Fri, Apr 2, 2004, 12:00am
After dropping two consecutive Ivy League games in the past two weeks, the Lions are looking to regroup at Penn tomorrow. Columbia, 5-3 (0-2 Ivy), will travel to Philadelphia to face the Quakers, 5-4 (1-2), who are coming off a 10-6 loss to 12th-ranked Johns Hopkins.
Fri, Apr 2, 2004, 12:00am
One day over spring break, my friend Hotch said to me, "Yeah, SB gets pretty boring after a couple months of smoking and playing 21."
Fri, Apr 2, 2004, 12:00am
In celebration of the University's 250th anniversary, Spectator is ranking the 250 greatest Columbians through the ages, from number 250 to number 1. The project will culminate with the selection of the single most influential alum in May.
Fri, Apr 2, 2004, 12:00am
Jeffrey Sachs NYC's "10th Most Loathsome Man"!?!?
Thu, Apr 1, 2004, 12:00am
In his latest play, Bee-Luther-Hatchee, dramatist Thomas Gibbons seizes on the racial awkwardness of contemporary America: racial conventions may be increasingly defined by white rap stars, black golf champions, and other previously "oxymoronic" figures, but divides of skin color and a heritage
Thu, Apr 1, 2004, 12:00am
Throughout the history of opera, composers and librettists have turned to the theater for inspiration. One need only think of Verdi's Macbeth, Otello, and Falstaff, or Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, to illustrate the point.
Thu, Apr 1, 2004, 12:00am
After a one-year hiatus, the Hillel Drama Society came back in full force this past weekend with its production of Friedrich Dürrenmatt's The Visit. But while the play itself was well-acted and well-produced, it's doubtful that anyone will want to visit the town at its center anytime soon.
Thu, Apr 1, 2004, 12:00am
Did John Adams' father know Charles Ives?
Thu, Apr 1, 2004, 12:00am
This past weekend the Black Theater Ensemble pushed past the space limitations of the Lerner Black Box Theatre to bring to life I Ain't Yo Uncle, a lively satire of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Thu, Apr 1, 2004, 12:00am
Wallace Shawn's play Aunt Dan and Lemon, which recently closed after a revival at the Acorn Theater, is from beginning to end an exercise in discovering the evils lurking within people who might, at first glance, seem harmless.

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