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(06/15/26 6:50pm)
At 10:14 a.m. yesterday, a group of approximately 16 Upper Valley residents processed around the Green during the 2026 commencement ceremony to protest Dartmouth’s speech policies, the name of the Black Family Visual Arts Center and Dartmouth’s granting of an honorary Doctor of Laws to Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression president Greg Lukianoff, among other issues.
(06/12/26 7:25pm)
Update Appended (June 13, 3:17 a.m.): This article has been updated to include information from a Hanover Police Department press release.
(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 9:15am)
Some students have reported that, for the past week, the tap water has tasted like metal.
(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.
(05/29/26 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.
(05/28/26 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.
(05/26/26 9:20am)
On May 21, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression president and chief executive officer Greg Lukianoff, who will receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree at Commencement next month, condemned the state of freedom of speech in higher education at an event in the Hanover Inn.
(05/22/26 12:53pm)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm and gubernatorial elections, the paper is publishing an interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth,” featuring in-depth conversations with candidates and political leaders connected to statewide and New Hampshire district races.
(05/21/26 9:10am)
On May 14, Harvard University history and law professor and Pulitzer Prize winner Annette Gordon-Reed ’81 discussed the importance of including broader perspectives in remembering American history at an event sponsored by the Montgomery Fellows Program.
(05/19/26 10:59am)
At yesterday’s meeting, the Hanover Selectboard voted unanimously to “take no action” on the anti-apartheid pledge passed at the annual town business meeting on May 12. The majority approval at the town meeting was “non-binding,” according to the town warrant.
(05/19/26 9:20am)
On May 14, United States assistant attorney general for civil rights Harmeet Dhillon ’89 joined the Dartmouth Political Union for a moderated conversation and open forum Q&A on her work in the Department of Justice.
(05/18/26 9:05am)
Former communications office assistant director of social media Micky Bedell posted three projects she used as part of a “knowledge base” to create and edit social media content for the College on the Dartmouth Claude enterprise portal.
(05/15/26 1:22am)
Nina Pavcnik will be the inaugural dean of the School of Arts and Sciences, according to a campus-wide email sent by College President Sian Leah Beilock and provost Santiago Schnell on Thursday. Pavcnik — who has served as interim dean of arts and sciences since January 2025 — will assume the role on July 1.
(05/12/26 11:00am)
Today, Hanover will vote on the the articles of the town warrant at the annual town meeting. Voting will take place at Hanover High School in two phases: first, from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., by secret ballot for articles 1 through 7; then, at 7 p.m., with public debate and placard voting for articles 8 through 23. Shuttles sponsored by the Dartmouth Student Government will run every hour on the hour from Baker-Berry Library to Hanover High School starting at 7 a.m.
(05/12/26 9:10am)
From 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. today, Hanover residents will vote by ballot on seven articles, including major zoning ordinances, to begin the ballot portion of the annual town meeting.
(05/08/26 9:05am)
During an event at the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy on May 5, Washington Post investigative reporter Silvia Foster-Frau urged students to “support the news” and to “raise your voice” against injustice.
(05/07/26 9:10am)
On April 30, The Dartmouth learned of a public project posted by chemistry professor Paul Robustelli on the Dartmouth Claude enterprise portal. The project, titled “PS3 Grading,” contained problem sets by 11 different students from Robustelli’s CHEM 76: Physical Chemistry II class, as well as the students’ personal identifying information. It could be accessed by any member of the Dartmouth Claude enterprise group, which is open to all campus community members. The Claude project was taken down by Robustelli on May 2 following The Dartmouth’s request for comment.
(05/04/26 9:00am)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm and gubernatorial elections, the paper is publishing an interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth,” featuring in-depth conversations with candidates for statewide and New Hampshire district offices.
(05/05/26 9:20am)
On Friday, a new, still-unnamed coalition of student activist groups held a rally in the center of the Green. Approximately 75 students, faculty and community members attended.