2008-02-18

Mon, Feb 18, 2008, 12:07am
As an aggregate, So Percussion’s performances at Miller Theatre over the past few years constitute a remarkably compelling argument for modern music.
Mon, Feb 18, 2008, 12:01am
If you never thought you could find yourself in the same room as Truman Capote, Ingmar Bergman, and Stephen Sondheim, a visit to the Morgan Library and Museum will prove you wrong.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 11:57pm
It seems like you can’t go to the movies these days without encountering some kind of political message.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 11:53pm
Columbia students may not date, but they still know a thing or two about the labors of love, judging by the creations found at the Columbia Culinary Society’s first annual post-Valentine’s Day Erotic Cake Competition last Friday.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 10:00pm
The photographer is a Columbia College first-year. As I See It appears on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 9:54pm
This Monday, Spectator Opinion presents four students’ experiences with studying abroad and their decisions to leave New York for a semester. Fernanda Diaz calms down and finds space to breathe at the University of York. Lauri Feldman discovers Cape Town is a city with secrets of its own.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 9:39pm
The easiest way to talk about Africa is in terms of material conditions. When my friends ask me about my six months in Tanzania, I’m usually pretty indulgent.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 9:24pm
I love Columbia—I love the academics, the organizations I am involved in, my friends, my boyfriend—and so my decision to study abroad was not made without a heavy heart. When I first got to Cape Town, my initial response was to doubt that decision.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 9:15pm
As I sit here in my comfortable single at the University of York, trying to meet my Spec deadline while simultaneously watching 30 Rock online and scooping cookie dough ice cream straight from the carton, it’s as if I never left 114th Street.
Sun, Feb 17, 2008, 9:05pm
The history of science is a long and winding road, but when we study it, we often take the straight and narrow path. Classes rarely touch on the dead ends and false starts that make up most of scientific history.

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