Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(06/04/26 9:46pm)
On June 1, tests conducted by the Hanover Water Department found that iron levels in the Fletcher Reservoir are higher than normal, but still within the safe limit for drinking water, water treatment supervisor Dylan McDermott wrote in an email statement to The Dartmouth. The reservoir, which supplies water for the town and the College, had iron levels of 0.16 milligram-per-liter.
(06/02/26 9:10am)
Earlier this month, Grafton County sheriff Jillian Myers pulled out of Grafton County’s 287(g) memorandum of understanding with Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, which she initially signed in March 2025. 287(g) agreements allow ICE to train local law enforcement personnel to perform the functions of federal immigration enforcement officers.
(06/02/26 9:00am)
At the ninth weekly Dartmouth Student Government meeting of the spring term on May 31, senators discussed upcoming changes to meal plan prices, which will take effect for the upcoming fall term. They also voted to fund providing free laundry detergent sheets from Generation Conscious, an environmentally-focused startup based in New York, for undergraduates.
(06/02/26 9:15am)
Some students have reported that, for the past week, the tap water has tasted like metal.
(06/02/26 9:05am)
On Friday, a group of student activists held a rally in front of the Black Family Visual Arts Center to call on the College to remove eponymous alumnus and former trustee Leon Black ’73’s name from the building. Approximately 20 students, faculty and community members attended the protest.
(06/01/26 9:00am)
After senior vice president and senior diversity officer Shontay Delalue steps down at the end of June, institutional diversity and equity will no longer operate as a standalone senior administrative office at the College. The office will move under the Office of Community and Campus Life, overseen by senior vice president Jennifer Rosales, Dartmouth News announced on May 15. Current associate vice president for inclusion and strategic engagement Tennille Haynes will permanently oversee institutional diversity and equity in her new role as associate vice president of campus life and inclusion initiatives.
(05/30/26 12:59am)
On May 28, federal district court judge Samantha Elliott ruled that New Hampshire’s 2024 law requiring proof of citizenship for first-time voters is unconstitutional. H.B. 1569 — signed into law by former Gov. Chris Sununu in September 2024 — banned the use of the qualified voter affidavit, used when a prospective voter does not have access to a government-issued ID such as a birth certificate or passport, to confirm citizenship for same-day voter registration.
(05/29/26 9:20am)
During his May 26 visit to Dartmouth, former Chicago mayor and U.S. ambassador to Japan Rahm Emanuel announced his plans for higher education reform, including caps on tuition increases. In an interview with The Dartmouth following the event, Emanuel said he is “very seriously” considering a run for president.
(05/29/26 9:10am)
On May 14, the Dartmouth Sustainability Office and the Office of Residential Operations announced that new energy-efficient microwave and mini-fridge units will be installed in all residence halls, living learning communities and College-owned Greek houses by fall 2026.
(05/29/26 9:15am)
This month, several student organizations — including Hōkūpaʻa, the Pan Asian Community and the Office of Pluralism and Leadership — hosted events to celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.
(05/29/26 9:05am)
On May 22, Forbes Magazine awarded Dartmouth an “A+” and “perfect GPA” of 4.5 in its annual college financial grades report for 2026. Included in its grading were over 900 private, non-profit American colleges; more than half scored “C” or worse, 27% received the lowest grade of “D” and no less than 192 were found to be, in Forbes’ words, “looting” their endowments to stay open.
(05/29/26 9:00am)
On May 15, Lebanon Circuit Court judge Michael Mace found Hanover resident David Vincelette ’84 liable for civil stalking. Mace barred Vincelette from attending biweekly Selectboard meetings in person or contacting town manager Robert Houseman and all five members of the Hanover Selectboard until May 15, 2027.
(05/28/26 9:25am)
Today, the College announced Jim Frank ’65, Karen Frank and their son Daniel Frank ’92 have committed $25 million to support Dartmouth Dialogues — College President Sian Leah Beilock’s initiative which “fosters a culture of respectful and open exchange across differences,” according to the Dartmouth Dialogues website.
(05/28/26 11:07am)
Geography professor Justin Mankin co-authored a study published in April 2026 in the scientific journal Nature about the impacts of extreme precipitation events on dryness conditions. The study found that concentrated rain events lead to increased soil dryness.
(05/28/26 11:08am)
On May 14, College President Sian Leah Beilock announced the appointment of Nina Pavcnik as the inaugural dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, a position established by the Future of Arts and Sciences Project in November 2024 after the Board of Trustees approved the project in October 2024. Pavcnik has served as the interim dean since Jan. 14, 2025.
(05/28/26 9:00am)
Thayer School of Engineering office of entrepreneurship and technology transfer vice provost Eric Fossum is an award-winning engineer who invented the pixel image sensor, patented in 1995, that made it possible for cell phones to have built-in cameras. Fossum’s career as an entrepreneur, inventor, professor and researcher has evolved as he has built increasingly sophisticated sensor chips for biomedical and industrial cameras. He also currently serves as the director of Dartmouth’s engineering Ph.D. innovation program, which prepares engineering students to translate their technical innovation into entrepreneurship.
(05/28/26 9:20am)
On Memorial Day morning, approximately 50 students, veterans and community members gathered in front of Dartmouth Hall to place 554 flags on the lawn, each representing a Dartmouth student or alumnus who died in military service since the Civil War.
(05/28/26 9:10am)
On May 19, approximately 35 New England residents gathered at The Church of Christ at Dartmouth College for a public meeting organized by the National Parks Conservation Association, the New Hampshire and Vermont chapters of the Sierra Club and the New England conservation organization Standing Trees to protest the potential rollback of the federal 2001 Roadless Area Conservation Rule, initiated in June 2025.
(05/27/26 3:00pm)
Update Appended (May 27, 1:17 p.m.): This article has been updated to explicitly reflect that the Hanover Police Department determined Lloyd was the driver during their investigation at the scene of the accident.
(05/26/26 9:05am)
On May 24, at the eighth weekly Dartmouth Student Government meeting of the spring term, senators discussed funding first-year health kits, supporting Muslim student association Al-Nur’s Eid al-Adha Gala and expanding a reusable cup initiative at Novack Cafe.