Dartmouth spent 25 times more on lobbying in the first six months of 2025 compared with 2024
Dartmouth spent 25 times more on federal lobbying in the first six months of 2025 than in the first six months of 2024.
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Dartmouth spent 25 times more on federal lobbying in the first six months of 2025 than in the first six months of 2024.
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.
Dartmouth launched a partnership with Israeli universities in October 2024 that will bring Israeli researchers to Hanover and facilitate academic collaboration.
Throughout the summer term, more than 4,000 alumni return to campus for 12 class reunions and the 40th anniversary of DGALA, the Dartmouth LGBTQIA+ Alumni Association. The Dartmouth sat down with vice president of alumni relations Cheryl Bascomb ’82 and alumni engagement director Joe Piedrafite to discuss this year’s reunions, undergraduate involvement in these events and what they hope to accomplish with reunions.
This spring, Roan V. Wade ’25 and Jordan Narrol ’25 were suspended following the May 28 sit-in at Parkhurst Hall. Both students were barred from accessing Dartmouth-owned and affiliated spaces and have since pleaded not guilty to College disciplinary charges.
Dear Freak of The Week,
Dearest fine readers of Mirror,
On July 28, Polish filmmaker Anna Zamecka visited Dartmouth College for a special screening of her film “Communion” at Loew Auditorium followed by a talkback. Known for blending documentary and fiction in her work, Zamecka achieved remarkable international success with her first feature film, “Communion,” which premiered at the Locarno Film Festival in 2016.
On July 27, the signature opening vocals to Big Time Rush’s titular single resounded through the amphitheater at BankNH Pavilion in Gilford, N.H., announcing the familiar sound of a 2010s boy band. The venue was packed with Gen Z and millenials alike, all of whom were in attendance to reminisce on the days of Nickelodeon when boy bands just made sense.
Sophomore summer — an iconic tradition in which students stay on campus and take classes during the summer following their sophomore year — is a unique part of the Dartmouth experience. While spending the summer away from schoolwork may seem normal to students at other institutions, when a Dartmouth student announces that they are opting out of sophomore summer by taking it “off,” they are typically met with a follow-up question: Why?
In December 2024, Dartmouth joined the Kalaniyot program, a network of American and Israeli universities who partner together for two goals: to make American college campuses less hostile to Israel and deepen research ties. Once funding is secured, the Dartmouth program aims to offer post-doctoral fellowships, sabbatical funding and opportunities for collaborative research projects in the sciences between Dartmouth faculty and Israeli researchers.
I once agreed to eat lunch with a friend and he sent me a Google Calendar invite. I cancelled because of it. Since when does enjoying a meal follow the drumbeat of a business schedule? The answer is: since Dartmouth students have become so busy. Meetings, post-grad applications, clubs, homework, lab, drinking, scrolling TikTok — there is too much to do.
There’s nothing quite like starting your afternoon by getting thrown across a mat. Welcome to ASCL 61.10: Japanese Martial Arts, a course I’m taking this summer that meets twice a week in the classroom and twice on the mat — yet lingers in my muscles all week long.
If you asked me what I was scared of on a normal day, I would say that I have a terrible fear of falling. If you asked me what I’m scared of while I’m holding onto a rope swing and soaring over a lake, however, I would say that I love that feeling of weightlessness that courses through me as I plunge into the cold water.
Two years after the passing of legendary Dartmouth football coach Eugene “Buddy” Teevens, the Kirsten and Eugene F. “Buddy” Teevens ’79 Center for Peak Performance is set to open for athletes in the fall. The Center will focus on elevating the Big Green’s varsity athletic performance by providing student-athletes with support in key areas such as academics and mental health and innovating research in sports science, according to the Center’s inaugural director, Duncan Simpson.
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.
The total cost of attendance for undergraduates for the 2025–2026 academic year will be $95,490, an increase of approximately five percent compared to the 2024–2025 school year, according to Dartmouth’s undergraduate admissions website. Cost of attendance is calculated by the sum of the costs of tuition, fees, housing and food as well as “estimated indirect costs,” including course materials.
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.
This week, Dartmouth women’s tennis received Intercollegiate Tennis Association All-Academic Honors for the 2024-25 season for the 22nd year in a row. All members of the team must maintain a GPA of 3.2 or higher to earn the honor. Dartmouth is one of 222 Division I teams to reach this accomplishment.