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
(* denotes news of special interest)
Tueday, July 31, 2001:
On This Day: July 31 (Augustus 7/31/1526-2/12/1586, George Baxter 7/31/1804-1/11/1867,
Jan Currie Hoge 7/31/1811-8/26/1890, Abram Stevens Hewitt 7/31/1822-1/18/1903,
Henri Brisson 7/31/1835-4/11/1912, Richard Dixon Oldham 7/31/1858-7/15/1936,
S. S. Kresge 7/31/1867-10/18/1966, Jacques Villon 7/31/1875-6/9/1963,
Elmo Roper 7/31/1900-4/30/1971, Primo Levi 7/31/1919-4/11/1987, Whitney Young 7/31/1921-3/11/1971,
Milton Friedman 1912, Curt Gowdy 1919, Don Murray 1929, Geoffrey Lewis 1935, France Nuyen 1939,
Geraldine Chaplin 1944, Sherry Lansing 1944, Willaim Weld 1945, Evonne Goolagong Cawley 1951,
Wesley Snipes 1962)
Ranger Takes Close-Up Moon Photos Revealing Craters (By Richard Witkin, July 31, 1964)
* Primo Levi, Holocaust Writer is Dead at 67
[7/31/1919-4/11/1987] (NY Times, Sept. 19, 1961)
Hugo Princz, 78, U.S. Winner Of Holocaust Settlement, Dies
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 31, 2001)
Fanny Brennan, Surrealist, Dies at 80
(By HOLLAND COTTER, July 31, 2001)
Leon Wilkeson, Rock Band Bassist, Dies at 49
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 31, 2001)
Joan Finney Kansas Governor, 76, Is Dead
(NY TIMES, July 31, 2001)
Laura Bush Says Daughters Deserve Privacy
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 31, 2001)
White House Says the U.S. Is Not a Loner, Just Choosy
(By THOM SHANKER, July 31, 2001)
Typhoon Rips Into Taiwan and China, Killing 46
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 31, 2001)
In Harlem, a Hero's Welcome for New Neighbor Clinton
(By AMY WALDMAN, July 31, 2001)
Boy, 6, Dies of Skull Injury During M.R.I.
(By DAVID W. CHEN, July 31, 2001)
* TUNNEL VISION: Helpfulness So Precious It's Kept Under Glass
(By RANDY KENNEDY, July 31, 2001)
Cool Economy Shrinks Number Of Visitors to New York City
(By ERIC LIPTON, July 31, 2001)
SPORTS: TOUR DE FRANCE: An American Without Tears Tweaks the Tour
(By SAMUEL ABT, July 31, 2001)
SPORTS BUSINESS: Armstrong Delivers Dollars for Sponsors
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, July 31, 2001)
* Sports Use Technology and T.L.C. to Hold On to Fans
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 31, 2001)
* OP-ED: Light in the Shadows of Arles
(By MARIO VARGAS LLOSA, July 31, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Noblesse Oblige
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 31, 2001)
OP-ED: Moving Beyond the Kyoto Impasse
(By EDWARD A. PARSON, July 31, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Fall as 3 Top Analysts Say Outlook Has Dimmed
[Dow -15, Nasdaq -11] (By, July 31, 2001)
Treasury Is Planning to Borrow to Cover Cost of Tax Rebates
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, July 31, 2001)
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS: More Experts Grow Wary as the Dollar Keeps Rising
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 31, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Investment Bankers Smell Riches in AT&T Cable
(By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, July 31, 2001)
Return of Computer 'Worm' Feared Today
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, July 31, 2001)
* ART: AUGUST STRINDBERG: Deep Anxiety, but No Words
(By JOHN RUSSELL, July 31, 2001)
* ARTS IN AMERICA: Returning All the Works of Langston Hughes to Print
(By JO THOMAS, July 31, 2001)
ARTS: As Audiences Discover Frugality, Pop Culture Starts Feeling a Chill
(By STEPHEN KINZER, July 31, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'THE INVENTION OF CLOUDS': He Gave Names to Clouds and Renown to Himself
(By RICHARD EDER, July 31, 2001)
* BOOKS: A CONVERSATION WITH / ROCK BRYNNER: A 'Dark Remedy' Now Is Generating Light
(By CLAUDIA DREIFUS, July 31, 2001)
DANCE: 'CROSS-POLLINATION': Antics of Strong-Minded Friends (and Tipsy Birdbrains)
(By JACK ANDERSON, July 31, 2001)
ROCK: PETE YORN: Gleanings From the Grab Bag, Obliquely Delivered
(By ANN POWERS, July 31, 2001)
THEATER: Playwrights Horizons Is Gaining More Seats and Studio Space
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, July 31, 2001)
STYLE: Trying On Those Supergraphics Again
(By KIMBERLY STEVENS with WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, July 31, 2001)
FRONT ROW: Military Style
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, July 31, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Rethinking a History That's Carved in Stone
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, July 31, 2001)
* Hidden Cameras Capture World of the Rare and Wild
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, July 31, 2001)
* A New Atomic Clock May Push Precision to the Next Level
(By KENNETH CHANG, July 31, 2001)
* For Female Lions, Democracy Rules
(By REUTERS, July 31, 2001)
ENGINEER AT PLAY / LONNIE JOHNSON: Rocket Science, Served Up Soggy [water gun]
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD, July 31, 2001)
Radioactive Waste Site: A Shift in Strategy
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, July 31, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: When Stars Get Fatter
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 31, 2001)
Q & A: Television in Space?
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, July 31, 2001)
* HEALTH: Car Calls May Leave Brain Short-Handed
(By SANDRA BLAKESLEE, July 31, 2001)
* CASES: An Escort Into the Land of Sickness [Chief Complaint: Death]
(By ANNA FELS, M.D., July 31, 2001)
PERSONAL HEALTH: Regular Pap Tests Remain a Crucial Detection Method
(By JANE E. BRODY, July 31, 2001)
Preserving Fertility While Treating Cervical Cancer
(By ANASTASIA TOUFEXIS, July 31, 2001)
Toilet Spiders? Not Real, but Good for a Scare
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 31, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS: Measurements: Tracking Faith, Race and Blood Pressure
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 31, 2001)
Mental Health: Counselors Address Suicidal Thoughts
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 31, 2001)
Symptoms: Biological Warfare Agent Resurfaces
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 31, 2001)
Perceptions: Smells Used to Explore Schizophrenia
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 31, 2001)
Survival: Down Syndrome Life Spans Lengthen [from 2 to 50]
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 31, 2001)
Monday, July 30, 2001:
On This Day: July 30 (Giogio Vasari 7/30/1511-6/27/1574, Emily Bronte 7/30/1818-12/19/1848,
Richard Burdon Haldane 7/30/1856-8/19/1928, Robert McCormick 7/30/1880-4/1/1955,
Vladimir Zworykin 7/30/1889-7/29/1982, Casey Stengel 7/30/1891-9/29/1975,
Henry Moore 7/30/1898-8/31/1986, C. Northcote Parkinson 7/30/1909-3/9/1993,
Michael Morris Killanin 7/30/1914-4/25/1999, Dick Wilson 1916, Richard Johnson 1927,
Edd "Kookie Byrnes 1933, Peter Bogdanovich 1939, Paul Anka 1941, David Sanborn 1945,
Arnold Schwarzenegger 1947, Frank Stallone 1950, Lisa Kudrow 1963, Hilary Swank 1974)
Cruiser Sunk, 1,196 Casualties; Took Atom Bomb Cargo to Guam (NY TIMES, July 30, 1945)
* Henry Ford Is Dead at 83 in Dearborn: Pioneer in Autos
[7/30/1863-4/7/1947] (Associated Press, April 8, 1947 )
Bertie Felstead, Soldier Who Joined a Timeout in War, Dies at 106
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, July 30, 2001)
Dr. Bernice L. Neugarten, 85, Early Authority on the Elderly, Dies
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, July 30, 2001)
Harold Land, Saxophonist Who Made a Splash in the Bop Era, Dies at 73
(By BEN RATLIFF, July 30, 2001)
Prof. Derek Freeman Dies at 84; Challenged Margaret Mead
(By JOHN SHAW, July 30, 2001)
Urban Police Jobs Are Losing Their Appeal
(By FOX BUTTERFIELD, July 30, 2001)
Where Girls of Summer Have Gone Since 1902
(NY TIMES, July 30, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: In the House, He's the Man in the Middle, and Loving It
(By ROBIN TONER, July 30, 2001)
China's Need for U.S. Trade May Be Outweighing Disagreements With Bush Administration
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, July 30, 2001)
Powell Is Upbeat About a Warmer Relationship With the Chinese
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 30, 2001)
Ruling Party Earns Decisive Victory in Japan
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, July 30, 2001)
New York Garment Mogul Takes Business Home
(By GINGER THOMPSON, July 30, 2001)
Stars on the Screen, the Moon Up Above
(By SOMINI SENGUPTA, July 30, 2001)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, July 30, 2001)
TOUR DE FRANCE: A Cunning Climber, Armstrong Joins the Gods of Cycling
(By SAMUEL ABT, July 30, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Not Arafat's Fault?
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 30, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Unmasking the Poor
(By BOB HERBERT, July 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Israel Needs a True Partner for Peace
(By EHUD BARAK, July 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Jail Time in the Digital Age
(By LAWRENCE LESSIG, July 30, 2001)
LETTERS: Eudora Welty's Deal
(By CHLOE AARON, July 30, 2001)
LETTERS: First Exam: Choosing the Right College
(By MAURA LEAHY, July 30, 2001)
New Software, New Scrutiny for Microsoft
(By STEVE LOHR, July 30, 2001)
Levy Case Brings Out Cable's Instinct for the Racy and Repetitive
(By JIM RUTENBERG, July 30, 2001)
* Big Magazines Get Bigger as Small Ones Get Gobbled Up
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, July 30, 2001)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Modest Growth Prevails on the Web
(By BOB TEDESCHI, July 30, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: 'A.I.' Caught in Tech Weariness
(By TIM RACE, July 30, 2001)
Studios Fight Pirated Movies on Web
(By AMY HARMON, July 30, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: Our Cover Article, Brought to You by...
