This web page is dedicated to my Dad, Tsien-Chung Chou (1902-2000),
who read avidly The New York Times daily & joyfully for over 50 years.
Selected Articles from The New York Times January 2002
(* denotes news of special interest)
Thursday, January 31, 2002:
On This Day: January 31 (Robert Morris 1/31/1734-5/8/1806, Sam Loyd 1/31/1841-4/10/1911,
Zane Grey 1/31/1872-10/23/1939, Anna Pavlova 1/31/1881-1/23/1931, Eddie Cantor 1/31/1892-10/10/1964,
John O'Hara 1/31/1905-4/11/1970, Thomas Merton 1/31/1915-12/10/1968, Norman Mailer 1923,
Jean Simmons 1929, Ernie Banks 1931, Philip Glass 1937, Suzanne Pleshette 1937, Jessica Walter 1944,
Nolan Ryan 1947, Phil Collins 1951, Minnie Driver 1971)
From Washington Abolition Of Slavery
(NY TIMES, February 1, 1865)
* Jackie Robinson, First Black in Major Leagues, Dies at 53
[1/31/1919-10/24/1972] (By DAVE ANDERSON, October 25, 1972)
Joshua L. Miner, 81, Founder of American Outward Bound, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Jan. 31, 2002)
Inge Morath, Photographer With a Poetic Touch, Dies at 78
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Jan. 31, 2002)
Raji Jallepalli-Reiss, Chef, 52, Dies
(By ERIC PACE, Jan. 31, 2002)
Bishop John McGann, 77, Dies on Long Island
(By TINA KELLEY, Jan. 31, 2002)
NATIONAL: Science Will Catch Up at Waste Site, U.S. Says
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Jan. 31, 2002)
Bush Asks Volunteers to Join Fight on Terrorism
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Jan. 31, 2002)
Complex Deal Is First Step to Create New National Park
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 31, 2002)
AIRPORT SECURITY: Suspect Walks Off as Explosive Is Detected
(By EVELYN NIEVES, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE INVESTIGATION: Suspect Calls Malaysia a Staging Area for Terror Attacks
(By PHILIP SHENON & DAVID JOHNSTON, Jan. 31, 2002)
When $450,000 Will Buy Just a Starter Home
(By EVELYN NIEVES, Jan. 31, 2002)
WORLD: Rich and Powerful Gathering at Elite Forum on Economy
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE ROGUE LIST: Bush Aides Say Tough Tone Put Foes on Notice
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 31, 2002)
WARLORDS: Fighting Erupts in Afghan City as Warlords Compete for Power
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Jan. 31, 2002)
JOURNALISTS: New Message Threatens Execution of U.S. Reporter
(By FELICITY BARRINGER with ERIK ECKHOLM, Jan. 31, 2002)
An Unusual New Palestinian 'Martyr': A Woman
(By JAMES BENNET, Jan. 31, 2002)
CELEBRITY: Conducting Diplomacy With a Cape
(By GUY TREBAY, Jan. 31, 2002)
Many Arabs Say Bush Misreads Their History and Goals
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Jan. 31, 2002)
PAST FORUMS: Bereft, Swiss Town Pines for Jet-Set Movers and World-Class Shakers
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE ALLIES: Many in Europe Voice Worry U.S. Will Not Consult Them
(By SUZANNE DALEY, Jan. 31, 2002)
ASIAN ARENA: South Korea and Japan Begin to Sweat After Bush Turns Up the Heat on North Korea
(By JAMES BROOKE, Jan. 31, 2002)
* NY REGION: ORGANIZER: The 'Chief Visionary' Discusses His Creation
(By JOYCE WADLER, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE PLAYERS: Appearing in the Role of Evil: The Other Side
(By DAN BARRY, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE STREETS: Maze of Barricades, Police, Detours and Irate Shoppers
(By AL BAKER, Jan. 31, 2002)
A GUIDE: How to Flee the Forum and Really See the City
(By LESLIE EATON, Jan. 31, 2002)
* 9/11 in Firefighters' Words: Surreal Chaos and Hazy Heroics
(By KEVIN FLYNN & JIM DWYER, Jan. 31, 2002)
New to a Job, and Hoping to Make It Obsolete [Linda I. Gibbs]
(By ROBIN FINN, Jan. 31, 2002)
BOLDFACE NAMES: Not in the Script [Gov. Pataki & Hamid Karzai]
(By JAMES BARRON, Jan. 31, 2002)
METRO MATTERS: Trying Honey After a Reign of Vinegar [Mayor Bloomberg]
(By JOYCE PURNICK, Jan. 31, 2002)
EDITORIAL: The View From Riyadh
(NY TIMES, Jan. 31, 2002)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Enter Patty Hearst, and Other Ghosts From the 60's
(By BRENT STAPLES, Jan. 31, 2002)
OP-ED: Two, Three, Many?
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Jan. 31, 2002)
OP-ED: A Merciful War
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Jan. 31, 2002)
OP-ED: Pearl's Kidnappers Won't Win
(By TERRY ANDERSON, Jan. 31, 2002)
OP-ED: Auditor Term Limits
(By HARRISON J. GOLDIN, Jan. 31, 2002)
LETTERS: What Will Downtown Look Like?
(By ANN BOOKMAN, et. al., Jan. 31, 2002)
BUSINESS: Shares Rally After Optimistic News About the Economy
Fed Holds Steady on Interest Rates as Economy Firms
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON with DAVID LEONHARDT, Jan. 31, 2002)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Globalism and the Liberal Model
(By VIRGINIA POSTREL, Jan. 31, 2002)
MAN IN THE NEWS: Pressing the President: David Michael Walker
(By NEIL A. LEWIS, Jan. 31, 2002)
Agency Will Sue for Records of Cheney Energy Meetings
(By DON VAN NATTA Jr., Jan. 31, 2002)
A CASE STUDY: A Video Record of Enron Shows Life Before the Fall
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Jan. 31, 2002)
ACCOUNTING: As Enron Searches for Auditor, Some Big Names Don't Apply
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE: A Strategy of Returning to the Roots in Energy
(By NEELA BANERJEE, Jan. 31, 2002)
ADVERTISING: Club Med Asks: 'Wanna Play?'
(By JANE L. LEVERE, Jan. 31, 2002)
MARKET PLACE: AT&T and AOL Report Losses
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Jan. 31, 2002)
Times Co. Reports 46% Drop in Fourth-Quarter Net Income [NY Times, Boston Globe]
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Jan. 31, 2002)
Mutual Fund Growth Was Slack Last Year [average stock fund lost 4.5% in 2000 and 13.3% in 2001]
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Jan. 31, 2002)
ARTS ABROAD: The Irish Are Delighted by Their Museum's New Wing
(By BRIAN LAVERY, Jan. 31, 2002)
ART: Old Masters Generate Mixed Results at Auctions
(By CAROL VOGEL, Jan. 31, 2002)
ARCHITECTURE: Dust-Up in the Desert: The Future of Wright's School
(By FRED BERNSTEIN, Jan. 31, 2002)
BOOKS: 'THE LESSONS OF TERROR': Augustus, Napoleon, the C.I.A. and Other Terrorists
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Jan. 31, 2002)
MAKING BOOKS: Celebrating Audiobook Narrators
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, Jan. 31, 2002)
DANCE: EIKO AND KOMA: Travel Companions on Life's Inevitable Journey
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Jan. 31, 2002)
MUSIC: Moving Mendelssohn Beyond Weddings
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Jan. 31, 2002)
MUSIC CRITIC: Great Performers Series Presses Its Minifestivals
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Jan. 31, 2002)
THEATER: 'WHAT'S ON THE HEARTS OF MEN': Mixing Romance With Responsibility
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Jan. 31, 2002)
TV: 'INSIDE THE TEENAGE BRAIN': When the Prefrontal Cortex Acts Up
(By JULIE SALAMON, Jan. 31, 2002)
CIRCUITS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Jan. 31, 2002)
New Tools Are Freeing TV Journalists to Roam
(By SUSAN E. REED, Jan. 31, 2002)
Some States Track Parolees by Satellite
(By JENNIFER 8. LEE, Jan. 31, 2002)
STATE OF THE ART: For Mail, a Palm That Gets It
(By DAVID POGUE, Jan. 31, 2002)
WHAT'S NEXT: Tiny Resonators May Help Cellphones Shrink
(By IAN AUSTEN, Jan. 31, 2002)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Internet Hotel Deals for Artful Lodgers
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Jan. 31, 2002)
* HOW IT WORKS: Cram Sessions: The Evolution of an Ever Deeper Disc [DVD]
(By MATT LAKE, Jan. 31, 2002)
Blazing a Trail Before a Single Tree Falls
(By JULIA LAWLOR, Jan. 31, 2002)
THE NEXT WAVE?: Equipment Check: Goggles, G.P.S.
(By SUSAN E. REED, Jan. 31, 2002)
ONLINE DIARY: From Horse Webcams to Tech Illiteracy
(By PAMELA LiCALZI O'CONNELL, Jan. 31, 2002)
APPAREL: Rain or Shine, a Coat That Checks Air Quality
(By SARA IVRY, Jan. 31, 2002)
HAND-HELDS: Passwords on Your Hand? Try Your Palm Instead
(By STEPHEN C. MILLER, Jan. 31, 2002)
WEB SITES: Getting Some Online Help in Sorting Out Terrorists
(By CATHERINE GREENMAN, Jan. 31, 2002)
PERSONAL COMPUTERS: Case Closed: A Sound Card Plugs In From the Outside
(By BRUCE HEADLAM, Jan. 31, 2002)
FROM THE DESK OF DAVID POGUE: Who Said What When?
