Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
The idea of producing an English version of Andre Breton's "L'Union Libre" that parallels the original French is absurd.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
Noche Mexicana, a new neighborhood restaurant, offers an unusually authentic approach to Mexican cuisine. It promises to become a mecca for students from the West Coast who miss the Mexican food they were accustomed to at home.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
The students have spoken, and now the results are in. About 38 percent of rising sophomores, juniors, and seniors responded to the Enrolled Student Survey, which was offered online last spring by the Office of Student Affairs.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
University Residence Halls' plan to conduct room checks under new fire safety regulations is picking up steam despite strong reservations from the Columbia College Student Council and Engineering Student Council.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
This spring, Columbia's two-time Ivy League champion tennis teams will play on courts more worthy of their standing in the league.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
Janet Jakobsen set the tone for this Saturday's "Public Sentiments: Memory, Trauma, History, Action" conference in her opening address when she recalled the saying, "the political is personal."
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
On a mercilessly sunny day in early November, a friend and I were standing at a gas station on the outskirts of Tucson, Ariz., one of the great military strongholds of the Southwest, in the shade of the raised hood of his defunct jeep.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
The word from Washington is that banning soft money will rid American politics of nefarious special interests. That's true--and American democracy will be weakened because of it.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
The history of the American presidency, normally considered no cause for frenzied celebration, is a story of improbable men--white men, of course--making it to the White House through some set of circumstances that includes military success, familial ties, or bizarre luck.
Mon, Feb 18, 2002, 12:00am
Anthropology is, as one student put it, the science of "who we are." It was defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as "The science of man, or of mankind, in the widest sense" in 1593, "The science of the nature of man, embracing human physiology and psychology and their mutual bearing" in 1706

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