(By ALLISON FASS, July 30, 2001)
A Virus, Yes, but One That Brings Interesting Things
(By RICHARD J. MEISLIN, July 30, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Lucent to Sell Its Golf Complex
(By SIMON ROMERO, July 30, 2001)
* Suit Filed in Registration of Domain Names
(By SUSAN STELLIN, July 30, 2001)
BOOKS: 'BLUE DIARY': Mystery Cloaked in Flora and Fauna
(By JANET MASLIN, July 30, 2001)
JAZZ: OSCAR PETERSON: Eclectic and Subtle Brute Force
(By BEN RATLIFF, July 30, 2001)
MUSIC: BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Crisp Weather for Spoofing and Musing
(By JAMES R. OESTREICH, July 30, 2001)
ROCK: BON JOVI: Keeping the July Fourth Spirit Rolling
(By ANN POWERS, July 30, 2001)
THEATER: HAROLD PINTER PLAYS: Snowed In on a Summer Evening
(By BRUCE WEBER, July 30, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Staticky Reception for Nuclear Families on Prime-Time TV
(By JULIE SALAMON, July 30, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Expanding Boundaries With a Colonial Legacy
(By SHASHI THAROOR, July 30, 2001)
Sunday, July 29, 2001:
On This Day: July 29 (Alexis Tocqueville 7/29/1805-4/16/1859,
George Pendleton 7/29/1825-11/24/1889, Max Nordau 7/29/1849-1/23/1923,
Booth Tarkington 7/29/1869-5/19/1946, Don Marquis 7/29/1878-12/29/1937,
Don Marquis 7/29/1878-12/29/1937, Benito Mussolini 7/29/1883-4/28/1945,
Sigmund Romberg 7/29/1887-11/9/1951, Owen Lattimore 7/29/1900-5/31/1989,
Clara Bow 7/29/1905-9/27/1965, Dag Hammarskjold 7/29/1905-9/18/1961, Lloyd Bochner 1924,
Robert horton 1924, Robert Fuller 1934, Elizabeth Dole 1936, Peter Jennings 1938,
David Warner 1941, Ken Burns 1953)
* Amid Splendor, Charles Weds Diana (By R.W. APPLE Jr., July 29, 1981)
* Hammarskjold Dies at 56; Greatly Extended U.N.'s Scope Through Leadership & Personal Initiatives
[7/29/1905-9/18/1961] (NY Times, Sept. 19, 1961)
Dr. Charles Granville Rob, 88, Surgeon Who Aided Churchill, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 29, 2001)
Fabio Taglioni, Ducati Motorcycle Wizard, Dies at 80
(By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, July 29, 2001)
Alan Green, Ambassador, Dies at 75
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 29, 2001)
Children's News Service Collapses
(By TAMAR LEWIN, July 29, 2001)
How F.B.I. Turncoat Struck the Deal That Spared His Life
(By DAVID JOHNSTON & JAMES RISEN, July 29, 2001)
Scientist Sees Signs of Life in Mars Data From 1970's
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 29, 2001)
SUNDAY Q & A: Religious Life After Marriage
(NY TIMES, July 29, 2001)
Faculties Take On Commercialization of College Sports
(By JODI WILGOREN, July 29, 2001)
Chinese Unswayed as Powell Pushes U.S. Missile Shield
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 29, 2001)
Ayatollah Tugs at Ties Constricting Iran's Women
(By NAZILA FATHI, July 29, 2001)
The Bondage of Poverty That Produces Chocolate
(By NORIMITSU ONISHI, July 29, 2001)
* By the Sea, Writing Mothers Need Not Choose
(By AL BAKER, July 29, 2001)
SILICON ALLEY JOURNAL: Dot-Coms Are Dead, Long Live Dot-Com Parties
(By JAYSON BLAIR, July 29, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Shakeout in Fiber Optics
(NY TIMES, July 29, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: The Vanishing Glory of the Modern Monarchy
(By TINA ROSENBERG, July 29, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Apetown, My Hometown
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 29, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Rebate and Switch
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 29, 2001)
OP-ED: The Future of Slavery's Past
(By HENRY LOUIS GATES Jr., July 29, 2001)
OP-ED: Free Trade Needs a Chance to Sell Itself
(By ALAN S. BINDER, July 29, 2001)
SPORTS: Pinch-Hitter Longing to Be Everyday Player [Lenny Harris]
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, July 29, 2001)
* SPORTS: TOUR DE FRANCE: Unyielding Training Gives Armstrong His Edge
(By SAMUEL ABT, July 29, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Plunge in Profits Raises Risk for Stock Market and Economy
(By ALEX BERENSON, July 29, 2001)
* Technology Pros Discuss What Comes After the Fall
(By JUDITH H. DOBRZYNSKI, July 29, 2001)
In Latest Hardy Boys Case, a Search for New Readers
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 29, 2001)
A Do-It-Yourselfer Takes On Home Depot [Lowes]
(By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, July 29, 2001)
From a British Chain, Lunch in a New York Minute
(By SUZANNE KAPNER, July 29, 2001)
Investing With Kathryn D. Beyer and Jeffrey D. Lorenzen: Vintage Bond Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, July 29, 2001)
Invading the Land of Q's and Spiders
(By DAN COLARUSSO, July 29, 2001)
A Weaker Dollar Could Help the U.S. (and Europe)
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, July 29, 2001)
The Graduate Meets the Slowdown
(By ANNA BLUMENTHAL, July 29, 2001)
Playing Used-Car Detective, Online
(By MICHELINE MAYNARD, July 29, 2001)
Business Diary: Wonder Bread's Match
(By GREG WINTER, July 29, 2001)
Investing Diary: A Shrinking Credit Club
(By JEFF SOMMER, July 29, 2001)
Dispelling the Myth That Options Help Shareholders
(NY TIMES, July 29, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: Despite Defaults, Junk Bonds Are Jumping
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, July 29, 2001)
STYLE: OUT THERE: LIGNANO SABBIADORO: Euro Pop Hits the Beach: So Hot, So Gritty
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, July 29, 2001)
THE AGE OF DISSONANCE: Madonna Connections, Strings Attached
(By BOB MORRIS, July 29, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT WITH LISA MARIE: A Vargas Girl in the City
(By LINDA LEE, July 29, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Keeping Cool: It's in the Wrist [Slides of Fans]
(Photographs By BILL CUNNINGHAM, July 29, 2001)
VOWS: Laura Eisman and Todd Richte
(By ABBY ELLIN, July 29, 2001)
NOTICED: Up Against a Fashion Wall: A Spin on Guerrilla Tactics
(By SUSAN M. KIRSCHBAUM, July 29, 2001)
GARDENING: CUTTINGS: Helping Vines to Reach Potentials
(By ANNE RAVER, July 29, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: The New Imperative to Establish Rapport
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 29, 2001)
The Alchemy of OxyContin: From Pain Relief to Drug Addiction
(By PAUL TOUGH, July 29, 2001)
What Has Really Been Resolved Since the 1963 Birmingham Church Bombing?
(By DIANE McWHORTER, July 29, 2001)
Questions for Andrew Spielman [Mosquitoes]
(By AMY BARRETT, July 29, 2001)
GAMING: Why Don't Men and Women Play Golf Together?
(By CHARLES MCGRATH, July 29, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Tipping Points
(By RANDY COHEN, July 29, 2001)
LIVES: I Always Figured My Girlfriend Could Take Care of Herself. But Me, Too?
(By JEFF Z. KLEIN, July 29, 2001)
* John Edward Is the Oprah of the Other Side
(By CHRIS BALLARD, July 29, 2001)
STYLE: I Am in My Room, and I'm Never Coming Out
(By JANE READ MARTIN & PATRICIA MARX, July 29, 2001)
FOOD DIARY: Food Fight
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 29, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 29, 2001)
* 'Dante': The Personal Was Political
(By ROBERT PINSKY, July 29, 2001)
* 'The Invention of Clouds': Puff Daddy
(By ALFRED CORN, July 29, 2001)
Alice Hoffman's 'Blue Diary': Secrets and Lies
(By CLAIRE DEDERER, July 29, 2001)
Michael Lewis's 'Next': Too Young to Drive, Old Enough to Surf
(By WALTER KIRN, July 29, 2001)
Sharon Chmielarz: 'The Other Mozart' [Nannerl, Mozart's older sister]
(By MEGAN HARLAN, July 29, 2001)
'The Seven Daughters of Eve': Xenia, Paleolithic Princess
(By ROBERT KANIGEL, July 29, 2001)
Beyond Multiculturalism, Freedom?
(By HOLLAND COTTER, July 29, 2001)
ARTS: A Face of [Louis] Armstrong, but Not the Image
(By TERRY TEACHOUT, July 29, 2001)
DANCE: A Wink and a Wiggle, a Dancer's Art [Belly Dancing]
(By SHAYNA SAMUELS, July 29, 2001)
FILM: Lena Headey: A Rare Blend of Beautiful and Blunt
(By ALAN RIDING, July 29, 2001)
FILM: Catching Up With James Dean
(By DAVID THOMSON, July 29, 2001)
FILM: Schmaltz-Plus-Funny Is Garry Marshall's Forte
(By RICK MARIN, July 29, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Ansel Adams, the Artist Who Preceded the Celebrity
(By TESSA DeCARLO, July 29, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: George Daniell: At 90, Still in Pursuit of Beauty
(By ALICIA ANSTEAD, July 29, 2001)
THEATER: David Warner: A Prodigy Who Opted Out Opts Back In
(By PETER MARKS, July 29, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Ultraviolet Light, an Old Friend With a New Use
(By KIRK JOHNSON, July 29, 2001)
* SCIENCE: A Fire in the Sky [meteors]
(By ANTHONY RAMIREZ, July 29, 2001)
Saturday, July 28, 2001:
On This Day: July 28 (Jacopo Sannazzaro 7/28/1456-4/24/1530, Judith Leyster 7/28/1609-2/10/1660,
Beatrix Potter 7/28/1866-12/22/1943, Charles Dillon Perrine 7/28/1867-6/21/1951, Lucy Burns 7/28/1879-12/22/1966,
Marcel Duchamp 7/28/1887-10/2/1968, Harry Bridges 7/28/1901-3/30/1990, Rudy Vallee 7/28/1901-7/3/1986,
Earl Tupper 7/28/1907-10/5/1983, Malcolm Lowry 7/28/1909-6/27/1957, Andrew V. McLaglen 1920, Darry Hickman 1931,
Bill Bradley 1943, Jim Davis 1945, Rick Wright 1945, Jonathan Edwards 1946, Linda Kelsey 1946, Sally Struthers 1948,
Elizabeth Berkley 1972)
* Austria Formally Declares War on Serbia (NY Times, July 28, 1914)
* Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis Dies of Cancer at 64
[7/28/1929-5/19/1994] (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, May 20, 1994)
Dave Freeman, a Badminton Champion, Dies at 80
(By FRANK LITSKY, July 28, 2001)
Jack Ubaldi, 90, a Chef, Butcher, Author and Teacher, Dies
(By ERIC PACE, July 28, 2001)
Don Sunseri, Artist, Teacher and Founder of a Workshop, Dies at 62
(By ROBERTA SMITH, July 28, 2001)
Steve Barton, Actor, Dies at 47
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 28, 2001)
Otto Wittmann Ex-Museum Chief, Dies at 89
(NY TIMES, July 28, 2001)
Josef Klaus, Austrian Chancellor, Dies at 91
(NY TIMES, July 28, 2001)
Boy Who Killed a Teacher Gets 28 Years and No Parole
(By, July 28, 2001)
2 Churches Tackle Racial Themes
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, July 28, 2001)
Thai Leader Wants Time Change
(By WAYNE ARNOLD, July 28, 2001)
Feeding a Hunger for Art Films Where Megaplexes Rule
(By LISA W. FODERARO, July 28, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Credit Cards on Campus
(NY TIMES, July 28, 2001)
OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: The Vision Thing
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, July 28, 2001)
OP-ED: Censors, Spies and Scholars
(By BEI LING, July 28, 2001)
OP-ED: A Financial Push for Peace in Ireland
(By RICHARD FREEMAN, July 28, 2001)
OP-ED: The Political Uses of Moving On
(By TODD GITLIN, July 28, 2001)
LETTERS: The Fine Art of the Book: A Love Story
(By ALLEN COHEN, July 28, 2001)
LETTERS: A Kay Graham Story
(By HANNAH C. PAKULA, July 28, 2001)
BUSINESS: Jaded Wall St. Barely Budges on Poor Economic News
[Dow -39, Nasdaq +6] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 28, 2001)
U.S. Economy Grew at Slowest Since Early '93 in Spring Quarter
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, July 28, 2001)
Ethics Aside, a Good Business Model Remains Elusive for Stem Cells
(By ANDREW POLLACK, July 28, 2001)
China Feud Has New Risks for Taiwan
(By MARK LANDLER, July 28, 2001)
File-Swapping Is New Route for Pornography on Internet
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, July 28, 2001)
BOOK: SHELF LIFE: When a Demystified Bible Became Anathema to Orthodoxy
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, July 28, 2001)
