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(05/14/25 7:15am)
I’ve been on for seven consecutive terms in Hanover, surviving solely on the Ivy Unlimited Plan. I’ll admit that I’ve actually come to like most of Dartmouth’s food. But I am off this term and residing at Summit, so I opted out of the meal plan and attempted to cook and sample the Upper Valley’s restaurants.
(05/13/25 8:00am)
To the Editor-in-Chief, Charlotte Hampton,
(05/13/25 9:10am)
Dartmouth Student Government voted to allocate $1,800 to a “strike cafe” to support student dining workers, if they choose to go on strike. The Student Workers Collective has initiated a strike authorization vote after negotiations with the College ended.
(05/13/25 9:20am)
On May 9, former U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gina Raimondo presented her vision of how to keep America economically competitive, arguing for more public-private sector collaboration, policies to reduce inequality, universal job training and targeted tariffs.
(05/13/25 9:05am)
Virginia secretary of education Aimee Guidera and Hanover and Norwich school district superintendent Jay Badams clashed over the government’s role in K-12 schooling in a Rockefeller Center for Public Policy event last week.
(05/13/25 9:00am)
Nobel laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk spoke about her advocacy for human rights in Ukraine in a May 9 talk at Dartmouth Hall. Matviichuk has been a dedicated tracker of human rights violations in Ukraine through her organization Center for Civil Liberties — and since 2014, has identified 86,000 war crimes committed by Russia throughout its invasion.
(05/13/25 9:15am)
From 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. today, town residents will head to the ballots to vote on local offices and zoning amendments, prior to the 7 p.m. Town Meeting in the Hanover High School gym.
(05/16/25 8:00am)
(05/15/25 9:10am)
A post shared by The Dartmouth (@thedartmouth)
(05/12/25 5:05am)
Tyron Herring ’23 became the next Dartmouth player to make the National Football League after signing with the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent on April 26, 2025. Herring played 18 games for Dartmouth as a cornerback and on special teams, being named to the All-Ivy League Fourth Team after an impressive senior season. After graduating from Dartmouth as a government major, he transferred to the University of Delaware, where he played two years while completing a master in public administration at the Joseph R. Biden, Jr. School of Public Policy and Administration. This past season, he was a team captain and an All-CAA Second Team selection. Herring sat down with The Dartmouth to discuss his thoughts on the signing, his time at Dartmouth and Delaware, late coach Buddy Teevens ’79 and his faith.
(05/12/25 9:00am)
On May 8, Jerry Hughes ’88 moderated a panel about free speech at the Rockefeller Center for Public Policy. Hughes was one of the Dartmouth students who took part in the 1986 sledgehammer attack on the shanties that were built on the Green to protest South African Apartheid.
(05/12/25 7:00am)
The Hopkins Center for the Arts and the Office of Pluralism and Leadership is hosting a film series in celebration of Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month. The program, in its third annual iteration, features seven movies representing regions across Asia and the Pacific Islands.
(05/12/25 7:05am)
Despite the recent wave of superhero fatigue that has been whittling audience’s attention spans, Marvel’s “Thunderbolts*” offers a refreshing, thought-provoking take on the stalling genre. Marvel films have been criticized for their lack of depth in recent years, but “Thunderbolts*” aims to set Marvel on a new path. The film handles depression, loneliness and finding one’s place in the world with a candor that surprised me.
(05/09/25 8:25am)
Charlotte, Editor-in-Chief: “The Writing Life” by Annie Dillard
(05/09/25 8:30am)
Last week, exactly one year after 89 students were arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest on the Green, students once again set up an encampment on College property to call for divestment and other administrative reforms.
(05/09/25 8:06am)
The precedent that the College had set up to this point was very clear: an encampment was the red line. For students to take up permanent space on this campus that, we are told, is our “home for four years” was the threshold the administration had set for immediate arrest, first in October 2023, and then again at a much larger scale on May 1, 2024. These were the rules of the game that student protesters accepted going into the Palestine encampment last week.
(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.