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(07/22/97 9:00am)
Since I'll be graduating soon (such tragedy), I thought I'd present you all with a little wish list: the Top Ten Changes I Would Like to See Happen at this School after I'm Gone. I had all you lovable folks in mind when I wrote it this one's for you!
(06/08/97 9:00am)
Last night, like many sleeping people, I had a dream.
(05/27/97 9:00am)
Maybe, after all, it's not so bad going to Dartmouth.
(05/20/97 9:00am)
Dartmouth I've given you all and now I'm nothing.
(05/13/97 9:00am)
I finally got sick of the sad, soaked, phony world of Dartmouth editorial writing -- it was Hunter S. Thompson who put the fix on me. Now there was a real gonzo journalist, prime mover, sunny scat-hound sleuthing through the slimy underbelly of the sinister rhinoceros that is America.
(05/06/97 9:00am)
Since I'll be graduating soon (such tragedy), I thought I'd present you all with a little wish list: the Top Ten Changes I Would Like to See Happen at this School after I'm Gone. I had all you lovable folks in mind when I wrote it -- this one's for you!
(04/29/97 9:00am)
Death.
(04/22/97 9:00am)
So you want to write a thesis.
(04/15/97 9:00am)
[Note: The following is excerpted from the valedictory address made by graduating senior Leslie K. Normal at the Commencement of the Class of 2033.]
(04/08/97 9:00am)
The closest I came to a 4.0 was my Blood Alcohol Level." I saw this on a T-shirt the other day, as I was preparing to take a shower in my charming dorm bathroom. No doubt you've seen this T-shirt, too, and numerous variations on that witty theme -- "Dartmouth: King of Schools" logos that otherwise are facsimiles of Budweiser cans.
(03/25/97 11:00am)
What a long, strange trip down a long and winding road it's been.
(03/04/97 11:00am)
Like many citizens of the world who, for some odd reason, wish to avoid dying of lung cancer, I have recently quit smoking. The possibility of breaking this highly addictive habit may seem daunting to many of you out there in ReaderLand who still enjoy the daily Tobacco Suck; thus, I present to you this brief journal of my first week after I quit smoking. I sincerely hope that this journal may be a beacon to those of you who desire to do the dirty deed of quitting -- may it, like an Anne Murray song or Tony Robbins' hypnotic white teeth, light your way.
(02/25/97 11:00am)
Since we didn't manage to cover very many departments in last week's column, here's a few more because I love you '99s so darn much!
(02/18/97 11:00am)
Many of you '99s out there are going to have to file a major card soon, so, in the interest of upholding social welfare and promoting decency and loving kindness, I present to you a small review of some of Dartmouth's more engaging departments. Enjoy!
(02/11/97 11:00am)
I recently read an article in that bastion of journalistic integrity, you know, The New York Times, that detailed some extraordinarily exciting discoveries made by some slick astronomers concerning a cosmological phenomenon called "exoplanets." (Whew ... that was quite a mouthful. I should have a job with the Sociology department.)
(02/04/97 11:00am)
The following are excerpts from an interview I conducted this weekend with one of Dartmouth's most famous alums, Tiresias '94.
(01/28/97 11:00am)
The Sunday evening before Martin Luther King's Birthday many of you may have attended the lecture given by Harvard Professor Cornel West in Spaulding Auditorium. I was among those in attendance, and what can I say? The man was brilliant, quoting a swath of literary figures, offering up not merely a diagnosis of the problems of racism in this country, but a prescription for how to live one's life in this time of existential malaise and social indifference.
(01/22/97 11:00am)
Last night I was having a rather involved discussion with a good friend of mine on the topic of professors. Both this friend and myself are what you might call "aficionados" of that most hallowed of stations, that of the professor, especially the Dartmouth professor.
(01/14/97 11:00am)
On January 4, 1997, a date not too long before today's, I saw a rather interesting article in the New York Times.
(01/06/97 11:00am)
Happy New Year! Well it took long enough -- a whole year in fact -- but 1997 has finally arrived. Like many righteous earthly citizens who abide by the chronological glories of the Gregorian calendar, I too have made a number of New Year's resolutions. After all, wouldn't we all like to be better, healthier, happier people? Let us remember, the millennium is approaching, and we all know what that means, more or less.