IDEAS: Under a Shroud of Kitsch May Lie a Master's Art
(By DANIEL ZALEWSKI, July 28, 2001)
IDEAS: Threat to Archaeology: The Privy Diggers
(By SARAH BOXER, July 28, 2001)
MUSIC: PHILIP GLASS: Scores by Philip Glass for Films From Five Countries
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 28, 2001)
JAZZ: NEW ORLEANS RHYTHM KINGS: Up to and Including Jelly Roll Morton
(By BEN RATLIFF, July 28, 2001)
THEATER: 'GO-GO REÁL': Was Much of the Club Scene as a Black Box Can Hold
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, July 28, 2001)
THEATER: 'LANDSCAPE': A Relationship Stretching for Miles Across a Table
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 28, 2001)
* Scientists Retract Their Claim of New Element [118 protons]
(By KENNETH CHANG, July 28, 2001)
THEATER: 'SLANGUAGE': The City's Beat, With an Iambic Heat
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 28, 2001)
Friday, July 27, 2001:
On This Day: July 27 (Charlotte Corday7/27/1768-7/17/1793, Charles Parnell 7/27/1846-10/6/1891,
Emma Goldman 7/27/1869-5/14/1940, Hilaire Belloc 7/27/1870-7/16/1953, Eduard Spranger 7/27/1882-9/17/1963,
Geoffrey De Havilland 7/27/1882-5/21/1965, Charles Vidor 7/27/1900-6/4/1959, Willie Mosconi 7/27/1913-9/16/1993,
Frank O'Hara 7/27/1926-7/25/1966, Vincent Canby 7/27/1924-10/15/2000, Norman Lear 1922, Jerry Van Dyke 1931,
John Pleshette 1942, Bobby Gentry 1944, Betty Thomas 1948, Peggy Fleming 1948, Maureen McGovern 1949, Juliana Hatfield 1967)
Truce Is Signed, Ending The Fighting In Korea; P.O.W. Exchange Near;
Rhee Gets U.S. Pledge; Eisenhower Bids Free World Stay Vigilant
(By Lindesay Parrott, July 27, 1953)
Leo Durocher, Fiery Ex-Manager, Dies at 86
[7/27/1906-10/7/1991] (By THOMAS ROGERS, October 8, 1991)
James J. McCaffrey, Dies at 79, Co-Founder of Top New York Ad Agency
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 27, 2001)
Robert Lowery, First Black Fire Commissioner, Dies at 85
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 27, 2001)
Camping Outside the Wal-Mart: The Price Is Right
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, July 27, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Rough Ride in House: G.O.P. Hustles on Patients' Rights
(By ALISON MITCHELL, July 27, 2001)
Bush Says Plan for Immigrants Could Expand
(By ERIC SCHMITT, July 27, 2001)
M.I.T. Physicist Says Pentagon Is Trying to Silence Him
(By JAMES DAO, July 27, 2001)
Times Names Gerald Boyd as Its Next Managing Editor
(By SUSAN SACHS, July 27, 2001)
Freed Chinese Scholar, Still Defiant, Returns to the U.S.
(By RAYMOND BONNER, July 27, 2001)
Powell, in Hanoi, Pauses to Take a Turn on Stage
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 27, 2001)
Beijing's Turnabout Is Seen as a Maneuver to Mollify the U.S.
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 27, 2001)
Office Dress: Baseball Casual
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, July 27, 2001)
A Senator's Own Brand of Seven-League Boots
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 27, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Sharks in Shallow Water
(NY TIMES, July 27, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Digital Defense
(By THOMAS FRIEDMAN, July 27, 2001)
* OP-ED: One Writer's Place in Fiction [Eudora Welty]
(By REYNOLDS PRICE, July 27, 2001)
OP-ED: Indonesia's Sea of Troubles
(By SIDNEY JONES, July 27, 2001)
BUSINESS: Stocks Unfazed by Earnings News
[Dow +50, Nasdaq +39] (By, July 27, 2001)
Hewlett-Packard to Cut 6,000 Jobs
(By MATT RICHTEL, July 27, 2001)
Record Write-Off at JDS Uniphase
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, July 27, 2001)
Stocks Relapse as Japan Waits for Changes
(By MIKI TANIKAWA, July 27, 2001)
Ad Slowdown Continues
(By STUART ELLIOTT, July 27, 2001)
ART: Creativity Overhead, Underfoot and Even in the Air
(By ROBERTA SMITH, July 27, 2001)
ART: 'VOICE, IMAGE, GESTURE': Wry Skepticism About What Jewishness Means
(By KEN JOHNSON, July 27, 2001)
INSIDE ART: Phillips Wins a Three-Sided Bidding Game
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 27, 2001)
ANTIQUES: To Reflect On or Simply to Admire
(By WENDY MOONAN, July 27, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'NEXT': Watch Out, Power Elite, for Those Web-Savvy Amateurs
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, July 27, 2001)
DANCE: COMPAÑÍA NACIONAL DE DANZA: Bach Plays a Cello Here, and the Cello Likes It
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 27, 2001)
FILM: FAMILY FARE: Bears, Bears Everywhere
(By LAUREL GRAEBER, July 27, 2001)
'PLANET OF THE APES': Get Your Hands Off, Ya Big Gorilla!
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 27, 2001)
'THE RIVER': From Taipei, Snapshots Full of Atmosphere Show an Accidental Family
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 27, 2001)
'BREAD AND TULIPS': Love in Venice for a Bored Housewife on the Lam
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 27, 2001)
'THE MONKEY'S MASK': In Pursuit of Poetry's Sleazy Side
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 27, 2001)
'TOKYO EYES': Love on the Run in Tokyo
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 27, 2001)
Terry Zwigoff: A Director Who Likes to Sit Alone in the Dark
(By DAVID THOMSON, July 27, 2001)
MUSIC: MADONNA: Sea of Self-Love, but Who's Drowning?
(By JON PARELES, July 27, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: AARON SISKIND: Wandering Toward Abstraction
(By MARGARETT LOKE, July 27, 2001)
THEATER: 'HAMLET': Aye, in a Harlem Courtyard, the Witching Time of Night
(By ANITA GATES, July 27, 2001)
THEATER: Pinter's Silences, Richly Eloquent
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 27, 2001)
THEATER: 'TOPDOG/UNDERDOG': Brothers in a Game Where the Hand Is Faster Than the Eye
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 27, 2001)
THEATER: Hardy Chekhov Fans Gain Amity, if Not Tickets
(By BARBARA STEWART, July 27, 2001)
TV WEEKEND: More Friends Hanging Out and Emoting in New York
(By JULIE SALAMON, July 27, 2001)
HEALTH: Clues of Asthma Study Risks May Have Been Overlooked
(By JAMES GLANZ, July 27, 2001)
Stem Cells Hint at Promise for Inborn Brain Diseases
(By NICHOLAS WADE, July 27, 2001)
Thursday, July 26, 2001:
On This Day: July 26 (Arthur Middleton 7/26/1742-1/1/1787, Abner Doubleday 7/26/1819-1/26/1893,
Frederick Henry Evans 7/26/1853-6/24/1943, Bernard Berenson 7/26/1865-10/6/1959, Carl Jung 7/26/1875-6/7/1961,
Pearl Buck 7/26/1892-3/6/1973, Willy Messerschmitt 7/26/1898-9/17/1978, Stuart Symington 7/26/1901-12/14/1988,
William Lear 7/26/1902-5/14/1978, Antonia Brico 7/26/1902-8/3/1989, Peter Lorre 7/26/1904-3/23/1964,
Pavel Belyayev 7/26/1925-1/10/1970, Blake Edwards 1922, James Best 1926, Peter Hyams 1943, Helen Mirren 1946,
Susan George 1950, Kevin Spacey 1959, Sandra Bullock 1964)
Truman Signs National Security Act Creating CIA, National Security Council
(By Bertram D. Hulen, July 26, 1947)
* Dr. Carl G. Jung Is Dead at 85; Pioneer in Analytic Psychology
[7/26/1875-6/6/1961] (By Associated Press, June 7, 1961)
Indro Montanelli, Fascist Journalist, Dies at 92
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 26, 2001)
Frances R. Horwich, 94, Host of 'Ding Dong School' in 50's Is Dead
(By DANIEL J. WAKIN, July 26, 2001)
Joseph J. Marbach, 66, Expert on Jaw Pain, Dies
(NY TIMES, July 26, 2001)
Erik Barnouw, Historian of Broadcasting, Dies at 93
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, July 26, 2001)
Jules Buck, Film Producer and Battlefield Cameraman, Dies at 83
(By MEL GUSSOW, July 26, 2001)
* Magician Prepares to Hang Up Black Hat
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, July 26, 2001)
Computer Files on Recount to Be Released
(By DANA CANEDY, July 26, 2001)
Other Immigrants, Envying Mexicans, Demand a Break, Too
(By ERIC SCHMITT, July 26, 2001)
Democrats Attack Phrase on Rebate Checks
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 26, 2001)
Scholars Freed Before Powell Visit to Beijing
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 26, 2001)
* A SPECIAL REPORT: Quest for Mideast Peace: How and Why It Failed
(By DEBORAH SONTAG, July 26, 2001)
India's 'Bandit Queen' Is Dead, Gunned Down at 37
(By BARRY BEARAK, July 26, 2001)
Koizumi Plan to Visit Shrine Raises Warning From China
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, July 26, 2001)
El Profesor Higgins de Español
(By MIRTA OJITO, July 26, 2001)
ESSAY: Victory for Missile Defense
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 26, 2001)
IN AMERICA: Death in the Ashes
(By BOB HERBERT, July 26, 2001)
Social Security's Stable Benefit
(By HUGH PRICE and JULIAN BOND, July 26, 2001)
A Duty to Warn
(By STEPHEN GILLERS, July 26, 2001)
BUSINESS: Dow and Nasdaq Gain After Two Days of Heavy Selling
[Dow +165, Nasdaq +25] (By MICHAEL BRICK, July 26, 2001)
* A Survey of Wall St. Finds Women Disheartened
(By REED ABELSON, July 26, 2001)
Second-Quarter Loss Hits $4.76 Billion at Corning
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, July 26, 2001)
This Time, Prospect of Pink Slips Makes Workers Grim at Lucent
(By ANDREW JACOBS, July 26, 2001)
Hewlett-Packard Cutting 6,000 Jobs
(By SHERRI DAY, July 26, 2001)
JDS Uniphase to Cut 7, 000 More Jobs
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 26, 2001)
Putting Canadians' Nest Eggs in a Nortel Basket
(By BERNARD SIMON, July 26, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Heinz Puts its Money Where the Young Mouths Are
(By ALLISON FASS, July 26, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'WORD FREAK': Scrabble, From 'Zest' To 'Abceghilnoprtuy'
(By JANET MASLIN, July 26, 2001)
BOOKS: Depression His Linchpin, a Novelist Keeps Going
(By DINITIA SMITH, July 26, 2001)
MAKING BOOKS: Books by Blacks in Top 5 Sellers
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, July 26, 2001)
MUSIC: Madonna Launches World Tour to Appreciative Fans
(By SUSAN SAULNY, July 26, 2001)
MUSIC: A Conductor Draws Management Metaphors From Musical Teamwork
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, July 26, 2001)
OPERA: VERDI'S 'OTELLO': Double Fervor for the Moor of Venice
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, July 26, 2001)
POP LIFE: Still Wild, Wildly Talkative [Reg Presley & Troggs]
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 26, 2001)
* GARDENING: Deep in the Desert, No Longer Far Out [Paolo Soleri]
(By ALASTAIR GORDON, July 26, 2001)
* AT HOME WITH: Julia Child: Change of Scene, if Not Cuisine
(By JOHN LELAND, July 28, 2001)
HOUSE PROUD: Classic Stories, a Fresh Chapter
(By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, July 28, 2001)
ROOF PROUD: Beach House With a Penthouse View
(By ELAINE LOUIE, July 28, 2001)
Bedbugs Checking in at the Best Hotels
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 28, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 26, 2001)
Creating 3-D Art on Your PC
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, July 26, 2001)
* Professor Who Once Found Isolation Online Has a Change of Heart
(By LISA GUERNSEY, July 26, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: The New Iomega Hard Drive
(By DAVID POGUE, July 26, 2001)
Behind That Banal Bar Code, Monsters and Dinosaur DNA
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, July 26, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Giving Up Privacy for a Bargain Price
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, July 26, 2001)
A Guessing Game to Rally the Diabetic Child
(By CHARLES HEROLD, July 26, 2001)
Meek or Masterly, a Challenger Awaits [Chess Online]
(By LISA SCHEER, July 26, 2001)
A Reunion? Relax. You're Invisible.
