Thu, Apr 11, 2002, 12:00am
Katie O'Shea is a Barnard College senior majoring in architecture.
Thu, Apr 11, 2002, 12:00am
A six-run eighth inning and four Columbia errors spoiled what had otherwise been a strong pitching performance by junior Gabe Gambardella, and sent the Lions to a heartbreaking 8-5 loss against the St. John's Red Storm Wednesday night in Queens.
Thu, Apr 11, 2002, 12:00am
A regulation softball game is seven innings long, and after ten innings, the international tiebreaker rule kicks into effect, allowing teams to start each offensive series with a runner on second base.
Wed, Apr 10, 2002, 12:00am
Once again the Whitney Biennial graces us with an exhibition that leaves art critics wriggling with a condescending comment and the rest of us wondering, "Uh, right, so this is art?" It is, of course, a survey show, the only criteria being the curators' admiration and the artists' citizenship or
Wed, Apr 10, 2002, 12:00am
Long famed for its diverse undergraduate population, Columbia was recently ranked as the second-best university in the United States for international undergraduates according to a survey conducted by the American Universities Admission Program.
Wed, Apr 10, 2002, 12:00am
Coverage of Sept. 11 events dominated the Columbia-sponsored Pulitzer Prizes for Journalism, including a record seven Pulitzers for The New York Times, two for the Washington Post, two for the Los Angeles Times and one each for the Wall Street Journal, Newsday and The Christian Science Monitor.
Wed, Apr 10, 2002, 12:00am
As far as the Columbia women's soccer team was concerned the only negative thing about their 4-0 loss to the New York Power--the WUSA professional team from Uniondale, NY--was the loss itself.
Wed, Apr 10, 2002, 12:00am
At 8 p.m. last night, as a rainy, eerie dusk fell over the Columbia campus and students disappeared into the library or their residence halls; the busy, sun-filled afternoon of only a few hours earlier seemed a distant memory.
Wed, Apr 10, 2002, 12:00am
Two of the world's most vicious birds of prey perched in Texas last weekend to discuss the crisis in Israel. Blair, the British hawk and Bush, the American eagle, squawked about what to do as Ariel continues butchering, and Arafat remains caged in Ramallah.

Pages