Mon, Apr 7, 2003, 12:00am
In their Ivy League-opening doubleheader on Saturday at Baker Field, the Lions (9-13, 1-1 Ivy) split games with powerful Cornell (14-4, 1-1). Columbia lost the first game 3-2 but took the second match 2-1, bringing the team's record to 9-13.
Mon, Apr 7, 2003, 12:00am
Prior to Columbia's match at Princeton on Saturday, junior Alan Bohane lamented that the tennis team would have to bring its A-game against the Tigers if they hoped to win.
Mon, Apr 7, 2003, 12:00am
With the NCAA final this evening and most of the on-campus protests over, it's time to turn back to a Columbia topic forgotten since last Wednesday--basketball.
Mon, Apr 7, 2003, 12:00am
Over the past weeks, rapid-fire insults have been flying between members of the student councils.
But any way you look at it, this year has broken any previous landmarks for collaboration between the four undergraduate student councils of Columbia University.
Fri, Apr 4, 2003, 12:00am
Phone Booth's plot develops around a Speed-like dilemma, but instead of Keanu Reeves frantically sustaining a bus at 60 mph to keep a madman from blowing it up, Colin Farrell's test is to escape a deranged sniper who demands that Farrell keep talking to him from a New York City phone booth.
Fri, Apr 4, 2003, 12:00am
Low Plaza was awash in a sea of blue and white "Union Now" signs yesterday as members of the teaching and research assistant unionization campaign made their voices heard on campus once again.
Fri, Apr 4, 2003, 12:00am
On visiting George Rupp's office in midtown Manhattan, it takes a moment to figure out what is different about the man who less than a year ago was president of Columbia University.
Fri, Apr 4, 2003, 12:00am
As part of the celebration of April's Asian Pacific American Awareness Month, students gathered last night to listen to Frank Wu, a law professor at Howard University, speak on affirmative action and the role of Asian Americans in society.
Fri, Apr 4, 2003, 12:00am
On a campus full of hundred-year-old buildings, construction tape and hard hats are familiar sights. But for Avery Hall, the major renovations that began in 1998 are finally nearing completion.
Fri, Apr 4, 2003, 12:00am
Columbia's undergraduate and graduate students may walk past each other every day, but rarely do they actually talk. But a recent series of panels about graduate schools has helped to break down some of the barriers separating the two communities.