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(01/28/25 10:11am)
President Donald Trump has signed over 30 executive orders since his Jan. 20 inauguration, affecting federal policy in a wide range of sectors including diversity, equity and inclusion, energy, the environment, immigration and public health, according to The New York Times. Dartmouth students and professors expressed mixed reactions to Trump’s orders and their implications for the United States.
(01/28/25 10:05am)
On Jan. 26, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its third weekly meeting of the winter term. Led by student body president Chukwuka Odigbo ’25, the Senate debated a slate of new Dartmouth Dining projects related to automation and voted to establish a Greek Life task force.
(01/30/25 10:05am)
Residential life administrators are working to curb community standards violations in multiple residence halls. According to associate dean for residential life Stacey Millard, residents in Hitchcock Hall and Wheeler Hall were required to attend meetings last week to address recurring cleanliness issues and noise complaints, respectively.
(01/28/25 10:00am)
On Jan. 26, the Office of Pluralism and Leadership and Tucker Center for Spiritual and Ethical Life co-hosted author Ilyasah Shabazz — the daughter of Black nationalist leader Malcolm X — for a keynote address titled “Honoring a Legacy.” Shabazz’s address was part of a two-day celebration commemorating the 60th anniversary of Malcolm X’s visit to campus in 1965.
(01/27/25 10:05am)
On Jan. 20, Donald Trump was inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States, marking a return to office after his first term concluded in 2021. In the week following the inauguration, members of the Dartmouth community have expressed both fear and excitement.
(01/27/25 6:00am)
The men’s and women’s swim and dive teams made waves last weekend at the Tate Ramsden Invitational in Hanover. Facing the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, the men’s team swept all swimming events, while the women’s team won eight of 18 events across swim and dive against UMass and Northeastern University.
(01/27/25 6:05am)
Following a 2-2 tie with Cornell University on Jan. 24, the women’s ice hockey team lost its Alumni Day home game against Colgate University on Saturday. The team fell 4-1 to the Raiders, who are ranked fifth in the nation.
(01/27/25 7:05am)
On Jan. 16, comedian Sarah Adelman ’19 performed her comedy show “EGG,” recognized in The New York Times as a “charming coming-of-age stand-up show,” on campus. The one-woman show chronicles Adelman’s life as a “neurotic” personality navigating her path to a career in comedy — from the woes of middle-school awkwardness and parental irritation to life as a sperm bank employee, according to her website.
(01/27/25 7:00am)
On Dec. 18, “Beyond the Bouquet: Arranging Flowers in American Art” opened at the Hood Museum of Art. Curated by Michael Hartman, an associate curator of American art at the museum, the exhibit explores flowers as a medium of connection through time.
(01/25/25 11:58pm)
The trial for a Dartmouth alumnus indicted for allegedly raping and strangling a woman on the roof of Theta Delta Chi fraternity in April 2022 began yesterday. The woman — who was an 18-year-old Dartmouth student at the time of the alleged assault — testified throughout the day in court, providing graphic details of the night.
(01/24/25 6:00am)
Leede Arena was buzzing.
(01/24/25 5:00am)
(01/25/25 9:45pm)
As the California wildfires continue to rage, devastating land, homes and livelihoods, newly inaugurated President Donald Trump has announced plans to declare a “national energy emergency.” This would grant him the authority to increase U.S. energy production and, as he puts it, “drill, baby, drill.” To a standing ovation on Inauguration Day, Trump announced sweeping legislation to end the Green New Deal and “electric vehicle mandate” — a mandate that does not actually exist — and to replenish American oil reserves, exporting American energy worldwide.
(01/24/25 10:00am)
On Jan. 20, President Donald Trump was inaugurated for a second time, ending former President Joe Biden’s term in office. The Biden administration made several impacts on federal policy, including passing the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, the Inflation Reduction Act and education-related policies.
(01/24/25 10:15am)
On Jan. 17, the Supreme Court upheld a ban on TikTok — a subsidiary of Chinese company ByteDance — that made it illegal for companies in the United States to host the platform after Jan. 19 unless “U.S. operation of the platform is severed from Chinese control,” according to TikTok Inc. v. Garland.
(01/27/25 10:00am)
On Jan. 23, members of Dartmouth Student Government met with Dartmouth Dining to discuss the relocation of the campus food pantry — a pantry containing refrigerated foods and non-perishables — from the basement of Dick’s House to Kellogg Hall, located on the ground floor of the Geisel School of Medicine. The pantry was relocated in December following a “fire code issue” of which the College was notified in September, according to School House senator and Dining Advisory Committee member JJ Dega ’26.
(01/24/25 10:20am)
On Jan. 22, former Georgia state representative and voting rights activist Stacey Abrams delivered the keynote address for the College’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. celebration. The official theme of this year’s address was “Moral Courage in the Face of Change and Uncertainty.”
(01/24/25 10:10am)
After serving for 10 years as Hanover Police Chief, Charlie Dennis retired in December to move closer to his family in Texas. The Dartmouth sat down with Dennis to discuss his tenure at the Hanover Police Department, which saw events ranging from the May 1 protest, when 89 individuals were arrested at a pro-Palestinian protest on the Green, to the Department’s accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies — a recognition of voluntarily meeting a set of professional standards.
(01/24/25 7:05am)
During their four years at Dartmouth, Molly Rouzie ’24 and Krista Schemitsch ’24 pursued distinct paths in their creative practices. Rouzie, a painter who studied studio art and Italian with a minor in art history, has spent years immersed in the arts, both as a student and through various curatorial works. Schemitsch, a psychology major on a pre-medicine track with a minor in studio art, “never thought” she would pursue art formally but “couldn’t see [herself] not doing it” after taking a few courses in the studio art department. Now, as Dartmouth studio art interns, Rouzie and Schemitsch have curated a joint exhibition of their own works titled “I Spy: The Things You See But I Know,” with paintings by Rouzie and drawings and photographs by Schemitsch.
(01/24/25 7:10am)
“Since when do you listen to Bad Bunny?”