dartmouth heavyweight rower Douglas Van Citters ’99, Th’03, GR’06 has served as the interim dean of the Thayer School of Engineering since former dean Alexis Abramson’s departure from the College after the fall term in 2024. Van Citters also leads the Dartmouth Biomedical Engineering Center for Orthopaedics, which researches musculoskeletal biomaterials, biomechanics and design applications. His team holds over a dozen U.S. patents for various biomedical technologies. Van Citters previously served as the associate dean for undergraduate education at Thayer and received the 2019 Woodhouse Excellence in Teaching award, which is given to the best teacher-scholar among Dartmouth faculty.
(05/07/26 8:05am)
In a Letter to the Editor last week, Ramsey Alsheikh ’26 questioned the manner by which Jewish campus organizations chose to commemorate Yom HaZikaron, Israel’s official memorial day honoring fallen soldiers and victims of terrorism. I understand and agree with his skepticism. I do not know that it is necessary or even appropriate to commemorate another nation’s memorial day in such a manner. The flags stuck into the Dartmouth Hall lawn felt far more prominent than most American Memorial Day commemorations that I have seen. My issue with Alsheikh’s piece is not his weariness of the flags, but the decontextualization of a quote from Yehuda Amichai that comes at the end of the article and serves as the piece’s title, a distortion that ignores the nuance of flag misuse by both sides of the Israel-Palestine conflict.
(05/07/26 8:00am)
I’m here to recommend we vote NO on Article 7 at the upcoming town election on May 12.
(05/07/26 9:10am)
On April 30, The Dartmouth learned of a public project posted by chemistry professor Paul Robustelli on the Dartmouth Claude enterprise portal. The project, titled “PS3 Grading,” contained problem sets by 11 different students from Robustelli’s CHEM 76: Physical Chemistry II class, as well as the students’ personal identifying information. It could be accessed by any member of the Dartmouth Claude enterprise group, which is open to all campus community members. The Claude project was taken down by Robustelli on May 2 following The Dartmouth’s request for comment.
(05/07/26 9:05am)
On May 5, former MS NOW anchor Mehdi Hasan and The Daily Wire host Michael Knowles debated whether President Donald Trump’s actions represent “deviance from or adherence” to the Constitution at a public event hosted by the Dartmouth Political Union.
(05/07/26 9:00am)
On May 4, the Hanover Selectboard voted unanimously to ban parking on both sides of Occom Ridge after a public hearing. The unmarked street, which runs along the northwestern side of Occom Pond, previously permitted parking on the farther side of the pond. Vehicles parked on either side of Occom Ridge now may receive a $40 fine.
(05/06/26 7:15am)
At Collis Cafe, fresh bagels are in limited supply. By around 9:30 a.m., they’re often sold out, replaced by store-bought alternatives that many students immediately recognize. The difference in quality, and the speed at which the originals disappear, has turned these bagels into one of the most sought-after parts of campus breakfast. But behind that daily sellout is a process most students never see, and a baker whose work begins long before anyone gets in line.
(05/06/26 7:05am)
Dear Freak of the Week,
(05/06/26 7:00am)
I had a protein bar in my bag for months. It wasn’t there because I really liked the flavor, or because I ever actually planned to eat it. It was there because having it felt like the responsible thing to do — a small, sealed backup plan for a version of the day that might go slightly wrong. I carried it because I imagined, vaguely, that at some point I’d find myself in lab for too many hours on end, or stranded somewhere right before a midterm with no other form of sustenance in sight, and I’d need something that quietly proved I thought ahead.
(05/04/26 11:27pm)
Dickey Center director Victoria Holt moderated the April 30 event title “New Cold Wars: A Journalist’s View of Geopolitics.”
(05/05/26 8:05am)
Dartmouth got it right.
(05/05/26 8:09am)
Re: Dartmouth to award seven honorary degrees at commencement ceremony
(05/05/26 9:05am)
On May 3, at the fifth weekly Dartmouth Student Government meeting of the spring term, Hanover Selectboard member Jennie Chamberlain presented information about the six zoning amendments that will be on the ballot at the upcoming May 12 town elections.
(05/05/26 9:00am)
The construction of three new dormitories on West Wheelock Street have created noise disturbances for some students who live in the River cluster dormitories.
(05/05/26 9:15am)
On April 30, New York Times chief White House correspondent David Sanger discussed his decades of experience reporting from Washington, D.C. and abroad at an event hosted by the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding.
(05/05/26 9:10am)
The start of May brings with it “peak” tick activity season, which will last through June, according to New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services public health information officer Tom Brown.
(05/04/26 6:15am)
Through its two-hour run time, “I Swear” maintains a remarkable tonal balance that elevates it from an entertaining film to a truly great one. It approaches Tourette syndrome with searing intimacy, never shying away from the awful consequences that those who live with it endure, and yet it also recognizes the humor inherent in its manifestations. The film masterfully presents its subject’s tics?— shouting “half-price heroin!” in front of police officers, “I’m a pedo!” during a job interview or “fuck the Queen!” during an audience with Elizabeth II herself — as simultaneously horrifying and outrageously funny. The movie’s command of its emotional register also allows it to be unexpectedly poignant as it tells an extremely personal true story that’s both heartbreaking and inspiring.
(05/04/26 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 statewide and New Hampshire district offices.
(05/04/26 5:05am)
After a pair of stellar collegiate careers, lineman Josiah Green ’25 and defensive back Sean Williams ’26 are looking to continue making plays on Sundays this upcoming NFL season.
(05/04/26 5:00am)
For Charlotte West ’28, sailing is as much about mindset as it is about speed. As a helm on the women’s sailing team, she is responsible for driving the boat by steering with the rudder and trimming the mainsail.