1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(11/13/25 9:00am)
Last month, Dartmouth announced an AI mental health resource called Evergreen.AI. The initiative is an AI chatbot aiming to “help students flourish by providing personalized guidance and support in real time.” The first chatbot will debut in December while, according to the College, “the fully generative, more personalized chatbot debuts for testing at the end of 2026.” The price tag is estimated to be $16.5 million, which will be funded by parent and alumni donations. While some students have welcomed the potential to increase mental health accessibility, others have expressed concern about de-personalized mental health care. We asked our writers, how do you feel about Evergreen.AI?
(11/13/25 10:00am)
Whale-watching trips and weekends in New York. Sushi, tea and cake every Wednesday. Fresh berries and yogurt every Tuesday. When incoming Dartmouth students receive their housing assignments ahead of their first year, they are integrated into one of six House Communities.
(11/07/25 9:15am)
In public bathrooms across campus, students can find “The Stall Street Journal.” It’s a series of posters produced by the Student Wellness Center offering students advice and help on a variety of topics. This term, they posted a new issue called “Doomscrolling Detox.” There are a couple of different designs, but they all convey the same message: that news and social media can be overwhelming, and it’s essential to consider your feelings and take precautions to avoid getting overwhelmed while scrolling through social media.
(11/07/25 10:10am)
When language students file into a 7:45 a.m. “drill” class, they step into a practice that has defined Dartmouth’s language teaching for generations. The small, fast-paced sessions — part performance, part repetition — are typically led by student instructors, creating a tradition of peer mentoring.
(11/07/25 10:00am)
The Society of Fellows provides a postdoctoral opportunity for nine early-career academics to engage in interdisciplinary research at Dartmouth before becoming full-time faculty members at the College or a different university. Society of Fellows faculty director Emily Walton said the group does “critical work” that blends different academic disciplines.
(11/06/25 10:10am)
Former national security advisor Jake Sullivan devoted much of his campus lecture on Nov. 4 to defending the Biden administration’s foreign policy record, including his roles during the wars in Gaza and Ukraine.
(11/05/25 8:20am)
You’ve likely seen the Dartmouth Libraries stickers dozens of times around campus, stuck to water bottles, computer cases laying out at the library's circulation desk. I first discovered them at the Baker-Berry Library open house, where a handful were out on display. There are 27 sticker designs in total, distinguished by their unique style: colorful, imaginative and playfully abstract. Each circular sticker represents a specific library or study space, designated in bold font on the bottom.
(11/04/25 10:10am)
Evergreen.AI — currently being built at Dartmouth — promises to be the world’s first first college-specific wellness artificial intelligence. The price tag? $16.5 million, according to the project website.
(10/31/25 6:05am)
From Oct. 2 to Oct. 19, Shaker Bridge Theatre in White River Junction, Vt., put on “Eureka Day,” a 2018 play by Jonathan Spector that follows a private elementary school board as it deals with a mumps outbreak. Given the significant population of unvaccinated students, the board disagrees and fractures over the right approach to the issue. With standout performances from the Shaker Bridge Theatre cast, “Eureka Day” is a mostly effective play that explores the negative underside of making decisions by forced consensus.
(10/30/25 9:15am)
Artificial intelligence has reshaped the job hunting process. Major corporations — citing a shift toward artificial intelligence — are leading a trend in layoffs, with over 900,000 workers dismissed nationwide this year through September, according to CBS News. Job postings on the campus recruiting platform Handshake have reduced by 15% over the past year, while the number of applicants has risen by 30%, according to CNBC News.
(10/29/25 7:15am)
Nestled behind Baker-Berry on Maynard Street, Sudikoff Hall is a campus diamond in the rough. From serving as a computer lab to hosting temples and student study spaces, Sudikoff has lived many lives. But it hasn’t always been this way.
(10/28/25 8:15am)
President Sian Leah Beilock has rightly rejected the Trump administration’s coercive Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education. The compact was a deal with the devil, deceptively designed to enhance institutional quality through federal investment. It demanded a price no free institution of learning should pay — the surrender of academic independence in exchange for government dollars. Accepting such terms would have not only violated Dartmouth’s proud tradition of self-governance, but Dartmouth would have ceded corporate rights we won in Dartmouth College v. Woodward.
(10/22/25 7:15am)
Dartmouth Thayer School of Engineering’s Dual-Degree Program allows students to attend two liberal arts institutions and earn two degrees in five years: a bachelor of arts from their home college and a professionally-accredited bachelor of engineering from Dartmouth. It’s an unconventional path that requires students to split their college experience between two campuses, navigate two distinct academic cultures and constantly readjust to new environments.
(10/17/25 8:15am)
In the past week, Dartmouth announced the development of an app called Evergreen, a chatbot meant to, in the words of the College, “help students flourish by providing personalized guidance and support in real time.” The bot will be designed by a team of 130 Dartmouth students who will put in a cumulative 100,000 hours to refine the bot. By the end of its development, Evergreen will be able to “speak like a Dartmouth student,” understanding campus slang and providing one-on-one counseling in moments of need.
(10/17/25 9:05am)
Engineering-consulting firm Toole Group presented a plan to add bike lanes to Hanover streets on Oct. 13 to the Hanover Bike Walk Committee and town residents. The Selectboard has yet to finalize any decisions about the “Hanover Shared Streets Vision Plan,” but is looking to make town more walkable.
(10/15/25 7:10am)
Whether it’s because of their love for Foco cookies or Collis’s Life Changer smoothies, students prefer different meal plans. Since not everyone has time to cook or access a kitchen during the 10-week term, a thoughtfully-chosen meal plan can enhance students’ experience on campus.
(10/13/25 6:00am)
“Against all odds, I’ve found myself in the business of optics, not substance.” Spoken by a peripheral character, this is the unassuming thesis of Luca Guadagnino’s latest film. “After the Hunt” is a gripping psychological thriller that weaves a complex web of power dynamics related to race, class and gender. In this campus drama set in 2019, philosophy professor Alma Imhoff (Julia Roberts) contends with the news that a favored colleague Hank (Andrew Garfield) has allegedly sexually assaulted her Ph.D. student Maggie (Ayo Edebiri).
(10/13/25 6:15am)
Feather boas. Bodies dripping with rhinestones. Burgundy stage curtains fading into shadow. This was the promotional imagery for Taylor Swift’s 12th studio album “The Life of a Showgirl.” Written and produced during Swift’s The Eras Tour by Swift, Max Martin and Shellback, this is a record about performance. It leans into spectacle, teasing some sort of confession behind its glittering facade that is never quite revealed. Over 12 tracks, Swift slips between contradictory personas, leaving the listener uncertain as to which, if any, are real.
(10/10/25 8:15am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/10/25 9:30am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.