Easy computing: the guide to Mac trackballs
RollerMouse (TM) 1.0 CH Products $119.95 619-598-2518 RollerMouse is a fairly average trackball.
RollerMouse (TM) 1.0 CH Products $119.95 619-598-2518 RollerMouse is a fairly average trackball.
In a town as small as Hanover, businesses do everything they can to compete for customers, even if it means going out on to the street. For the last five years, Lou's table of fresh baked goods and coffee outside its store on Main Street has been a common sight for morning and afternoon passersby, but since the opening of Chez Francoise in July behind the Dartmouth Bank, Lou's has had competition. Both bakeries set up tables at 7 a.m.
The Hanover Board of Selectmen appointed a Parking Task Force Committe to investigate the possibility of creating an estimated $3 million parking garage to ease overcrowding in the downtown area. The proposed garage would hold an estimated 200 to 250 cars and would be for the use of town patrons, according to College Assistant Director of Business Affairs William Barr, a task force member. The current parking problem in downtown Hanover results from the limited number of public parking spaces -- there are 838 metered spaces and 64 leased spaces.
NEW YORK CITY, August 10 - Her Vietnamese name is Thi Thanh Nga, but throughout a career that has taken her from Bruce Lee's training gym and low-budget films she became Tiana Alexandra and sometimes Tiana Banana.
History can be viewed as a sequence of repetitions, recurring events, reappearances and reenactments.
"Much Ado About Nothing" is about everything that makes one happy to be alive. Set in the Italian countryside in the 16th century, the film appropriately begins with Beatrice, played by Emma Thompson, reading in the fields to a group of women and men about how "men were deceivers ever." She implores them to convert their sounds of "woe into hey nonny, nonny." The duplicity is first noted when Beatrice closes the book.
The Camera Shop of Hanover will move up the street early next month into the space between Murphy's Tavern restaurant and The Dartmouth Co-Op. Owner Oscar Romero '69 said the new location at 15 South Main Street has two advantagesover its current location at 47-51 S.
Fact or fiction. Documentation or art. These dualities are common issues in a discussion of photography because, although the process is a mechanized way to creating images of the physical world, the photographer's subject choices and methods of depiction render the outcome subjective. "To Image and To See: Crow Indian Photographs by Edward S.
They've been called Boston's Indigo Girls. They were recently chosen "Best New Face Folk Act" for the Boston Music Circuit.
The Drama Department could not have chosen a more appropriate way to celebrate its 25th anniversary at the College.
In a lecture last Thursday in Carpenter Hall, artist, sculptor and print-maker Clinton Hill spoke about his art exhibit, "Spatial Constructions," now featured in the Hopkins Center. Placing the works currently on exhibit in a clear context, Hill discussed the development of his art, as it has moved from fiberglass to colored pulp to the most recent wooden constructions.
It's sunny, hot, humid and sticky. You drip with sweat and smell like you've just finished an All-Star basketball game; instead, you're in New England in the midst of a heat wave. As your brow drips with sweat and your body pulsates with excess heat, you dream about swimming. The obvious first choice is the Connecticut River.
When was the last time you saw cloggers, line dancers, magicians, clows, and African drummers, all along the streets of Hanover? Well they will all be in Hanover this weekend, as the town prepares for the 15th annual Hanover Street Fest, its celebration of summer. The numerous events will take place Saturday from 10 a.m.
First of all, skeptics of the world, "In the Line of Fire" is not another JFK conspiracy movie. The many references to the untimely demise of the president are included only for their symbolic value, and for the character development of Horton, played by the revered cinematic veteran Clint Eastwood. In his first production since his Academy Award winning "Unforgiven," Eastwood plays a secret service agent in this movie directed by German Wolfgang Petersen. Horton is known among his colleagues as a "dinosaur," having been in the department long enough to have been assigned to defend President Kennedy on that fateful Dallas afternoon in November 1963. Despite earning a legendary reputation for toughness over the years, Horton's career, confidence and personal life were never quite strong enough to overcome his apparent failure to dive in front of the fatal shots purportedly emanating from the book depository across the street. Enter John Malkovich as the antagonist.
Running a business can often be a gamble, and those who place their bets on Hanover must first pass an obstacle course of town by-laws that keep some businesses out of Hanover and help others prosper. Hanover is split into 14 zoning districts, each with a specific list of how land in the district can be used.
It was not too long ago that U2 flooded radio stations and heated the summer with its incredible smash "Achtung Baby" and outdoor concert phenomena "Zoo TV Tour." In an amazingly short time, the Irish band has created a new and different album, just in time for another summer. The new album, which keeps with the "zoo" theme in its title "Zooropa," is definitely not old-style U2.
Somehow the cute, elementary drawing of rolling hills, apple trees and stick figures that decorates the cover of Distant Cousins' compact disc does not quite seem to fit with Elvis Presley doing karate. Then again, the group's first album, "Twice Removed," is not exactly what one would call consistent.
The relaxing, slow-pace atmosphere of summer may inspire some restless students, faculty or administrators to try something new.
A small corner of Paris has made its way to Hanover. Chez Francoise, the town's new French bakery, opened last week next to J.B.
It's been hyped to be the hottest movie of the summer -- calling out to those countless numbers of fans who glued themselves to every page of suspense-writer John Grisham's best seller, "The Firm." The movie version, starring Tom Cruise, opened Wednesday in theaters everywhere. Unlike other suspense novels that make successful movies, like Jonathan Demme's "Silence of the Lambs," this law firm thriller plot fails to keep its audience as entertained because of the long-drawn out story and the slow pace. It contradicts the whole premise of a thriller which is to keep viewers on edge. Cruise plays the young, ambitious and money-hungry lawyer named Mitch McDeere. McDeere, having just graduated fifth in his Harvard Law School class, is lured to a small Memphis-based law firm called Bendini, Lambert, and Locke by offers of a high salary, a new home and a fancy car -- all the things he dreamed of possessing because of his impoverished childhood. Mitch's wife Abby, played by Jeanne Tripplehorn, is suspicious from the start of what seems to be a life that's just a little too good to be true.