(By DEBRA A. KLEIN, July 26, 2001)
* Looking at the World of Art, by the Letter
(By SHELLY FREIERMAN, July 26, 2001)
Mastering the 3-D Universe
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, July 26, 2001)
BASICS: Hands-Free Calling Options for the Road
(By SUSAN STELLIN, July 26, 2001)
One Connection, Many PC's: Networking Without the Wires
(By STEVEN E. BRIER, July 26, 2001)
Can't Forsake Movies on Tape? DVD Player Doubles as a VCR
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 26, 2001)
Q & A: A Tool Kit for Keeping Windows Up to Date
(By J. D. BIERSDORFER, July 26, 2001)
HEALTH: Early Success Seen With 2nd Type of Stem Cell
(By NICHOLAS WADE, July 26, 2001)
HEALTH: Birth Control Pill May Not Be Cancer Guard, Study Says
(NY TIMES, July 26, 2001)
Wednesday, July 25, 2001:
On This Day: July 25 (Paolo Gualdo 7/25/1553-10/16/1621, Christoph Scheiner 7/25/1575-1650,
Henry Knox 7/25/1750-10/25/1806, Maria Weston Chapman 7/25/1806-7/12/1885,
Richard Oglesby 7/25/1824-4/24/1899, Thomas Eakins 7/25/1844-6/25/1916, David Belasco 7/25/1853-5/14/1931,
Maxfield Parrish 7/25/1870-3/10/1966, Davidson Black 7/25/1884-3/15/1934, Walter Brennan 7/25/1894-1974,
Eric Hoffer 7/25/1902-5/21/1983, Elias Canetti 7/25/1905-8/14/1994, Johnny Hodges 7/25/1906-5/11/1970,
Walter Payton 7/25/1954-1999, Estelle Getty 1923, Barbara Harris 1935, Nate Thurmond 1941,
Verdine White 1951, Iman 1955, Ray Billingsley 1957, Matt LeBlanc 1967)
Italian Liner Andrea Doria Sinks After Colliding with Swedish Ship Stockholm; 51 Dead
(By Max Frankel, July 25, 1956)
* Former British Prime Minister Balfour Dies at 81; Leader for Half a Century
[7/25/1848-3/19/1930] (NY Times, March 20, 1930)
Milton Gabler, Storekeeper of the Jazz World, Dies at 90
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 25, 2001)
William V. McDermott, 84, Combat Surgeon and Teacher, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 25, 2001)
Jonathan C. Rice, Innovator of Public TV in San Francisco, Dies at 85
(By ERIC PACE, July 25, 2001)
RITUALS: College Hunt: Son, Are We There Yet?
(By HUBERT B. HERRING, July 25, 2001)
Social Security's Fate Hinges on Investing Plan, Panel Says
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 25, 2001)
Former President Carter Is 'Disappointed' in Bush
(By KEVIN SACK, July 25, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: On World Stage, America's President Wins Mixed Reviews
(By DAVID E. SANGER, July 25, 2001)
Beijing Sentences 2 Chinese U.S. Residents to Prison
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 25, 2001)
Hanoi Welcomes Powell, the Foe of 3 Decades Ago
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 25, 2001)
Powell Said to Be Dismayed by Beijing Trial
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 25, 2001)
Mandela Is Being Treated for Prostate Cancer
(By HENRI E. CAUVIN, July 25, 2001)
Testimony of Priest and Lawyer Frees Man Jailed for '87 Murder
(By JIM DWYER, July 25, 2001)
Government Sites for Children Aren't the Coolest
(By, July 25, 2001)
An Order of Cultural Spying, Supersize
(By LYNDA RICHARDSON, July 25, 2001)
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE: Chinese Group Buys Landmark Site
(By DAVID W. DUNLAP, July 25, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Chinese Injustice
(NY TIMES, July 25, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Eudora Welty's Daringly Sheltered Life
(NY TIMES, July 25, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Obligation or Temptation
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 25, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Sins of Commission
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 25, 2001)
OP-ED: Clinical Trials, Human Errors
(By JEROME GROOPMAN, July 25, 2001)
OP-ED: Away From the Pack
(By ALEX S. JONES, July 25, 2001)
BUSINESS: More Weak Profit Reports Push Dow and Nasdaq Lower
[Dow -183.30, Nasdaq -29] (By MICHAEL BRICK, July 25, 2001)
Lucent Announces Big Further Job Cuts, and a Large Loss
(By SIMON ROMERO, July 25, 2001)
Greenspan Says Fed's Rate Cuts Are Working
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 25, 2001)
Time Enough for AT&T's Cable Business?
(By SETH SCHIESEL, July 25, 2001)
WORKPLACE: Traveling 2 Roads in One Life
(By MARCI ALBOHER NUSBAUM, July 25, 2001)
MANAGEMENT: Getting the Corporate Point Across to Employees
(By THOM WEIDLICH, July 25, 2001)
THE BOSS: Steeped in Family and Faith
(By J.W. MARRIOTT Jr., CEO, Marriott International, July 25, 2001)
The Therapeutic Listener
(By SHELDON FIRSTENBERG, July 25, 2001)
Nextel and AT&T Wireless Register Losses
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, July 25, 2001)
Editor in Chief of Inside.com Steps Down
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, July 25, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Shanghai's High-Flying Patron Hits Stormy Weather
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 25, 2001)
ARTIST AT WORK: TAKASHI MURAKAMI: A Japanese Artist Goes Global
(By PETER MARKS, July 25, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE TWO CHINATOWNS': Bringing the Real Police to a Police Procedural
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, July 25, 2001)
DANCE: COMPAGNIE KAFIG: A Spirit of Urban Rebellion and a Celebration of Diversity
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 25, 2001)
OPERA: In 'Jenufa,' the Music and Drama Are One
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, July 25, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: It's Walker Evans Time, and the Getty Is in Luck
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, July 25, 2001)
TV NOTES: Oh, Brother! Just a Prank
(By BILL CARTER, July 25, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Mars May Have Water Near Surface
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 25, 2001)
* Scientists Solve 'Iceman' Mystery
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 25, 2001)
Tuesday, July 24, 2001:
On This Day: July 24 (Benedetto Marcello 7/24/1686-7/24/1739, Simon Bolivar 7/24/1783-12/17/1830,
Alexander Dumas 7/24/1802-12/5/1870, Alexander Davis 7/24/1803-1/14/1892,
William Gillette 7/24/1853-4/29/1937, Robert Graves 7/24/1895-12/7/1985,
Amelia Earhart 7/24/1897-7/2/1937, James Rhyne Killian 7/24/1904-1/29/1988,
John D. MacDonald 7/24/1916-12/12/28/1986, Cooti Williams 7/24/1908-9/15/1985,
Peter Yates 1929, Jacqueline Brookes 1930, Pat Oliphant 1935, Ruth Buzzi 1936,
Mark Goddard 1936, Chris Sarandon 1942, Michael Richards 1949, Lynda Carter 1951,
Gus Van Sant 1952, Laura Leighton 1968, Jennifer Lopez 1970, Anna Paquin 1982)
Nixon and Khrushchev Argue In Public As U.S. Exhibit Opens; Accuse Each Other Of Threats
(By Harrison E. Salisbury, July 24, 1959)
Bella Abzug, 77, Congresswoman And a Founding Feminist, Is Dead
[7/24/1920-3/31/1998] (By LAURA MANSNERUS, April 1, 1998)
* Eudora Welty, a Lyrical Master of the Short Story, Dies at 92
(By ALBIN KREBS, July 24, 2001)
William R. Bricker, Boys Clubs Director, Dies at 78
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 24, 2001)
Meteors Reported Across the Northeast
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 24, 2001)
Bush Hears Pope Condemn Research in Human Embryos
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, July 24, 2001)
178 Nations Reach Climate Accord; U.S. Only Looks On
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, July 24, 2001)
A New President, as Well as an Old One, for Indonesians
(By SETH MYDANS, July 24, 2001)
Woman in the News: Indonesia's Daughter of Destiny
(By SETH MYDANS, July 24, 2001)
ANTIMISSILE DIPLOMACY: A Day After Seeing Putin, a Harder-Line Bush Emerges
(By DAVID E. SANGER, July 24, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: MAD Isn't Crazy
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 24, 2001)
OP-ED: Pakistan Reckons With a Rising India
(By PANKAJ MISHRA, July 24, 2001)
BUSINESS: Dow Drops Sharply as Worries Won't Fade
[Dow -152, Nasdaq -41] (By MICHAEL BRICK, July 24, 2001)
* AOL Invests $100 Million in Amazon.com
(By SAUL HANSELL, July 24, 2001)
* Race Under Way to Winnow Down Genetic Data
(By ANDREW POLLACK, July 24, 2001)
* A City Takes a Breath After the Dot-Com Crash [San Francisco]
(By MATT RICHTEL, July 24, 2001)
Suitors Wait for Demise of Cyberian Outpost
(By LAURIE J. FLYNNN, July 24, 2001)
ART: Modern Masters' Works to Be Auctioned for Unicef
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 24, 2001)
* BOOKS: Famed Bookstore Looks for New Home
(By MEL GUSSOW, July 24, 2001)
BOOKS: 'SUZANNE'S DIARY FOR NICHOLAS': Love Story, or Is That Death Story?