(By DAVID POGUE, Jan. 31, 2002)
Q & A: Child's Play: Creating Games the Easy Way
(By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Jan. 31, 2002)
SCIENCE: Biologists Enlist in Anthrax Hunt
(NY TIMES, Jan. 31, 2002)
HEALTH: Company Says It Used Cloning to Create New Kidneys for Cow
(By KENNETH CHANG, Jan. 31, 2002)
HEALTH: New Gene Test May Provide Early Signs of Colon Cancer
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Jan. 31, 2002)
Wednesday, January 30, 2002:
On This Day: January 30 (George Villiers Buckingham 1/30/1628-4/16/1687, Bernardo Bellotto 1/30/1720-10/17/1780,
Philip Henry Stanhope 1/30/1805-12/24/1875, Samuel Armstrong 1/30/1839-5/11/1893,
Roy Eldridge 1/30/1911-2/26/1989, Barbara Tuchman 1/30/1912-2/6/1989, Dorothy Malone 1925,
Harold Prince 1928, Gene Hackman 1930, Tammy Grimes 1934, Jeanne Pruett 1937,
Vanessa Redgrave 1937, Dick Cheney 1941)
* Gandhi Is Killed By A Hindu; India Shaken, World Mourns
(By Robert Trumbull, January 30, 1948)
Obituary: Franklin Delano Roosevelt: Part I of VIII
[1/30/1882-4/12/1945] (NY TIMES, April 13, 1945)
Michael P. Hammond Is Dead; New Arts Chairman Was 69
(By ROBIN POGREBIN, Jan. 30, 2002)
Andrew W. Cooper, 74, Pioneering Journalist, Is Dead
(By THOMAS J. LUECK, Jan. 30, 2002)
Eugene M. Ezersky Environmental Educator, 75, Is Dead
(NY TIMES, Jan. 30, 2002)
Elizabeth M. Riley, 94, Editor of Children's Books, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Jan. 30, 2002)
Bishop John R. McGann, L.I. Diocese Leader, Dies at 77
(By TINA KELLEY, Jan. 30, 2002)
NATIONAL: Bush, Focusing on Terrorism, Says Secure U.S. Is Top Priority
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 30, 2002)
SCENE: Ritual Moment of Glory as Battle-Tested Bush Returns to a Once-Chilling Setting
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Jan. 30, 2002)
President Bush's State of the Union Address to Congress and the Nation
(NY TIMES, Jan. 30, 2002)
THE GUESTS: Friends and New Heroes Dot List of Attendees
(By DAVID STOUT, Jan. 30, 2002)
PUBLIC RESPONSE: A Nation Yearns to Hope, and Some Find Solace
(By JOHN W. FOUNTAIN, Jan. 30, 2002)
VOLUNTARISM: Commander in Chief to Recruit an Army of Good Samaritans
(By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Jan. 30, 2002)
F.B.I. Director Removes Official Over Her Handling of Spy Inquiry
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, Jan. 30, 2002)
EDUCATION: Harvard Adds Black-Politics Scholar to Faculty
(By PAM BELLUCK, Jan. 30, 2002)
THE DISEASE: Geographic Gaffe Misguides Anthrax Inquiry
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Jan. 30, 2002)
MILITARY PLANS: Call to Step Up Antiterror War Identifies 3 Nations as Threats
(By THOM SHANKER, Jan. 30, 2002)
U.S. Athletes Must Guess on Supplements
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Jan. 30, 2002)
Jeb Bush's Daughter Is Arrested on Charge of Faking Prescription
(By DANA CANEDY, Jan. 30, 2002)
LESSONS: If Tried, Real Integration Easily Proves Its Worth
(By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Jan. 30, 2002)
WORLD: A Star of Diplomacy Is Born
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Jan. 30, 2002)
JOURNALISTS: An Intricate Web Lured Reporter to Meet a Cleric Who Vanished
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Jan. 30, 2002)
LONDONDERRY JOURNAL: 'Bloody Sunday' of '72: Digging Anew for the Truth
(By WARREN HOGE, Jan. 30, 2002)
Afghan Agrees With Bush on Prisoners
(NY TIMES, Jan. 30, 2002)
* NY REGION: Before the Towers Fell, Fire Dept. Fought Chaos
(By JIM DWYER, Jan. 30, 2002)
POLITICAL MEMO: Tenuous Grip on Rebuilding Could Hurt Bloomberg's Term
(By ADAM NAGOURNEY, Jan. 30, 2002)
For City, Good Buzz May Be Best Payoff of Economic Forum
(By LESLIE EATON, Jan. 30, 2002)
17 Are Charged in Theft of Sept. 11 Funds
(By ROBERT F. WORTH, Jan. 30, 2002)
Terrorism Jitters Not Enough to Keep Some Students Home
(By BRUCE LAMBERT, Jan. 30, 2002)
PUBLIC LIVES: Life as a Bearer of Tidings and More Exotic Things
(By JOHN KIFNER, Jan. 30, 2002)
Capturing for History Many of a Tragic Day's Triumphs and Problems
(NY TIMES, Jan. 30, 2002)
EDITORIAL: George W. Bush's Moment
(NY TIMES, Jan. 30, 2002)
OP-ED: A Blue Burka for Justice
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Jan. 30, 2002)
OP-ED: Dead Man Walking
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Jan. 30, 2002)
OP-ED: The Cloning Conundrum
(By JACK M. BALKIN, Jan. 30, 2002)
LETTERS: No Respite in the Enron Furor
(By SUSAN ESKO, et. al., Jan. 30, 2002)
Worries of More Enrons to Come Give Prices a Pounding
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Jan. 30, 2002)
THE ACCOUNTING: Evidence Proving Fraud May Turn Out to Be Elusive
(By FLOYD NORRIS & KURT EICHENWALD, Jan. 30, 2002)
MONEY TRAIL: Lawmakers Praise Efforts to Block Terror Funds
(By ADAM CLYMER, Jan. 30, 2002)
Gerstner to Step Down as I.B.M. Chief
(By STEVE LOHR, Jan. 30, 2002)
AN EXECUTIVE'S DEATH: Hometown Remembers Man Who Wore Success Quietly
(By ELISSA GOOTMAN, Jan. 30, 2002)
Enron Says Shredding of Records Was Not Stopped Until Recently
(By BARNABY J. FEDER & MICHAEL BRICK, Jan. 30, 2002)
TURNAROUND EFFORT: Enron Names an Interim Chief to Oversee Its Bankruptcy
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN With JENNIFER 8. LEE, Jan. 30, 2002)
THE POLITICS: Republicans Divide Over Disclosing Information
(By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. and ROBERT PEAR, Jan. 30, 2002)
THE TV INTERVIEW: Did NBC Let Lay's Wife Get Around Hard Issues?
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, Jan. 30, 2002)
ADVERTISING: Fox News Beats CNN in Ratings
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Jan. 30, 2002)
ARTS ABROAD: French Government and the Louvre in a War of Words
(By ALAN RIDING, Jan. 30, 2002)
ART: The Trial of a Dealer Divides the Art World
(By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Jan. 30, 2002)
BOOKS: 'THE RIVER'S TALE': Solo on the Mekong, Mile by Mile, Source to Delta
(By FRANK GIBNEY, Jan. 30, 2002)
DANCE: LIZ LERMAN DANCE EXCHANGE: Evoking a Festival's Past With a View From the Kitchen
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Jan. 30, 2002)
FILM: 'DOMESTIC VIOLENCE': Battering Begins. The Police Come. It All Starts Again.
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Jan. 30, 2002)
MUSIC: FOCUS FESTIVAL: Musicians, Like Actors, Can Master the Method
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Jan. 30, 2002)
POP REVIEW: AMERICAN SONGBOOK: Lingering on Delicious Byways
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Jan. 30, 2002)
THEATER: 'MONSTER: Once Again That Hulking Creature Remains Nameless
(By BRUCE WEBER, Jan. 30, 2002)
Tuesday, January 29, 2002:
On This Day: January 29 (Emanuel Swedenborg 1/29/1843-9/14/1901, Thomas Paine 1/29/1737-6/8/1809, Henry Lee 1/29/1756-3/25/1818,
Anton Chekhov 1/29/1860-7/15/1904, Frederick Delius 1/29/1862-6/10/1934, Romain Rolland 1/29/1866-12/30/1944,
John D. Rockefeller Jr. 1/29/1874-5/11/1960, W. C. Fields 1/29/1889-12/25/1946,
John Forsythe 1918, Germaine Greer 1939, Tom Selleck 1945, Ann Jillian 1951, Oprah Winfrey 1954, Greg Louganis 1960)
* Robert Frost Dies At 88; Poet Won Four Pulitzer Prizes
(Associated Press, January 29, 1963)
President McKinley Dies at 58
[1/29/1843-9/14/1901] (NY TIMES, September 7, 1901)
Astrid Lindgren, Author of Children's Books, Dies at 94
(By MARGALIT FOX, Jan. 29, 2002)
John Jackson, Guitarist and Singer in Piedmont Style, Dead at 77
(By JON PARELES, Jan. 29, 2002)
NATIONAL: Bush Proposes Drug Benefit for the Low-Income Elderly
(By ROBERT PEAR & ROBIN TONER, Jan. 29, 2002)
Cotton Jobs Gone, Black Migrants' Town Limps On
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE OLYMPICS: U.S. Is Requesting Tighter Security at Utah Olympics
(By PHILIP SHENON, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE REPORTER: Missing American Journalist Wasn't Spy, Friends Say
(By FELICITY BARRINGER with ERIK ECKHOLM, Jan. 29, 2002)
Accident-Prone Sub Bumps U.S. Warship
(NY TIMES, Jan. 29, 2002)
U.S. OPERATIONS: Dust Cloud Causes Helicopter to Crash, Injuring 14 Soldiers
(By JAMES DAO, Jan. 29, 2002)
WORLD: Bush Reconsiders Stand on Treating Captives of War
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE & DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 29, 2002)
Saudi Affirms U.S. Ties but Says Bush Ignores Palestinians' Cause
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Jan. 29, 2002)
DIPLOMACY: Bush Offers Afghanistan U.S. Help for Training of Military and Police
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Jan. 29, 2002)
SHOWDOWN: Afghans Kill 6 Who Held Out Inside Hospital
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Jan. 29, 2002)
LONDON JOURNAL: Lady Thatcher in Marble, and Craved by Arizona
(By SARAH LYALL, Jan. 29, 2002)
China Sentences Man on Reduced Charge for Importing Bibles
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Jan. 29, 2002)
NY REGION: Seeking Safety, Manhattan Firms are Scattering
(By CHARLES V. BAGLI, Jan. 29, 2002)
Huge Police Presence Is Readied for World Economic Forum
(By AL BAKER, Jan. 29, 2002)
Still Family After All These Years
(By GLENN COLLINS, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE BIG CITY: Beware the Yikes of March
(JOHN TIERNEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Justice at Guantánamo
(NY TIMES, Jan. 29, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Illuminating the Cheney Task Force
(NY TIMES, Jan. 29, 2002)
OP-ED: The Great Divide
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Jan. 29, 2002)
OP-ED: Let Them Be P.O.W.'s
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Jan. 29, 2002)
OP-ED: A Need for Prudence in the Persian Gulf
(By SHIBLEY TELHAMI, Jan. 29, 2002)
OP-ED: Argentines Check Their Baggage
(By ROBERTO GONZÁLEZ ECHVARRÍA, Jan. 29, 2002)
OP-ED: In Wartime, the People Want the Facts
(By BILL KOVACH & TOM ROSENSTIEL, Jan. 29, 2002)
LETTERS: Alienated Muslims and the West
(By LAKSHMI BANDLAMUDI, et. al., Jan. 29, 2002)
LETTERS: The Cheney Talks: Why So Secret?
(By GERALD ALBERT, et. al., Jan. 29, 2002)
BUSINESS: Dow and Nasdaq Register Slight Gains, but S.& P. Dips
[Dow +26, Nasdaq +6] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 29, 2002)
Bush Says Privacy Is Needed on Data From Enron Talks
(By STEPHEN LABATON and RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Jan. 29, 2002)
In Another Big Bankruptcy, a Fiber Optic Venture Fails
(By SIMON ROMERO, Jan. 29, 2002)
Back From the Brink, Xerox Posts a Return to Operating Profit
(By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE AUDITORS: Andersen Says It Is Losing Clients
(By BARNABY J. FEDER with STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE EX-CHAIRMAN: Lay's Family Is Financially Ruined, His Wife Says
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY & JIM YARDLEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
EX-CHIEF'S HOLDINGS: Putting 'Lost Everything' in Perspective
(By REED ABELSON, Jan. 29, 2002)
MARKET PLACE: An Innovative Way to Borrow Started at Enron
(By DANIEL ALTMAN, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE RETIREMENT MONEY: Public Funds Say Losses Top $1.5 Billion
(By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Jan. 29, 2002)
THE ACTIVIST: Jesse Jackson Declines to Judge an Enron Leader
(By JIM YARDLEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
Jenny Craig Founders Are Selling Chain in $115 Million Deal
(By GREG WINTER, Jan. 29, 2002)
A Faster Line of Computers From Apple
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Jan. 29, 2002)
Chip Makers in Japan See Only Trouble
(By KEN BELSON, Jan. 29, 2002)
Texas Instruments Reports 4th-Quarter Loss
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Jan. 29, 2002)
ART CRITIC: Jewish Museum Show Looks Nazis in the Face and Creates a Fuss
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Jan. 29, 2002)
ARTS: The Old Man Who Loved the Sea, and Papa
(By STEPHEN KINZER, Jan. 29, 2002)
BOOKS: Brief Views of Dislocation and a Long Look at Sex
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Jan. 29, 2002)
DANCE: FLAMENCO FESTIVAL U.S.A.: Flamenco Dares the Unpredictable
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Jan. 29, 2002)
DANCE: WENDY OSSERMAN DANCE COMPANY: Assessing Terror Attack in a New Light
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Jan. 29, 2002)
MUSIC: MET ORCHESTRA: Musicians of Operatic Turf Add a Bit of Singing Art to Mahler
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Jan. 29, 2002)
MUSIC: 'DOUBLE EXPOSURE': An Evening Relying on Instant Replay, and Not a Football in Sight
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Jan. 29, 2002)
ROCK: GIRLS AGAINST BOYS: Post-Punk Pioneers, No Illusions
(By KELEFA SANNEH, Jan. 29, 2002)
THEATER: 'TARTUFFE': Molière in the 1930's, Not Anti-Religious, Just Anti-Fanatic
(By BRUCE WEBER, Jan. 29, 2002)
TV: 'NICHOLAS NICKLEBY': Those Schools. That Dreadful Uncle. Those Hats.
