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(10/01/25 7:25am)
At Dartmouth, being pre-medicine is more than just taking a sequence of classes — it’s a culture. Although the College’s pre-med track is notorious for its rigorous course structure, students have found ways to foster a sense of community with others who are also planning to pursue careers in medicine.
(10/01/25 7:30am)
“Dartmouth was the first time …” I used this statement a lot in my first year. Dartmouth was the first time I shared my pronouns, simply because my language, Karakalpak, had one pronoun for she, he and it. Dartmouth was the first time I took classes fully in English. Dartmouth was the first time I learned how to use Canvas. I know it’s become cliche to say that I’ve learned so much in a year, but I mean it. I’ve learned to embrace being opinionated at a liberal arts school, whose values are quite different from those in my culture in Uzbekistan.
(09/26/25 6:05am)
Through the Hood Museum’s “A Space for Dialogue” program, which offers student interns the chance to curate their own exhibition, Sadie Weil ’25 researched and created “Hidden Histories: Art, Provenance and the Nazi Era.” It is currently on display at the Alvin P. Gutman Gallery in the Hood through Nov. 2.
(09/26/25 8:10am)
In conversations with friends, I recently discovered that the four-way intersection at East Wheelock and South Main Street is an infrequently discussed yet polarizing part of campus life. It’s not the intersection on its own, but specifically how the traffic lights work — some people love it, some people hate it and most everyone can’t understand why someone would feel differently than they do about it.
(09/08/25 9:30am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
(09/08/25 9:16am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
(09/08/25 7:15am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
(09/08/25 8:14am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Freshman Special Issue.
(08/22/25 9:10am)
New Hampshire has the lowest amount of funding for higher education in the country, according to a recent study by the New Hampshire Fiscal Policy Institute that ranked all 50 states. The study comes less than two months after New Hampshire approved its 2026-2027 state budget, which cut funding for the University System of New Hampshire by 17.6%.
(08/08/25 7:00am)
I’ve been journaling a lot this summer. Not every day, and not with the intention of writing anything particularly poetic or put-together, but a lot. It’s mostly scattered thoughts — half-finished sentences, lists of things I’m trying to process, weirdly specific moments I don’t want to forget. It’s like the feeling of driving with the windows down after a long day, or hearing something someone said that hit a little too close. I journal in the times of the day when things slow down: late at night before bed, sitting in my parked car after a long drive or in the 20 minutes between class and Collis lunch when I need to get out of my head.
(08/01/25 9:05am)
Thirty students completed the Dartmouth Outing Club Fifty on July 27, hiking 54 miles from Moosilauke Lodge to Hanover in an iconic and celebrated College tradition. The outdoor event is a complicated logistical feat organized entirely by students. Over 150 students, selected via applications, run support stations along the hike, offering hikers snacks, water and medical aid, according to Carter Bartel ’27, the Fifty’s logistics director.
(08/01/25 5:05am)
Last week, at the World Rowing Under 23 Championships in Poznan, Poland, Dartmouth rowers Cosmo Hondrogen ’28 and Áine Ley ’26 earned silver medals for the United States in the lightweight men’s single sculls and women’s eight, respectively.
(07/11/25 8:05am)
A group of Dartmouth students is putting up an original piece of theater called “Be the Boy” at The Tank in New York City next month. The performance is part of the LimeFest theater festival for emerging artists.
(07/11/25 5:01am)
After 36 consecutive seasons of leading Dartmouth baseball, head coach Bob Whalen retired on July 3 as the winningest baseball coach at a single institution in Ivy League history, according to Dartmouth Sports. Whalen finished his Dartmouth career with 653 wins, the most by an Ivy League baseball coach at a single program, along with two Ivy League championships and two NCAA tournament appearances. Under Whalen’s leadership, Dartmouth baseball featured 80 first-team All-Ivy selections and 365 Ivy League wins, both the most of any program in the league.
(07/04/25 9:10am)
On June 16, Matthew Catrambone ’26 and Samuel Terry ’26 were found guilty for providing alcohol to people under the age of 21 and were each fined $930 at Lebanon District Court, according to the Valley News. Catrambone pleaded guilty and Terry pleaded no contest. A no contest plea means that a defendant neither disputes their charge nor explicitly admits guilt, but allows the court to treat them as guilty when sentencing.
(06/15/25 9:25am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/15/25 7:00am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(06/15/25 6:05am)
This article is featured in the 2025 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(05/30/25 4:05pm)
Thompson Arena thundered with applause last Tuesday night as Dartmouth hosted its annual Celebration of Excellence, honoring student-athletes who exemplified success in competition, the classroom and the community.
(05/29/25 9:05am)
On July 1, University of Notre Dame dean Santiago Schnell will assume the role of Dartmouth’s next provost, succeeding outgoing Provost David Kotz ’86. Born and raised in Venezuela, Schnell holds a Ph.D. in mathematical biology from the University of Oxford and has served in leadership roles at the University of Michigan and University of Notre Dame, where he currently serves as dean of its College of Science. Schnell’s own research is on the role of enzymes in kinetic reactions. The Dartmouth sat down with Schnell to discuss his path to Dartmouth, his priorities as provost and how he hopes to engage with students during his tenure.