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(01/23/26 10:10am)
Jan. 5 marked the 250th anniversary of New Hampshire’s adoption of its first state constitution — the first of the 13 colonies to adopt a constitution and form an independent state government. In light of the anniversary, students, faculty members and state historians considered the state’s unique history, culture and political identity.
(01/22/26 10:15am)
South Main Street, running right through Hanover, is usually buzzing with pedestrian, car and bicycle traffic. Town officials say that parts of the street are aging and in need of an upgrade.
(01/20/26 10:00am)
On Jan. 18, at the second weekly Dartmouth Student Government meeting of the winter term, senators listened to two presentations about mental health on campus — the first by faculty members involved in Evergreen.AI, and the second by members of the student Mental Health Union.
(01/20/26 10:15am)
New Hampshire is facing one of its sharpest flu surges in recent decades, with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently classifying the state at a “very high” risk level for influenza activity.
(01/16/26 10:15am)
The behavior of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents has been in the national spotlight, especially since the shooting of Renee Nicole Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis, Minn. last week. On Tuesday, a group of about 30 students gathered to discuss ICE and the shooting in an event hosted by the Dartmouth chapter of the conservative organization Turning Point USA.
(01/15/26 10:15am)
As part of The Dartmouth’s coverage of the upcoming 2026 midterm elections, we are launching a new interview series, “A Sit-Down with The Dartmouth,” featuring in-depth conversations with major national and statewide candidates in New Hampshire.
(01/14/26 10:01am)
The Dartmouth is bringing back a biweekly print magazine. We will print our full Mirror Mag every other Wednesday, in addition to our regular newspaper on Friday. Our daily digital coverage will, of course, continue.
(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.
(01/09/26 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.
(01/13/26 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.
(01/08/26 10:15am)
Following a mass shooting at Brown University last month, Dartmouth’s Safety and Security is undergoing a “complete review” of its emergency preparedness plans, senior vice president for operations Josh Keniston said.
(01/06/26 10:15am)
The personal information of over 40,000 people, including Social Security numbers and bank account information, was compromised in an August cyberattack on Dartmouth’s Oracle E-Business Suite software, according to data breach notices filed by the College with state attorneys general in New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine on Nov. 24, 2025.
(12/20/25 2:20am)
On Dec. 15, the College extended its offers of early admission to the Class of 2030. For a second year, the College declined to release information on how many students applied or were accepted until the regular decision period concludes in March.
(11/14/25 10:15am)
In the first few weeks since the Hopkins Center for the Arts reopened, members of some student performing arts groups have said that spatial and staffing constraints, along with content regulations, have limited their ability to perform there.
(11/13/25 10:20am)
Approximately 75 community members gathered on the lawn of Parkhurst Hall on Nov. 7 to protest the Trump administration’s interference in higher education, as well as other federal policies including expanding immigration raids, removal of Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program benefits and collaboration with the Israeli government.
(11/11/25 10:10am)
College President Sian Leah Beilock has travelled to Washington, D.C., eight times since the beginning of the year to meet with members of the federal government, according to senior vice president for communications and government relations Justin Anderson. College leaders are “focused on” protecting the school’s research and financial aid funding as the Trump administration has continued to renegotiate its relationship with higher education, according to Anderson.
(11/10/25 10:00am)
The Class of 2029 cast their ballots for their Dartmouth Student Government senators on Oct. 27. They voted for two senators to represent their entire class as well as a representative for each house community.
(11/06/25 10:20am)
On Nov. 4, the Davidson Institute for Global Security hosted former national security advisor Jake Sullivan for an event about his role in the Biden administration’s foreign policy. Sullivan served as U.S. national security advisor under President Joe Biden, worked as a foreign policy advisor for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign and served as director of policy planning in the state department under President Barack Obama. Sullivan also taught at the College from 2019 to 2020.
(11/04/25 10:10am)
Evergreen.AI — currently being built at Dartmouth — promises to be the world’s first first college-specific wellness artificial intelligence. The price tag? $16.5 million, according to the project website.
(10/30/25 9:00am)
On Sept. 23, Iman Ahmad ’27 became the third Dartmouth student to be awarded an Obama-Chesky Voyager Scholarship for Public Service. Every year, the scholarship program — co-founded by Barack and Michelle Obama and Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky in 2022 — awards 100 scholars a $50,000 scholarship and funds a “summer voyage” to work and travel abroad during junior summer.