(By JANET MASLIN, July 24, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE MAN WHO HAD ALL THE LUCK': Deflation of an Optimist, by a Young Writer
(By BRUCE WEBER, July 24, 2001)
FASHION: FRONT ROW: Vogue's Latest Salutes Older Women
(By RUTH LA FERLA, July 24, 2001)
FASHION: It's Off to the Races for Stock Car Fashion
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, July 24, 2001)
* Scientists Are Starting to Add Letters to Life's Alphabet
(By ANDREW POLLACK, July 24, 2001)
To Be Young and in Search of the Higgs Boson
(By JAMES GLANZ, July 24, 2001)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Ways to Make Retirement Work for You
(By JANE E. BRODY, July 24, 2001)
* HEALTH: Heart Group Shifts Stance on Estrogen
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 24, 2001)
HEALTH: Grappling With the Ethics of Stem Cell Research
(By NICHOLAS WADE, July 24, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS: In Practice: Hospitals Put Doctors in the Picture
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 24, 2001)
Monday, July 23, 2001:
On This Day: July 23 (Francesco Sforza 7/23/1401-3/8/1466,
Sir Thomas Brisbane 7/23/1773-1/27/1860, Sir Jonathan Hutchinson 7/23/1828-6/26/1913,
S. H. Kress 7/23/1863-9/22/1955, Sunny Jim Fitzsimmons 7/23/1874-3/11/1966,
Emil Jennings 7/23/1884-1/2/1950, Sir Arthur Whitten Brown 7/23/1886-10/4/1948,
Raymond Chandler 7/23/1888-3/26/1959, Harry Cohn 7/23/1891-2/27/1958,
Elio Vittorini 7/23/1908-2/13/1966, Pimen 7/23/1910-5/3/1990, Gloria DeHaven 1925,
Calvert DeForest 1928, Anthony Kennedy 1936, Don Imus 1940, Larry Manetti 1947,
Belinda Montgomery 1950, Lydia Cornell 1957, Martin Gore 1961, Woody Harrison 1961,
Charisma Carpenter 1970)
Austria Ready to Invade Servia, Sends Ultimatum
(NY TIMES, July 23, 1914)
Haile Selassie of Ethiopia Dies at 83
[7/23/1892-8/26/1975] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, August 28, 1975)
* Author Eudora Welty Dies at 92
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 23, 2001)
* Aveline Kushi, Advocate of Macrobiotic Diet for Health, Dies at 78
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 23, 2001)
Joan Bove, a Co-Founder of Clairol, Is Dead at 99
(By TERRY PRISTIN, July 23, 2001)
Geologist Fights to Save Dinosaur Fossils
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, July 23, 2001)
Bush and Putin Tie Antimissile Talks to Big Arms Cuts
(By DAVID E. SANGER, July 23, 2001)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, July 23, 2001)
SPORTS: Picture of Calm, Duval Seizes His First Major
(By CLIFTON BROWN, July 23, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Reading Putin's Mind
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 23, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Economics 101 at Big Tobacco U.
(By BOB HERBERT, July 23, 2001)
OP-ED: The Roots of Conflict in Jamaica
(By ORLANDO PATTERSON, July 23, 2001)
* LETTERS: Rules for Writers (1. Don't Rely on Rules)
(By PAUL DREXLER & HENRY B. MALONEY, July 23, 2001)
Disney Is Said to Be Close to Acquiring Fox Family
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, July 23, 2001)
Why Dan Rather and CBS Limited Coverage of Levy Case
(By JIM RUTENBERG, July 23, 2001)
* Pulitzer Prize Winner Also a Profitable Bookseller [Larry McMurtry]
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, July 23, 2001)
* Pop-Up Web Ads Pose a Measurement Puzzle [X10.com ads]
(By SAUL HANSELL, July 23, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: Pioneering Spirit Lives On at Apple
(By STEVE LOHR, July 23, 2001)
From a Free Service to a Business That Charges
(By SUSA STELLIN, July 23, 2001)
* MEDIA TALK: Error in Quote Stirs Arguments Over Adams Legacy
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 23, 2001)
When the Soundtrack Turns Subliminal
(By TIM RACE, July 23, 2001)
BUENOS AIRES JOURNAL: Recession Blues Are Turning Into a Ballad of the Sad Cafes
(By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, July 23, 2001)
PATENTS: An Invention Will Cut Hair Evenly
(By SABRA CHARTRAND, July 23, 2001)
ARTS: Difficult Road Seen for Midsize Arts Groups
(By DOREEN CARVAJAL, July 23, 2001)
ARTS ONLINE: A Stronger, More Theatrical Role for Female Activists
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, July 23, 2001)
BALLET: 'GISELLE': A Sweet Innocent Turns Free Spirit
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 23, 2001)
BOOKS: 'SPAIN BETRAYED': Aiding Dictatorship, Not Democracy
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, July 23, 2001)
DANCE: 'MERCY': Mysteries of Life, in Images And Music
(By JACK ANDERSON, July 23, 2001)
MUSIC: PHILIP GLASS: 12 Parts With Something New to Say
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 23, 2001)
TV: NBC: High-Toned, Reality-Ridden
(By BILL CARTER, July 23, 2001)
Sunday, July 22, 2001:
On This Day: July 22 (Jacques-Germain Soufflot 7/22/1713-8/29/1780, Gregor Mendel 7/22/1822-1/6/1884,
Thomas Pendergast 7/22/1872-1/26/1945, Edward Hopper 7/22/1882-5/15/1967, Gustav Hertz 7/22/1887-10/30/1975,
Ely Culbertson 7/22/1891-12/27/1955, Oskar Maria Graf 7/22/1894-6/28/1967, Alexander Calder 7/22/1898-11/11/1976,
Stephen Vincent Benet 7/22/1898-3/13/1943, Charles Weidman 7/22/1901-7/15/1975, Amy Vanderbilt 7/22/1908-12/27/1974,
William V. Roth, Jr., 1921, Bob Dole 1923, Margaret Whiting 1924, Orson Bean 1928, Oscar de la Renta 1932,
Louise Fletcher 1934, John Korty 1936, Terence Stamp 1939, Geroge Clinton 1940, Alex Trebek 1940, Bobby Sherman 1943,
Paul Schrader 1946, Albert Brooks 1947, Don Henley 1947, Willem Dafoe 1955, Rob Estes 1963)
Dillinger Slain in Chicago; Shot Dead by Federal Men in Front of Movie Theatre
(NY TIMES, July 22, 1934)
* Emma Lazarus: Death of an American Poet of Uncommon Talent at Age 38
[7/22/1849-11/19/1887] (NY Times, Nov. 20, 1887)
* Arthur Davidsen, 57, Johns Hopkins Astrophysicist, Dies
(By DENNIS OVERBYE, July 22, 2001)
Beate Uhse, Entrepreneur in the Business of Erotic Goods, Dies at 81
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 22, 2001)
Dispute Over Ads Draws Wide Scrutiny After Award [Stopping Fax Ads]
(By WILLIAM GLABERSON, July 22, 2001)
Vengeance Destroys Faces, and Souls, in Cambodia
(By SETH MYDANS, July 22, 2001)
Fujian, USA / A Special Report: For Newcomers, a Homey New Chinatown
(By SUSAN SACHS, July 22, 2001)
The Tinkerer's Last Stand, Sold for Pennies
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, July 22, 2001)
ST. JOHN'S CEMETERY JOURNAL: Sleeping With the Mob Giants, and Regular People
(By ALAN FEUER, July 22, 2001)
* SPORTS: Fond Memories of Maris's Series Homer, No. 62*
(By IRA BERKOW, July 22, 2001)
LIBERTIES: Blubber For Breakfast
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 22, 2001)
RECKONINGS: 2016 and All That
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 22, 2001)
Russia's Eventual Place in NATO
(By TIMOTHY GARTON ASH, July 22, 2001)
The Tabloid Public Is Not the Majority
(By ANDREW KOHUT, July 22, 2001)
BUSINESS: Temporary Work Is Sidestepping a Slowdown
(By AMY ZIPKIN, July 22, 2001)
The Making (or Possible Breaking) of a Megabrand [Dove]
(By JULIAN E. BARNES, July 22, 2001)
When Hidden Fees Erode 401(k)'s
(By VIRGINIA MUNGER KAHN, July 22, 2001)
* Doldrums for All Seasons on Wall St.
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, July 22, 2001)
* The Names Scream 'Value.' But the Portfolios Don't.
(By MARK HULBERT, July 22, 2001)
* Investing With Bruce L. Bartlett and Christopher M. Leavy: Atlas Growth and Income Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, July 22, 2001)
MIDSTREAM: College Saving, by the Numbers
(By JAMES SCHEMBARI, July 22, 2001)
* ON THE JOB: A Welcome Mat, or a Banana Peel? [Firewalk]
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 22, 2001)
A Barbour, a Baker, a Chinese Rainmaker
(Compiled By RICK GLADSTONE, July 22, 2001)
Personal Business Diary: Don't Spend That Check
(By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON, July 22, 2001)
* Investing Diary: Is More Knowledge Bad for Investors?
(By REUTERS, July 22, 2001)
Business Diary: When You're Cooking More Than a Meal
(By AARON DONOVAN, July 22, 2001)
Shareholders Are Restless, and Starting to Pounce
(GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 22, 2001)
One Investor. Two Brokers. An Account Runs Dry.
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 22, 2001)
Finding Some Way to Disperse the Fog
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, July 22, 2001)
TV: Here Lies Hollywood: Falling for 'Six Feet Under'
(By WENDY LESSER, July 22, 2001)
PETROPOLIS: A Dog Biscuit for Your Thoughts
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, July 22, 2001)
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE: Her Homework's in the Window at Bendel's
(By ALEX WITCHEL, July 22, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT WITH: Willa Ford: Twinkle, Little Star
(By LINDA LEE, July 22, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Come Home, Jay Gatsby
(Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, July 22, 2001)
VOWS: Isa Catto and Daniel Shaw
(By LOIS SMITH BRADY, July 22, 2001)
OUT THERE: TOKYO: Love Birds Seek Discreet Nest
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, July 22, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Word War in the Language of Languor
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 22, 2001)
American Media Mogul Makes News in Moscow
(By MATTHEW BRZEZINSKI, July 22, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Nursing School
(By RANDY COHEN, July 22, 2001)
SEX AND THIS CITY: The Sexual Culture of Washington Has Always Been Uniquely Predatory
(By ANDREW SULLIVAN, July 22, 2001)
* Questions for Neil Diamond
(By JOHN LELAND, July 22, 2001)
LIVES: She Went From an Elusive Child to a Terrifying Mystery
(By EMER MARTIN, July 22, 2001)
THE BEST OF THE STYLE COLLECTIONS: Glimmer Twins
(By LISA EISNER and ROMÁN ALONSO, July 22, 2001)
FOOD: Cabbage Fever
(By JONATHAN REYNOLDS, July 22, 2001)
TOLERATING FALUN GONG: Hong Kong Bows to Beijing. Except When It Doesn't.
(By MARK LANDLER, July 22, 2001)
* Fiddle With Baseball's Internal Clock? Good Luck
(By ALAN SCHWARZ, July 22, 2001)
AMERICAN WAY: A World Seeking Security Is Told There's Just One Shield
(By MICHAEL WINES, July 22, 2001)
OPEN DOOR, OPEN QUESTIONS: This Way Up
(By ERIC SCHMITT, July 22, 2001)
Sex and the Purple Prose
(By TOM KUNTZ, July 22, 2001)
WRONG NUMBER: The Unbearable Lightness of Public Opinion Polls
(By ADAM CLYMER, July 22, 2001)
* WORD FOR WORD / NEAPOLITAN HAND GESTURES: Non Beffeggiare, Please:
A Field Guide to Italian Conversation
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, July 22, 2001)
Dick Cheney, Environmentalist
(By PHILIP SHENON, July 22, 2001)
* Who Added the Yeast?