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Jan. 29, 2002)
* SCIENCE: Planet or No, It's On to Pluto
(By KENNETH CHANG, Jan. 29, 2002)
* How Dolphins Keep Their Cool in the Zone That Counts
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Jan. 29, 2002)
Shuttle's Cameras Offer New Views of the World
(By WARREN E. LEARY, Jan. 29, 2002)
Is Logging Bane or Balm? Plan Stirs Debate
(By JIM ROBBINS, Jan. 29, 2002)
OBSERVATORY: Nice Birds Finish First
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Jan. 29, 2002)
SCIENCE Letters: Society and Punishment
(By SHAUL KELNER, et. al., Jan. 29, 2002)
* HEALTH: Experts Dissect Last Layer of Anthrax Toxin
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Jan. 29, 2002)
PERSONAL HEALTH: 5 Drops of Infant Blood Offer Gift of Health
(By JANE E. BRODY, Jan. 29, 2002)
HEALTH: When H.I.V. Made Its Jump to People
(By GINA KOLATA, Jan. 29, 2002)
Flame Retardant in Furniture Causes Concern
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 29, 2002)
Now, Fear of Flying Is More Than a Phobia
(By ERICA GOODE, Jan. 29, 2002)
* Exploring Life at the Top of the Happiness Scale
(By ERICA GOODE, Jan. 29, 2002)
CASES: Restoring the Physical to the Exam
(By SANDEEP JAUHAR, M.D., Jan. 29, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Patterns: Temperature Risks Are All Over the Map
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
Concern Over Health Risk Stemming Use of Painkillers [Vioxx]
(By MIKE WISE, Jan. 29, 2002)
Marijuana's Effects: More Than Munchies
(By LINDA CARROLL, Jan. 29, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: At Risk: Linking Anxiety, Depression and Strokes
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Safety: Guarding Basketball Players' Teeth
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Habits: Smokers' Ethnicity May Make Difference
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Nutrition: Extra Fortification for Baby Formulas
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Jan. 29, 2002)
Q & A: Yerba Maté
(By C. CLAIBOURNE RAY, Jan. 29, 2002)
Monday, January 28, 2002:
On This Day: January 28 (Henry VII 1/28/1457-4/21/1509, Sir Henry Morton Stanley 1/28/1841-5/10/1904,
Wm. Seward Burroughs 1/28/1855-9/15/1898, Franklin Hooper 1/28/1862-8/14/1940, Colette 1/28/1873-8/3/1954,
Auguste Piccard 1/28/1884-3/24/1962, Arnst Lubitsch 1/28/1892-11/30/1947, Jackson Pollack 1/28/1912-8/11/1956,
Virgílio Ferreira 1/28/1916-3/1/1996, Susan Sontag 1933, Alan Alda 1936,
Marthe Keller 1945, Barbi Benton 1950)
The Challenger Shuttle Explodes: 7 Killed 74 Seconds After Liftoff
(By William J. Broad, January 28, 1986)
* Arthur Rubinstein Dies in Geneva at 95; Virtuoso Pianist
[1/28/1887-12/20/1982] (NY TIMES, December 21, 1982)
John Buscema, Who Drew Mighty Comic Book Characters, Is Dead at 74
(By ERIC NASH, Jan. 28, 2002)
James L. Usry, Atlantic City Mayor in 1980's, Dies at 79
(By KIRK JOHNSON, Jan. 28, 2002)
Michel Poniatowski, 79, Ally of an Ex-President of France, Dies
(By PAUL LEWIS, Jan. 28, 2002)
Kenneth Ryan, 75, Obstetrician and Leader in Medical Ethics
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Jan. 28, 2002)
NATIONAL: Efforts to Track Foreign Students Are Said to Lag
(By KATE ZERNIKE & CHRISTOPHER DREW, Jan. 28, 2002)
Cheney Is Set to Battle Congress to Keep His Enron Papers Secret
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Jan. 28, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: In a Sign of Changing Times, Bush Calls for More Spending
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Jan. 28, 2002)
CAMPUS POLITICS: Arab Students Rediscover Voices Silenced on Sept. 11
(By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO, Jan. 28, 2002)
DOMESTIC DEFENSE: Cheney Supports Domestic Antiterrorist Military Command
(By JAMES DAO, Jan. 28, 2002)
POLITICAL MEMO: A High-Profile Speech Poses Knotty Challenges
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Jan. 28, 2002)
WHITE HOUSE LETTER: W. After Dark: Dinner Is Early and Quick
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Jan. 28, 2002)
WORLD: Sept. 11 Survivor Wounded as Jerusalem Bomb Kills 2
(By JAMES BENNET, Jan. 28, 2002)
U.S. RAID: After Green Beret Operation, Townspeople Have Questions About Bound Bodies
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Jan. 28, 2002)
CAPTIVES: Detainees Are Not P.O.W.'s, Cheney and Rumsfeld Declare
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 28, 2002)
RIYADH JOURNAL: Taking a Rare Peek Inside the Royal House of Saud
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Jan. 28, 2002)
Dalai Lama Tested After Suffering Stomach Pains
(By, Jan. 28, 2002)
American Honors Germans Who Preserve Jews' History
(By DESMOND BUTLER, Jan. 28, 2002)
NY REGION: Hotel Plans a Defiant Debut Near Ground Zero
(By SUSAN SAULNY, Jan. 28, 2002)
Police Shift Focus to Terror With Spymaster and a Marine
(By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM, Jan. 28, 2002)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, Jan. 28, 2002)
Anarchy Has an Image Problem [World Economic Forum]
(By JACOB H. FRIES, Jan. 28, 2002)
OP-ED: What's a Recovery Without Jobs?
(By BOB HERBERT, Jan. 27, 2002)
OP-ED: Colin Powell Dissents
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Jan. 27, 2002)
OP-ED: A Symbionese Family Reunion
(By TIM FINDLEY, Jan. 27, 2002)
LETTERS: Full Harvests and Empty Wallets
(By CLEMENT HARRIS, et. al., Jan. 27, 2002)
An Honorable Historian
(By GEORGE MCGOVERN, Jan. 27, 2002)
BUSINESS: For a Hewlett, Merger Raises a Basic Fear
(By STEVE LOHR, Jan. 28, 2002)
Readjusting the Power in the Music Industry
(By LAURA M. HOLSON, Jan. 28, 2002)
Before Going, Van Susteren Told CNN of Hurt Feelings
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Jan. 28, 2002)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: Compaq Sells More PC's Directly
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Jan. 28, 2002)
Fox Said to Want Conan O'Brien
(By BILL CARTER, Jan. 28, 2002)
NEW ECONOMY: Could Enron's Business Model Actually Work?
(By DANIEL ALTMAN, Jan. 28, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Shredded Papers Key in Enron Case
(By KURT EICHENWALD, Jan. 28, 2002)
Enron Footprints Revive Old Image of Caymans
(By DAVID GONZALEZ, Jan. 28, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: Palm to Start Selling New Hand-Held Communicator
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Jan. 28, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: Sales Executive Finds a Role Undercover
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Jan. 28, 2002)
BOOKS: 'TISHOMINGO BLUES': Leaving Out the Parts Readers Skip [Elmore Leonard]
(By JANET MASLIN, Jan. 28, 2002)
BOOKS: Critics Announce Book Award Finalists
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 28, 2002)
DANCE: 'VIVA VERDI': In a Ballet Drawn From Verdi, an Unplanned Debut
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Jan. 28, 2002)
MUSIC CRITIC: Recapturing a Spirit of Daring
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Jan. 28, 2002)
MUSIC: DA CAPO CHAMBER PLAYERS: Ups and Downs of Romance
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Jan. 28, 2002)
OPERA: 'NOZZE DI FIGARO': Allowing Subtlety to Shine
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Jan. 28, 2002)
THEATER: 'THE GUYS': Standing In for New Yorkers: Expressions of Grief Over Sept. 11
(By BRUCE WEBER, Jan. 28, 2002)
THEATER: 'THICKER THAN WATER': Fledgling Playwrights Display Varied Flight Plans
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Jan. 28, 2002)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Hometown Boy Makes Waves
(By WILLIAM KENNEDY, Jan. 28, 2002)
Sunday, January 27, 2002:
On This Day: January 27 (Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 1/27/1756-12/5/1791, Édouard Lalo 1/27/1823-4/22/1982,
Lewis Carroll 1/27/1832-1/14/1898, Learned Hand 1/27/1872-8/18/1961, Ch'ing-ling Soong 1/27/1892-5/29/1981,
Hyman G. Rickover 1/27/1900-7/8/1986, Troy Donahue 1936, Mikhail Baryshnikov 1948, Mimi Rogers 1956, Bridget Fonda 1964)
3 Apollo Astronauts Die in Fire; Grissom, White, Chaffee Caught in Capsule During Test
(Associated Press, January 27, 1967)
* Jerome Kern Dies at 60; Composer of Music for Theatre and Screen
[1/27/1885-11/11/1945] (NY TIMES, April 6, 1964)
Richard Brown Baker, Collector and Donor of Contemporary Art, Dies at 89
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Jan. 27, 2002)
Michel Poniatowski, 79, Ally of French Leader in the '70's
(By PAUL LEWIS, Jan. 27, 2002)
Édouard Nies-Berger, 98, Concert Organist, Dies
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 27, 2002)
NATIONAL: Camera Rage Strikes Hawaii Drivers
(NY TIMES, Jan. 27, 2002)
TRAVEL: At Airports, New Watchdog Is Taking Over
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Jan. 27, 2002)
EDUCATION: Princeton Embraces Scholar of Black Studies
(By JACQUES STEINBERG, Jan. 27, 2002)
Powell Asks Bush to Reverse Stand on War Captives
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE TREATMENT: Prisoners Straddle an Ideological Chasm
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 27, 2002)
* WORLD: Bin Laden Stirs Struggle on Meaning of Jihad
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Jan. 27, 2002)
Don't Weaken Arafat, Saudi Warns Bush
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE FRONTIER: On a Barren, Icy Peak, Border Guards Prevent Escapes Into Pakistan
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Jan. 27, 2002)
Ex-Operative Writes of Decline at C.I.A.
