TTLG: Enjoy This Beautiful View
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
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This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
At a Palestine Solidarity Coalition rally today at noon, six students began a hunger strike. Most of the students were masked and unidentifiable.
A kilometer into the first heat of women’s rowing at the Ivy League Women’s Rowing Championship in Camden, N.J., Dartmouth’s varsity eight was neck-and-neck with rival Brown University. Already at a quick pace, the crew unlocked another gear to finish second in the heat, eight seconds ahead of Brown.
From Madeleine Baldwin ’27 in Athens, Greece
As someone who dislikes the taste and jitters of coffee, I have long searched for an alternative morning drink to power me through my day. My senior year of high school, I turned to chai, a trendy black tea from India, and soon grew addicted. Along with my best friend and fellow chai enthusiast, I would scavenge New York City in search of the best oat milk iced chai latte.
This term, I’ve had my dorm room to myself — technically a double, but temporarily mine alone. For the first two weeks, I didn’t touch my former roommate’s side. Her bed stayed bare, her desk remained clear and her walls, blank and pale, stretched out like silence across from me. I kept to my half, like I was waiting for someone to give me permission to inhabit more space. But the emptiness was tantalizing, daring me to cross the line. Slowly, my things began to drift — first a book, then a blanket and now a sprawl across every surface except the walls.
Dear Sun,
In 1775, in a village in Hampshire, England, an author was born who would go on to be among the most influential and beloved in the world. In the state of New Hampshire this year, fans of Jane Austen are celebrating her 250th birthday in high style.
Whether it’s escaping the Choates, getting that long-desired single or striving for the comforts of “Hotel” Wheelock, the housing draw brings out students’ hopes for better possibilities. This is especially true for those living at Summit on Juniper, a College-owned apartment complex in West Lebanon.
Spring term should be filled with sunshine, lounging out on the Green and occasionally skipping class in favor of mid-day naps and river dips. But with the constant flow of April and May showers, the ever-relentless workload and the overall mental exhaustion that accompanies the end of the school year, sometimes the rest and relaxation promised by spring does not come until much later in the term. Still, activities other than lounging on the Green can provide springtime serenity. One such space is the weekly Monday morning meditation sessions hosted at Rollins Chapel. Held from 8 to 8:45 a.m., these sessions offer a quieter, more intentional kind of calm.
After a bleak winter and the rain of the past week, spring is finally in bloom at Dartmouth. Bright smiles and sunshine light up every corner of campus. But with all the excitement of warmth, it is easy to neglect the unique opportunities that lie just beyond Hanover. While many students may endeavor to hike local trails, paddleboard on the Connecticut River or spikeball on the green, if you are looking to stare nature right in the face this spring while supporting local conservation efforts, I highly recommend visiting the array of avian exhibits featured at the Vermont Institute of Natural Science Nature Center.
On Green Key last year, after another day of dangerous, unplanned, regretful decisions, I told Won sternly: “If your world ends, so does mine.”
Dear College President Sian Leah Beilock:
On April 24, Quisqueyanos at Dartmouth held a vigil to honor the victims of the April 8 roof collapse at Jet Set nightclub in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Around 40 Dartmouth students and community members attended the vigil.
Mia Steinberg ’25 was the president of the Rohr Chabad Center at Dartmouth last year, during and after the May 1, 2024, arrests. At the time, she co-wrote a letter to the editor with then-president of Hillel at Dartmouth Cara Marantz ’25 sharing “concern over the state of student safety and balanced discourse at Dartmouth,” particularly for Jewish students. Steinberg also spoke with The Dartmouth about antisemitism, hostility and isolation experienced by Jewish students in the aftermath of the arrests.
I was arrested a year ago today, while reporting for The Dartmouth.
A filly is a female horse who is too young to be called a mare. That is how I feel, basking in the sunshine on this terrace at an unnamed university outside Philadelphia, visiting a friend. The academic references are the same across college consortiums, as is the language for expressing intellectual attitudes and the student’s routine on a slow Sunday morning. I feel young. I feel refreshed by the breeze. The trees are green. It is already spring in the mid-Atlantic.
This past Sunday, Jensin Hall ’27 threw her second collegiate complete no-hitter against Yale University, earning Ivy League Pitcher of the Week.
Lyndsey Emmons joined Dartmouth’s Office of Pluralism and Leadership as an assistant director in September 2024. During the seven months she has been here, she has led civic engagement initiatives such as Lunch and Learn and promoted Women and Gender Advising initiatives.