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(01/12/26 6:05am)
In the six weeks when most Dartmouth students left campus, the women’s hockey team continued training and competing, now at 4-13-3 with 10 regular season games left in the season. The team traveled to Minnesota and Vermont, and hosted Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Union College, St. Michael’s College and Saint Anselm College at Thompson Arena.
(01/12/26 6:15am)
When a student-athlete suffers a concussion, athletic trainers immediately notify academic support coordinators to arrange testing accommodations. Mental performance coaches reach out proactively. Nutritionists adjust fueling plans for upcoming travel. The 31-person Dartmouth Peak Performance team operates behind the scenes of every Big Green victory.
(01/12/26 6:10am)
After a national search to replace outgoing men’s soccer head coach Bo Oshoniyi, Dartmouth Athletics announced on Dec. 19 that Connor Klekota will serve as the next Bobby Clark Head Coach of Men’s Soccer. A proven winner, having won national championships as a player and a coach, Klekota’s hiring comes at the end of a year in which Dartmouth’s men’s soccer program finished with a 3-8-3 record.
(01/12/26 10:00am)
Kate Ginger ’27 paid attention to the little things. She folded origami animals, laminated pressed flowers and decorated intricate charcuterie boards. She wrote cursive hand-written letters to friends. She asked questions and remembered people’s answers.
(01/12/26 7:05am)
“Marty Supreme,” writer/director/editor Josh Safdie’s first solo feature, follows the table tennis phenomenon Marty Mauser (Timothée Chalamet) on his obsessive quest to be a great table tennis player. Like his previous films “Good Time” and “Uncut Gems” made with his brother Bennie Safdie, the film is about a single-minded con-artist who resorts to increasingly dangerous and immoral methods to achieve his goals — and the seemingly bottomless depths of depravity and desperation to which he will stoop in pursuit of it. Yet here, Safdie elevates this formula to its most epic, and most thematically nuanced, shape yet.
(01/12/26 12:01pm)
The Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, George Washington — these images represent America, but what do they say about our nation?
(01/09/26 6:05am)
The Dartmouth women’s basketball team enjoyed a fairly successful start to their season, finishing 9-4 in their non-conference schedule before beginning Ivy League play. They won eight of their first ten games, their best record in their first 10 games since the 1989-90 season.
(01/09/26 6:10am)
In the early morning darkness of a New Hampshire winter, the Dartmouth swimming and diving teams have been rewriting their story, one record at a time.
(01/09/26 6:15am)
GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA — After Dartmouth left the floor on Dec. 29, following a loss against the No. 22 ranked University of Florida, it wouldn’t have been surprising if the team decided to hop on the bus back to the hotel.
(01/09/26 10:15am)
The Hanover Selectboard unanimously voted to adopt a policing ordinance that will expand the town’s cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Dec. 8. This concludes months of deliberation over how best to comply with a July 21 state law that mandates that local government cannot impede ICE investigations.
(01/09/26 10:00am)
Robert Tulloch, 25 years into a life sentence without the possibility of parole for murdering two Dartmouth College professors in 2001, will be given a resentencing hearing on April 20.
(01/13/26 10:15am)
Last December, the College announced a partnership with Anthropic and Amazon Web Services, making Dartmouth the first Ivy League university to launch artificial intelligence at an institutional scale. The Dec. 3 announcement has drawn criticism from some faculty members, including claimants in a class action lawsuit against Anthropic for allegedly infringing their copyrights and unethically downloading their publications to train its large-language model Claude.
(01/09/26 10:05am)
This year, 786 undergraduate students remained on campus for at least some of winterim, the six-week period between the fall and winter terms, according to Office of Pluralism and Leadership director and winterim committee coordinator Rachele Hall. According to previous reporting by The Dartmouth, between only 300 and 550 students remained on campus for at least some of winterim in 2023.
(01/09/26 7:06am)
2024’s music scene was rife with chart-topping releases and cultural landmarks – from the Kendrick Lamar-Drake feud to Brat Summer. Against that backdrop, 2025 was never going to compete on spectacle alone. Instead, it emerged as a more reflective year, with many artists leaning into more emotionally intentional projects. Japanese Breakfast turned inward on “For Melancholy Brunettes (& sad women),” resisting the urge to recreate the euphoric immediacy of “Be Sweet,” while Justin Bieber surprised listeners with “SWAG,” a raw R&B pivot rooted in faith and introspection.
(01/09/26 7:13am)
Those familiar with Mary Shelley’s 1818 classic gothic horror novel “Frankenstein; Or, The Modern Prometheus” know that the central creature is nameless — not, as many think, named after his mad scientist creator. Built from various body parts and electric currents, rejected by humanity for the body he did not ask for, he wanders alone with neither a name nor a companion. Featuring trademark whimsical cinematography and standout acting, Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein” loyally and memorably interprets the classic. The latest in a long line of adaptations, del Toro’s film insightfully explores the background of the creator Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) while giving due place to the perspective of the creature (Jacob Elordi).
(01/09/26 9:15am)
When the College announced its policy of institutional restraint in December 2024, it entered uncharted territory. There was no precedent for such a policy in Dartmouth’s history, which left room for much debate over its implications. Now, however, the policy has found its analogue in a surprising place — not at another university, but at the CBS headquarters in Midtown Manhattan. And yet, rather than reassuring us about Dartmouth’s policy, the case at CBS News is quickly becoming an omen about what exactly could go wrong with institutional neutrality at Dartmouth, and how a policy designed to promote free speech could be co-opted just as quickly to restrict it.
(01/09/26 9:30am)
As the 2025 summer president of Dartmouth’s Interfraternity Council and a member of Greek Life at Dartmouth, I feel as though I have a unique perspective from both a macro and personal level that I’d like to share in response to The Dartmouth's article about Greek Life.
(01/08/26 9:30am)
(01/08/26 10:05am)
At the beginning of the 2025-26 academic year, Dartmouth brought in 30 new tenured and tenure-track scholars across disciplines, including atmospheric science, studio art, economics and East European studies. Two of the 30 new members are Dartmouth alumni.
(01/08/26 10:00am)
The other day, another Dartmouth ’27 announced they were leaving, after receiving the first round of funding of venture capital for their start-up from an alum. They join at least five students from the Class of 2026 who departed after admission to Y Combinator. All of them, unsurprisingly, are building artificial intelligence business-to-business, software-as-a-service companies. I love that Dartmouth is generating entrepreneurs, and I have written in the past about the need to recognize them. However, I am critical of how some glorify leaving college and treat it as a rite of passage in building a successful business.