(By ADAM CLYMER, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE ARMIES: U.S. Account of a Battle With Taliban Is Disputed
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Jan. 27, 2002)
WARLORDS: Dissension Within Taliban Made a Daring Escape From Prison Possible
(By CARLOTTA GALL, Jan. 27, 2002)
China Changes Approach in Espionage Incident
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Jan. 27, 2002)
An Orange Grove Illustrates Japan's Economic Woe
(By JAMES BROOKE, Jan. 27, 2002)
After Fall of Taliban, Sports Enter Light of Day
(By MARK LANDLER, Jan. 27, 2002)
NY REGION: What's in an Economic Forum? Visitors, Police and Protests
(By DAN BARRY, Jan. 27, 2002)
60 Firefighters Who Died on Sept. 11 Were Off Duty
(By KEVIN FLYNN, Jan. 27, 2002)
U.S. Ignored Threat of Terror, Giuliani Says
(NY TIMES, Jan. 27, 2002)
FOLLOWING UP: A Lose-Lose Encounter in the World of Baseball
(By JOSEPH P. FRIED, Jan. 27, 2002)
Artifacts of Anguish Saved for Posterity
(By ERIC LIPTON & JAMES GLANZ, Jan. 27, 2002)
Cornell Raises Tuition to $27,270 a Year
(NY TIMES, Jan. 27, 2002)
BUSINESS: Economic Forum Moves to Manhattan
(By STEPHANIE STROM with LOUIS UCHITELLE, Jan. 27, 2002)
Parachuting Into Kmart's Aisles
(By MICHELINE MAYNARD, Jan. 27, 2002)
The Rise of the Fee-Based Account
(By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Jan. 27, 2002)
Unloading Old Francs and Lire
(By PAUL FREIREICH, Jan. 27, 2002)
Hard Times Prompt an Entrepreneurial Itch
(By WILLIAM SANTIAGO, Jan. 27, 2002)
INVESTING WITH: The Lundmark USAA Balanced Strategy Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Jan. 27, 2002)
PORTFOLIOS: Don't Underestimate the Power of Contrary Thinking
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Jan. 27, 2002)
To Learn What People Want, Trade 'Idea Stocks'
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Jan. 27, 2002)
BOOK VALUE: A Financial Whodunit, Awaiting Answers
(By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN, Jan. 27, 2002)
MIDSTREAM: Practice Makes Perfect (and Poorer Parents)
(By JAMES SCHEMBARI, Jan. 27, 2002)
DIARY: Sales Survey Predicts More Hiring Than Firing
(Compiled by Vivian Marino, Jan. 27, 2002)
ON THE JOB: Expense-Wise, Maybe, but Morale-Foolish
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE SUICIDE: Despite His Qualms, Scandal Engulfed Executive
(By JIM YARDLEY & SHAILA K. DEWAN, Jan. 27, 2002)
DIFFERENT STRATEGIES: 2 in Energy Field Profit in Old-Fashioned Way
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Jan. 27, 2002)
MARKET WATCH: In a New World, a Puzzling Directive From the S.E.C.
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Jan. 27, 2002)
GREED, PAIN, EXCESSES: In Wake of Enron, Democrats May Have Opportunity
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Jan. 27, 2002)
ECONOMIC VIEW: Enron's Way: Pay Packages Foster Spin, Not Results
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE WEEK THAT WAS: A Suicide and a Resignation as the Formal Inquiries Get Under Way
(By TOM REDBURN, Jan. 27, 2002)
FALLOUT: The Enron Scandal Grazes Another Bush in Florida
(By LESLIE WAYNE, Jan. 27, 2002)
ART: When Japan Tried On the Modernist Mantle
(By EDWARD M. GOMEZ, Jan. 27, 2002)
An Explicit Celebration of Eros Uninhibited
(By NICHOLAS FOX WEBER, Jan. 27, 2002)
DANCE: At 81, Dancing With New Partners [Anna Halprin]
(By JANICE ROSS, Jan. 27, 2002)
Keeping the Flame of Flamenco
(By VALERIE GLADSTONE, Jan. 27, 2002)
* MUSIC: Peggy Lee: A Master and Mentor in Song
(By TERRY TEACHOUT, Jan. 27, 2002)
MUSIC: To Be Alicia Keys: Young, Gifted and in Control
(By JON PARELES, Jan. 27, 2002)
MUSIC: Quiet, Please. This Is a Library After All.
(By JOSEPH HOROWITZ, Jan. 27, 2002)
MUSIC: When Melody Grows From Harmony
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Jan. 27, 2002)
THEATER: More Than a Witty Novelist, She Wrote Plays, Too
(By JONATHAN MANDELL, Jan. 27, 2002)
TV: The Blue Planet': A Sense of Wonder Under the Sea
(By JULIE SALAMON, Jan. 27, 2002)
TV: 'Smallville': Getting to the Heart of a Hero
(By HAL HINSON, Jan. 27, 2002)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Jan. 27, 2002)
POWER HOUSE: There's a Small Matter Of Checks and Balances
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 27, 2002)
HELL ON EARTH: An Inferno to Make Dante Shudder
(By MARC LACEY, Jan. 27, 2002)
PEACE PROCESS IN REVERSE: Trusting Pessimissm
(By JAMES BENNET, Jan. 27, 2002)
I Am Woman, Hear Me Roar in the Enron Scandal
(By JILL ABRAMSON, Jan. 27, 2002)
Seeking Perspective on the Movie Front Lines
(By NEAL GABLER, Jan. 24, 2002)
WORD FOR WORD: The World's 'Funniest' Jokes
(By TOM KUNTZ, Jan. 27, 2002)
LOSING GRACE: Brutality as a Performace Art
(By EDWARD WONG, Jan. 27, 2002)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Jan. 27, 2002)
* ON LANGUAGE: Needing To
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Jan. 27, 2002)
* QUESTIONS FOR ALAN KEYES: Speak Easy
(By MICHAEL CROWLEY, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: This Doesn't Add Up
(By D.T. MAX, Jan. 27, 2002)
THE ETHICIST: Center or Side?
(By RANDY COHEN, Jan. 27, 2002)
DOCUMENT: America at War in Five Letters
(NY TIMES, Jan. 27, 2002)
* Gerhard Richter: An Artist Beyond Isms
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Jan. 27, 2002)
The Twang Thang [John Dopyera's wood-body resonator guitar]
(By DANIEL MENAKER, Jan. 27, 2002)
I'm on the Olympic Team? Bummer!
(By ALLEN ST. JOHN, Jan. 27, 2002)
Death by Stoning
(By RICHARD DOWDEN, Jan. 27, 2002)
STYLE: Glossary of Trends [slide show]
(Photographs by NICOLAS MOORE, Jan. 27, 2002)
FOOD DIARY: When in Rome
(By AMANDA HESSER, Jan. 27, 2002)
LIVES: Dishing Dirt
(By EMILY WHITE, Jan. 27, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Jan. 27, 2002)
Saturday, January 26, 2002:
On This Day: January 26 (Jean-Baptiste Pigalle 1/26/1714-8/21/1785, Claude-Adrien Helvétius 1/26/1715-12/26/1771,
Samuel Hopkins Adams 1/26/1871-11/15/1958, Julia Morgan 1/26/1872-2/2/1957,
Seán MacBride 1/26/1904-1/15/1988, Paul Newman 1925, Jules Feiffer 1929,
Bob Uecker 1935, Angela Davis 1944, Eddie Van Halen 1957, Ellen DeGeneres 1958)
India a Republic, Rajendra Prasad President
(By Robert Trumbull, January 26, 1950)
* MacArthur Dies at 84; Commander of Armies That Turned Back Japan
[1/26/1880-4/5/1964] (NY TIMES, April 6, 1964)
Bertalan de Nemethy, Equestrian Coach, Dead at 90
(By FRANK LITSKY, Jan. 26, 2002)
Ron Taylor, Voice of Blues and a Plant, Dies at 49
(By JESSE McKINLEY, Jan. 26, 2002)
John H. D'Arms, 67, Classicist Who Headed Academic Council, Dies
(By ERIC PACE, Jan. 26, 2002)
NATIONAL: Mormons Project Image as Diverse as Olympics
(By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Jan. 26, 2002)
THE TERROR SUSPECTS: U.S. Identifies a Canadian as Taker of Martyrdom Pledge
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, Jan. 26, 2002)
Father in Killing at Hockey Rink Receives 6 to 10 Year Sentence
(By FOX BUTTERFIELD, Jan. 26, 2002)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Calls for More Money for Border Patrols
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Jan. 26, 2002)
EDUCATION: A Harvard Star in Black Studies Joins Princeton
(By JACQUES STEINBERG, Jan. 26, 2002)
* Memories Pour From Purse Returned to Its Owner After 42 Years
(By JODI WILGOREN, Jan. 26, 2002)
BELIEFS: A Revival of Religious Traditions Sweeps Vietnam.
