Gore flounders behind Bush in appeal and polls
Al Gore is a desperate man.
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Al Gore is a desperate man.
Commencement and Reunion staff are scrambling to house the families and guests of the Class of 2000.
Five months after the steering committee report highlighted the need for a revamped residential system, the College is in the beginning stages of drafting housing plans for the upcoming decade, considering changes such as eliminating the River cluster and enhancing the quality of existing dormitories.
The College reprimanded all graduating members of the former Phi Delta Alpha fraternity for "dirty rushing" -- joining the organization during their freshman year -- by a letter of reproach delivering to the seniors' Hinman Boxes.
Affirmative Action Office intern Cara Fuller '00 transformed Collis Porch into a controversial talk show set yesterday afternoon in a presentation mysteriously named "Whispers."
Well, the time has come folks. The Stanley Cup Finals are upon us. The last stretch of the long haul that began in early October starts tonight. Twenty-eight teams began the season with the glimmer of hope that they would sip from the Cup on one humid night in early June. That faint glimmer of hope is now almost a reality for two teams -- the Dallas Stars and New Jersey Devils.
The media attention was focused on Ivy League champ Princeton's young team, which started three freshmen and two sophomores, but in the end it was Syracuse's young talent who stole the show. Sophomore attackman Liam Banks, recording a career-high six goals and one assist, helped the Orangemen cruise to the NCAA title with an easy 13-7 victory over the Tigers for their sixth NCAA championship and first since 1995.
I find it not so ironic that not only are you near Cuba in geographic origination, but you are on a strikingly similar level to said country in your desire for the destruction of the democratic principles on which this country was founded -- liberty and justice for all."
The recent speech of Yvette Schneider has sparked a decent amount of discussion related to the controversial topic of homosexuality. However, as it often seems with The Dartmouth (with great encouragement from a very vocal liberal population), the scales appear unbalanced to portray only one, extremely slanted side. Albeit popular to the College community here, many will find that throughout the United States a rather conservative counterpoint exists, and in all probability would have lauded the hosting of such a speaker as Schneider. So let me ask the "other" side to climb down from their "heterosexist and heterophobic" high horse and listen to a true vox clamantis in deserto for this day and age.
To the Editor:
I am ashamed to be a student at Dartmouth.
Has anyone given thought to the embarrassing nature of death these days, especially in, but not limited to, the young? We -- the denizens of Western society -- have developed something like an instinctual abhorrence of death and its discussion. It (a pronoun will now be used so as to accommodate the delicate), in other words, is no longer the respectable, inevitable part of life it once was but is now a mortifying pronouncement of the weakly constitutioned. It, shockingly, has become in some circles an object of sarcasm and ridicule and in even larger circles is now considered escapable and indeed subduable! In this short piece, I intend to explore the modern-day attitude toward the gaping, life-sucking black hole we call death -- I mean "IT."
These kids know about the pit stops in life.
Though current funding for the Dartmouth Organic Farm runs out on July 1 of this year, the program is very likely to be funded through the joint efforts of the Outdoor Programs Office and the Environmental Studies department.
The Student Assembly confirmed a number of appointments made by president-elect Jorge Miranda '01 last night, including J.R. Lederer '02 and Sabeen Hassanali '02 as the Assembly president and vice president for the Summer term.
Did you ever notice how nothing that was cool in 1989 is still cool? Vanilla Ice is no longer cool. Color Me Badd is not cool anymore. Arsenio Hall is not cool anymore. Collecting pencils is not cool anymore.
Longtime film and television producer James L. Brooks came to Dartmouth this past week as a part of the Mongomery Fellowship project "Making Music, Making Movies." Brooks has one of the most illustrious hit lists in Hollywood, producing T.V. programs including "The Mary Tyler Moore Show," "Taxi," "The Tracey Ullman Show" and "The Simpsons," and films such as "Terms of Endearment," "Broadcast News" and the recent hit "As Good As It Gets."
Five goals by freshman Sean Hartofilis helped the third-ranked Princeton men's lacrosse team overcome a late three-goal deficit to edge the defending national champion Virginia Cavaliers, 12-11, in the NCAA semifinal game. The Tigers advance to the NCAA championship game and face this year's top-ranked Syracuse, who defeated Johns Hopkins 14-12 in the other semifinal match up.
All year long, the Dartmouth women sailors have set their eyes on one goal -- the national championships.
To the Editor: