Dartmouth hosts Dimensions for the Class of 2029
On April 14 and April 28, Dartmouth hosted 759 admitted members of the Class of 2029 for “Dimensions” — a sleepaway program for admitted students to learn about the College.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
On April 14 and April 28, Dartmouth hosted 759 admitted members of the Class of 2029 for “Dimensions” — a sleepaway program for admitted students to learn about the College.
Around 6:25 p.m. today, protesters took down the remaining tent erected in front of Parkhurst Hall yesterday during a pro-Palestinian protest. After nearly two days of negotiations, the College announced that the immigration legal fund will provide up to $5,000 of aid for international students in need. Administrators also committed to releasing a formal response to the protesters’ divestment proposal by May 20.
Until May 15, students will be able to video call activists, artists, professionals, students and teachers across the world from a “portal” located in Kemeny Courtyard.
On the one-year anniversary of mass arrests during a pro-Palestinian protest, Dartmouth students erected another encampment on the lawn of Parkhurst Hall.
On April 24, Quisqueyanos at Dartmouth held a vigil to honor the victims of the April 8 roof collapse at Jet Set nightclub in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Around 40 Dartmouth students and community members attended the vigil.
On April 15, Dartmouth Health joined the New Hampshire Hospital Association and other regional hospitals in a lawsuit against the state of New Hampshire to challenge the constitutionality of the Medicaid Enhancement Tax, a tax levied on New Hampshire hospitals that helps pay for the state’s Medicaid program.
On the one year anniversary of mass arrests at Dartmouth, pro-Palestinian protesters have erected another encampment.
Around 11:45 a.m. on May 1, two bathrooms in Parkhurst Hall were filled with 10,000 ladybugs. Each bathroom contained bags of ladybugs left open, as well as cardboard signs with pro-Palestinian messaging.
On May 1, 2024, 89 individuals at a pro-Palestinian protest were arrested on the Green. The protest, which began as a ‘Labor for Liberation rally’ in support of Palestinian liberation, was organized by multiple activist groups, including the student-run Palestine Solidarity Coalition.
A year after 89 individuals were arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest on the Green on May 1, 2024, faculty members are still divided on the response to the protest and the state of free speech on campus.
Mia Steinberg ’25 was the president of the Rohr Chabad Center at Dartmouth last year, during and after the May 1, 2024, arrests. At the time, she co-wrote a letter to the editor with then-president of Hillel at Dartmouth Cara Marantz ’25 sharing “concern over the state of student safety and balanced discourse at Dartmouth,” particularly for Jewish students. Steinberg also spoke with The Dartmouth about antisemitism, hostility and isolation experienced by Jewish students in the aftermath of the arrests.
On May 1, 2024, 89 individuals were arrested on the Green during a pro-Palestinian protest. Last summer, Grafton County prosecutor Mariana Pastore charged 55 individuals, primarily with violation-level trespassing. All other charges were dropped.
A year ago today, police arrested 89 individuals on the Green during a pro-Palestinian protest.
Yesterday, Sabik Jawad ’26 and Favion Harvard ’26 were elected as the next student body president and vice president, respectively. The two ran on different tickets, with Jawad pulling ahead of Harvard’s running mate Jack Wisdom ’26 by three votes.
Alumni are speaking out and calling for Dartmouth to stand up against the Trump administration.
Red paint was dumped over the front of Dartmouth Hall yesterday morning. It was an act of protest against the war in Gaza, according to an interview with a source who claimed full responsibility.
On April 25, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand ’88, D-NY discussed the Democratic Party’s election losses, the Party’s strategy for the upcoming midterm elections and her current legislative agenda.
Every year, the Town of Hanover hosts an annual “Green Up” event for Earth Day — where participants perform community service and work to clean up Hanover by picking up trash. For the first time, Dartmouth Civics joined in.
On April 27, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its fourth weekly meeting of the spring term. Led by student body president Chukwuka Odigbo ’25, the Senate voted to allocate $3,000 on shuttles for the upcoming May 17 Hanover town election and impeached two senators.
A power outage swept Hanover from around 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. today. More than 4,600 people in the region were without power, according to WMUR.