(By PETER STEINFELS, Jan. 26, 2002)
White House Could be Sued Over Cheney Advisers
(By DON VAN NATTA Jr., Jan. 26, 2002)
WORLD: President Assails Palestinian Chief on Arms Shipment
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Jan. 26, 2002)
'Sleeper Cells' in Singapore Show Al Qaeda's Long Reach
(By RAYMOND BONNER with SETH MYDANS, Jan. 26, 2002)
CAPTIVES: Criticized, U.S. Brings Visitors to Prison Camp
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 26, 2002)
U.S. Warns of Arms Threat, Citing North Korea and Iraq
(By ELIZABETH OLSON, Jan. 26, 2002)
SATURDAY PROFILE: A Turkish Doctor's Specialty: The Torture Victim
(By SOMINI SENGUPTA, Jan. 26, 2002)
94-Year-Old Becomes Case Study in British Health Care Woes
(By SARAH LYALL, Jan. 26, 2002)
NY REGION: Accommodations, Next Door to Devastation
(By DAN BARRY, Jan. 26, 2002)
EDITORIAL: TOPICS OF THE TIMES: All That Glitters
(NY TIMES, Jan. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: Enron for Dummies
(By BILL KELLER, Jan. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: Captives and the Law
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, Jan. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: State of the Union, Test of the President
(By MICHAEL WALDMAN, Jan. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: Still Shortchanging the City's Schools
(By MICHAEL A. REBELL, Jan. 26, 2002)
LETTERS: The Enron Inquiry: Lessons From a Collapse
(By MATTHEW KNOWLES, et. al., Jan. 26, 2002)
LETTERS: Fly Baggage Separately
(FRANCIS MASON, Jan. 26, 2002)
BUSINESS: Blue-Chip Shares Increase, but Technology Issues Fall
[Dow +44, Nasdaq -5] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 26, 2002)
U.S. to Reconsider Agency Contracts in Enron Scandal
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON & RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Jan. 26, 2002)
Blue Lights or Not, Martha Stewart Remains Calm
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN & CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Jan. 26, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Amazon Looks for an Encore
(By SAUL HANSELL, Jan. 26, 2002)
Compaq Chief Optimistic
(By REUTERS, Jan. 26, 2002)
Diabetes Drug Now a Generic [metformin, generic of Glucophage]
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Jan. 26, 2002)
Critic Who Quit Top Enron Post Is Found Dead [J. Clifford Baxter]
(By JIM YARDLEY, Jan. 26, 2002)
VIGIL IN HOUSTON: Executive's Suicide Brings Hard Reality to Sugar Land
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Jan. 26, 2002)
Trying Not to Be the Next Enron, Companies Scrutinize Practices
(By REED ABELSON, Jan. 26, 2002)
COLLEGE REACTIONS: Business Students Fret Over Their Job Prospects
(By JOBERT ABUEVA, Jan. 26, 2002)
ARTS: The Women Behind the Masks of Hate
(By DINITIA SMITH, Jan. 26, 2002)
Kipling Knew What the U.S. May Now Learn
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Jan. 26, 2002)
ARTS: Ads Suggest the Pitfalls Of Losing Art Education
(NY TIMES, Jan. 26, 2002)
FILM: 'KUNG POW: ENTER THE FIST': An Old Karate Tale Kicked Up a Notch
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Jan. 26, 2002)
MUSIC: JUPITER SYMPHONY CHAMBER PLAYERS: Jupiter Orchestra Is a Lively Survivor
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Jan. 26, 2002)
POP: ANTI-POP CONSORTIUM AND AESOP ROCK: The Evolving Definition of Underground Hip-Hop
(By KELEFA SANNEH, Jan. 26, 2002)
THINK TANK: Stop, Historians! Don't Copy That Passage! Computers Are Watching
(By EMILY EAKIN, Jan. 26, 2002)
TV: 'FIDEL': Castro's Road, a Historical Pageant
(By RON WERTHEIMER, Jan. 26, 2002)
TV: 'MY SISTER'S KEEPER': A Wrenching Family Dilemma Inflicted by Mental Illness
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Jan. 26, 2002)
* SCIENCE: Jellyfish Horde Uncovered After Half a Billion Years
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 26, 2002)
Friday, January 25, 2002:
On This Day: January 25 (Robert Boyle 1/25/1627-12/30/1691, Joseph-Louis Lagrange 1/25/1736-4/10/1813,
Robert Burns 1/25/1759-7/21/1796, Benjamin Haydon 1/25/1786-6/22/1846, Rufus Matthew Jones 1/25/1863-6/16/1948,
W. Somerset Maugham 1/25/1874-12/16/1965, Edwin Newman 1919, Corazon Aquino 1933)
* Phone to Pacific From the Atlantic [Bell talks to Watson over a 3,400-mile wire]
(NY TIMES, January 25, 1915)
* Virginia Woolf Believed Dead at 59
[1/25/1882-3/28/1941] (NY TIMES, April 3, 1941)
Pierre Bourdieu, 71, French Thinker and Globalization Critic
(By ALAN RIDING, Jan. 25, 2002)
ARTS: In Remembrance of Sorrow From Other Times
(By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Jan. 25, 2002)
ART: Calligraphy, Cavorting Pigs and Other Body-Mind Happenings
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Jan. 25, 2002)
INSIDE ART: Choice Additions for the Met
(By CAROL VOGEL, Jan. 25, 2002)
ANTIQUES: Needlework Dazzling in Its Detail
(By WENDY MOONAN, Jan. 25, 2002)
BOOKS: Analyzing the Cultural Collision That Gave Rise to Sept. 11
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Jan. 25, 2002)
DANCE: NEW YORK CITY BALLET: A Ballet Evolves Through Several Lives
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Jan. 25, 2002)
PHOTOGRAPHY: DAVID GOLDES: Making Artful Images Out of Science
(By MARGARETT LOKE, Jan. 25, 2002)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: When Strindberg Found His Truth Machine
(By SARAH BOXER, Jan. 25, 2002)
TV: 'ROSE RED': Victims Blue in a Stephen King Thriller
(By RON WERTHEIMER, Jan. 25, 2002)
THE OUTSIDER: Developing an Ear for Nature's Untuned Orchestra
(By JAMES GORMAN, Jan. 25, 2002)
Thursday, January 24, 2002:
On This Day: January 24 (William Congreve 1/24/1670-1/19/1729, Christian Wolff 1/24/1679-4/9/1754,
Pierre-Augustin Beaumarchais 1/24/1732-5/18/1799, Henry Barnard 1/24/1811-7/5/1900,
Cassandre 1/24/1901-6/19/1968, Mark Goodson 1/24/1915-12/18/1992, Robert Motherwell 1/24/1915-7/16/1991,
Ernest Borgnine 1917, Oral Roberts 1918, Neil Diamond 1941, Yakov Smirnoff 1951, Nastassja Kinski 1961,
Mary Lou Retton 1968)
* Churchill is Dead at 90; The World Mourns Him; State Funeral Saturday
(By Anthony Lewis, January 24, 1965)
* Edith Wharton, 75, Is Dead in France
[1/24/1862-8/11/1937] (NY TIMES, August 13, 1937)
Robert Nozick, Harvard Political Philosopher, Dies at 63
(By CHRISTOPHER LEHMANN-HAUPT, Jan. 24, 2002)
* George P. Goold, 79; Rejuvenated Classical Texts
(By PAUL LEWIS, Jan. 24, 2002)
* Ikko Tanaka, 71, Japanese Graphic Designer
(By STEVEN HELLER, Jan. 24, 2002)
Norman Atkins, 82, Baritone of City Opera and Musicals
(NY TIMES, Jan. 24, 2002)
BUSINESS: Shares Finish Slightly Higher After a Day of Indecision
[Dow +17, Nasdaq +40] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 24, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: In AOL's Suit Against Microsoft, the Key Word Is Access
(By STEVE LOHR, Jan. 24, 2002)
Greenspan Sees Signs That Economy Is Beginning to Stabilize
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 24, 2002)
THE CHAIRMAN: Calling Inquiries a Distraction, Enron Chief Quits Under Pressure
(By JIM YARDLEY & JOHN SCHWARTZ, Jan. 24, 2002)
THE OFFICE: Morale and Occupancy Are Low at Enron's Headquarters
(By DAVID BARBOZA, Jan. 24, 2002)
Stimulus or Not, Hope in the Consumer Economy
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Jan. 24, 2002)
ARTS IN AMERICA: Imitating Hollywood's Snippy Designer
(By STEPHEN KINZER, Jan. 24, 2002)
BALLET: 'HALLELUJAH JUNCTION': What's Black and White and Rhythmic All Over?
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Jan. 24, 2002)
BOOKS: 'EVERY BREATH YOU TAKE': A Tale of a Killing, Written at the Victim's Request
(By JANET MASLIN, Jan. 24, 2002)
DANCE: TORONTO DANCE THEATER: A Choreographer Embraces His Change of Heart
(By JACK ANDERSON, Jan. 24, 2002)
MUSIC: THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA: Beethoven for a Contemporary Generation
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, Jan. 24, 2002)
THEATER: CRITIC: Picking Up Static While Fine-Tuning a Play
(By BRUCE WEBER, Jan. 24, 2002)
CIRCUITS: Content
(NY TIMES, Jan. 24, 2002)
STATE OF THE ART: The Last Word in Dictation. Period.
(By DAVID POGUE, Jan. 24, 2002)
* WHAT'S NEXT: A Sharper Picture of What Ails the Body
(By ANNE EISENBERG, Jan. 24, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Jan. 24, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Jan. 24, 2002)
Wednesday, January 23, 2002:
On This Day: January 23 (John Hancock 1/23/1737-10/8/1793, Stendhal 1/23/1783-3/23/1842,
Edouard Manet 1/23/1832-4/30/1883, David Hilbert 1/23/1862-2/14/1943, Herbert D. Croly 1/23/1869-5/17/1930,
Potter Stewart 1/23/1915-12/7/1985, Joseph Nathan Kane 1899, Jeanne Moreau 1928,
Princess Caroline 1957, Anita Pointer 1948)
Vietnam Accord is Reached; Cease-Fire Begins Saturday
(By Bernard Gwertzman, January 23, 1973)
* Sergei Eisenstein Is Dead In Moscow at 50
[1/23/1898-2/11/1948] (By REUTERS, February 12, 1948)
* Peggy Lee, Singer Who Sizzled for Six Decades, Dies at 81
(By ENID NEMY, Jan. 23, 2002)
Stanley Marcus, the Retailer From Dallas, Is Dead at 96
(By ERIC PACE, Jan. 23, 2002)
Jack Shea, Gold Medalist in 1932, Dies at 91
(By FRANK LITSKYwith LENA WILLIAMS, Jan. 23, 2002)
Herchel Smith, 76, Major Player in Developing Birth Control Pills, Dies
(By KENNETH CHANG, Jan. 23, 2002)
Census Bureau Estimates 115,000 Middle Eastern Immigrants Are in the U.S. Illegally
(By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Jan. 23, 2002)
WHITE HOUSE MEMO: 'West Wing' Rides Coattails of the Real Thing
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER with JIM RUTENBERG, Jan. 23, 2002)
Kennedy and Bush Negotiate on Patients' Rights, Alarming Their Allies
(By ROBERT PEAR, Jan. 23, 2002)
POLITICS: In Shift, Bush Assails Enron Over Handling of Collapse
(By DAVID E. SANGER with DAVID BARBOZA, Jan. 23, 2002)
NUCLEAR SECURITY: Suicidal Nuclear Threat Is Seen at Weapons Plants
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Jan. 23, 2002)
THE DETAINEES: Rights Groups Press for Names of Muslims Held in New Jersey
(By TAMAR LEWIN, Jan. 23, 2002)
THE AMERICAN CAPTIVE: Walker to Arrive in U.S. Today to Await His Conspiracy Trial
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 23, 2002)
LESSONS: Let Education Guide Welfare
(By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Jan. 23, 2002)
One Call to Tell Marketers: Don't Call Me
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 23, 2002)
Patricia Hearst Says Good May Come From Murder Trial
(By NICK MADIGAN, Jan. 23, 2002)
WORLD: Rumsfeld Defends U.S. Treatment of Detainees in Cuba
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 23, 2002)
India Ties Attack to Pakistan-Based Group; F.B.I. Chief Demurs
(By CELIA W. DUGGER with BARRY BEARAK, Jan. 23, 2002)
Espionage? By the U.S.? China Prefers to Stay Quiet
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Jan. 23, 2002)
Qaeda Moving Into Indonesia, Officials Fear
(By RAYMOND BONNER & JANE PERLEZ, Jan. 23, 2002)
ETHNIC VIOLENCE: Pashtuns, Once Favored by Taliban, Now Face Retribution
(By CARLOTTA GALL, Jan. 23, 2002)
Volcano-Scorched Congo City Returns to a Nervous Kind of Normal
(By MARC LACEY, Jan. 23, 2002)
N.Y. REGION: Transit Plan Would Connect Dots Downtown
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Jan. 23, 2002)
* Museum's Stolen Chagall, or a Good Fake, Turns Up in Topeka Mail
(By THOMAS J. LUECK, Jan. 23, 2002)
FIREFIGHTING: 9/11 Inspires Call to Review Response Plan for Crises
(By ERIC LIPTON & JAMES GLANZ, Jan. 23, 2002)
SMALL BUSINESS: Survey Calls Loss of 100,000 Jobs Big Problem for Retailers
(By TERRY PRISTIN, Jan. 23, 2002)
EDITORIAL: The Gloom at the Garden [Knicks downfall]
(NY TIMES, Jan. 23, 2002)
OP-ED: Run, Osama, Run
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Jan. 23, 2002)
OP-ED: Vain or Glorious?
