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(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?
(11/12/25 8:00am)
13 days from now, the Dartmouth Coach will take me away from Hanover and will likely not bring me back until next fall. 13 days from now, I will say goodbye to the friendships I’ve had since freshman fall and those I’ve made this term, to my current favorite study spots — the Foco tiny booths and Novack high tables — and to the ridiculously cramped bathroom stalls in my dorm building. 13 days from now, my D-Plan will force me — or allow me, depending on how you look at it — to take a roughly nine month break from campus.
(11/04/25 9:30am)
In preparation for the Class of 2029’s student government elections, which concluded last week, the Dartmouth campus took on a familiar rhythm. Each would-be class senator released polished Instagram graphics, crafted statements about community and connection and circulated Google Docs paired with the promise of hearing students’ voices. Group chats begin to overflow with reminders to vote for a friend of a friend. The walls of Novack Cafe are plastered with headshots of freshmen in suits that remind you to “VOTE!”
(10/10/25 8:10am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Homecoming Special Issue.
(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.
(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 6:10am)
A wide range of people will likely despise the new film “Eddington,” for myriad reasons. Perhaps some will be offended by the film’s lampooning of self-righteous antiracist activists. Others might feel targeted by the depiction of its deranged far-right conspiracy theorist characters. Many others will be put off by the film’s tonal twists and turns — particularly in the absurdist, hyperviolent third act. Then there are the great many people who might be reluctant to revisit 2020 in a film at all, regardless of the context. But for those who are open-minded and able to laugh at themselves, “Eddington” is a thrilling and hilarious satire that will amuse, provoke and shock in equal measure.
(07/18/25 11:46am)
Mindy Kaling ’01 is rewriting the script on what a college theater space can be. In June 2025, the award-winning writer, actress and producer donated a gift to fund the Mindy Kaling Theater Lab, which will be located in the newly renovated lower level of the Hopkins Center for the Arts adjacent to the Warner Bentley Theater.
(06/03/25 4:18pm)
Yesterday, the Student Worker Collective at Dartmouth announced the end of their strike, two weeks after it began. SWCD will enter into mediation with the College, according to a statement posted on the union’s Instagram account.
(05/29/25 9:10am)
Dartmouth is launching the Davidson Institute for Global Security, a $34 million initiative for the study of international policy and security. The program, housed under the Dickey Center for International Understanding, will host fellowship programs and fund internships for students.
(05/28/25 6:14pm)
Around 1:30 p.m., approximately fifteen pro-Palestinian protesters occupied the reception area of the president’s office in Parkhurst Hall. They then left the building at 6 p.m., when it closed for the day.
(05/16/25 7:10am)
When you hear the words “Dartmouth bubble,” several iconic images come to mind: maybe lunch on Collis Porch, flitzing or pong. But for better or worse, a little bumblebee flying over an app called Fizz gave me my first impressions of Dartmouth.
(05/15/25 9:10am)
A post shared by The Dartmouth (@thedartmouth)
(05/07/25 7:05am)
Dear Freak of the Week,
(05/06/25 8:55am)
This article was originally published to Instagram and YouTube on May 2, 2025. At the time of publishing, one tent was still up on the Parkhurst Hall lawn. Shortly after the video was published, the protesters took down the remaining tent and vacated the lawn.
(04/28/25 7:00am)
Kira Parrish-Penny ’24, the 2024-25 Edward Connery Lathem ’51 Special Collections Fellow, utilized her research skills and interest in studying the societal roles of American women to curate “Plate to Print.” This exhibit examines how cookbooks speak to the evolution of domesticity and womanhood throughout the history of the United States. It has been on display since March 17 and will remain in the Class of 1965 Galleries in Rauner Special Collections Library until June 13.
(04/18/25 9:20am)
Last December, Omar Rashid ’29 was accepted to Dartmouth through the early decision process as a member of the Class of 2029. Rashid lives in the Gaza Strip with his mother and two brothers. Since May 2024, both exit points from Gaza — the Rafah crossing into Egypt and the Kerem Shalom crossing into Israel — have been closed. As a result, he may not be able to travel to Dartmouth for the upcoming academic year.
(04/15/25 8:15am)
Omar Rashid ’29 lives in Gaza – you can read more about his story from his incoming classmates or through his Instagram. He has risked his life to apply to Dartmouth, and his dream of being accepted came true in December. Yet without help, he may never arrive. Israel has broken the ceasefire, and Gaza has been sealed off from the world. No humanitarian aid has entered Gaza for over a month, and the Israelis allow virtually no one to leave.
(04/02/25 7:10am)
The clocks have been set back an hour, sunset begins after 6 p.m. and warmer days are sprinkled in with rain and wind. In short, spring has arrived in Hanover. With the new season, our two-week break came and went, briefly relieving students of their classes and stress. While some Dartmouth students boarded planes to international destinations like the Caribbean or Europe, others chose to spend break at home or on campus. Having no set vacation plans, I traveled back home to the South Side of Chicago this spring break.
(03/06/25 10:00am)
On Thursday, the College and Student Worker Collective at Dartmouth will meet for a fifth bargaining session to renegotiate a new student dining worker contract, according to the Office of Labor Relations website. The current contract, which was ratified in February 2023, expires on March 18.