Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
Two Loons for Tea Looking for Landmarks Doldrum, 2002
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
New York City is the financial capital of the world. That association encourages a less-than-jovial reputation that the city's artists and musicians have fought, often successfully, throughout its history.
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
This semester, fewer Columbia students are looking for lost syllabuses, tracking down missed lecture notes, and searching for course web sites, but not because the student body has become more organized.
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
A seemingly innocent topic of conversation among peers and family alike, it's a question college students dread as much as next week's midterms: "So, what's your major?"
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
They don't care whether students do the macarena or the mashed potato. The committee members for the Columbia University Dance Marathon just hope that 150 enthusiastic students come out dancing to support their cause on Feb. 8 and 9.
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
Over 40 years ago, John F. Kennedy wrote Profiles in Courage, a book that won the 1957 Pulitzer Prize. In it he detailed the lives of public officials who made the ultimate sacrifice: allowing the demands of one's conscience to supersede the demands of one's political future.
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
We are all Americans now. This sentiment, which first appeared in Le Monde, was expressed by democratic countries the world over in the days following last year's attacks. Canada, which I had left for New York City two weeks before, was particularly profuse in its declarations of solidarity.
Tue, Oct 8, 2002, 12:00am
The left in this country is at odds with itself. Its moderate contingent is struggling to find a happy medium between distancing itself from the offensive statements of radicals and maintaining necessary criticism of President Bush.

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