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Jan. 23, 2002)
Unaccountable in Washington
(By MICHAEL H. GRANOF & STEPHEN A. ZEFF, Jan. 23, 2002)
LETTERS: Yak, Yak, Yak, All the Way to Westchester
(By FREDERIQUE N. SOL, Jan. 23, 2002)
LETTERS: Appeal to the Chinese
(By INCENT WEI-CHENG WANG, Jan. 23, 2002)
BUSINESS: Shares Drop on Warning About Technology
[Dow -58, Nasdaq -48] (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Jan. 23, 2002)
Genome Scientist Resigns [J. Craig Venter, Celera Genomics]
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Jan. 23, 2002)
TECHNOLOGY: An AOL Unit Sues Microsoft, Saying Tactics Were Illegal
(By STEVE LOHR, Jan. 23, 2002)
Kmart Files Chapter 11
(By DANNY HAKIM & LESLIE KAUFMAN, Jan. 23, 2002)
MARKET PLACE: In a Surprise, Tyco to Split Into Four Pieces
(By ALEX BERENSON, Jan. 23, 2002)
A Surprise From Amazon: Its First Profit
(By SAUL HANSELL, Jan. 23, 2002)
Connie Chung Gets CNN Prime-Time Spot
(By JIM RUTENBERG and BILL CARTER, Jan. 23, 2002)
Lucent Says Sales Dropped but Shortfall Is Narrowing
(By SIMON ROMERO, Jan. 23, 2002)
Swiss Knife Sales Slide at Airports
(By ELIZABETH OLSON, Jan. 23, 2002)
BUSINESS TRAVEL: Keeping Airline Passengers Happy
(By JOE SHARKEY, Jan. 23, 2002)
Satellite Start-Up for Apple Co-Founder
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Jan. 23, 2002)
THE CHAIRMAN: Chief Paints Hands-Off Image, but Actions Offer Different View [Kenneth Lay]
(By ALEX BERENSON, Jan. 23, 2002)
THE LAWYER: Attorney Seeks Enron Pursuit
(By LESLIE WAYNE, Jan. 23, 2002)
THE INVESTORS: In 401(k) Plans, a New Rush to Diversify
(By PETER T. KILBORN, Jan. 23, 2002)
* ARTS IN AMERICA: For Artists, a Sanctuary From Sept. 11
(By STEPHEN KINZER, Jan. 23, 2002)
BOOKS: 'JUST LIKE BEAUTY': Futureschlock Arrives in Deansville
(By RICHARD EDER, Jan. 23, 2002)
BOOKS: Historian Says Publisher Quickly Settled Copying Dispute
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Jan. 23, 2002)
DANCE: CAPACITOR: Cavorting in a Three-Ring Cosmos Where Newton's Laws Share Top Billing
(By JACK ANDERSON, Jan. 23, 2002)
MUSIC: SÉRGIO AND ODAIR ASSAD: A Telepathic Jazz Treatment for Classical Composers
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Jan. 23, 2002)
MUSIC CRITIC: Audience Connection Gets Lost in Translation
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Jan. 23, 2002)
MUSIC: NEW YORK COLLEGIUM: Getting to Know Bach Better
(By JAMES R. OESTREICH, Jan. 23, 2002)
MUSIC: MARC RIBOT: Some Memorable Lunacy on Layers of Refinement
(By BEN RATLIFF, Jan. 23, 2002)
THEATER: 'HOMECOMING': A Woman in Search of Mother
(By ANITA GATES, Jan. 23, 2002)
THEATER: 'CARSON MCCULLERS (HISTORICALLY INACCURATE)': Calculating the Square Root of Sadness
(By BRUCE WEBER, Jan. 23, 2002)
TV: 'AMERICAN FAMILY': Latino Family Values, Beyond the Tortillas
(By JULIE SALAMON, Jan. 23, 2002)
TV: 'THAT 80'S SHOW': Remembering a Decade That Never Went Away
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Jan. 23, 2002)
Tuesday, January 22, 2002:
On This Day: January 22 (Lord Byron 1/22/1788-4/19/1824, August Strindberg 1/22/1849-5/14/1912,
David Griffith 1/22/1875-7/23/1948, Rosa Ponselle 1/22/1897-5/25/1981,
George Balanchine 1/22/1904-4/20/1983, U Thant 1/22/1909-11/25/1974, Howard Moss 1/22/1922-9/16/1987,
Ann Sothern 1909, Piper Laurie 1932, Joseph Wambaugh 1937, John Hurt 1940,
Mike Bossy 1957, Linda Blair 1959, Diane Lane 1965)
Roe vs. Wade: High Court Rules Abortions Legal the First 3 Months [also LBJ Dead at 64]
(By Warren Weaver, Jr., January 22, 1973)
Vinson Excelled In Federal Posts, Dies at 63
[1/22/1890-9/8/1953] (NY TIMES, September 9, 1953)
Charity Adams Earley, Black Pioneer in Wacs, Dies at 83
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Jan. 22, 2002)
Alex Hannum, Hall of Fame Basketball Coach, Dies at 78
(By GERALD ESKENAZI, Jan. 22, 2002)
Dr. Ruth Whittemore, 84, Early Researcher in Pediatric Cardiology
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, Jan. 22, 2002)
Carrie Hamilton, 38, Actress and Writer
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 22, 2002)
* NATIONAL: Mayhem at Cybercafes Shakes a Town in California
(By NICK MADIGAN, Jan. 22, 2002)
Dr. King Is Hailed by Bush in Event at the White House
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 22, 2002)
WORLD: Gunmen Shoot at U.S. Offices in Eastern India
(By CELIA W. DUGGER, Jan. 22, 2002)
More Than $4.5 Billion Pledged in Afghan Aid Effort
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Jan. 22, 2002)
THE REGION: Iranian Influence Felt in Afghanistan's West
(By CARLOTTA GALL, Jan. 22, 2002)
Dozens Die in Congo as Lava Sets Off Blast at Gas Station
(By MARC LACEY, Jan. 22, 2002)
MOGADISHU JOURNAL: For the Somalis, a Manhunt Movie to Muse Over
(By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr., Jan. 22, 2002)
Press Reports of Bugged Jet Fray U.S. Ties With Chinese
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Jan. 22, 2002)
ASIAN TERROR: Beijing Says Chinese Muslims Were Trained With bin Laden Funds
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Jan. 22, 2002)
AMERICAN CAPTIVE: Walker to Be Moved From Ship to Airport Camp
(By JAMES DAO, Jan. 22, 2002)
* N.Y. REGION: No Dress, No Vows, and Less Status in Grief
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Jan. 22, 2002)
PUBLIC LIVES: Heartaches, Heartthrobs and a Smattering of Song [Margaret Whiting]
(By JOYCE WADLER, Jan. 22, 2002)
EDUCATION: To Teach About King, School Is In
(By MARIA NEWMAN, Jan. 22, 2002)
No Cherry Trees? Don't Blame Washington
(By YILU ZHAO, Jan. 22, 2002)
TUNNEL VISION: It's a Subway, and the Mayor Is Riding It
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Jan. 22, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Restoring Yosemite
(NY TIMES, Jan. 22, 2002)
* OP-ED: The New China Syndrome
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Jan. 22, 2002)
OP-ED: A Fiscal Fantasy
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Jan. 22, 2002)
OP-ED: Thinkers in Need of Publishers
(By RICK PERLSTEIN, Jan. 22, 2002)
LETTERS: An Autistic Artist
(By JOAN FALLON, Jan. 22, 2002)
BUSINESS: Kmart on Verge of Bankruptcy
(By STEPHANIE STROM & LESLIE KAUFMAN, Jan. 22, 2002)
Tracking Kmart's Demise at Ground Level
(By GREG WINTER, Jan. 22, 2002)
Martha Stewart Crucial to a Kmart Turnaround
(By CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Jan. 22, 2002)
MARKET PLACE: For Chief, $200 Million Wasn't Quite Enough Cash [Enron's Kenneth Lay]
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Jan. 22, 2002)
2 Early Enron Lenders Didn't See the End Coming [Citigroup & J.P. Morgan Chase]
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Jan. 22, 2002)
Ex-Official Says Enron Employees Shredded Papers
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER & MICHAEL BRICK, Jan. 22, 2002)
Industry Ponders Moves at Random House [cost cuts & layoffs]
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Jan. 22, 2002)
ADVERTISING: Giving Newspaper Ads Some Bite
(By COURTNEY KANE, Jan. 22, 2002)
An I.B.M.-VeriSign Venture for E-Commerce
(NY TIMES, Jan. 22, 2002)
BOOKS: 'THE SISTERS': The Sisters Who Shocked a Britain on the Precipice
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Jan. 22, 2002)
CABARET: SANDRA BERNHARD: Skewering American Culture and Politics, in Evil Fun
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Jan. 22, 2002)
DANCE: A Childhood World Comes Alive in Images of Dreaming Flight
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Jan. 22, 2002)
MUSIC: DEBORAH VOIGT: Giving Voice to Lesser-Known Songs
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Jan. 22, 2002)
MUSIC: A Festival of Some of the Last Works of Richard Strauss
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Jan. 22, 2002)
RADIO CRITIC: On the Radio, Heartbeats of Eccentrics and Troubled Youths [Joe Richman]
(By JULIE SALAMON, Jan. 22, 2002)
THEATER: 'CYMBELINE': Shakespeare's Grab Bag, Globally Rendered
(By BRUCE WEBER, Jan. 22, 2002)
FASHION REVIEW: Seeing a New Man Calling the Tune, Fashion Gets in Step
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Jan. 22, 2002)
FRONT ROW: Hollywood Glitter Makes a Dramatic Return
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Jan. 22, 2002)
* SCIENCE: Scientists Report Genetic Finding That Could Aid Anthrax Inquiry
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD & NICHOLAS WADE, Jan. 22, 2002)
* COSMOLOGY: Hawking's Breakthrough Is Still an Enigma
(By DENNIS OVERBYE, Jan. 22, 2002)
* The Urge to Punish Cheats: Not Just Human, but Selfless
(By NATALIE ANGIER, Jan. 22, 2002)
From Tiny Fossilized Fish Teeth Come Clues to Oceans' History
(By KENNETH CHANG, Jan. 22, 2002)
A CONVERSATION WITH / BARUCH BLUMBERG: A Nobel in Medicine, a Second Career in Space
(By CLAUDIA DREIFUS, Jan. 22, 2002)
Sunken Island Is Found Off California
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 22, 2002)
OBSERVATORY: From the Muddy Depths
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Jan. 22, 2002)
Letters: Africans on the Front Lines & The Toll of Inertia
(By ELIZABETH GARLAND et. al., Jan. 22, 2002)
* HEALTH: Body's Defender Goes on the Attack
(By MARY DUENWALD, Jan. 22, 2002)
* HEALTH: Scent of a Man Is Linked to a Woman's Selection
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Jan. 22, 2002)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Misunderstood Opioids and Needless Pain
(By JANE E. BRODY, Jan. 22, 2002)
* In Struggle Against Alzheimer's, Hope May Be Over the Counter
(By DENISE GRADY, Jan. 22, 2002)
HEALTH: Second Faulty Gene Is Linked to a Few Prostate Cancer Cases
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 22, 2002)
Gauging Stress Management's Many Benefits
(By DAVID TULLER, Jan. 22, 2002)
After 20 Years, Debate Over Drug Persists [Accutane acne drug]
(By MARY DUENWALD, Jan. 22, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Habits: Lower Cholesterol, the Grazing Way
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Jan. 22, 2002)
Technology: Improving Care, Via the Phone Line
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Jan. 22, 2002)
At Risk: Early Intervention to Stop a Stroke
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Jan. 22, 2002)
Patterns: Piercing's Popularity, Beyond the Ears
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Jan. 22, 2002)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: What to Expect When an Operation Awaits
(By JOHN LANGONE, Jan. 22, 2002)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Patients Create Poetic Expressions
(By JOHN LANGONE, Jan. 22, 2002)
Q & A: Be Careful With B's [vitamin Bs]
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Jan. 22, 2002)
