Tue, Sep 30, 2003, 12:00am
A reporter's first trip to a press room is fraught with excitement, apprehension, and bewilderment. It almost feels like initiation into a secret cult--you ascend to the level of not just watching news happen, but shaping it yourself.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
William Theodore de Bary, the John Mitchell Mason Professor of the University and Provost Emeritus, teaches Asian Humanities and Civilizations, Chinese and Japanese Thought, and NeoConfucianism in China, Korea, and Japan.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
Kristen Waterfield Duisberg's debut novel, The Good Patient, attempts unsuccessfully to be both the literary version of a light chick flick and an emotionally wrenching tearjerker. Its first 250 pages are nothing but the frivolous drivel of its protagonist, Darien Gilbertson.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
Students arrived back on campus this fall to witness a whole new crop of culinary rivalries in Morningside Heights: the Cremalita angels battling Pinnacle for fro-yo supremacy, East and West Ferris Booth vying for marinara or curry leadership, and D'AG Fresh Market challenging the incumbent West
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
You may ask yourself, "How can Japanese cuisine, a delicacy which prides itself on small portions and artful presentation, adapt to an insatiable American culture that invented the Big Gulp and the Never-Ending Pasta Bowl?" Well stop asking; the all-you-can-eat sushi meal has arrived.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
The University Senate reconvened on Friday with a relatively quiet first meeting that nonetheless served as the starting point for a debate that is expected to continue for much of the rest of the year.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
Voting closed Thursday in the Barnard Student Government Association first-year elections with a Barnard record 64.2 percent of the class voting.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
When the University's Board of Trustees meets next week, the group will have three new members.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
When the University's Board of Trustees meets next week, the group will have three new members.
Mon, Sep 29, 2003, 12:00am
The heavy rain Sunday afternoon was not enough to deter a group of resilient Manhattanites from attending a free walking tour of Harlem conducted by the New York Surveillance Camera Players (SCP), a group that protests the use of surveillance cameras in public places.