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(05/09/25 8:10am)
Recently, the Student Workers Collective at Dartmouth has been one of the most prominent activist groups on campus. From the encampment in front of Parkhurst last week to recent rallies on the Collis Patio, they have taken stances on contract negotiations and the Israel-Palestine conflict. Although I think that a combination of pressing social issues can often be powerful and effective tools to help raise awareness, there is a time and place for them. In the case of SWCD, the fusion of being pro-Palestinian and fighting for higher wages for dining workers wrongly compares the struggle of Dartmouth students with those suffering in Gaza, intentionally or not.
(05/09/25 9:00am)
Hillel at Dartmouth and the Rohr Chabad Center at Dartmouth held a vigil on the Green last week to commemorate Yom HaZikaron, Israel’s remembrance day for fallen soldiers and victims of terror. Earlier in the day on April 30, community members placed 1,200 Israeli flags in front of Dartmouth Hall to represent the nearly 1,200 individuals killed during the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel.
(05/09/25 9:05am)
Asian societies, cultures and languages studies postdoctoral fellow Josephine Ong has worked with other postdoctoral fellows and the Dartmouth Asian American Studies Collective at Dartmouth to increase awareness about the lack of Asian American studies courses at Dartmouth and advocate for an Asian American studies department. The Dartmouth sat down with Ong to discuss her course about Guam, academic work with Asian American studies and initiatives in partnership with the DAASC.
(05/09/25 9:10am)
Sociology professor Brooke Harrington criticized offshore financing, or the movement of money out of a country to foreign centers, and its impacts on democracy in an event on May 6.
(05/08/25 5:05am)
Eloise Langan ’27 thinks this guy deserves a warm round of applause.
(05/08/25 5:00am)
Jamylle Oliveira '26 is no stranger to the existential perils of the Dartmouth experience.
(05/08/25 9:05am)
Last week, Harvard University Jewish studies professor Derek Penslar and Hebrew University sociology and anthropology professor and former human rights lawyer Yael Berda discussed “settler colonialism” — and whether the academic term can be used to describe Zionism.
(05/08/25 5:10am)
(05/08/25 8:10am)
Elan Kluger 26’s op-ed reveals his own myopic, naive misunderstanding of the relationship between work and purpose. Kluger misconstrues criticism leveled against aspiring financiers or consultants as defensiveness masking latent “careerism.” It’s a pity you’re a cynic, Kluger. Because you’re wrong: Some people are motivated by passion.
(05/08/25 8:05am)
Re: Beilock says “reflection does not mean capitulation”
(05/08/25 9:00am)
A group of academics and agriculture professionals came together to talk about migrant labor and food production in a panel last week.
(05/08/25 8:05am)
As a freshman during spring term 1972, I attended my first protest against the Vietnam War in front of the Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory near campus. Although a few other protesters had committed to performing acts of civil disobedience during the protest — namely, by blocking the driveway entrance to CRREL — I was only there to lend vocal and moral support. After the Hanover police had removed and arrested the half-dozen or so protesters who had physically blocked the entrance and refused to move, the protest looked like it would be very short-lived unless others threw themselves into the breach. So I was moved to do so and quickly found myself in the paddy wagon headed to Hanover’s jail.
(05/08/25 8:05am)
Re: Beilock says ‘reflection does not mean capitulation’
(05/08/25 9:10am)
Over a third of the faculty have signed an open letter urging College President Sian Leah Beilock to “defend the values” of higher education.
(05/07/25 7:10am)
This weekend, while the Dartmouth campus largely let loose in sandy, flower-strewn and muddy backyards, I took a flight back to Florida. My little brother decided to graduate from college in a hasty three years, while I took a gap year. Despite our two-year age difference, he graduated a month and two weeks before me.
(05/07/25 7:05am)
Dear Freak of the Week,
(05/07/25 7:00am)
At dusk on Saturday, I lay on my quilted duvet, listening to the droning of my fan and infrequent conversations on the road below my window. Last week, I endured the kind of stress that numbs you, that makes it hard to believe the stressors are trivial. But I made it to the weekend, to a moment of stillness in the constant turmoil of the Dartmouth bubble.
(05/06/25 8:50am)
On Green Key last year, after another day of dangerous, unplanned, regretful decisions, I told Won sternly: “If your world ends, so does mine.”
(05/06/25 8:03am)
College President Sian Leah Beilock:
(05/06/25 8:11am)
Re: Beilock says “reflection does not mean capitulation”