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(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.
(04/18/25 9:10am)
President Donald Trump has signed a series of executive orders freezing medical federal research funding across the nation. While many of these orders have been delayed by federal courts, researchers at both the Geisel School of Medicine and Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center have seen the early impacts of funding freezes, according to Northern New England Co-Op Practice and Community Based Research Network executive director Meagan Stabler.
(04/17/25 8:50pm)
Earlier today, the College presented its final contract offer to the Student Workers Collective at Dartmouth — the student worker union that has been in negotiation with the College.
(04/17/25 8:45am)
Over the past decade, there has been a 16.2% decrease in the social sciences at Dartmouth, and a staggering 25.8% increase in STEM fields. The Dartmouth reviewed a decade of data from the College on the composition of each graduating class, from the Class of 2014 to the Class of 2024.
(04/17/25 9:05am)
On April 15, the Dickey Center for International Understanding hosted Sudanese activist Rania Aziz for an event titled “Sudan’s difficult path to peace and democracy: an activist’s perspective.” Aziz discussed political conflict in Sudan, her role in the 2019 Sudanese protests and work as an activist away from her home country.
(04/17/25 9:10am)
Many top universities are navigating how to respond to the Trump administration’s threats to cut federal funding. Earlier this week, Harvard chose not to comply with the government’s demands, while a month ago, Columbia coalesced, agreeing to alter the university’s student protest policies, hire new campus security officers and appoint a new senior vice provost to Columbia’s Middle East, South Asian and African Studies department.
(04/17/25 9:20am)
Four international undergraduate students have been given the pseudonyms Zoey, May, Catherine and Sarah. They each have been granted anonymity to speak candidly about their experiences.
(04/17/25 9:15am)
Harvard Medical School professor Jim O’Connell said the Trump administration’s federal funding cuts to diversity programs might threaten his nonprofit work to support the unhoused. The Nathan Smith Society, a student-run organization that supports students interested in health professions, and the Offices of the President and Chief Health Officer, hosted the professor for a talk on April 15.
(04/17/25 9:00am)
On April 15, a Dartmouth student was arrested and charged with a felony and three misdemeanors for driving the wrong way on Interstate 89 while drunk.
(04/15/25 9:10am)
Yesterday, a New Hampshire judge sentenced a Dartmouth alumnus to 20 to 40 years in prison for sexually assaulting a female student on the roof of Theta Delta Chi fraternity in April 2022.
(04/15/25 9:05am)
On April 10, journalist Candace Rondeaux gave a talk at the Dickey Center for International Understanding about the history of Russian military organization the Wagner Group.
(04/15/25 9:05am)
On April 13, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate voted 2-3-14 in closed session against creating an emergency immigration fund proposed by general senator Sabik Jawad ’26.
(04/14/25 9:00am)
On April 10, the Rockefeller Center and Programming Board hosted a conversation with comedian and The Daily Show co-host Jordan Klepper. The event was moderated by New York Times journalist and producer Zach Goldbaum, who has collaborated with Klepper on The Daily Show and his former talk show.
(04/11/25 9:00am)
On April 7, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy hosted a panel discussion entitled “Bipartisan Discussion on Energy Policy.” The event, with former Secretary of Energy Dan Brouillette and former Department of Energy chief of staff Kevin Knobloch, was moderated by Tuck School of Business government and society professor Charles Wheelan, Dartmouth Conservatives member John Coleman ’26, Dartmouth Democrats member Fiona Hood ’26 and Tuck Business and Politics Club member Nolan Mayhew TU ’25.
(04/11/25 9:20am)
The Student Workers Collective at Dartmouth held a rally on April 8 outside of the Class of 1953 Commons to protest automation of Dartmouth Dining locations as well as “union busting, food costs and management harassment,” according to a flyer circulated by the union. Approximately 30 students and community members attended the rally.
(04/11/25 9:05am)
The Howe Library, Hanover’s town library, may experience changes and cuts to its services following a March 14 executive order signed by President Trump which will substantially reduce funding to the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
(04/11/25 9:10am)
On April 2, the Office of the Provost released a new freedom of expression and dissent policy. The Dartmouth went through the new 28-page long report and compared it to the prior policy, which was adopted in 2015.
(04/11/25 9:05am)
A new town policy differentiates demonstrations, protests and vigils from other planned outdoor events. It will allow organizers to register this type of event two days in advance and promotes logistical communication between organizers and the Town. These new guidelines clarify the registration process for a separate category of outdoors events that require less scrutinous code review, according to Town Manager Robert Houseman.
(04/10/25 9:00am)
Business executive Barry Caldwell ’82 and investor Hadley Mullin ’96 will join Dartmouth’s Board of Trustees on July 1 for a four-year term.
(04/10/25 9:10am)
The number of ticks that carry Lyme disease has climbed in recent years. A recent study by Dartmouth researchers and several other universities found that 50% of adult blacklegged ticks in northeastern United States carry the bacteria that causes Lyme disease.