CHAMPS! Women’s soccer wins Ivy League tournament with 1-0 victories over Columbia and Princeton
For the first time since 2003, Dartmouth women’s soccer are Ivy League champions.
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For the first time since 2003, Dartmouth women’s soccer are Ivy League champions.
With three minutes left in the second quarter of Dartmouth women’s basketball’s season opener against Boston University on Friday, guard Alexandra Eldredge ’27 found an open Cate MacDonald ’27 at the top of the key. The junior forward launched a 3-point attempt, which rattled around the rim before dropping in to give the Big Green a 21-14 lead. BU head coach Melissa Graves was forced to take a timeout, and her squad went into halftime down by seven points. The Big Green’s multi-faceted offense continued to thrive throughout the game, with five players getting on the scoresheet. Despite 16 Terrier points in the last four minutes of the game, Dartmouth held on to start their season off with a 52-50 victory.
In a game defined by grit, resilience and a pair of key defensive takeaways early in the first quarter, Dartmouth football defeated the Princeton Tigers 20-17 on Saturday afternoon. The win moved the Big Green to 6-2 on the season and 3-2 in Ivy League play, good for third in the conference.
The Class of 2029 cast their ballots for their Dartmouth Student Government senators on Oct. 27. They voted for two senators to represent their entire class as well as a representative for each house community.
The Dartmouth College Wind Ensemble heralded the reopening of the Hopkins Center for the Arts with “Curtain Up!” — a jubilant program featuring world-renowned Venezuelan artists Pacho Flores and Héctor Molina. The evening marked not only the ensemble’s return to its long-time home after three years of renovation, but also the Hop’s first mainstage concert by a resident ensemble since its rededication earlier this fall.
On Oct. 21, students, faculty and community members gathered in Loew Auditorium to watch Swiss director Fredi Murer’s 1985 film, “Alpine Fire.” The screening was part of Cannes on the Connecticut, a film series curated by Montgomery Fellow Vinzenz Hediger to showcase international films.
In public bathrooms across campus, students can find “The Stall Street Journal.” It’s a series of posters produced by the Student Wellness Center offering students advice and help on a variety of topics. This term, they posted a new issue called “Doomscrolling Detox.” There are a couple of different designs, but they all convey the same message: that news and social media can be overwhelming, and it’s essential to consider your feelings and take precautions to avoid getting overwhelmed while scrolling through social media.
When language students file into a 7:45 a.m. “drill” class, they step into a practice that has defined Dartmouth’s language teaching for generations. The small, fast-paced sessions — part performance, part repetition — are typically led by student instructors, creating a tradition of peer mentoring.
On Tuesday, Democrats took home several major east coast election wins, including the mayoral race in New York City and gubernatorial elections in Virginia and New Jersey.
The Rockefeller Center for Public Policy hosted former Rep. Annie Kuster ’78, D-N.H., and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association — the national trade organization for solar and storage industries — Abigail Hopper ’93 for a conversation about energy policy. The two said President Donald Trump has discouraged the clean energy industry by denying permits and ending federal subsidies for clean energy developments.
The Society of Fellows provides a postdoctoral opportunity for nine early-career academics to engage in interdisciplinary research at Dartmouth before becoming full-time faculty members at the College or a different university. Society of Fellows faculty director Emily Walton said the group does “critical work” that blends different academic disciplines.
Following a disappointing loss against the Harvard Crimson last week, Dartmouth football is ready to get back on track in Saturday’s game against Princeton.
For several hours last Saturday, the Boss Tennis Center buzzed with the sound of rallies, line calls and cheers as the Dartmouth men’s tennis team battled through its final invitational of the fall season. By the weekend’s conclusion on Sunday afternoon, the Big Green posted 21 wins to 8 losses, capping a fall season defined by steady improvement and a young roster finding its footing.
I am a sucker for adventure documentaries, from “Free Solo” to “Edge of the Unknown.” So when I saw that the Hopkins Center for the Arts was showing “Mountainfilm on Tour,” I was ready to be similarly enraptured. Curated from the annual Mountainfilm festival held in Telluride, Co., it promised an “evening of adventure-packed short films.”
On Nov. 2, the Dartmouth College Glee Club — a longstanding professionally-run Hopkins Center for the Arts ensemble — performed its termly concert at Rollins Chapel for a full audience.
The College has introduced a new institutional registrar position as part of the introduction of the School of Arts and Sciences, an administrative restructuring of the undergraduate college. Beth Dowling, who was previously a dean at New England College, began the role on Oct. 27.
A few weeks ago, I was sitting next to a group of boys at the meeting of a liberal campus political organization. They were discussing how they could collaborate to vote in the club’s elections to ensure that they were all elected, which would have resulted in a freshman board with no women. They seemed to either not realize that that is what the result would have been of their plan or, even more problematically, they understood and saw no issue with that outcome. In that conversation, I heard the same young men discussing how they might skirt their mandatory Sexual Violence Prevention Project training, which is a four-year sexual violence prevention curriculum implemented for all Dartmouth students. One said they would play training videos on their laptop while the club meeting went on. Another said that the training didn’t apply to him because he is dating someone and doesn’t drink alcohol.
On Monday night, the Hanover Selectboard held a public hearing for feedback to the proposed revision to the town’s Fair and Impartial Policing Ordinance. Twelve of the 13 attendees who spoke said they vehemently opposed changes to the directive. The Selectboard decided to discuss the issue again at their next meeting on Nov. 17 before voting.
Like many Dartmouth students this past Homecoming, I was disappointed to hear the College’s plan to supplement the traditional bonfire celebration with a light and laser show. I still vividly remember my freshman-year Homecoming. Huddled together, my friends and I stared in amazement, the heat radiating off of our awe-filled faces and warming us against the chilly New England night. We were staring at 137 years of Dartmouth tradition.