SA Leaderships' Columns: A Point/Point on the Greeks
To the Editor:
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
14 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
To the Editor:
There have been a slew of remakes lately, both of older movies and television shows. "Batman" was the beginning of this trend, and it has spread through numerous sequels, knockoffs and other assorted travesties.
Many returning to Dartmouth in the Fall were disappointed to learn that Mrs. Ou's had closed its doors. However, another restaurant has decided to fill the vacant space.
There is a new a cappella group on campus, a new name that might not sound entirely familiar. The Modern Madrigal Singers focus on traditional madrigal tunes, particularly those of the 16th century.
Oliver Stone is a mouthpiece for the people who control the conspiracies. NASA is plotting to kill the President with an earthquake in Turkey. Jerry Garcia isn't dead, he is an English 007 spy returned home for retirement. And "Air Force One" just slipped to second in total box office receipts.
Opportunities abound at Dartmouth for arts lovers to experience all genres of the fine and performing arts.
"Men In Black" was on the cover of Newsweek before it opened. The Will Smith single from the film had already been in heavy rotation on MTV for weeks. Next to the new Batman, MiB has been the most heavily advertised and talked about of the big summer movies.
To the Editor:
A giant curtain filled with the diagram of a blood-soaked barber's chair falls to the stage. Out comes a gritty chorus, singing about the Demon of Fleet Street, Sweeney Todd, and his killing streak. Dark would accurately describe the performance of "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street."
Musical theater returns to Dartmouth with the opening of "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street" at the Hopkins Center. "Sweeney Todd," which was written by Stephen Sondheim, is based on a Christopher Bond adaptation of a classic morality tale that has been floating around France and England for centuries.
Think of the funniest thing that has ever happened in a math class because of math itself. Aha. You are beginning to see immediately how much work it takes to make math funny.
Pilobolus (Pil-AH-bo-les) is a noun defined in Webster's Dictionary as "an absolutely amazing dance troupe, capable of creating the illusion of motion when still and stillness when in motion."
The stage setting looks like footage of the recent civil war in Bosnia. A guard tower is manned by a bearded soldier, and the background is a gray and black curtain, torn and dirty.
I am still in pain as I write this. The Reduced Shakespeare Company's performance last night of "The Bible: The Complete Word of God (abridged)" was humor at its finest, deftly combining physical with more traditional comedy.