Monday, January 21, 2002:
On This Day: January 21 (Ethan Allen 1/21/1738-2/12/1789, John Fremont 1/21/1813-7/13/1890,
Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson 1/21/1824-5/10/1863, Paul Scofield 1922, Jack Nicklaus 1940,
Placido Domingo 1941, Mac Davis 1942, Jill Eikenberry 1947, Geena Davis 1957)
* Lenin Dies Of Cerebral Hemorrhage at 54; Moscow Throngs Overcome With Grief
(By Walter Duranty, January 21, 1924)
* Christian Dior, 52, Creator Of 'New Look,' Dies
[1/21/1905-10/24/1957] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, October 24, 1957)
* Charles Ditmas, Clockmaker, Dies at 91
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Jan. 21, 2002)
* Alfred Graf, 100, Botanist and Author of Plant Books
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Jan. 21, 2002)
Gordon J. Stanley Dies at 80; Pinpointed Radio Waves From Space
(By KENNETH CHANG, Jan. 21, 2002)
Joseph Laitin, 87, Press Officer in 5 Presidencies of Both Parties, Dies
(By ROBERT PEAR, Jan. 21, 2002)
Hammoud bin Oqla al-Shoeiby, Islamist, Dies
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 21, 2002)
NATIONAL: Group Says Santa Cruz, Calif., Has Least-Affordable Housing
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 21, 2002)
THE POLITICIANS: Lieberman Feels the Sting of Criticism Over Enron
(By DON VAN NATTA Jr., Jan. 21, 2002)
WORLD: U.S. Makes Pledge for $300 Million in Aid to Afghans
(By TODD S. PURDUM & HOWARD W. FRENCH, Jan. 21, 2002)
BATTLEFIELD: Conduct of War Is Redefined by Success of Special Forces
(By THOM SHANKER, Jan. 21, 2002)
REPAIR BILL: Rebuilding the Land After Ruinous Wars Will Require Billions
(By MARK LANDLER, Jan. 21, 2002)
VOLCANO: Warily, Residents Return to Lava-Scarred Congo City
(By MARC LACEY, Jan. 21, 2002)
Clinton, in Israel, Rebukes Arafat for Letting Peace Slip Away
(By JAMES BENNET, Jan. 21, 2002)
China Gives Tibetan Scholar an Early Release From Prison
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 21, 2002)
N.Y. REGION: Ground Zero Cleanup Defies How Jobs Are Usually Done
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF & STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Jan. 21, 2002)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, Jan. 21, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Nuclear Reactors as Terrorist Targets
(NY TIMES, Jan. 21, 2002)
OP-ED: An Honorable Man
(By BOB HERBERT, Jan. 21, 2002)
OP-ED: The Crimson Birthmark [human cloning]
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Jan. 21, 2002)
OP-ED: The Farm Bill Charade
(By DICK LUGAR, Jan. 21, 2002)
OP-ED: Where Liberal Is a Native Species
(By KATHARINE WHITTEMORE, Jan. 21, 2002)
* LETTERS: Try a Little Humility
(By JAMES N. MORGAN, Jan. 21, 2002)
LETTERS: TV News: Getting the Young to Tune In
(By SHIRIN SHOAI, et. al., Jan. 21, 2002)
BUSINESS: Enron Chief Says His Sale of Stock Was to Pay Loans
(By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Jan. 21, 2002)
THE ANALYST: Man Who Doubted Enron Enjoys New Recognition
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Jan. 21, 2002)
Enron Fired Workers for Complaining Online
(By ALEX BERENSON, Jan. 21, 2002)
Fire, Alligators, Maybe 500 Flies: Stayed Tuned
(By BILL CARTER, Jan. 21, 2002)
A Credit Crisis for Web Casinos
(By MATT RICHTEL, Jan. 21, 2002)
At Viacom, Rumors Persist of Tension at the Top
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT with SETH SCHIESEL, Jan. 21, 2002)
After Talk, Miramax to Refocus on Movies
(By RICK LYMAN, Jan. 21, 2002)
Amazon Ships to Sorting Machine Beat
(By SAUL HANSELL, Jan. 21, 2002)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: Bloomingdales Reconsiders Online Sales
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Jan. 21, 2002)
NEW ECONOMY: Software Screens Trading Partners
(By SHERRI DAY, Jan. 21, 2002)
ImClone's Woes Cast a Broader Biotech Shadow
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Jan. 21, 2002)
* COMPRESSED DATA: How Lonely Is the Life That Is Lived Online?
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Jan. 21, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: DVD Copyright Case Grinds Through Courts
(By AMY HARMON, Jan. 21, 2002)
FILM: 'A Beautiful Mind' Wins Four Golden Globes
(By RICK LYMAN, Jan. 21, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Jan. 21, 2002)
Sunday, January 20, 2002:
On This Day: January 20 (Henry Cromwell 1/20/1628-3/23/1674,
Richard Henry Lee 1/20/1732-6/19/1794, Ruth St. Denis 1/20/1877-7/21/1968,
Walter Piston 1/20/1894-11/12/1976, Harold Gray 1/20/1894-5/9/1968,
Joy Adamson 1/20/1910-1/3/1980, Slim Whitman 1925, Edwin Buzz Aldrin 1931, David Lynch 1947,
Bill Maher 1957, Melissa Rivers 1969)
Reagan Takes Oath as 40th President; Promises an 'Era of National Renewal'
(By Steven R. Weisman, January 20, 1981)
* Federico Fellini, Film Visionary, Is Dead at 73
[1/20/1920-10/31/1993] (By PETER B. FLINT, November 1, 1993)
Ernest Gordon, Who Found Faith as a P.O.W., Dies at 85
(By DAVID STOUT, Jan. 20, 2002)
Terry Ehrich, 60, of Old-Car Magazine, Dies
(By CHARLES McEWEN, Jan. 20, 2002)
Norman Kay, 74, a Bridge Champion Sans Title, Is Dead
(By ALAN TRUSCOTT, Jan. 20, 2002)
Bert Steinhauser, 73, Art Director for Ad Agency, Is Dead
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Jan. 20, 2002)
Ikko Tanaka, 71, Who Fused Old and New in Graphic Design, Dies
(By STEVEN HELLER, Jan. 20, 2002)
Anne Poor Dies at 84, Painter of War and Landscape
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Jan. 20, 2002)
John Grigg, 77, Tory Writer Who Criticized Queen, Dies
(By CHRISTOPHER LEHMANN-HAUPT, Jan. 20, 2002)
WORLD: Volcano's Lava Engulfs a Congo Town, Killing Up to 40
(By MARK LACEY, Jan. 20, 2002)
U.S. Is Silent on Report It Bugged Chinese Jet
(By AGENCE-FRANCE PRESSE, Jan. 20, 2002)
Afghan Refugees Plead for Food, Help and a Way Out
(By CARLOTTA GALL, Jan. 20, 2002)
THE DETAINEES: For America's Captives, Home Is a Camp in Cuba, With Goggles and a Koran
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 20, 2002)
TERROR NETWORK: Shoe-Bomb Suspect Linked With E-Mail Across Europe
(By, Jan. 20, 2002)
TERROR NETWORK: Spanish Police Arrest 2 More Suspected of Al Qaeda Ties
(By REUTERS, Jan. 20, 2002)
* Thai Education Tool: the All-Purpose Elephant
(ASSOCIATED PRESS Jan. 20, 2002)
LIFE IN KABUL: Keeping Their Faiths Under Taliban Rule Drew Sikhs and Hindus Together
(By AMY WALDMAN, Jan. 20, 2002)
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: A Diplomatic Star With a Singular Style [Colin Powell]
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Jan. 20, 2002)
Egyptian Group Patiently Pursues Dream of Islamic State
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Jan. 20, 2002)
BUSINESS WORLD: India's Tea Industry Battles the Blues
(By SARITHA RAI, Jan. 20, 2002)
MEDIA: Talk Ends and Spin Begins: Tina Brown Has No Regrets
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Jan. 20, 2002)
* BUSINESS: How 287 Turned Into 7: Lessons in Fuzzy Math
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Jan. 20, 2002)
MARKET INSIGHT: Energy Partnerships Are Still Shining
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Jan. 20, 2002)
Juggling Strikeouts and Home Runs [Van Wagoner Emerging Growth fund]
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Jan. 20, 2002)
Consumer Tools for Holding Bill Collectors at Bay
(By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN, Jan. 20, 2002)
* STRATEGIES: The Fall and Rise of a Fund Group? Well, Not Exactly
(By MARK HULBERT, Jan. 20, 2002)
* PRIVATE SECTOR: The Face of Security Technology
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Jan. 20, 2002)
ART: The Body as Machine, Taken to Its Extreme
(By MICHAËL AMY, Jan. 20, 2002)
ART: An American in Paris, Looking for Answers
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Jan. 20, 2002)
ART: A Journalist Learns Art Can Be Fast but Hard to Fasten
(By BLAKE ESKIN, Jan. 20, 2002)
DANCE: Turning Bits of Video Into Works of Art
(By VALERIE GLADSTONE, Jan. 20, 2002)
DANCE: Back From the Woods, With New Ways to Dance
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Jan. 20, 2002)
FILM: List of Golden Globe Winners
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 20, 2002)
FILM SERIES: ALEKSANDR SOKUROV: Deepening Spiritually Over Time
(By STUART KLAWANS, Jan. 20, 2002)
* FILM: Anime, Japanese Cinema's Second Golden Age
(By DAVE KEHR, Jan. 20, 2002)
FILM: Hollywood's Honeymoon With Time
(By PETER KOBEL, Jan. 20, 2002)
FILM: Todd Solondz Is Not for Everyone. Is He for Anyone?
(By LISA ZEIDNER, Jan. 20, 2002)
* MUSIC: A Steamy Scandal of the 13th Century Revived in Music [Dante]
(By DAVID WRIGHT, Jan. 20, 2002)
MUSIC: Communing in Darkness With an Ancient Forerunner
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Jan. 20, 2002)
MUSIC: A British Pop Songwriter Meets America Halfway [Divine Comedy]
(By MAC RANDALL, Jan. 20, 2002)
MUSIC: From a Fiery Conga Player, Jazz's Latin Tinge
(By TOM PIAZZA, Jan. 20, 2002)
THEATER: Plays That Leave the Audience Bullied by Words
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, Jan. 20, 2002)
THEATER: Carson McCullers: Bringing Her Gold Prose to the Stage
(By JONATHAN MANDELL, Jan. 20, 2002)
TV: Making Anime a Little Safer for Americans
(BBy J. D. CONSIDINEy, Jan. 20, 2002)
TV: The Latest Export of the BBC: Fake, and Funny, Reality
(By MARGY ROCHLIN, Jan. 20, 2002)
FASHION: Après Yves, Le Déluge?
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Jan. 20, 2002)
PETROPOLIS: Cashing In on Being Cute
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, Jan. 20, 2002)
BACKSPIN: Can a Kid Squeeze by on $320,000 a Month?
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Jan. 20, 2002)
A NIGHT OUT WITH: Jussara Lee: She's Downsized, but Up
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Jan. 20, 2002)
Making the Most of Lounging by Keeping It Simple
(By JULIA CHAPLIN, Jan. 20, 2002)
ON THE STREET: Who Needs Snow?
(Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Jan. 20, 2002)
VOWS: Tammy Hensrud and Luke DeLalio
(By JENNY ALLEN, Jan. 20, 2002)
TRAVEL: Oases of Calm in Rural Japan
(By MATTHIAS KRIESBERG, Jan. 20, 2002)
TRAVEL: In Japan, a Company Town Thrives on Art
(By ELIZABETH ANDOH, Jan. 20, 2002)
Encounters With Glaciers in Switzerland
(By ERIC PFANNER, Jan. 20, 2002)
TRAVEL ADVISORY: A Venerable Berlin Museum Reopens; Safety Sensors in the Washington Metro; Ground Zero
(By CORINNE LaBALME, Jan. 20, 2002)
TRAVEL ESSAY: New Life for the Ancestral Home
(By PAUL SALSINI, Jan. 20, 2002)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Jan. 20, 2002)
EXIT STRATEGIES: The Rich Are Different. They Know When to Leave.