(By SARAH BOXER, July 22, 2001)
The Most Sought After Tailor in France
(By SAMUEL ABT, July 22, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 22, 2001)
* 'The Selected Poetry of Robinson Jeffers': Staring Out to Sea
(By BRAD LEITHAUSER, July 22, 2001)
Saturday, July 21, 2001:
On This Day: July 21 (Saint Philip Neri 7/21/1515-5/26/1595, John Weaver 7/21/1673-9/24/1760,
Georg Brandt 7/21/1694-4/29/1768, Paul Julius Reuter 7/21/1816-2/25/1899, Sir John Gilbert 7/21/1817-10/5/1897,
Louise Blanchard Bethune 7/21/1856-12/18/1913, Lovis Corinth 7/21/1858-7/12/1925, Jacques Feyder 7/21/1888-5/25/1948,
Hart Crane 7/21/1899-4/27/1932, Hemingway 7/21/1899-7/2/1961, Marshall McLuhan 7/21/1911-12/31/1980,
Isaac Stern 1920, Billy Taylor 1921, Kay Starr 1922, Don Knotts 1924, Norman Jewison 1926, Paul Burke 1926,
Patricia Elliot 1942, Yusuf Islam [formerly Cat Stevens] 1948, Art Hindle 1948, Robin Williams 1952)
Scopes Guilty, Fined $100, Scores Law; Benediction Ends Trial, Appeal Starts;
Darrow Answers Nine Bryan Questions (NY TIMES, July 21, 1925)
* Hemingway Dies at 61; Prize-Winning Works Reflected Preoccupation With Life and Death
[7/21/1899-7/2/1961] (NY Times, July 3, 1961)
Grace Borgenicht Brandt, New York Art Dealer, Dies at 86
(By ROBERTA SMITH, July 21, 2001)
Johnny LoBianco, Referee in Controversial Duran Bout, Dead at 85
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, July 21, 2001)
John Marriott, 78, Stamp Master for Britain's Royal Collectors
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 21, 2001)
Intense Hunt for Intern a Missing-Person Exception
(By FOX BUTTERFIELD, July 21, 2001)
For Aspiring Americans, New Hope and Concern [Mexican immigrants]
(By JIM YARDLEY, July 21, 2001)
A Newport Aristocrat Has Fallen for Everyman's Game [ballpark]
(By WILLIAM NORWICH, July 21, 2001)
THE FIRST LADY: Laura Bush Enjoys Globalization's Lighter Side
(By SUZANNE DALEY, July 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: THE RURAL LIFE: For Sale
(By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, July 21, 2001)
OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: Bush the Radical
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, July 21, 2001)
OP-ED JOURNAL: Condit Country or Bust
(By FRANK RICH, July 21, 2001)
* OP-ED: A Great Woman Who Was Everywoman
(By GLORIA STEINEM, July 21, 2001)
OP-ED: Stem Cell Research and a Parent's Hopes
(By ALLEN GOLDBERG, July 21, 2001)
BUSINESS: Leading Indexes Drop as Microsoft Casts Long Shadow
[Dow -33, Nasdaq -17] (By SHERRI DAY, July 21, 2001)
* Columbia University Hires Star Economist [Stanford's Joseph E. Stiglitz]
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, July 21, 2001)
Grim Reminder on Mental Illness
(By MICHELINE MAYNARD, July 21, 2001)
* BOOK: THINK TANK: A Cold-War Weapon Disguised as a Place to Spend the Night
(By MICHAEL Z. WISE, July 21, 2001)
DANCE: 'WAITING': Making Time Elastic Enough to Tell a Tale of Generations
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 21, 2001)
DANCE: AMERICAN DANCE FESTIVAL: Artists From Faraway Places With Far-Out Ideas
(By JACK ANDERSON, July 21, 2001)
IDEAS: Damaged Brains and the Death Penalty
(By LAURA MANSNERUS, July 21, 2001)
* IDEAS: Coming to Blows Over How Valid Science Really Is [Thomas S. Kuhn]
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, July 21, 2001)
OPERA: 'Otello' Runs a LivelyLeg in La Selva's Verdi Marathon
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 21, 2001)
ROCK FESTIVAL: YOUSSOU N'DOUR: Think Locally and Rock Globally
(By JON PARELES, July 21, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE HOMECOMING': Talk About a Reality Show. A Pinter Classic Is It.
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 21, 2001)
Friday, July 20, 2001:
On This Day: July 20 (Petrarch 7/20/1304-7/18/1374, Giuseppe La Farina 7/20/1815, Augustin Daly 7/20/1838-6/7/1899,
Sir George Otto Trevelyan 7/20/1838-8/17/1928, Max Liebermann 7/20/1847-2/8/1935, Miron Cristea 7/20/1868-3/6/1939,
Santos-Dumont Alberto 7/20/1873-7/23/1932, Theda Bara 7/20/1885-4/7/1955, George II 7/20/1890-4/1/1947,
Errett Lobban Cord 7/20/1894-1/2/1974, Sally Ann Howes 1930, Barbara A. Mikulski 1936, Diana Rigg 1938,
Kim Carnes 1946, Carlos Santana 1947, Donna Dixon 1957, Frank Whaley 1963)
* Men Walk On Moon: Astronauts Land On Plain; Collect Rocks, Plant Flag
(By John Noble Wilford, July 20, 1969)
Elliot Richardson Dies at 79; Stood Up to Nixon and Resigned In 'Saturday Night Massacre'
[7/20/1920-12/31/1999] (By NEIL A. LEWIS, January 1, 2000)
Gunther Gebel-Williams, Circus Animal Trainer, Dies at 66
(By RICHARD SEVERO, July 20, 2001)
Boisfeuillet Jones, 88, Educator and President of Philanthropies
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 20, 2001)
Mimi Fariña, Folk Singer Who Founded Bread & Roses, Dies at 56
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 20, 2001)
Scott Merrill, Broadway Star; Macheath in `Threepenny Opera,' Dies at 82
(LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 20, 2001)
U. of California Alters Admission Policy
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 20, 2001)
Fire in Baltimore Snarls Internet Traffic, Too
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 20, 2001)
Some Letters From I.R.S. Err on Size of Rebate
(By PHILIP SHENON, July 20, 2001)
Mrs. Clinton Slips From Script on Aspiration
(NY TIMES, July 20, 2001)
Sierra Club Considers a Mutual Fund
(By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., July 20, 2001)
Argentina's Austerity Plan Provokes Nationwide Strike
(By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, July 20, 2001)
Nepal Premier Resigns; Caught in Chaos After Royal Blood Bath
(By BARRY BEARAK, July 20, 2001)
India Is Not Amused [President G.W. Bush names cat "India"]
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 20, 2001)
THE BIG CITY: Why People Love to Hate Publicists
(By JOHN TIERNEY, July 20, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: The Risks and Rewards of Ranch Diplomacy [Bush & Putin]
(By PHILIP TAUBMAN, July 20, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Evolutionaries
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 20, 2001)
OP-ED: What the Protesters in Genoa Want
(By MICHAEL HARDT & ANTONIO NEGRI, July 20, 2001)
OP-ED: New York Needs a Place to Live
(By ROLAND LEWIS, July 20, 2001)
BUSINESS: Two Bright Spots in Technology Give Lift to Share Prices
[Dow +40, Nasdaq +30] (By SHERRI DAY, July 20, 2001)
* A Quieter Webby Party
(By EVELYN NIEVES, July 20, 2001)
* Microsoft Says PC Business Will Worsen
(By STEVE LOHR, July 20, 2001)
* Sun Microsystems Posts Quarterly Loss for First Time in 12 Years
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 20, 2001)
* With Napster Down, Its Audience Fans Out
(By MATT RICHTEL, July 20, 2001)
Early Winner in Online Food [Tesco.com]
(By SUZANNE KAPNER, July 20, 2001)
They Sold the Derivative, but They Didn't Understand It/A>
(By FLOYD NORRIS, July 20, 2001)
Nortel Posts a Huge Loss [record loss of $19.4 billion, or $6.08 a share]
(By BERNARD SIMON, July 20, 2001)
30-Year Mortgage Rates Drop to 7.08%
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 20, 2001)
ART: Summery Homes for Art
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, July 20, 2001)
ART: NEW JERSEY EXHIBITS: From the Caribbean to Russia
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, July 20, 2001)
ART: CONNECTICUT EXHIBITS: David Smith and Lord Snowdon Reign
(By GRACE GLUECK, July 20, 2001)
ART: LONG ISLAND: Lush, Staid or Frenetic
(By KEN JOHNSON, July 20, 2001)
INSIDE ART: A Jasper Johns for Philadelphia
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 20, 2001)
ANTIQUES: Recognition for Biloxi's Mad Potter
(NY TIMES, July 20, 2001)
BOOKS: 'BROTHEL': Sweetness and Light at a Brothel? It Still Sounds Pretty Grim
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, July 20, 2001)
DANCE: 'EL TRILOGY': Interpreting Jazz for Ears, Eyes and Feet
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 20, 2001)
DANCE: LA SCALA: Grown-Up Now and Showing Off Its Edge
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 20, 2001)
FILM: WATCHING MOVIES WITH KEVIN SMITH: The Thrill Is Just Talk
(By RICK LYMAN, July 20, 2001)
FILM: 'AMERICA'S SWEETHEARTS': A Celebrity Couple and the Emptiness of It All
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 20, 2001)
FILM: 'GHOST WORLD': Teenagers' Sad World in a Comic Dimension
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 20, 2001)
FILM: 'BROTHER': Los Angeles, Don't Mess With a Tokyo Gangsta
(By Elvis Mitchell, July 20, 2001)
THEATER: 'MUSIC FROM A SPARKLING PLANET': Trying to Come of Age Before 40
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 20, 2001)
THEATER: Family Fare: A Good Swami Named Yami
(By LAUREL GRAEBER, July 20, 2001)
* SCIENCER: Genome Mappers Navigate the Tricky Terrain of Race
(By NICHOLAS WADE, July 20, 2001)
HEALTH: U.S. Suspends Human Research at Johns Hopkins After a Death
(By GINA KOLATA, July 20, 2001)
Thursday, July 19, 2001:
On This Day: July 19 (Samuel Colt 7/19/1814-1/10/1862, Mary Ann Bickerdyke 7/19/1817-11/8/1901,
Edward Charles Pickering 7/19/1846-2/3/1919, Charles Horace Mayo 7/19/1865-5/26/1939,
Alice Dunbar 7/19/1875-9/18/1935, A. J. Cronin 7/19/1896-1/6/1981, Edgar Degas 7/19/1834-9/27/1917,
Herbert Marcuse 7/19/1898-7/29/1979, Edgar Snow 7/19/1905-2/15/1972, George McGovern 1922,
Pat Hingle 1924, Helen Gallagher 1926, Sue Thompson 1926, Dennis Cole 1940, Vikki Carr 1941,
Atom Egoyan 1960)
* British Open 'V' Nerve War; Churchill Spurs Resistance
(By James MacDonald, July 19, 1941)
* Hilaire G. E. Degas, Noted Painter, Dies
[7/19/1834-9/27/1917] (NY TIMES, September 28, 1917)
Elmer Henderson, 88, Dies; Father of Major Rights Case
(By DAVID STOUT, July 19, 2001)
David E. Babcock, Ex-Chief of May Department Store Chain, Dies at 86
(NY TIMES, July 19, 2001)
Ernst Baier, Skating Star and Founder of Berlin Ice Revue, Dies at 95
(By ERIC PACE, July 19, 2001)
Jia Lanpo, Archaeologist Who Led Work on Peking Man, Is Dead at 92
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, July 19, 2001)
Marco Zanuso, 85, Innovative Designer, Is Dead
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, July 19, 2001)
* Ailing Statue: Symbol of Industry or Pork Barrel? [Vulcan in Birmingham, Alabama]
(By DAVID FIRESTONE, July 19, 2001)
Missile Interception Test Was Hit-and-Miss, Pentagon Reports
(By JAMES DAO, July 19, 2001)
Pushing Agenda for ABM's, Bush Prepares to Meet Putin
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, July 19, 2001)
Nepal's Royal Deaths Give Life to Swirl of Theories
(By JOHN F. BURNS, July 19, 2001)
* And Now a Word From Their Cool College Sponsor
(By KATE ZERNIKE, July 19, 2001)
IN ART'S FOOTSTEPS: Painting the Pictures of a Perfect Vacation
(By KIRK JOHNSON, July 19, 2001)
Washington Stayed Here, but Here Is on the Move
(By ANDREW JACOBS, July 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Cleaning Up Stock Market Research
(NY TIMES, July 19, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Thought Police
(By BOB HERBERT, July 19, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Nights of The Round Table
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 19, 2001)
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR: Dredge the Hudson
(By GARY S. GUZY, July 19, 2001)
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR: The Reign of a Great Publisher
(By WARD JUST, July 19, 2001)
LETTERS: Why Isn't the U.S. Making Friends?
