Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 9:02pm
Ah yes, another year, another Castlevania game. In 2005, the series premiered on the Nintendo DS with Dawn of Sorrow, a solid but unadventurous debut that paved the way for 2006’s Portrait of Ruin, a more robust title that ultimately took too many risks that didn’t pay off.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 9:01pm
When Sophia D’Ignazio, BC ’12, tells people that she is a vegan, the standard response is, “Well, what do you eat? Nothing?”
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 8:51pm
As the lengthy campaigns and election season come to a close, all eyes turn to November 4. This Monday, Spectator Opinion asked Columbia students from different groups and affiliations to analyze individual issues relevant and critical to the 2008 Election.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 8:47pm
It is hard to say what the most important issue is for Asian Americans this election season. Nonetheless, the unifying theme in Asian American politics despite ethnicity and political affiliation is the absence of relevant issues from the national discourse.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 8:46pm
About two dozen new people needing food come each week to the Soup Kitchen & Food Pantry at St. Mary’s Church in West Harlem. St. Mary’s Saturday Outreach in Harlem each week encounters more and more people sleeping on the streets.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 8:41pm
If there is one thing that Muslims in America can credit this election for, it is throwing the ugly specter of Islamophobia into sharp relief.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 8:30pm
There’s an old saying: “If you speak three languages, you’re tri-lingual. Speaking two languages makes you bi-lingual.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 8:28pm
One of the arguments circulating the Bwogosphere for the return of the Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps to Columbia goes that opening our ivy-covered gates to the military will allow more economically disadvantaged students to wonder in.
Sun, Oct 26, 2008, 7:14pm
Holding the New York Times in my hands, I feel as if the weight of the paper imbues sophistication in me before I take stock of the first page. Yet my guilt brews as I imagine the paper’s weight in another form, its heft signifying my unnecessary indulgence in reams of newsprint.