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(10/28/24 9:00am)
On Oct. 17, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy and Dartmouth Dialogues co-hosted writer and former Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications and Speechwriting Ben Rhodes for a talk titled “Foreign Policy, the Obama Administration and the World as It Is.” Approximately 170 people attended the event — which was part of the College’s 2024 Election Speaker Series — in person, and another 50 watched the livestream on YouTube.
(10/28/24 6:05am)
On Oct. 25 and 26, Dartmouth’s Coast Jazz Orchestra held their first performances of the term at Sawtooth Kitchen. The appearances were the orchestra’s first time performing at Sawtooth as a full band, according to director Taylor Ho Bynum.
(10/28/24 6:00am)
With support from the Artist-in-Residence Program at the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park in Woodstock, Vt., artists Ellen Smith Ahern and Menghan Wang have collaborated to create innovative soundscapes, which they plan to incorporate into a performance art piece. The soundscapes were drawn from natural sound recordings from the national park forest.
(10/28/24 5:00am)
Dartmouth volleyball lost its fourth straight match after facing Harvard University on Friday evening, falling to 9-9 on the season and 2-6 in Ivy League play. After a 2-2 start to conference play, the Big Green has come up short in recent matches, losing 3-1 to Yale University last week.
(11/01/24 9:35am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Homecoming Special Issue.
(10/25/24 9:10am)
Provost David Kotz ’86 first arrived in Hanover as an undergraduate more than 40 years ago and has barely left since. After graduating from the College in 1986 with a degree in computer science and physics, Kotz earned his Ph.D at Duke in 1991 and returned to the College to teach later that year. He has risen through academia and administration in the decades since. In July 2021, former College President Phil Hanlon appointed Kotz interim provost, a post that became permanent in January 2022. His role makes him Dartmouth’s chief academic and budget officer. During his time as Provost, Kotz has continued to advise graduate students, serving as the Pat and John Rosenwald Professor of Computer Science. Kotz announced that he will conclude his tenure as provost this June after almost three years in office, returning full-time to the computer science department following a year-long sabbatical. The Dartmouth sat down with Kotz to discuss his life and career at the College.
(10/25/24 9:05am)
The fall recruitment process concluded last week, with the Interfraternity Council extending 343 bids to new members and the Intersorority Council extending 273, according to interim director for Greek life and student societies Edward McKenna. The numbers are consistent with recruitment in previous years, with sorority recruitment dipping by 15 bids from last year and fraternity recruitment dipping by 31 bids from 2022.
(10/25/24 5:04am)
With less than six minutes left in the fourth quarter on Oct. 19, the Big Green seemed to be falling apart. Down 16-13 to Central Connecticut State University, quarterback Grayson Saunier ’27 lost his helmet and hurt his ankle on second and goal at the one-yard line, taking him out for the next snap. Freshman quarterback Kyle Meier ’28 replaced Saunier, but Meier — making his Dartmouth debut — fumbled the ball, which CCSU recovered. Distraught, Dartmouth head coach Sammy McCorkle looked to the sideline officials for a lifeline: a defensive penalty.
(10/25/24 5:00am)
On Oct. 19 and 20, Dartmouth’s women’s openweight rowing team and men’s heavyweight and lightweight men’s rowing teams competed in the Head of the Charles, an annual regatta on the Charles River in Boston.
(10/25/24 9:05am)
On Oct. 20, the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center held its 19th annual CHaD HERO fundraiser event, raising $825,000 for local child healthcare. More than 3,100 participants from across the Upper Valley ran, walked and volunteered, according to CHaD HERO fundraising events director Olive Isaacs.
(10/25/24 7:49am)
On Oct. 17, the Hood Museum of Art hosted the sixth annual Indigenous People’s Fashion Show in the Russo Auditorium. The program — which was co-sponsored by the Hood, Hokupa’a, the Native American Program and Native Americans at Dartmouth, according to the Hood’s website — featured 19 student models who displayed 20 outfits.
(10/24/24 9:10am)
On Oct. 21, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy and the Political Economy Project co-hosted former Secretary of the Treasury and former Harvard University President Larry Summers on campus. The discussion, moderated by economics professor Doug Irwin, covered topics including populism, socialism and the economic impacts of artificial intelligence.
(10/25/24 9:15am)
On Oct. 22, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy and Dartmouth Dialogues co-hosted former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Strategy and Force Elbridge Colby for an event titled “U.S. Foreign Policy in Light of China’s Rise: A Strategy of Denial.” Approximately 130 students and community members attended the event, which was part of the ongoing 2024 Election Speaker Series.
(10/24/24 4:26am)
Two pro-Palestinian protesters — one student and one College employee — were arrested during a moderated discussion with Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., on Wednesday evening. Fetterman was speaking in Filene Auditorium as part of the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy’s 2024 Election Speaker Series.
(10/24/24 9:00am)
On Oct. 20, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its fifth weekly meeting of the fall term. Led by student body president Chukwuka Odigbo ’25, the Senate discussed a potential amendment to its constitution, library hour extensions and the upcoming Healthy Minds survey.
(10/23/24 7:00am)
Italian plums, a hole forming in my favorite pair of Levi’s jeans, Bram Stoker’s “Dracula,” Anthropologie candles, emails that begin with “Thank you for your interest” and end in disappointment, contact-safe eye drops, a warm Pacifico on a Thursday, Imogen Heap’s “Headlock” blasting through my Sony headphones as I do my skin care routine. The first fragments of my senior year.
(10/23/24 7:25am)
For many Dartmouth students, a mention of “the Lodge” might spark visions of First-Year Trips, flair and the chaos of hundreds of students after spending the previous three days isolated in the wilderness. But those two weeks in early September when the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge is bursting with nervous freshmen and covered in signs, streamers and balloons only represent a small portion of the Lodge’s character.
(10/23/24 7:15am)
Regardless of Dartmouth’s liberal arts approach to education, the Tuck School of Business’ presence on campus means that undergraduates have a resource to strengthen their pre-professional skills, particularly through the Tuck Business Bridge Program, also known as Tuck Bridge. During an intense three-week academic experience, top-ranked Tuck MBA faculty teach attendees a fundamental business curriculum and connect students to a cohesive network of peers and alumni.
(10/23/24 7:10am)
Following my First-Year Trip at Dartmouth’s Organic Farm, I considered myself a near-expert agriculturalist. In the handful of days I spent at the O Farm, pulling the occasional weed from the rows of squash — or more often snacking on ripe cherry tomatoes — I felt nature-bathed and rejuvenated before the start of the year.
(10/23/24 7:05am)
In early September, the Class of 2028 arrived to a campus under renovation, with fewer spaces available to socialize than previous freshman cohorts had experienced. The two-year construction of the Fayerweather Halls, which began in June 2024, as well as the initial phase of renovations to the Collis Center porch, has eliminated two spots where past freshmen classes typically socialized.