Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
Project HEALTH, a national non-profit focused on identifying and finding resolutions to community welfare concerns, held a panel discussion yesterday at Columbia entitled “Harlem Leaders on Public Health: Exploring the Relationship of Policy, Healthcare, and Community Programming.” The panel foc
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
Most of us have to learn to live within our means. If you spend more money than you bring in then you will be either be an unsuccessful citizen—or a very successful politician.
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
The present New York state legislature accomplishes nothing. Actually, “nothing” would be an overstatement. Each passing year, the legislature does nothing about decades-old issues, and more and more citizens throw up their hands in exasperation.
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
Under other circumstances, we might salute Columbia for its recent launch of an Emergency Management System for the disposal of hazardous waste at its Morningside Heights and Lamont-Doherty campuses.
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
A few months ago, I was enjoying an overpriced, undersatisfying sandwich just outside of Uris Café, marveling at the beauty that is the Seeley W. Mudd Engineering Building, when a group of young, idealistic high schoolers passed by, led by a very bubbly and enthusiastic tour guide.
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
Just a day after his predecessor Buddy Teavens was fired from Stanford, Dartmouth football head coach John Lyons was removed from his own job. After a dismal 1-9 season, the worst in the program’s history, the Big Green dismissed Lyons Tuesday after 13 seasons and a 60-68-1 overall record.
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
Longtime Columbia football fans who walk up the hill at 218th Street to see a Lions game know that Baker Field has not always looked as it does today.
Thu, Dec 2, 2004, 12:00am
A dozen or so of them appeared in Levien Gymnasium last Wednesday night, handing out basketball coach Joe Jones “Colonel Sanders” faces, painting their faces blue, and leading “de-fense” cheers to a meager crowd of 600.
Wed, Dec 1, 2004, 12:00am
When it comes to the cold, I’m sort of a sissy. Growing up in Colorado, I spent countless hours restoring my core temperature by the fireplace or in a hot bath. In dorms, alas, fireplaces are nonexistent, and bathtubs are places for shower shoes, not full-body contact.
Wed, Dec 1, 2004, 12:00am
“How many of you think we are living in perilous times?” Geoffrey Stone asked in a speech he gave last night in Low Library. Times of peril, the audience was told, demand a balance of safety and Constitutional legality that has created controversy in American history.

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