At May 1 rally, speakers call for ‘unity’ among student activist groups
On Friday, a new, still-unnamed coalition of student activist groups held a rally in the center of the Green. Approximately 75 students, faculty and community members attended.
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On Friday, a new, still-unnamed coalition of student activist groups held a rally in the center of the Green. Approximately 75 students, faculty and community members attended.
A group of Dartmouth students (right) play hacky sack throughout the duration of the rally held on The Green on May 1.
History professor Annelise Orleck — one of the 89 individuals arrested on May 1, 2024 — delivers a speech about the history of protest on Dartmouth's campus.
A Hanover Police Department car circles The Green on May 1.
This year’s Green Key concert will be headlined by indie-rock band Grouplove. Recently-reunited hip hop duo MKTO will open after performances by student band Avalanche and a DJ set from Philip Ernst ’26 and Ufuk Sahmeran ’27, according to the Dartmouth Programming Board.
The College will award seven honorary degrees at the Class of 2026’s commencement ceremony on June 14, according to an email to campus today from the Office of the President. The awards include two Doctors of Arts, one Doctor of Humane Letters, two Doctors of Laws and two Doctors of Science.
At a Rockefeller Center for Public Policy event on April 28, Princeton University political science professors Stephen Macedo and Frances Lee argued that COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns did not reduce disease spread and had negative consequences on education.
Americans should not “underestimate what a dangerous moment this is for women,” former U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Alabama and University of Alabama School of Law professor Joyce Vance told attendees at an April 27 event hosted by the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy. Vance pointed to legislation like the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act, which was passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on Feb. 11 and is now awaiting vote in the Senate. The SAVE Act would force women who have changed their last names to “jump through hoops” to vote, Vance argued.
On April 17, Gracie Bartos ’27, Jackson DeConcini ’22 and Will Nelson ’27 were awarded the Harry S. Truman Scholarship, joining a cohort of 55 students selected from 761 candidates across 305 colleges and universities. The scholarship is awarded for “leadership potential, a commitment to a career in government or the nonprofit sector and academic excellence,” according to the Truman Foundation website.
On April 3, former Dartmouth Health chief quality and value officer Carol Barsky filed a lawsuit against Dartmouth Health in the U.S. District Court of New Hampshire. The publicly-filed complaint alleges that Dartmouth Health wrongfully terminated Barsky for presenting her safety concerns regarding medical equipment used at the hospital. The case, which also alleges that Dartmouth Health president Joanne Conroy “bullied and harassed” Barsky for attempting to “mitigate the safety risks” Barsky exposed, has not been heard in court.
Re: Hillel and Chabad hold vigil in remembrance of fallen Israeli soldiers and terror victims
In the 1990s, as the field of economics almost universally rallied around globalization, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman went on a crusade against journalists and pundits who dared raise concerns about unrestricted trade. Through a series of books and articles, Krugman dismissed in scathing style any critique of globalization as being ignorant of well-established economic theory. Some decades later, you’d be able to find Krugman behind what his ’90s self would’ve deemed enemy lines: In the pages of the Bloomberg Opinion Section, admitting that the past economic consensus overlooked the negative consequences of globalization that many journalists and pundits had long been pointing to.
If Ronald Reagan was “the Teflon President,” for his ability to dodge political controversies, then there is probably no substance around to describe the non-stick quality of Donald Trump. His scandals — personal, political and, for a moment, criminal — are so numerous and well-documented that revisiting them will prove to be a fruitless endeavor.
Laura Stacey ’16’s path to hockey stardom was anything but linear. From crying during figure skating lessons and longing to join hockey practice on the other side of the rink, to representing Canada on the Olympic stage and winning a gold and two silver medals for her country, Stacey’s journey has been defined by persistence, perspective and an ever-evolving love of the game.
Peyton Capuano ’27 has been a constant at the top of the lineup for the Dartmouth women’s tennis team since her freshman year. Playing primarily at No. 1 singles and doubles, she has become one of the Ivy League’s most consistent and dominant competitors. This season, Capuano went 13-4 in singles play and 15-5 in doubles alongside partner Michela Moore ’27, helping lead the Big Green to multiple victories while continuing to build a decorated career that includes multiple All-Ivy honors and, most recently, being named the 2026 Ivy League Player of the Year.
On April 24, Hood Museum of Art hosted its quarterly “Art in Focus” tour, an interactive program designed for people with dementia-related illnesses and their caregivers in collaboration with Dartmouth Health’s Aging Resource Center.
Season 4 of the adult animated superhero series “Invincible” delivers high stakes and an even higher emotional payoff as the conflict between the heroes and the Viltrumites — the space-faring race of Superman analogues — comes to a head. Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun) embraces a more cynical approach to heroism after his destructive skirmish with the Viltrumite Conquest (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) left him with the resolve to stop holding back from killing his opponents. Mark adopted his blue and black suit during season 3 and keeps it for much of this season, reflecting a darker period of his life.
This week marks the middle of my “H-Term.” For those who aren’t in on the lingo, an H-Term (or Hanover term) is when a Dartmouth student takes an off-term but stays in Hanover. I’ve been trying out writing full time while simultaneously taking care of other campus responsibilities. This experiment has taught me a lot about myself and my independent work habits, but beyond that, and more interesting to readers of my column, it has allowed me to take a step back from a busy class schedule and observe the reproduction of the Dartmouth student’s learning power.
Once upon a time, we, as a campus, protested. Have you heard of the 1969 occupation of Parkhurst in opposition to the Vietnam War? The 1985 anti-apartheid shanty towns that lasted for months on the Green? Or the anti-Wall Street Occupy Dartmouth encampment in 2011?