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(04/22/25 9:00am)
On April 18, demonstrators gathered in downtown Hanover to protest recent changes in federal and New Hampshire government. For 75 minutes, protesters raised signs from “dump DOGE” to “free Mohsen Mahdawi,” a detained Palestinian activist, while cars and pedestrians passed by.
(04/21/25 2:07am)
Dartmouth Student Government Senate voted to earmark $15,000 of their budget for a student “emergency fund” during their April 20 meeting. The vote passed with nine in favor, two opposed and eight abstentions.
(04/21/25 8:00am)
(04/21/25 6:15am)
Four hours is a long way to drive for anything. And I don’t discount the great art that exists in the Upper Valley — it’s easier to visit Saint-Gaudens or even the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. But Storm King Art Center is reopening for the season, and you should make the trip.
(04/21/25 6:09am)
Lethokuhle Msimang GR and Veronika Yadukha GR worked together to create “Rantau,” combining their respective prowess in poetry and ceramics. The exhibition, which was on view at the Black Family Visual Arts Center from April 9-18, explores migration, cultural liminality, loss and resilience.
(04/21/25 9:00am)
Former New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu discussed some of the Trump administration’s controversial policies at a Rockefeller Center for Public Policy event last week, explaining potential reasoning for tariffs, targeting universities and student visa revocations.
(04/18/25 8:10am)
Dartmouth’s men’s tennis team continues to prove itself in the Ivy League, as the squad charged past Yale University and Brown University last weekend, picking up 4-1 and 4-2 wins, respectively. The weekend sweep put the Big Green back in the national rankings at no. 73 with less than a week left of regular season play.
(04/18/25 8:15am)
After falling in Providence to Brown University, Dartmouth baseball is tied with Cornell for fifth in the Ivy League. Brown remains last in the conference with a 3-9 record, even after taking two out of three games from the Big Green.
(04/18/25 8:05am)
Halfway through Dartmouth heavyweight rowing’s 2,000 meter race on the Charles River this Saturday, Boston University’s first varsity eight boat was nowhere in sight. Just a few minutes earlier, though, the boats were neck and neck with Dartmouth trailing behind.
(04/18/25 8:00am)
After you graduated last spring, how did you start playing for the Boston Banshees in the Women’s Elite Rugby league?
(04/18/25 11:06am)
Filmed by Mike Demayo '27
Edited by Alesandra Gonzales '27
(04/18/25 8:00am)
(04/18/25 11:12am)
Charlotte, Editor-in-Chief: “Anna Karenina” by Leo Tolstoy
(04/18/25 11:13am)
Over spring break, the Rude Mechanicals –– Dartmouth’s student-run Shakespeare company –– performed “The Comedy of Errors” across the Upper Valley in their first ever tour. The group also ran workshops with seven middle and high schools in the Upper Valley and greater Vermont area.
(04/18/25 8:15am)
Navigating Dartmouth Dining has never been a walk in the park for disabled students. Dining locations are crowded and noisy; the A-9 station, while helpful, is not vegetarian-friendly; and if Dartmouth Dining can’t accommodate your needs, making the move to off-campus housing that would allow one to cook for themself isn’t always financially or physically feasible.
(04/18/25 8:10am)
The “Dartmouth Bubble” is real. Although it’s impossible to say what exactly causes it, I think geographic isolation and rigorous courses of study often prevent students from engaging with the world beyond our campus. Right now though, things are different. It feels like the world is coming to Dartmouth in a way that it almost never does, frantically waving its arms and begging us to notice.
(04/18/25 9:20am)
Last December, Omar Rashid ’29 was accepted to Dartmouth through the early decision process as a member of the Class of 2029. Rashid lives in the Gaza Strip with his mother and two brothers. Since May 2024, both exit points from Gaza — the Rafah crossing into Egypt and the Kerem Shalom crossing into Israel — have been closed. As a result, he may not be able to travel to Dartmouth for the upcoming academic year.
(04/18/25 9:05am)
On April 16, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy hosted former United States representatives Annie Kuster ’78, D-N.H. and Alex Mooney ’93, R-W.Va, to speak about how Congress can operate more effectively during an era of political polarization.
(04/18/25 9:15am)
On April 16, Dartmouth’s Office of Visa and Immigration Services hosted an information session on changing immigration regulations for international and exchange students.
(04/18/25 9:00am)
Trail Break, a Mexican restaurant previously located in White River Junction, Vt., will open its new location in Quechee, Vt., for its first full season in mid-May, according to Trail Break owner Topher Lyons. The previous physical location closed in December 2023, after its lease expired, although the restaurant continued to run its taco trucks and catering services and opened the Quechee location for a partial season in July 2024.