(By RAYMOND D. GASTIL et. al., July 19, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Decline on Bleak Earnings Reports
[Dow -37, Nasdaq -51] (By SHERRI DAY, July 19, 2001)
Greenspan Warns of Serious Risk but Says Rebound May Be in Sight
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 19, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: American Express to Cut Jobs as Junk Bond Losses Mount
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, July 19, 2001)
AOL Time Warner Posts Mixed Results in Quarter
(By SETH SCHIESEL, July 19, 2001)
At Apple, Price Cuts and Upgrades
(By STEVE LOHR, July 19, 2001)
AT&T Rejects Comcast Offer on Cable Unit; Halts Spinoff
(By SETH SCHIESEL, July 19, 2001)
Book Business Is Latest Battleground Over Contracts and Copyrights
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 19, 2001)
I.B.M. Earnings Meet Expectations
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, July 19, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Summer Jobs Are Hard to Come By
(By ALAN B. KRUEGER, July 19, 2001)
* ART: Twice Stolen, Twice Found: A Case of Art on the Lam [Dürer]
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, July 19, 2001)
* ARTS IN AMERICA: Of Cycles and Scriptures: Chafing Against Rituals
(By DINITIA SMITH, July 19, 2001)
BOOKS: 'LIT LIFE': Serving Roasted Author, Preferably au Jus
(By JANET MASLIN, July 19, 2001)
* MAKING BOOKS: It's Not What It Used to Be
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, July 19, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: Recapturing a Partnership That Was Lost
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 19, 2001)
THEATER: HAROLD PINTER PLAYS: Pinter the Actor Meets Pinter the Writer
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 19, 2001)
* TV CRITIC: After All the Guests Agree, What More Is There to Say?
(By JULIE SALAMON, July 19, 2001)
GARDENING: From Outfields to Art, One Blade at a Time
(By JOHN LELAND, July 19, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 19, 2001)
* Looking for Clues in Junior's Keystrokes
(By LISA GUERNSEY, July 19, 2001)
Mining a Dot-Com Disaster for EBay Sales
(By TODD LAPPIN, July 19, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: Film's Rival Is Gaining
(By DAVID POGUE, July 19, 2001)
Voice Recognition Software Helping Dyslexics
(By IAN AUSTEN, July 19, 2001)
HOW IT WORKS: Using the Internet to Cut Phone Calls Down to Size
(By DAVID J. WALLACE, July 19, 2001)
Ancient Egypt, With a Pager as Your Guide
(By CATHERINE GREENMAN, July 19, 2001)
What's Next: Staying Online Without Cutting Off the Rest of the World
(By, July 19, 2001)
HEALTH: Mastectomy May Aid Those With Gene
(By REUTERS, July 19, 2001)
Wednesday, July 18, 2001:
On This Day: July 18 (Hermann Von Reichenau 7/18/1013-9/24/1054, Robert Hooke 7/18/1635-3/3/1703,
Royall Tyler 7/18/1757-8/26/1826, William Thackeray 7/18/1811-12/24/1863, Philip Snowden 7/18/1864-5/15/1937,
Vidkun Quisling 7/18/1887-10/24/1945, Victor Gruen 7/18/1903-2/14/1980, S. I. Hayakawa 7/18/1906-2/27/1992,
Clifford Odets 7/18/1906-8/14/1963, Hume Cronyn 1911, Nelson Mandela 1918, Dick Button 1929,
Hunter S. Thompson 1937, Paul Verhoeven 1938, Brian Auger 1939, Dion DiMucci 1939, James Brolin 1940,
Lonnie Mack 1941, Martha Reeves 1941, Kurt Mann 1947, Audrey Landers 1959, Elizabeth McGovern 1961,
Jack Irons 1962, Vin Diesel 1967)
Spain Checks Army Rising as Morocco Forces Rebel; 2 Cities in Africa Bombed
(By William P. Carney, July 18, 1936)
* Andrei A. Gromyko: Flinty Face of Postwar Soviet Diplomacy
[7/18/1909-7/2/1989] (By CRAIG R. WHITNEY, July 4, 1989)
* Katharine Graham of Washington Post Dies at 84
(By MARILYN BERGER, July 18, 2001)
Robert Frazer Rushmer, Dies at 86; Developed Heart Monitoring
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 18, 2001)
Eugene Brooks, a Lawyer and Poet, Dies at 80 [Allen Ginsberg's brother]
(NY TIMES, July 18, 2001)
Richard Rogers, Harvard Film Teacher, Dies at 57
(NY TIMES, July 18, 2001)
Jerome A. Danzig, 88, Rockefeller Adviser, Dies
(NY TIMES, July 18, 2001)
James Bernard, Film Composer, Dies at 75
(NY TIMES, July 18, 2001)
Mike Saltzstein, 60, Coney Island's Carousel Man, Dies
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 18, 2001)
F.B.I. Check Finds Laptops and Weapons Are Missing
(By DAVID JOHNSTON, July 18, 2001)
Police See Nothing to Link Missing Intern and Dead Women
(By JAMES RISEN & RAYMOND BONNER, July 18, 2001)
A Real Estate Mystery on Proper Nantucket
(By CAREY GOLDBERG, July 18, 2001)
Official Defends Her Conduct in the Vote Counting in Florida
(By DANA CANEDY, July 18, 2001)
U.S. Resident Will Likely Be Tried This Month in China
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 18, 2001)
Argentine With a Headache: The Economy
(By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, July 18, 2001)
China Reports 7.8% Growth in Economy
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 18, 2001)
* Teachers' Ongoing Training Includes DNA Lessons
(By KAREN W. ARENSON, July 18, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: A Filmmaker and a Castle, Both With a View
(By ROBIN FINN, July 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Katharine Graham
(NY TIMES, July 18, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Kay's Amazing Grace
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 18, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Other People's Money
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 18, 2001)
OP-ED: Free Trade Has to Be Managed
(By JEFFREY E. GARTEN, July 18, 2001)
OP-ED: A Bad Call
(By JIM BOUTON, July 18, 2001)
LETTERS: At Cheney's House, 186,000 Points of Light
(By FRED POLVERE & KENDALL WELLS, July 18, 2001)
BUSINESS: Rally Builds on Positive Earnings Reports
[Dow +134, Nasdaq +38] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 18, 2001)
Intel Earnings Beat Estimates by 2¢
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 18, 2001)
Earnings at Apple Beat Expectations; Sales Miss Target
(By STEVE LOHR, July 18, 2001)
Merrill and Schwab Say Earnings Show Steep Declines
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, July 18, 2001)
MANAGEMENT: What Dad (the Boss) Says, Goes
(By LISA FICKENSCHER, July 18, 2001)
THE BOSS: Taking Charge in the Huddle
(By William R. Johnson, CEO, H.J. Heinz Co., July 18, 2001)
* LIFE'S WORK: My Indirect Career Path
(By LISA BELKIN, July 18, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Filming the Comic and the Absurd in Czech History
(By JOSEPHINE SCHMIDT, July 18, 2001)
BOOKS: 'HERE': Blurring Borders in the New World [Canada & Mexico]
(By DAVID M. OSHINSKY, July 18, 2001)
Culture Notes: Another View [David Hockney]
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 18, 2001)
FILM: JURASSIC PARK 3': It's Risky Crashing a Raptor Convention
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 18, 2001)
MUSIC: 3 Routes to the Heart of Africa Out Loud
(By JON PARELES, July 18, 2001)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: Building Bridges With Buoyant Spirits Under the Stars
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, July 18, 2001)
* THEATER: How 'Seussical: The Musical' Was Puffed Into a Big Flop
(By ROBIN POGREBIN, July 18, 2001)
THEATER: 'CYMBELINE': Hark, Golden Lads and Girls, Was That a Helicopter?
(By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, July 18, 2001)
TV: The Roman Empire Without the Plebeians
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, July 18, 2001)
TV NOTES: No Wiseguys for 'X-Files'
(By BILL CARTER, July 18, 2001)
FOOD: Follow That Watermelon!
