A Dose of Common Sense
The Editorial Board urges students to balance fun with safety this weekend.
The Editorial Board urges students to balance fun with safety this weekend.
The JED Foundation misses many important criticisms of the administration regarding mental health and wellbeing on campus, despite repeated calls to action by students.
After a swastika was discovered drawn on campus, the Editorial Board calls on the Dartmouth community to recognize rising antisemitism and to unequivocally condemn hate towards the Jewish community.
Dartmouth students must get more involved with Student Government elections.
Dartmouth’s attempt at busting graduate student worker unions is unacceptable and must end immediately.
Students should educate themselves on the cultural significance of mishandled Native remains without relying on Native students for explanations.
The College should mandate professors to provide feedback on their students’ final examinations or papers before inputting grades.
Dartmouth must be proactive and thorough when it comes to establishing its emergency response protocols.
Dartmouth finally gave up on denying student dining workers fair pay. It should read the writing on the wall and fairly compensate other student workers too.
Dartmouth must renegotiate its laundry contract to ensure that students have access to functional and affordable laundry facilities.
Dartmouth must reconsider the repercussions associated with Greek houses using the Good Sam policy.
Dartmouth must do more to ensure students have adequate heating in their residences.
Small changes in the classroom could have a big impact on student mental health and wellbeing.
Dartmouth Dining prices have skyrocketed inexcusably. It must stop.
The arts at Dartmouth must maintain its robust offering of programs and performances in light of the temporary closure of the Hopkins Center.
The College’s recent partnership with UWill provides more mental health support to students and makes great progress towards listening to students.
On Nov. 8, vote where you can — in New Hampshire or wherever you call home.
Dartmouth must recognize its problematic treatment of Indigenous peoples and honor Indigenous Peoples’ Day as an institution.
The frat ban must be extended to better reflect the spirit of the policy — to promote community and mitigate risks for first-year students.
Following two weeks of continuous tragedy, it is clear that Dartmouth needs a culture change — which starts at the top.