Collis tests metalware with meals
For years, upon first glance Collis Cafe appeared to be what Dartmouth Alumni Magazine writer Noel Perrin once called an "environmentally minded gourmet."
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For years, upon first glance Collis Cafe appeared to be what Dartmouth Alumni Magazine writer Noel Perrin once called an "environmentally minded gourmet."
When Kathy Kelly first went to take toys and medicine to hospitalized Iraqi children, she met one little girl whose abdomen had literally been ripped open.
It would certainly be more difficult to explain why Gigli was produced and released than it would be to correctly pronounce the film's name (Gee-lee). This should-have-been-straight-to-video film fails in a profoundly memorable manner. After watching the film, one is left with a sincerely vexing question worthy of rumination: Which is worse, the "script" or the "acting"?
The trading deadline has come and gone and while the waiver market is still open, most major moves are done in the world of baseball. The trades have been analyzed and the prognosticators have been prognosticating since Opening Day, but this here is not mere conjecture, this is fact: The Red Sox will win the American League East. You may scoff, as the evil empire has claimed this honor seven of the last nine seasons -- with the Red Sox last winning in 1995 -- but the off-season moves combined with the surprise trading deadline prowess displayed by Theo Epstein clearly sent the message that the Sox are no mere wild card team.
Why will the Yankees win the American League's east division? Well first of all, they always do. That's not exactly true, but it sure seems that way. Since baseball went to a multi-layered playoff system in 1969, the New York Yankees have won the East 12 times to date. Their division rivals, the Boston Red Sox, have managed to do so only five times in that span.
Remember that infamous "swim test" we all took during our freshman DOC trip? I'm sure you do -- it was the easiest test to pass at Dartmouth. Though the test's original goal was noble, ensuring that every student have a basic level of swimming competency, it is no longer effectively test students' swimming ability, hence no longer serves a purpose.
As an exchange student for the summer from New College, Edinburgh University, I have had ample opportunity to meditate on the value of college exchanges. This process was prompted by a July 23 article in The Dartmouth ("Religion dept. FSP location frustrates") bemoaning the value of the exchange with New College in Edinburgh.
In the world of serious high school and college debate, Ken Strange is a distinguished figure.
The chase lasted 50 hours and involved the same number of volunteers and concerned passersby -- it just never broke a speed of five miles per hour.
It just might be the rainbow in a precipitous weeklong weather forecast.
In recognition of the wind-swept hills, lone pines and famed New Hampshire granite that surround Dartmouth, the September 2003 issue of Outside magazine has ranked the College seventh among its "40 Best College Towns."
Single Frame's 2002 debut release, 'Wetheads Come Running', sounded like Modest Mouse dropping acid with Fugazi. Full of twisted pop songs and electronic experimentation, Single Frame created a unique and memorable sound that explored the boundaries of harmony and cacophony. The band's new EP, 'Burn Radio Airtest', modifies and evolves this sound over eight songs and 17 minutes.
One hundred seventeen schools around the country are getting ready for the 2003 NCAA football season. From Troy State to Florida State and from Utah State to Nebraska, every campus gets excited for the fall season. The following are my predictions for the 2003 season, which probably will not all be correct.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
I'll state this for the record: I hate walking all
Colleges across the country are spending more and more money on making students' lives more comfortable, blurring the line between necessity and luxury.
From Steven Kung's description, the world of high school debate, currently manifesting itself in the Choates Cluster in the form of the highly prestigious summer Dartmouth Debate Institute, seems pretty surreal.