Word: gores
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...graduate of Harvard College has won the presidential election since Kennedy narrowly beat out Richard M. Nixon in 1960. And after Yale man George W. Bush narrowly defeated Al Gore ’69 in 2000, this year, the best and the brightest are staying out of the race entirely...
...hard-liners, Wilson was exactly the wrong guy to send on a WMD hunt, particularly when it concerned Iraq. He had worked on President Clinton's national-security staff, contributed $2,000 to John Kerry's presidential campaign and made a donation to Al Gore's presidential bid in 2000 (as did his wife). And even though Wilson had given money to Bush that year as well, the hard-liners believed his instincts matched those of most people at the CIA--moderate, internationalist and, above all, too slow to see the enemy forming over the horizon...
...film, but it also directly affects the style of the action. From the first fight to last, no scene is performed or shot in the same cinematic style, and all are extremely exciting. The only caution is that, in the second half of the film, the blood and gore aspect of the violence is portrayed in an almost Monty Python-esque manner that, although appropriate in the “Movie World” context, can be off-putting and even unintentionally humorous. Nonetheless, the Kill Bill’s fight scenes are the most exciting and intense of this...
...night has finally come. After a summer’s worth of legwork, the boys of 7 Promotions, a blocking group comprised of Jon R. Ardrey ’05, Rob J. Flynn ’05, Al A. Gore ’05, Ryan P. Lannon ’05, Derek R. Melvin ’05 and Noah P. Welch ’05, are about to drop the perfect party on fair Harvard. Perfect, meaning not crowded, not exclusive, not ending at 1 a.m. So perfect, in fact, that its founders christened...
...fall of 1969, a year before Harvard and Radcliffe dorms went co-ed, undergraduate Al Gore was caught out after ten with a female B.U. student. This was, of course, against Harvard’s parietal rules, which took their last breath before expiring later that semester. Professor Roger Rosenblatt, the story goes, was known for his leniency in student affairs. Seeing the fear in the eyes of Tipper Aitcheson and her boyfriend, he called out, “Good evening, boys,” and strode briskly past...