Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism.
The Dartmouth
June 28, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
News
News

145 courses over-enrolled in past year

|

Having more students in a class than space permits stands in contrast to the College’s liberal arts focus on small class sizes, highlighting the issue of over-enrolled and at-capacity courses at the College.


Portraits from the APAHM project hang in the Collis Center.
News

APAHM kicks off in May

|

This past Sunday marked the beginning of Asian American and Pacific Island Heritage month, an annual celebration of the pan-Asian community that continues through all of May. This year’s theme at Dartmouth is “Loving #MyAsianAmericanStory,” a hashtag that was originally started by an Asian American high school student.





News

Jasbir Puar to speak tomorrow

|

Controversial academic Jasbir Puar will speak at the College tomorrow as part of the Gender Research Institute at Dartmouth’s “Archipelagic Entanglements” panel.


News

Migrant workers in the Upper Valley face challenges

|

Many Dartmouth students know about the number of farms in and around the Upper Valley, which provide fresh dairy and other foods to the region. But few know about the migrant workers who keep these dairy farms running, or the struggles that they face on a daily basis.



News

Link Up hosts annual conference for seventh grade girls

|

Seventh grade girls from all across the Upper Valley came together at the College yesterday for the annual Sister-to-Sister conference — an event facilitating discussions related to women’s community — hosted by the mentorship organization Link Up. Over 130 students gathered from eight different schools, the highest attendance ever since the conference began in 2000.





News

Matt Olsen to speak at the Dickey Center today

|

In a discussion today with Dickey Center for International Understanding director Daniel Benjamin, former National Counterterrorism Center director and former General Counsel of the National Security Agency Matt Olsen will address the nature of the threats the United States currently faces and convey measures the government is taking to counter those threats. Olsen is this year’s Class of 1950 Senior Foreign Affairs Fellow.


Dartmouth Hall lights up in rainbow in honor of PRIDE.
News

PRIDE expands to two weeks

|

This past weekend, red, yellow, pink, green, blue and purple lights illuminated the front of Dartmouth Hall in honor of PRIDE 2016. The 10th annual PRIDE week will celebrate the LGBTQIA+ community, and for the first time, will last two weeks instead.


News

College faculty are least diverse in Ivy League

|

Faculty diversity at the College lags far behind that of the undergraduate student body. Whereas 37 percent of Dartmouth’s undergraduate population identifies as part of a minority group, only 14.7 percent of Dartmouth’s full-time instructional faculty identifies as belonging to a minority group.



News

Mark Connolly begins campaign for governor

|

Here’s the story of how Mark Connolly ’79 became a state representative at the age of 21. His neighbor in his hometown of Bedford, New Hampshire ran for Congress in 1974, and Connolly worked as his driver for the campaign.




News

Rose McLarney arrives as newest poet in residence

|

“Writing a poem is discovering,” Robert Frost once said. The place of such discovery for Frost himself, this year’s poet in residence and many others is Frost Place, a modest farmstead perched high on a rolling hill covered in wildflowers, nestled in the White Mountains in Franconia.