Thu, Jan 24, 2002, 12:00am
The Marcellus Wiley story just keeps getting better. Columbia’s finest football player since Sid Luckman will don the AFC Red and White when he starts as defensive end in the NFL’s Feb. 10 Pro Bowl.
Thu, Jan 24, 2002, 12:00am
  Men’s Basketball
Thu, Jan 24, 2002, 12:00am
The Associated Press reported yesterday that a London bookie has taken more bets on whether Mike Tyson will be disqualified than he has on who will win the former heavyweight champion’s fight with Lennox Lewis.
Thu, Jan 24, 2002, 12:00am
With only a few seconds remaining in regulation and the game’s outcome already decided, “His Airness” decided to remind everyone in the sports world that he still has the goods.
Wed, Jan 23, 2002, 12:00am
David Hockney, a Brit by birth and contemporary painter based out of Los Angeles, began to question paintings that appeared to have a "true to life" quality of rendering while he was visiting the 1999 Ingres exhibition in London.
Wed, Jan 23, 2002, 12:00am
With the unveiling of its long-awaited new building on West 53rd Street, the American Folk Art Museum has assumed a new identity. Known until this year as the Museum of American Folk Art, it has rearranged its name to reflect its growing interest in 20th-century folk art from abroad.
Wed, Jan 23, 2002, 12:00am
Named after the 1971 album that was arguably folk prince Tim Buckley's most apocalyptic, erotic, eccentric release--the great orgasm of his short career--Wigan's Starsailor is thankfully less obscure and more melodious.
Wed, Jan 23, 2002, 12:00am
Basement Jaxx appeared on record store shelves two years ago with Remedy, and suddenly people were walking around in a funked-out daze, straining to hit the high notes of that frighteningly infectious hook and wondering why that bassline sounded so familiar.
Wed, Jan 23, 2002, 12:00am
Dispatch is the poster child for homegrown bands who want success without the corporate greed of record companies. The band made a name for itself by playing reggae/funk-tinged rock music to college audiences throughout the Northeast and using Napster as a music distribution system.
Wed, Jan 23, 2002, 12:00am
To a visitor unfamiliar with Columbiaís campus in recent years, the presence of a large pit of mud near South Field might seem a blight in the middle of Charles McKimís picturesque 1897 campus.

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