Tue, Nov 1, 2005, 12:00am
SEEJ Argument Is Based on Columbia's Prior CommitmentTo the Editor:Agnieszka Sablinska, in her letter "SEEJ's Argument Against Sweatshops is Too Idealistic," (Oct. 24) levels a number of criticisms to the proposal SEEJ members presented to President Bollinger on September 28th.
Tue, Nov 1, 2005, 12:00am
Apparently an alcohol ban motivates student council members more than a policy increasing students' financial aid.
Tue, Nov 1, 2005, 12:00am
Although the Lions have some outstanding individual players who take the field each week in their Light Blue and white, these individuals do not constitute a team.
Tue, Nov 1, 2005, 12:00am
Few collegiate athletes have the opportunity to make an instant impression. But SEAS freshman Amalia Viti has been given such a chance, and she's made the most of it.
Tue, Nov 1, 2005, 12:00am
After a triumphant win over Yale on Friday night, the Columbia women's soccer team is set to continue its Ivy League title hunt tonight in a crucial match at Princeton.
Tue, Nov 1, 2005, 12:00am
Tuesday afternoon provides the Columbia men's soccer team with a rare late-season non-conference game. It also provides it with a legitimate shot at a much-needed victory.
Mon, Oct 31, 2005, 12:00am
Christine Schutt writes skinny books-she is a master of packing searing moments into small spaces. That's one reason why her first novel, Florida, was a National Book Award nominee in 2004. The book, just recently released in paperback, explores the wanderings of a young, orphan girl.
Mon, Oct 31, 2005, 12:00am
I'm very angry with Oprah right now.
Not because of the whole couch incident that made TomKat the topic of the summer or the awful film adaptation of Beloved that she financed, but because of her Faulkner preferences.
Mon, Oct 31, 2005, 12:00am
When a work explores the struggles, victories, and disappointments of its protagonists and literature's role in the context of these experiences, additional layers of thematic and stylistic complexity result-with varying implications for the novel's success.
Mon, Oct 31, 2005, 12:00am
Philip Gourevitch, editor of The Paris Review, began Symphony Space's 12-hour marathon "The Book That Changed My Life" by questioning its very premise: "If [an author] came up to anybody and said ...