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(09/26/25 5:10am)
For the first time in 20 years, the Dartmouth women’s soccer team left Harvard University’s Jordan Field with a win. With a goal from junior Kate Ryan ’27 in the 75th minute and a strong defensive performance, the Big Green achieved a 1-0 victory against the Crimson in Cambridge, Mass. on Sept. 20. This is the first time the Big Green has beaten Harvard on the road since 2005.
(09/25/25 8:10am)
On Sept. 3, former U.S. Sen. John E. Sununu posted a cryptic tweet on his unverified, obscure X page: “Don’t call it a comeback…” The post linked to a Politico article reporting that the former senator is weighing a run for Senate in the upcoming midterm elections. Could Sununu, a member of a powerful New Hampshire political family, be tacitly confirming his intention to run? Although his gambit for the Senate seat may seem out of the blue, he might just be the best candidate for the job if he positions himself as a firmly anti-Trump Republican.
(09/24/25 7:00am)
I hate driving, but Hanover makes me crave the peace of life behind the wheel. I spent interim chauffeuring my little sister to and from middle school. I listened to her chatter while methodically navigating the pothole-ridden roads of Connecticut suburbia, dodging protruding mailboxes and the high school track team and women in their 60s walking dogs too close to the middle of the road. The rides were amusing; I had forgotten how uniquely excruciating life as a seventh-grade girl is.
(09/24/25 7:15am)
I began my final year at Dartmouth the same way I began my first: with the more strenuous hiking First Year Trip. In previous years, the weeks before trips had me brimming with excitement, putting on the ‘Medley,’ casually dancing along to “Shower” and “Blame it on the Boogie” as I meandered through my days. Although I was just as excited this year, that excitement was now laced with a quiet dread I couldn’t quite shake. This time, I was painfully aware of the finality of it all. This would be my last safety talk, my last batch of Annie’s Mac on the Trangia, my last Lodj Croo dinner and my last group of new trippees. This was my last First Year Trip, and I couldn’t escape the thought that I might never experience anything like it again.
(09/22/25 8:00am)
Down one point late in the fourth quarter, Dartmouth sat on the one-yard line with a chance to take the lead.
(09/22/25 6:00am)
A wistful feeling I can’t quite place stirs in me at the arrival of fall: the shortening days bring thoughts of the open road, a desire to wander. The words of Isabelle Eberhardt are fitting.
(09/19/25 5:00am)
On Wednesday, the men’s soccer team took to Burnham Field to face Northeastern University. After an intense 90 minutes, Dartmouth walked away with a 4-2 win against the Huskies.
(09/16/25 8:00am)
Δεν ξεχνώ. Never forget.
(09/08/25 7:00am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
(08/22/25 7:10am)
A memory: My roommate and I collapse into our seats across from each other at the dining table of our apartment in Prague — home for the next 10 weeks. Between us are bowls of couscous, roast chicken thighs, grilled eggplant and roasted carrots. As we begin to eat, our conversation drifts from excitement about being abroad, to weird cake ideas, to concerns about pigeons in the apartment. Warm sunset light bathes our meal. Like my study-abroad friends often said, this must be the point.
(08/15/25 8:30am)
The other morning, I was enjoying a leisurely stroll to the gym. I was doing something dumb on my phone when suddenly, I was struck by a splash of cold water. I looked up, expecting an errant water balloon or an ephemeral summer shower. I was instead greeted by a cold, unfeeling black cylinder emerging mysteriously from the ground. I had once again become the victim of the panopticon of automated sprinklers, whose watering paths frequently fly carelessly in the face of major pedestrian thruways. This 10 a.m. shower is emblematic of something larger on our campus: a strange grass fetish.
(07/25/25 9:10am)
Throughout July, residents of the McLaughlin Cluster dorms have reported microbial growth in their rooms to the Office of Residential Operations. On the evening of July 18 into the early morning of July 19, a custodial team sent by the Residential Operations identified 14 rooms with microbial growth and “cleaned and sanitized” them with the “best practices,” according to a campus-wide email update sent to campus by student body president Sabik Jawad ’26 and student body vice president Favion Harvard ’26.
(07/25/25 7:00am)
It’s week five of the term, and we’re now in the Dog Days of summer. I find myself waking up every morning groggy, still tired from the night out before. Cakey mascara stains my eyelashes and under eyes while my muscles ache from somehow walking over 15,000 steps the previous day — from class to the river to the dining hall, to up and down frat row in search of a party.
(07/18/25 7:00am)
I’ve found myself walking more slowly lately. It isn’t a conscious choice. I think I just exist in less of a rush.
(07/18/25 9:00am)
On July 14, Dartmouth students, faculty and community members participated in the 44th Annual Prouty, a fundraising event for cancer-related healthcare such as research, patient treatment and family support services. The event was organized by the Dartmouth Cancer Center, a cancer treatment and research center that is part of Dartmouth Health.
(07/11/25 7:00am)
A little goal of mine this summer is to explore every building on campus I’ve never been in before. Not just poke my head in, but actually be there, setting up camp with my laptop, drinking bad coffee in a forgotten lounge, watching the light move through unfamiliar windows. Dartmouth is tiny but still vast; I want to see how the campus feels when I let it surprise me.
(07/04/25 9:00am)
As another summer rolls around in Hanover, campus is once again gearing up for construction. This year, Crosby Street and Thompson Arena are both closed for major construction projects.
(06/15/25 9:55am)
The Class of 2025 is capping off its time at Dartmouth at a complicated moment for universities. President Donald Trump has put the Ivy League in the national spotlight with his effort to cut federal funding and change aspects of higher education — most recently, attempting to bar Harvard University from enrolling international students. In some ways, Dartmouth has steered clear of the turmoil, the New York Times heralding the College as the “one Ivy League university [which] has avoided Trump’s retribution so far.” Still, over the past three months, Dartmouth’s community has engaged in discussions about the College’s role in the national political landscape. The Dartmouth sat down with College President Sian Leah Beilock to discuss these pressing issues and the graduating class.
(06/15/25 9:10am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/15/25 7:05am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.