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(04/04/25 9:10am)
Starting on Saturday, April 5, a free express shuttle service will run between Baker-Berry Library and shopping locations in West Lebanon, Dartmouth Student Government announced in an email yesterday.
(04/04/25 9:00am)
Engineering professor Sam Raymond has developed a new generative artificial intelligence “teaching kit” with NVIDIA that provides university educators with resources to integrate large language models into their curricula.
(04/04/25 9:05am)
During a busy first week of spring term, monks from the Plum Village Monastery came to campus for seven days to hold activities of meditations, mindfulness, talks and retreats for students, faculty and the Upper Valley. The Dartmouth sat down with Brother Mindfulness and Sister True Vow to discuss the value of meditation.
(04/10/25 9:05am)
Students at the College said that they are worried about the future of Dartmouth’s diversity programs, amid President Donald Trump’s crackdown on higher education.
(04/04/25 9:15am)
On March 27, Geisel School of Medicine professor Nicholas Jacobson published the results of the first clinical trial evaluating the effectiveness of a generative artificial intelligence psychotherapy chatbot.
(04/03/25 9:15am)
The College published an updated version of its freedom of expression policy yesterday in a campus-wide email from Provost David Kotz ’86.
(04/03/25 9:05am)
On April 1, the Latin American, Latino and Caribbean studies department and the College’s Dialogue Project co-hosted Arizona State University Latin American history professor Alexander Aviña and University of Houston history professor Adela Cedillo for a panel titled “Mexico As Border? Power, Violence and the Future of U.S.-Mexico Relations.” The panelists discussed the impact of Mexico’s ruling Morena party on immigration policies and the history behind the conflict between the United States and Mexico.
(04/03/25 9:00am)
On March 29, a team of six Dartmouth students placed fifth in Emory University’s international Morningside Global Health Case Competition. During the competition, which lasted two days and included students from 28 universities, teams presented solutions to addressing cervical cancer in Western Kenya.
(04/03/25 9:10am)
Students are overwhelmingly unhappy with the recent changes made to the Courtyard Cafe implemented at the beginning of spring term — which include new touchscreen kiosks and the construction of a wall between students and workers.
(04/01/25 12:00pm)
Opening at 6 a.m., The Works Cafe starts the morning with a bustle of early birds picking up coffee. Throughout the day, and into dinnertime, students, professors and locals camp out at the Main Street hub for grub.
(04/01/25 12:05pm)
Marysa Navarro-Aranguren, the trailblazing Charles A. and Elfriede A. Collis professor emerita in history, passed away at age 90 on March 2. She is remembered as a “proud Basque,” “strongly opinionated and outspoken” and for her “laughter,” according to an obituary written by her daughter, Nina Gerassi-Navarro.
(03/28/25 1:23am)
Dartmouth accepted 1,702 students to the Class of 2029, according to the Dartmouth News. Regular decision and early decision applicants totaled 28,230, a drop of almost 11% from a year earlier.
(03/21/25 3:14pm)
Former Republican National Committee chief counsel Matthew Raymer ’03 will serve as the College’s next general counsel and senior vice president starting March 17. Raymer, who has publicly defended President Donald Trump’s push to redefine the scope of birthright citizenship, will oversee the Office of Visa and Immigration Services and serve on College President Sian Leah Beilock’s leadership team.
(03/07/25 10:00am)
This February, Hanover saw 39 inches of snowfall — up a whopping 37 inches from February 2024, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information. High snowfall was accompanied by a decrease in temperatures. The average temperature in Hanover this February was 16.8 degrees Fahrenheit, compared to an average of 23.5 degrees over the same period last year.
(03/07/25 10:05am)
On March 2, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its ninth weekly meeting of the winter term. Led by student body president Chukwuka Odigbo ’25, the Senate discussed a constitutional task force proposal — sponsored by School House senator JJ Dega ’26, West House senator Favion Harvard ’26 and East Wheelock senator Jack Wisdom ’26 — and a constitutional amendment proposed by Odigbo to allow non-voting DSG representatives to vote on budget allocations.
(03/06/25 10:00am)
On Thursday, the College and Student Worker Collective at Dartmouth will meet for a fifth bargaining session to renegotiate a new student dining worker contract, according to the Office of Labor Relations website. The current contract, which was ratified in February 2023, expires on March 18.
(03/06/25 10:05am)
On March 1, the Dartmouth Democrats, Dartmouth Law Journal and the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy hosted former Acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal ’91 and Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., for the Rockefeller Center’s annual Roger S. Aaron ’64 lecture. Katyal and Welch discussed the legal impact of Trump’s recent executive actions and considered potential checks by the courts and Congress on executive overreach.
(03/06/25 10:15am)
On Feb. 28, the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy hosted North Carolina Gov. Josh Stein ’88 for an event titled “Finding Common Ground: Leadership During a Politically Polarized Time.” Stein, a first-term Democrat in a state won by Republican President Donald Trump in the 2024 election, spoke about governing across party lines in a swing state and the importance of political partnership amid polarization.
(03/04/25 10:00am)
On Feb. 27, the Montgomery Fellows Program hosted Yale University Digital Ethics Center founding director Luciano Floridi for a talk titled “AI and the Future of Content.” Floridi’s lecture focused on the importance of maintaining human-made content in a world that is becoming increasingly reliant on artificial intelligence.
(03/04/25 10:05am)
On Feb. 27, Dartmouth Divest for Palestine — a coalition of College students, faculty, staff and alumni — organized a protest to “tell the Board of Trustees to invest in workers not the war machine,” according to a flyer for the event. Approximately 60 students and community members attended the protest.