Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
The last time I looked, there were plenty of gorgeous people crawling all over Columbia's campus. I've only been here for three weeks, but I want to know: with all the beautiful people, how does anyone get any work done?
Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
Phallus. Peter. Quivering Member. Twig 'n' berries. Frank 'n' beans. The Chubby Conquistador. 100% all-beef thermometer. Purple-headed yogurt slinger. Bow-legged swamp donkey. One-eyed wrinkle-necked trouser trout.And my personal favorite, The Pulsating Python of Loooooove.
Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
For a brief time last Friday afternoon, the unthinkable appeared possible. After six of 13 events, the Columbia women's swimming and diving team was leading the perennial powerhouse and Ivy-undefeated Princeton Tigers, 70-41.
Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
Considering how much it had been promoted through fliers, publications, e-mails,and broadcast messages, I showed up at the forum on Title IX expecting a full house.
Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
The Columbia wrestling team experienced both ends of a blowout this weekend, losing big to Cornell, 31-6, before trouncing Binghamton, 43-0. With their second dual meet split in two weekends, the Lions are now 3-5, 1-2 Ivy.
Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
Highlighting a weekend of festivities glorifying over three decades of women student-athletes, a crowd of about 400 gathered to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Columbia-Barnard Athletic Consortium Friday night in Low Rotunda.
Tue, Feb 10, 2004, 12:00am
Led by another first-year record setter, the indoor track and field team completed a successful day at the Metropolitan Invitational meet on Feb. 8.
Mon, Feb 9, 2004, 12:00am
A week before the spring equinox, New York's contemporary art world holds a few pagan rituals of its own. A month from now, the Armory Show and its unofficial satellites like the Scope Art Fair will invoke a frenzy of buying, browsing, and boozing.
Mon, Feb 9, 2004, 12:00am
"This man endowed his creations with a certain loveliness which makes whoever looks at them fall in love with them." So wrote the 16th-century art theorist Lodovico Dolce of his contemporary Girolamo Francesco Maria Mazzola, commonly called Parmigianino.
Mon, Feb 9, 2004, 12:00am
Print journalism may be the last bastion of glamorous respectability. The excitement--late hours, mysterious people--and the standards--truth, facts, fairness--make the newsroom scandalous, but always (well, mostly) honest.

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