Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism.
The Dartmouth
December 22, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia

Sports

Track teams continue early season success

The Dartmouth men’s and women’s track and field teams continued their stellar winter seasons with strong team victories against the University of Maine, the University of Vermont and Colgate University on Saturday, Jan. 17, at the Leverone Field House. This marked the second victory in two weeks for both teams. ?


Sports

Nordic and alpine ski teams runner-ups at Bates Carnival

|

Kicking off the Eastern Intercollegiate Ski Association Carnival Season, the men and women’s ski teams placed second out of 16 teams at the Bates Carnival competition held at Sunday River Resort and Black Mountain for alpine and nordic, respectively. Maine from Jan. 16 to Jan. 17. The Big Green finished with 854 points and trailed the University of Vermont’s team, who earned 914 points after winning both slalom races.



News

Bartlett Hall

|

Year Built: 1890 \n Situated on a hill overlooking East Wheelock street, Bartlett Hall was originally not a classroom building, but a Young Men’s Christian Association building, or YMCA building.


News

The Green

|

Year Construction Began: 1771 \n While not technically a building, the Green forms the heart of Dartmouth’s campus.


01.23.15.Mirror.The Green_Abiah Pritchard-5
News

Dartmouth Hall

|

Years Built: 1784-1791 (rebuilt in 1904 and 1935) \n Dartmouth Hall was originally built in 1784.


News

The Choates Residential Cluster

|

Year Built: 1956 \n In response to the 1955 faculty committee’s assertion that Dartmouth’s existing dormitories looked like military barracks, the College built the Choates in an effort to create a more intimate learning community.


News

Collis Center

|

Year Built: 1901 \n This building was originally home to the College Club, a now-defunct eating group for students.




News

Students, faculty anticipate MDF policy changes

|

As President Phil Hanlon gears up to present his final Moving Dartmouth Forward plan to the Board of Trustees next week, some student leaders and faculty members have expressed skepticism as to whether the new policies will effectively change student social life, while others are hopeful and supportive. His presentation to the public, which will take place on Thursday, Jan. 29 at 8:30 a.m. in the Moore Theater, represents the final step in a nine-month process to generate feedback and create new campus policies to combat harmful student behaviors and exclusivity.


Natalie Cantave/The Dartmouth Senior Staff
News

Sororities extend bids to 92 women

|

This winter’s Panhellenic recruitment, the second to implement more intense Rho Chi training and alterations to the call back system, ended Wednesday with 92 women receiving bids, Panhellenic vice president for public relations Jessica Ke ’15 said. One hundred and seven women registered for rush, meaning that 86 percent of those who registered received bids.


News

Obama discusses higher education

|

President Obama delivered his sixth and penultimate State of the Union address on Tuesday night, in which he called for a focus on middle-class economics and outlined his plans for the final years of his administration.




Sports

Any Given Thursday

|

Last Sunday, many of us witnessed one of the greatest comebacks to ever occur in a playoff football game. The game perfectly illustrated why football can be such a thrilling ride, and how it can leave many of us craving more. Unfortunately, the only football this Sunday will be the annual Pro Bowl, which epitomizes the fact that All-Star games in professional sports never live up to their potential.


Sports

Squash teams go 2-1 in New Haven

|

The No. 10 women’s squash team notched two upsets in a successful trip to New Haven, Connecticut this past weekend. The No. 8 men’s team, also in New Haven, lost 7-2 to the No. 4 University of Rochester.


Each slab in Sera Boeno’s exhibit “Kelimeler Kiyafetsiz (:Words Naked/Are Not Enough)” weighed between 50 to 120 pounds.
Arts

Rotunda exhibition explores gender roles in Turkey

|

Concrete slabs reminiscent of ancient Middle Eastern tablets stand alone in the Barrows Rotunda, the circular glass gallery space that students pass by as they enter the Hopkins Center. These imposing slabs are a part of studio art intern Sera Boeno’s ’14 politically and personally charged piece “Kelimeler Kiyafetsiz (:Words Naked/Are Not Enough.)”


News

Peer advising program expanded

|

This fall and winter, approximately twenty students have been the first to participate in two new programs — Thriving@Dartmouth and Thriving Together — that have been offered by the College’s office of health promotion and student wellness for the first time this year. Building on feedback, the office plans to continue at least one of the