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(01/09/25 10:00am)
On Dec. 19, 2024, Dartmouth College Child Care Center employees voted 21-1-3 to join the Service Employees International Union, Local 560. The National Labor Relations Board certified their union on Dec. 30, according to College spokesperson Jana Barnello.
(11/15/24 7:00am)
The Hood Museum of Art’s landmark exhibition, “Cara Romero: Panûpünüwügai (Living Light),” will travel to the Phoenix Art Museum on Feb. 28, 2026 and remain in the city until June 2026 following its showcase at the Hood, according to Hood Museum website. The move marks the Hood’s first traveling exhibition in over a decade, according to curatorial affairs associate director and Hood Indigenous Art curator Jami Powell.
(11/12/24 9:00am)
Re: Two protesters arrested at campus event with US Sen. John Fetterman
(11/12/24 10:00am)
On Nov. 10, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its eighth weekly meeting of the fall term. Led by student body president Chukwuka Odigbo ’25, the Senate met with Safety and Security associate director Tom O’Donnell to discuss campus infrastructure projects such as improved outdoor lighting, bicycle infrastructure and increased pedestrian safety measures.
(11/11/24 7:05am)
From Nov. 7 to Nov. 10, the Dartmouth Film Society celebrated the 75th Alumni Fest — an event that honors the Society’s 75th anniversary by bringing alumni in the film industry to campus. According to Johanna Evans, four out of the six films screened are brand new.
(11/05/24 10:21pm)
Election Day 2024 has arrived, as millions of Americans prepare to head to the polls and cast their ballots in Hanover and around the nation.
(11/05/24 10:15am)
After more than a year of campaign rallies, on-campus student debates and get-out-the-vote efforts, Election Day is here.
(10/30/24 7:30am)
A mob of ghosts crowd the street. Mummies shuffle forward with arms outstretched while autumn leaves crunch beneath their cloth-wrapped feet. They all march towards the same door, outlined by a white arch set in colonial brick.
(10/30/24 7:20am)
Visiting Salem, Mass. in October feels like stepping into a cross between a history book and a Halloween carnival. Driving into the quaint town, your eyes are immediately drawn to the sheer force of crowds flooding the sidewalks. Cars line up bumper to bumper, and every turn reveals another wave of people bustling with excitement and anticipation. The town feels transformed, swept up in centuries-old mystique. Salem in October is undeniably larger than life — a place where history, spectacle and human fascination collide.
(11/01/24 9:00am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/28/24 6:00am)
With support from the Artist-in-Residence Program at the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park in Woodstock, Vt., artists Ellen Smith Ahern and Menghan Wang have collaborated to create innovative soundscapes, which they plan to incorporate into a performance art piece. The soundscapes were drawn from natural sound recordings from the national park forest.
(10/23/24 7:10am)
Following my First-Year Trip at Dartmouth’s Organic Farm, I considered myself a near-expert agriculturalist. In the handful of days I spent at the O Farm, pulling the occasional weed from the rows of squash — or more often snacking on ripe cherry tomatoes — I felt nature-bathed and rejuvenated before the start of the year.
(10/15/24 8:00am)
For many Dartmouth freshmen, the first taste of college comes in the form of First-Year Trips. Trips showcase the best of Dartmouth’s community and deeply-rooted traditions, which come to life while stuck in the woods with a group of relative strangers. It’s easy to fall into the trap of “Camp Dartmouth” and forget the difficulty of the journey ahead.
(10/09/24 7:10am)
“Cycling up here is like the ultimate powder day,” my dad, Mr. Scarola, said just before departing on a gravel bike ride during my freshman move-in weekend. He was so consumed by the beauty of the Upper Valley that he got lost in the Norwich woods without cell service. After a not-so-fun excursion to try to find him near Gile Mountain, a missed dinner reservation and a dorm room that still needed unpacking, I made a promise to my dad: For his future visits to campus, I would compile the best cycling routes in the Upper Valley.
(09/30/24 5:00am)
Casey Ratzlaff is taking life match by match. The 26-year-old wheelchair tennis savant is the top-ranked American male wheelchair tennis player and an assistant coach for Dartmouth’s men’s varsity tennis team. Born with the rare disease spina bifida in 1988 — a decade after the first integrated Olympic and Paralympic games — Ratzlaff has grown up in the world of adaptive sports. He has racked up numerous accolades in his young career, winning a silver medal at the 2019 Parapan American Games games in Peru and representing the United States on seven World Team Cups. This summer, he competed at his second Paralympic games in Paris in both the singles and doubles divisions. In singles, Ratzlaff lost in the second round to Brazil’s Daniel Rodrigues. In doubles, Ratzlaff and his partner fell to Argentina in the opening round. The Dartmouth spoke with Ratzlaff to discuss his most recent competition in Paris, his reflections on the people and communities that have shaped him and his ambitions for the future.
(09/27/24 9:15am)
The College is constructing new upperclassmen apartments on West Wheelock Street, which will add 285 beds to campus, according to senior vice president for capital planning and campus operations Josh Keniston. The project, Russo Hall, is named in honor of Thomas Russo ’77 and Gina Russo ’77, who donated $30 million — the largest gift for undergraduate housing in Dartmouth’s history — to erect the complex.
(09/27/24 6:05am)
The age of cable television is essentially over. Youtube, Netflix, Hulu and Apple TV feature more content than we could ever consume, and many of the most beloved shows of our time — such as “Suits,” “Bridgerton” and “Squid Game” — are released on these on-demand streaming platforms. Media entertainment, it seems, is a never-ending source of instant gratification.
(09/25/24 7:00am)
A few days ago, I decided that I would write this week’s Editor’s Note about trying to slow down and pay more attention to my surroundings. Mere hours ago, I was out on a run and, in a cruel display of irony, my advice came back to haunt me. For a moment, I stopped paying attention to the road beneath my feet and started mentally cataloging my to-do list. I promptly tripped and scraped my knee, hand and elbow, leaving me to run the last mile back to campus covered in blood and extremely upset.
(09/25/24 7:05am)
From the ongoing Israel-Palestinian conflict to the two assassination attempts against former president Donald Trump to Vice President Kamala Harris becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, 2024 has proven to be one of the most politically memorable years in recent history. With the uncertainties of this election season coming to a head as November approaches, it can be frustrating — and, at times, even exhausting — to remain completely knowledgeable about the ever-changing political climate.
(09/23/24 9:00am)
This summer, Dartmouth’s Chinese language study abroad program returned to Beijing after a five year pause, according to Asian societies, cultures and languages department chair Edward Miller. The program was placed on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic.