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(05/23/24 8:05am)
It is an understatement to say I am disgusted at Dartmouth Student Government and its failure to consistently follow through with actions that address all student concerns. I am repulsed by DSG members prioritizing their relationships with the College administration over what some attendees of the May 5 meeting requested: a no-confidence vote against College President Sian Leah Beilock after her administration authorized police to break up the May 1 protest on the Green.
(05/23/24 9:10am)
Six Jewish undergraduate students have been given the pseudonyms Daniel, Dylan, William, Sarah, Phoebe and Lucy. They each have been granted anonymity to speak candidly about their experiences.
(05/23/24 9:10am)
At the annual town meeting on May 14, Hanover residents voted 101 - 89 to pass a resolution calling for an “immediate and permanent” ceasefire in Gaza and the West Bank, according to former Hanover Selectboard member Nancy Carter.
(05/23/24 8:00am)
On May 20, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences voted 183 - 163 at a meeting in the Hanover Inn to censure College President Sian Leah Beilock for her response to the pro-Palestinian protest on May 1. More than half of the arts and sciences faculty cast votes.
(05/22/24 4:58am)
On May 21, a “supermajority” of participating Dartmouth Undergraduate Advisors voted 43 to 6 in favor of unionization, according to SWCD vice chair Hosaena Tilahun ’25, who also serves as a UGA. The students will now begin a negotiating and bargaining process with the school.
(05/22/24 7:10am)
As a German major, I’ve learned about the student protests that swept Germany in the late 1960s more times than I can count. Most Americans are aware of the related protests that occurred in the U.S. around the same time, which were largely in response to the Vietnam War and the civil rights movement. Fewer, though, know about their European counterparts. In Germany, these protests were in part fueled by anger towards the Vietnam War, but their primary focus was the lack of critical reflection in German society on its past Nazism. At the time, it had not even been 30 years since Hitler lost power.
(05/22/24 7:05am)
Outside of Guangzhou, China, atop Baiyun Mountain, I became deeply ill.
(05/22/24 7:00am)
It’s reached the point in the term where I look back on the past nine weeks and wonder how the days passed by so quickly. This term, I’m feeling the fickleness of time even more so than normal — on Friday, my younger brother and only sibling will graduate from high school. It feels like just yesterday he was 14 years old and starting his freshman year.
(05/22/24 7:20am)
Whether he’s spotted in Baker-Berry Library or waddling around the Green, Keggy the Keg always stands out in a crowd.
(05/22/24 7:15am)
There’s a reason why we call Dartmouth a “bubble.” With many students lacking a car of their own on campus, it can be difficult to find a short reprieve from Hanover. Grabbing meals with friends can be an excellent way to de-stress — but while Foco is open seven days a week, and there are a handful of restaurants to choose from in Hanover, eating at the same spots year after year can get repetitive.
(05/21/24 8:10am)
On May 1, the Graduate Organized Laborers of Dartmouth-United Electrical Workers — the College’s graduate student union — began its strike for a fair contract. Now, many of us graduate students are wondering why or how we should participate. I’m writing to say that I am striking, and my fellow graduate students should too. The cost of attending Dartmouth’s graduate programs has spiraled out of control. In the last five years, we have experienced an 83% increase in rent without a sufficient change in pay. Graduate workers currently have no paid medical or disability leave. International students face the extra burdens of immigration fees and precarity due to their visa status. Parents are especially financially burdened by insufficient childcare support. These barriers mean that higher education at Dartmouth is only truly accessible to the privileged few. These issues must be resolved for the sake of our workers and the future of our programs.
(05/21/24 8:05am)
More than 30% of Dartmouth’s undergraduate students have voted “no confidence” in College President Sian Leah Beilock, and now Dartmouth faculty voted yesterday to formally censure her. These events reflect campus concerns about the administration’s biased and punitive response toward pro-Palestinian campus advocacy since October 2023. The students’ vote and faculty censure should serve as an urgent call for alumni engagement.
(05/21/24 2:48pm)
Re: Police arrest 89 individuals at pro-Palestinian protest
(05/21/24 9:00am)
On May 19, the Dartmouth Student Government Senate met for its eighth weekly meeting of the spring term. Led by student body president Jessica Chiriboga ’24, the Senate discussed how to handle emergency situations — such as the May 1 protest — in the future. The Senate also outlined its broad goals for next fall, which include improving free speech policies and communication between DSG and students.
(05/21/24 1:49am)
Students arrested at the May 1 protest will not face suspension or expulsion, College President Sian Leah Beilock announced during the May 20 faculty meeting. According to Beilock, the College has now concluded its disciplinary process for the arrested students.
(05/21/24 12:29am)
On May 20, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences voted to censure College President Sian Leah Beilock during a faculty meeting. One hundred and eighty three faculty members voted in favor of the motion to censure Beilock, and 163 voted against it.
(05/20/24 8:10am)
For the first time since 2018, Dartmouth qualified for the Ivy League softball postseason after sweeping the double header against Columbia University on May 4.
(05/20/24 5:05am)
Nearly 1,000 students play a varsity sport at Dartmouth, each of them dedicating significant time and energy to their respective sports. Among them lies an even smaller community of 43 athletes who take their talents to two separate sports.
(05/18/24 8:00pm)
Kexin Cai GR, a graduate student in the psychological and brain sciences department, was reported missing to the Lebanon Police Department on May 17, Safety and Security director Keiselim Montás wrote in an email statement to The Dartmouth. Cai was last seen on the afternoon of May 15.
(05/17/24 9:00am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.