Tue, Mar 29, 2005, 12:00am
There are few things as reliable around Columbia as a winning result from the second doubles pairing of the men’s tennis team. This season, junior James Moore and his sophomore brother Martin have played inspired tennis, losing only one of 12 doubles matches in dual match play.
Tue, Mar 29, 2005, 12:00am
In a year of ups, downs, and unpredictable finishes in the Ivy League, perhaps no team was more surprising than the Dartmouth Big Green.
Tue, Mar 29, 2005, 12:00am
The Columbia baseball team will realize that it wasn't just the questionable calls that cost them their weekend series against Penn.
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
You wouldn’t know it by looking at the towering Unitarian Church at 1157 Lexington Ave., but inside is a Mecca for lovers of the last great literary art form: the short story.
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
What’s the best way to evaluate a society? Politics? Art? Television? I, for one, am inclined to believe that the best way to evaluate a society is to look at what (or if) it is reading. Physically, you are what you eat, but mentally, you are what you read.
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close begins with a keyhole. The detailed black-and-white image appears before any mention of a title, an author, or a publisher.
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
In the midst of a controversy centered on allegations of pro-Palestinian teaching in Columbia’s MEALAC department, the administration has pushed forward with its plans to hire the Ivy League’s first permanent chair of Israel Studies.
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
Disturbed by the outgrowths of the controversy over Middle East studies at Columbia, faculty members across the university are speaking out against what they see as baseless attacks from outsiders intending to harm Columbia’s reputation.
Mon, Mar 28, 2005, 12:00am
Dr. Nancy Hopkins, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology molecular biologist who exposed the university’s sex discrimination in the 1990s, spoke Friday on the trials faced by women faculty in the sciences.

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