Word: tonight
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...nationwide tour. Rumor had it, though, before Monday’s show at the Middle East, that J and Lou were fighting again; perhaps this would be their last hurrah.EARPLUGS NEEDEDA worrisome warning sign had been taped up at the Middle East: “The show tonight will produce sounds of extremely loud volume. Earplugs are available at the coat check. Sincerely, Dinosaur Jr.” As sooner as I finished reading, the sidewalk began to shake from the sound check. I knew Dinosaur Jr. shows are supposed to be loud; “wall of sound?...
Haddock and Riley received 59 percent of the first-place votes cast, the Election Commission announced earlier tonight. Their ticket received 2,308 votes out of 3,896 cast, while surprise second-place finishers Magnus Grimeland ’07 and Tom D. Hadfield ’08 received 912 votes and John F. Voith ’07 and Tara Gadgil ’07 received 664 votes. Slightly fewer votes were cast this year than the 3,985 cast in last year’s election...
...well,” Sullivan said. Harvard forced 17 Terrier turnovers on the night, but BU shot 53 percent from the field for the contest and 62 percent from three to overcome those mistakes for the 72-63 win. “We just couldn’t guard tonight,” captain Matt Stehle said. “We were trying everything, and coach was trying everything. All the positions, one through five, no one shut down the man they were supposed to be guarding. We tried to switch it up [to the zone], and it didn?...
...statement with curse words and attacks on their competitors’ UC track record. “I think you should expect more from candidates than what you have heard from the previous two tickets,” Hadfield said. He ended by saying, “No bullshit tonight.” Grimeland said that although Haddock and Voith have been on the UC for years, they accomplished very little during their tenures. “Let’s cut the crap,” he said. “We are the ticket that is going...
...Washington, the season of giving takes on special meaning in years ending with odd numbers. Politicians seeking election or re-election raise money for their most treasured federally regulated charities: their campaigns. Vice President Dick Cheney headlines a fundraiser in Houston tonight for Republican Rep. Tom DeLay, the former House Majority Leader forced to step down an indictment for conspiracy and money laundering. Tomorrow, former President Bill Clinton stumps for his wife's 2006 Senate campaign at a swanky New York nightclub. Presidential potentials, such as McCain and Democratic New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, sign their new books, which, like...