New restaurant serves up colorful and spicy foods
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.
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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.
After the British surrendered to American revolutionary forces at the Battle of Yorktown, the British army marching band played "The World Turned Upside Down" to commemorate the occasion. Two hundred and seventeen years later, marching bands throughout the Ivy League are practicing the same tune after looking at this year's Ivy League football standings. Perennial cellar-dwellars Columbia and Yale are on the top looking down, while recent front-runners Harvard, Dartmouth and Brown find themselves occupying the bottom three rungs of the standings.
They have dealt with national powerhouses, regional competitors and Ivy League rivals; but, yesterday the Dartmouth women's soccer team displayed why they are the best team in the state of New Hampshire.
Bert and Ernie are two typical 2002 class members whose names have been changed to protect their true identities. Like the average pyromaniacal '02, they are intrigued by the thought of a raging inferno smack dab in the middle of the Green. The following dialogue was overheard and is published here to increase your awareness of proper bonfire procedures.
A couple of Saturday nights ago at a little past midnight, my friends and I found ourselves at Fort Lou's. Suffice to say, it was not the smoothest dining experience of my life.
"It all depends upon your appetite ..."Billy Joel
To the Editor:
Despite complaints from members of the surrounding community, the town planning board will meet to finalize plans for Chase Field renovations on Oct. 20.
Alexander Hernandez-Siegel's new office in the Collis Center is easy to find, as colorful banners direct the way to his heavily decorated door. The impact that the College's newly appointed Latino/Hispanic Advisor will have on the community should be hard to miss as well.
Sean Alpert '01 won this year's Albert I. Dickerson '30 Freshman Essay Prize for his freshman seminar paper, "A Travesty of Justice: The Case of Leo Frank."
Dartmouth Telephone Services is assuring students that the latest telephone scam rumor on campus is nothing to worry about.
Former Congresswoman Patricia Schroeder condemned the Clinton impeachment inquiry as too broad in scope in a speech before 75 people in Cook Auditorium yesterday.
The Student Assembly last night announced that 16 new iMac computers will soon replace most of the public BlitzMail terminals on campus and overwhelmingly voted to support a resolution urging the College to consider recommendations to increase social and programming space for students.
Two allegedly intoxicated male intruders found their way into the apartments of female College students, in unrelated incidents in the past two weeks, raising questions of safety in the Hanover community.
Jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, who has been called the most influential jazz pianist in the last 40 years, will bring his innovative style to Spaulding Auditorium tonight at 8 p.m. as part of the McCoy Tyner Trio.
The tennis courts by West Gym were largely empty this weekend, populated only by pairs of hackers out for some exercise. The hardcourt and clay surfaces remained virtually untouched because both of Dartmouth's varsity teams were busy tearing up the courts in other venues.
Men's Golf
The Big Green field hockey team had their fans rubbing their eyes and shaking their heads in hopeful disbelief yesterday afternoon. This is what they've wanted to see all along. Their team -- the team in the green and white -- was finally cracking open the can of whoop-ass as the Big Green notched a 3-0 shutout over the Tigers of Towson State at Chase Field yesterday.
In the interest of meeting new people and networking, I decided to head to Boston this weekend. Actually, it was more in the interest of seeing a city whose brightest lights aren't flashing on the top of a Safety and Security car. Or it was in the interest of going to a place where "public transportation" means something more than walking across the Green in a big 'shmob. In all honesty, though, my main reason for going to Boston was to visit my longtime friend, Colin, a freshman at Boston College. That and to beat up some Harvard kids.
Technology scares me to death. Once a proud neo-Luddite, I have spent the past few years arguing passionately, complaining publicly and writing dramatically about the harms of new technological advances. I refused to use e-mail and agreed to "surf the Net" only when forced by class requirements.