High-school girls go wild in satiric look at adolescence
By Lisa Chau | April 21, 2004Keep your enemies close, watch your back and keep your lips glossed at all times. Welcome to the art of war -- teenage girl style.
Keep your enemies close, watch your back and keep your lips glossed at all times. Welcome to the art of war -- teenage girl style.
"The Prince & Me" begins with a car race in scenic Copenhagen, undoubtedly an early reward for the scores of males who have agreed to watch a movie based on an old-fashioned fairy tale targeted at pre-pubescent girls.
When members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity discovered that acclaimed electric and acoustic bassist Christian McBride would be on campus with the Pat Metheny Trio this weekend, they knew they had an opportunity they couldn't miss.
In "Anything Else," Woody Allen stars as David Dobel, a much older mentor to a young and impressionable Jerry Falk, played by Jason Biggs.
A quiet murmur pervaded Collis Commonground yesterday, as students feeling the painful, real effects of an ongoing nationwide financial slump presented their resumes to Career Services counselors for review. The advice session was advertised as a response to the overwhelming demand for resume and cover letter assistance that Career Services has seen in recent weeks, the office's employees said, but for students, the reasons for this spike can be attributed to a different factor: a serious lack of jobs, for undergraduates in particular. Career Services Director Skip Sturman, on the other hand, linked the recent upsurge in resume help requests to current round of corporate recruiting. "Students are deadline-driven," Sturman said, noting that on-campus interviews scheduled with recruiters may have made some students aware that application deadlines for next year are fast approaching -- and that if they don't get a job soon, they might not get one at all. Indeed, the national unemployment level hit its highest level in nine years in May at 6.1 percent, and despite a slight upward turn in a formerly stagnant economy, the job market has not seen a similar improvement.
Empty seats at Berry Library's normally sedate Novack Caf become prime real estate as reading period descends on the College and finals approach.
The Displaced Theater Company's dynamic Nickel Theater players performed Shakespeare's "Love's Labours Lost" in Fairchild Tower in front of an eager audience over the weekend. The actors used the building's distinct infrastructure to its maximum potential.
Greek life, the housing situation and parking were among the issues cited by students at last night's Visions dinner as the greatest points of concern on campus.
This weekend, the Dartmouth Dance Ensemble will host "Cross Culture," a spring performance with some special guests: the Dance Company of the National University of Costa Rica and poet and guest performer Chin Woon Ping.
"Down With Love" is a tribute to the Rock Hudson and Doris Day comedies of the early '60s. The movie begins with a series of colorful cartoons and has a wonderfully retro feel throughout.