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Jan. 20, 2002)
The C.I.A.'s Domestic Reach
(By TIM WEINER, Jan. 20, 2002)
Give Me a Home Where the Buffalo Roam Less
(By ALISON MITCHELL, Jan. 20, 2002)
Another Bush's 'Vision Thing'
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Jan. 20, 2002)
D.C. Shocker: The President Snacks Alone
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Jan. 20, 2002)
Giddy Yet Covert
(By JOHN LELAND, Jan. 20, 2002)
'Least Worst' Place Also a Most Peculiar One
(By ANTHONY DePALMA, Jan. 20, 2002)
Casting Civic Pride In a Utopian Mold
(By TRACIE ROZHON, Jan. 20, 2002)
* WORD FOR WORD: And Now, a Few Words We Wish Had Never Been Written
(By SCOTT VEALE, Jan. 20, 2002)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Jan. 20, 2002)
ON LANGUAGE: Homeland
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Jan. 20, 2002)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Ice Sturm
(By CHARLES MCGRATH, Jan. 20, 2002)
QUESTIONS FOR VANESSA LEGGETT: Writer's Cell Block
(By AMY BARRETT, Jan. 20, 2002)
THE ETHICIST: Kid Coverup
(By RANDY COHEN, Jan. 20, 2002)
GALLERY: DESIGN: In-the-Zone Outerwear
(By CHEE PEARLMAN, Jan. 20, 2002)
The Family Milosevic: The Unrepentant
(By BLAINE HARDEN, Jan. 20, 2002)
Glenn Loury's About Face
(By ADAM SHATZ, Jan. 20, 2002)
The Lion in Waiting [16-year-old Abdul Majeed Arsala]
(By SUSAN BURTON, Jan. 20, 2002)
The Widows' Battalion [Indonesia]
(By ANDREW MARSHALL, Jan. 20, 2002)
* STYLE: Clothes of Quiet Inspiration
(By AMY M. SPINDLER, Jan. 20, 2002)
FOOD: The Fabulous Baker Boy
(By JONATHAN REYNOLDS, Jan. 20, 2002)
LIVES: Vengeful Is the Night
(By ALEXANDRA FULLER, Jan. 20, 2002)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Jan. 20, 2002)
'John Maynard Keynes': A Man of Action as Well as Ideas
(By SYLVIA NASAR, Jan. 20, 2002)
'Sinclair Lewis': All-American Iconoclast
(By JANE SMILEY, Jan. 20, 2002)
'Armageddon Averted': Who Lost the Soviet Union?
(By ORLANDO FIGES, Jan. 20, 2002)
'The Good Men': A Sexually Obsessed Priest and the Inquisition
(By KATHRYN HARRISON, Jan. 20, 2002)
Improving Scientific Ethics Through Democratization
(By GALEN STRAWSON, Jan. 20, 2002)
'Home Lands': Redeeming the Diaspora
(By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN, Jan. 20, 2002)
CHILDREN'S BOOKS: Classroom Trials With Happy Endings
(By JANE MARGOLIES, Jan. 20, 2002)
* SCIENCE: More Up There Than Meets the Eye
(By GEORGE JOHNSON, Jan. 20, 2002)
Saturday, January 19, 2002:
On This Day: January 19 (Tai Chen 1/19/1724-7/1/1777, James Watt 1/19/1736-8/25/1819,
Auguste Comte 1/19/1790-9/5/1857, Edgar Allen Poe 1/19/1809-10/7/1849,
Paul Cezanne 1/19/1839-10/22/1906, Alexander Woollcott 1/19/1887-1/23/1943,
John Raitt 1917, Jean Stapleton 1923, Fritz Weaver 1925, Robert MacNeil 1931, Richard Lester 1932,
Phil Everly 1939, Dolly Parton 1946, Ann Compton 1947, Desi Arnaz Jr. 1953)
Hughes, Riding Gale, Sets Record Of 7 1/2 Hours in Flight From Coast
(NY TIMES, January 19, 1937)
* General Robert E. Lee Dead at 63
[1/19/1807-10/12/1870] (NY TIMES, October 13, 1870)
Naomi Bliven, Staff Writer and Critic at The New Yorker, Dies at 76
(NY TIMES, Jan. 19, 2002)
NATIONAL: 70's Radical Is Sentenced, Then Arraigned in New Case
(By JAMES STERNGOLD, Jan. 19, 2002)
AIRPORT SECURITY: On First Day of New Rules for Bag Checks, Delays Are Slight
(By MATTHEW L. WALD with DAVID FIRESTONE, Jan. 19, 2002)
As Audits Decline, Fewer Taxpayers Balk at a Bit of Cheating
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Jan. 19, 2002)
RELIGION JOURNAL: A Bishop's Unusual Path to the Pulpit
(By BARBARA WHITAKER, Jan. 19, 2002)
White House Will Reopen for School Tours
(NY TIMES, Jan. 19, 2002)
WORLD: Tens of Thousands Flee a Devastating Volcano in Congo
(By MARC LACEY, Jan. 19, 2002)
DRAGNET: Pakistani Says Bin Laden May Be Dead of Disease
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Jan. 19, 2002)
THE AMERICAN TRAVELER: Woman Says Captors Have Freed Her Spouse
(By KEVIN SACK, Jan. 19, 2002)
Sterner U.S. Policy Toward North Korea Causes Debate in South
(By DON KIRK, Jan. 19, 2002)
DRUG TRADE: Poppy Ban Pleases Dealers in Opium
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Jan. 19, 2002)
N.Y. REGION: Office Workers Haunted by Views of Terror Site
(By DAVID W. CHEN, Jan. 19, 2002)
NYC: With Thanks Comes a Call for Restraint
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Jan. 19, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Two Approaches to Cloning
(NY TIMES, Jan. 19, 2002)
OP-ED: The United States of Enron
(By FRANK RICH, Jan. 19, 2002)
OP-ED: The Fate of Qaeda Prisoners
(By WILLIAM F. SCHULZ, Jan. 19, 2002)
OP-ED: The Donor's Right to Take a Risk
(By RONALD MUNSON, Jan. 19, 2002)
OP-ED: Enron's Vision (and Values) Thing
(By JAMES S. KUNEN, Jan. 19, 2002)
LETTERS: Thorny Questions at Ground Zero
(By JASON GOTTLIEB, et. al., Jan. 19, 2002)
LETTERS: Nazis and Christianity [Nuremberg trials]
(By MARVIN FLISSER, Jan. 19, 2002)
BUSINESS: Shares Slump as Investors Fear Recovery May Be Delayed
[Dow -78, Nasdaq -55] (Associated Press, Jan. 19, 2002)
BUSINESS: Lifelines Cut, Talk Magazine Goes Silent
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI & GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Jan. 19, 2002)
Despite Warning, Enron Chief Urged Buying of Shares
(By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Jan. 19, 2002)
* Slump in Technology Spending Pushes Sun Deeply Into the Red
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Jan. 19, 2002)
Dell Raises Profit Forecast, Saying Holiday Sales Were Strong
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Jan. 19, 2002)
* ARTS: Another Top 100: This Time, It's Intellectuals
(By WILLIAM GRIMES, Jan. 19, 2002)
* BOOKS: SHELF LIFE: Of Hexaflexagons, Superellipses and the Mad Romance of Numbers
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Jan. 19, 2002)
FILM: 'STATE PROPERTY': A Banquet of Mob Mayhem With Hip-Hop Seasoning
(By A. O. SCOTT, Jan. 19, 2002)
* IDEAS: A Blasphemy Spreads: Debts Are O.K.
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Jan. 19, 2002)
OPERA: 'THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK': A Chance for Anne Frank to Be Her Own Librettist
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Jan. 19, 2002)
OPERA: HENRY STREET CHAMBER OPERA: Purcell and Milhaud, an Unlikely Pairing
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Jan. 19, 2002)
THEATER: 'FLICKER': The Freedom (and Limits) of Fudging Boundaries
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Jan. 19, 2002)
* WRITING: THE SATURDAY PROFILE: Postwar German Writer a Bard of a Generation
[Bernhard Schlink] (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Jan. 19, 2002)
SCIENCE: Academy Supports Cloning to Treat Disease
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Jan. 19, 2002)
Friday, January 18, 2002:
On This Day: January 18 (Daniel Webster 1/18/1782-10/24/1852, Seth Low 1/18/1850-9/17/1916,
Hans Goldschmidt 1/18/1861-5/25/1923, A.A. Milne 1/18/1882-1/31/1956,
Sir Thomas Sopwith 1/18/1888-1/27/1989, Cary Grant 1/18/1904-11/29/1986,
Danny Kaye 1/18/1913-3/3/1987, John Boorman 1933, Kevin Costner 1955)
Scott 150 Miles From South Pole Jan. 3; Will Stay In Antarctic Another Year
(NY TIMES, January 18, 1912)
* T. A. Watson Dead at 80; Made First Phone
[1/18/1854-12/13/1934] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, December 15, 1934)
Camilo José Cela, Spanish Writer and Nobelist, Dies at 85
(By ALAN RIDING, Jan. 18, 2002)
John W. Locke, 87, Agent for Edward Gorey and Other Artists, Dies
(By STEVEN HELLER, Jan. 18, 2002)
Arne H. W. Larsson, 86; Had First Internal Pacemaker
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Jan. 18, 2002)
NATIONAL: U.S. Hunts 5 Men Seen on Tape, Saying They May Plan Attack
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, Jan. 18, 2002)
AIRPORT SECURITY: Screening of All Checked Bags Is to Start Today
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Jan. 18, 2002)
* A Bird That's on a Lot of Hit Lists [double-crested cormorant]
(By JODI WILGOREN, Jan. 18, 2002)
WORLD: Afghan Leader Plans Trip to Seek Aid
(By REUTERS, Jan. 18, 2002)
In Shattered Kabul, Powell Vows Longterm U.S. Help for Afghans
(By TODD S. PURDUM & MARK LANDLER, Jan. 18, 2002)
CAPTIVES: Red Cross Team Will Examine Prisoners From Afghanistan
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Jan. 18, 2002)
Powell, in India, Declares That Tension Has Eased
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Jan. 18, 2002)
Vatican Says Jews' Wait for Messiah Is Validated by the Old Testament
(By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Jan. 18, 2002)
NY REGION: Contractors at Ground Zero Denied Insurance for Cleanup
(By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Jan. 18, 2002)
COMPENSATION: Families of Victims Rally for Higher Federal Awards
(By ROBERT F. WORTH, Jan. 18, 2002)
Facing a Door He Can't Open [WTC disaster]
(By LESLIE EATON, Jan. 18, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Hidden Files
(NY TIMES, Jan. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: A System Corrupted
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Jan. 18, 2002)
* OP-ED: The Chip on China's Shoulder
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Jan. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: The Damaged Spirit of the Sept. 11 Fund
(By FRED PRICE & MITCH KLEINMAN, Jan. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: A New Oil Game, With New Winners
(By RICHARD BUTLER, Jan. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: Fifty Ways to Use Your Cell Phone
(By WILLIAM SORENSEN, Jan. 18, 2002)
Shares Rise on Profit Taking; Treasury Prices Weaken
[Dow +138, Nasdaq +41] (ASSOCITED PRESS, Jan. 18, 2002)
THE STRATEGY: Deals That Helped Doom Enron Began to Form in the Early 90's
(By KURT EICHENWALD with MICHAEL BRICK, Jan. 18, 2002)
THE AUDITOR: Enron's Chief Sold Shares After Receiving Warning Letter
(By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. & JONATHAN D. GLATER, Jan. 18, 2002)
FLOYD NORRIS: An Enron Legacy: Lower Reported Profits
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Jan. 18, 2002)
Truth Is Out: This Season Will Be Last for 'X-Files'
(By BILL CARTER, Jan. 18, 2002)
I.B.M.'s Quarterly Sales and Profit Fall
(By STEVE LOHR, Jan. 18, 2002)
ART: In the Orbit of Funk and Hip-Hop
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Jan. 18, 2002)
|