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 18, 2001)
FOOD: In France, It's Finally Time for Tea
(By SUZY GERSHMAN, July 18, 2001)
FOOD: In Japan, a Steak Secret to Rival Kobe
(By STEPHANIE STROM, July 18, 2001)
THE CHEF: Tom Colicchio [Recipe: Potatto Gnocchi]
(By Tom Colicchio with Florence Fabricant, July 18, 2001)
THE MINIMALIST: Crispy Lamb Chops Grilled to a T
(By MARK BITTMAN, July 18, 2001)
DINING: Watermelon: No Seeds, Thanks, I'm Cooking [3 recipes]
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 18, 2001)
DINING: Knife Maker Prefers to Step Back Into the Past
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 18, 2001)
Tuesday, July 17, 2001:
On This Day: July 17 (Alexander Baumgarten 7/17/1714-5/26/1762, Elbridge Gerry 7/17/1744-11/23/1814,
John Jacob Astor 7/17/1763-3/29/1848, Sir Erskine Holland 7/17/1835-5/24/1926, Ernest Rhys 7/17/1859-5/25/1946,
S.Y. Agnon 7/17/1889-3/11/1970, Earle Stanley Gardner 7/17/1889-3/11/1970, Georges Lemaitre 7/17/1894-6/20/1966,
James Cagney 7/17/1899-3/30/1986, William Gargan 7/17/1905-2/16/1979, Art Linkletter 1912, Phyllis Diller 1917,
Juan Antonio Samaranch 1920, Diahann Carroll 1935, Lucie Arnaz 1951, David Hasselhoff 1952, Phoebe Snow 1952,
Nancy Giles 1960)
U.S. And Soviet Astronauts Unite Ships And Then Join In Historic Handshakes
(By John Noble Wilford, July 17, 1975)
* James Cagney Is Dead at 86; Master of Pugnacious Grace
[7/17/1899-3/30/1986] (By PETER B. FLINT, March 31, 1986)
Rodney Kirk, Director Of Manhattan Plaza, Is Dead at 67
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 17, 2001)
Norman Singer, Executive Who Led Arts Organizations, Dies at 80
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 17, 2001)
Andrew Gibson, an Official in the Nixon Commerce Dept., Dies at 79
(By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, July 17, 2001)
Michael Murtagh, Brookhaven Physicist, Dies at 57
(NY TIMES, July 17, 2001)
Cheney Calls on Navy to Pay Bill to Light His Home
(By PHILIP SHENON, July 17, 2001)
Study Says 2000 Election Missed Millions of Votes
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, July 17, 2001)
Russia and China Sign 'Friendship' Pact
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, July 17, 2001)
INVERCRERAN JOURNAL: Fish Farms Spawn Trouble for Salmon Anglers
(By ALAN COWELL, July 17, 2001)
In Court, a Priest Reveals a Secret He Carried for 12 Years [confession of killer]
(By JIM DWYER, July 17, 2001)
Art Dealer Faces Charges in Trading of Antiquities
(By SUSAN SAULNY, July 17, 2001)
All Languages, All the Time, and All Over the Suburban Dial [radio]
(By DAVID W. CHEN, July 17, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Like Politics, Except the 400-Pound Gorilla Is Real [Steven Sanderson & Bronx Zoo]
(By JOHN KIFNER, July 17, 2001)
SPORTS: New Leader Represents Old Order
(By GEORGE VECSEY, July 17, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Don't Look Back
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 17, 2001)
OP-ED: The Recount Is In, and the Supreme Court Loses
(By JEFFREY ROSEN, July 17, 2001)
OP-ED: The Best Investment in Helping Poor Nations
(By PAUL H. O'NEILL, July 17, 2001)
OP-ED: Selling a Book With More Than Guesswork
(By JAMES ATLAS, July 17, 2001)
LETTERS: Great American Books
(By JASON EPSTEIN, July 17, 2001)
BUSINESS: Technology Continues Losses as Investors Take Profits
[Dow -67, Nasdaq -56] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 17, 2001)
* Several Rough Years Are Seen for Semiconductor Industry
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 17, 2001)
Ex-Alcoa Boss May Become a Man of Steel
(By LESLIE WAYNE, July 17, 2001)
Lucent Seeks One.Tel Payment
(By BECKY GAYLORD, July 17, 2001)
* ARTS ABROAD: A Sandinista Who Renounced the Sword for the Pen
(By STEPHEN KINZER, July 17, 2001)
BOOKS: 'JUNO & JULIET': Double Trouble in the Big City of Galway
(By RICHARD EDER, July 17, 2001)
CIRCUS: 'MÉLANGES': Whimsical, Dreamy and Outright Wacky
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 17, 2001)
DANCE: 'THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS': Pick a Sin and Run With It
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 17, 2001)
DANCE: 'A CURIOUS INVASION': Stroll Around the Grounds, Mindful of the Sprinklers
(By JACK ANDERSON, July 17, 2001)
DANCE: INFINITY DANCE THEATER: A Vision of Choreography That Includes a Wheelchair
(By JACK ANDERSON, July 17, 2001)
ROCK REVIEW: AREA: ONE: The Sound Was Spinning at Jones Beach
(By JON PARELES, July 17, 2001)
TV: Reality Island: Overcrowded, but Showing No Signs of Sinking
(By BILL CARTER, July 17, 2001)
PARIS DIARY: American Style From the 60's Captures New Imaginations
(By GUY TREBAY, July 17, 2001)
FRONT ROW: Sensible Shoes
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, July 17, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Live by the Pen, Die by the Sword
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, July 17, 2001)
* Clever Wiring Harnesses Tiny Switches [molecular electronics]
(By KENNETH CHANG, July 17, 2001)
* Olympics Ignite a New Battle of Marathon
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, July 17, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: Marine Motion Detectors
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 17, 2001)
PERSONAL HEALTH: A Human Touch Is Added to Infant Formulas
(By JANE E. BRODY, July 17, 2001)
HEALTH: A Rainbow of Differences in Gays' Children
(By ERICA GOODE, July 17, 2001)
* HEALTH: For Some, Insulin Without Needles
(By RANDI HUTTER EPSTEIN, July 17, 2001)
VIDEOS ON HEALTH: No Yoga Studio Nearby? Your Chair Will Do
(By ANDREA HIGBIE, July 17, 2001)
HEALTH: Doctors See Improvements in Artificial-Heart Patient
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 17, 2001)
Johns Hopkins Admits Fault in Fatal Experiment
(By GINA KOLATA, July 17, 2001)
Monday, July 16, 2001:
On This Day: July 16 (Clare of Assisi 7/16/1194-8/11/1253, Andrea Del Sarto 7/16/1486-9/28/1530,
Marc-Rene Montalembert 7/16/1714-3/29/1800, Sir Joshua Reynolds 7/16/1723-2/23/1792,
Camille Corot 7/16/1796-2/22/1875, Mary Baker Eddy 7/16/1821-12/3/1910, Fannie Zeisler 7/16/1863-8/20/1927,
Roald Amundsen 7/16/1872-6/18/1928, Barbara Stanwyck 7/16/1907-1/20/1990, Guy 7/16/1921-2/17/1989,
Vincent Sherman 1906, Barnard Hughes 1915, Dick Thornburgh 1932, Corin Redgrave 1939, Margaret Court 1942,
Ruben Blades 1948, Michael Flatley 1958, Phoebe Cates 1963, Will Ferrell 1967, Corey Feldman 1971)
* Ex-Czar Nicholas of Russia Killed by Order of Ural Soviet
(NY TIMES, July 16, 1918)
* Ginger Rogers, Who Danced With Astaire and Won an Oscar for Drama, Dies at 83
[7/16/1911-4/25/1995] (By PETER B. FLINT, April 26, 1995)
Meyer Potamkin, Banker With an Eye for Art, Dies, Dies at 91
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 16, 2001)
Paul Magloire, Former Haitian Ruler, Is Dead at 94
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 16, 2001)
Washington Post's Katharine Graham Is Injured
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 16, 2001)
Mormons Rebuild a Temple on Hallowed Ground
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, July 16, 2001)
Democrats Seek Inquiry on Florida Vote Count
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, July 16, 2001)
Surveillance Cameras Incite Protest
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 16, 2001)
Hispanic Workers Die at Higher Rate
(By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, July 16, 2001)
China and Russia Draw Closer, With Ceremony Today
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, July 16, 2001)
SHANGHAI JOURNAL: High-Rises Displace the Proletariat
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 16, 2001)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, July 16, 2001)
Movie Made for Russia Roils Brighton Beach
(By SUSAN SACHS, July 16, 2001)
METRO MATTERS: Bye-Bye, Boroughs? Not Just Yet
(By JOYCE PURNICK, July 16, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Florida's Flawed Ballots
(NY TIMES, July 16, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A Rocky Road for AT&T
(NY TIMES, July 16, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: A Second Injustice?
(By BOB HERBERT, July 16, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Stem Cell Genie
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 16, 2001)
OP-ED: The Coming AIDS Crisis in China
(By BATES GILL and SARAH PALMER, July 16, 2001)
OP-ED: Europe's Chance in the Mideast
(By GEOFFREY WHEATCROFT, July 16, 2001)
LETTERS: Teaching Takes Skill, as Well as Smarts
(By ROBERT LAURENCE & PETER SACKS, July 16, 2001)
BUSINESS: Cashing In on Black Readers
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 16, 2001)
An Executive's Missing Years: Papering Over Past Problems
(By FLOYD NORRIS, July 16, 2001)
AT&T Is Said to Be Open to Courtship of Its Cable Unit
(By SETH SCHIESEL & GERALDINE FABRIKANT, July 16, 2001)
* NEW ECONOMY: Online Journalism Comes of Age
(By DAVE KANSAS, July 16, 2001)
* Russian Internet Use Is Low, but Great Potential Is Pushing Expansion
(By JOHN VAROLI, July 16, 2001)
Internet Music Start-Up to Obtain Licenses
(By MATT RICHTEL, July 16, 2001)
When Site Sponsorship Threatens Credibility
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, July 16, 2001)
Offline Stalwarts Could Use Some Online Marketing
(By BERNARD STAMLER, July 16, 2001)
Book Chronicles a Colliding of Interests
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, July 16, 2001)
MEDIA TALK: Reporter to Cover Mergers from Other Side
(By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, July 16, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Amazon's Chief Agrees to Play Barbecue Chef
(By SAUL HANSELL, July 16, 2001)
Oxford Dictionary Gives 'Concise' a New Meaning
(By LAURIE J. FLYNN, July 16, 2001)
* For a Tiny Pacific Nation, Its Domain Is Its Treasure
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 16, 2001)
* Some Business-to-Business Marketplaces Showing Staying Power
(By BOB TEDESCHI, July 16, 2001)
Joint Effort to Investigate Gene Functions [Celera Genomics & Isis Pharmaceuticals]
(NY TIMES, July 16, 2001)
BOOKS: 'A COLD CASE' & 'JUSTICE': True Crimes, Famous and Forgotten
(By JANET MASLIN, July 16, 2001)
Culture Notes: Playing, Singing, Acting
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 16, 2001)
DANCE: Gimmicks, Games and Explanation to Create Dancegoers
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 16, 2001)
DANCE: BRIDGE FOR DANCE: Youthful Angst and Ambivalence
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 16, 2001)
MUSIC: 'A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM': Ardor, Elegance and Trees
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, July 16, 2001)
MUSIC: A Journey From the Loud to the Lyric
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 16, 2001)
POP: A TRIBUTE TO ARMSTRONG: The Good Times of New Orleans
(By JON PARELES, July 16, 2001)
THEATER: A 60's Shakespeare à Go-Go, With Hints of James Bond
(By ANITA GATES, July 16, 2001)
Stringing Together Taut Episodes, Not Codas, on 'The Sopranos'
(By BILL CARTER, July 16, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING | ELMORE LEONARD: Easy on the Hooptedoodle
(By ELMORE LEONARD, July 16, 2001)
Sunday, July 15, 2001:
On This Day: July 15 (Inigo Jones 7/15/1573-6/21/1652, Rembrandt Van Rijn 7/15/1606-10/4/1669,
Clement Moore 7/15/1779-7/10/1863, Sir Henry Cole 7/15/1808-4/18/1882, Mother Cabrini 7/15/1850-12/22/1917,
Alfred Northcliffe 7/15/1865-8/14/1922, Jacques Riviere 7/15/1886-2/14/1925, Thomas Francis, Jr. 7/15/1900-10/1/1969,
Iris Murdoch 7/15/1919-2/8/1999, Philly Joe Jones 7/15/1923-8/30/1985, Philip Carey 1925,
Alex Karras 1935, Ken Kercheval 1935, Patrick Wayne 1939, Jan-Michael Vincent 1944, Linda Ronstadt 1946,
Kim Alexis 1960, Brigitte Nielsen 1963, Scott Foley 1972)
Americans Drive Germans Back Over Marne: Take 1,000 Prisoners and Check Big Drive
(By Edwin L. James, July 15, 1918)
* Iris Murdoch, Novelist and Philosopher, Is Dead
[7/15/1919-2/8/1999] (By RICHARD NICHOLLS, February 9, 1999)
Maria Chabot, 87, Dies; Began Indian Market
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 15, 2001)
Fred Marcellino, 61, Designer of Elegant Best-Seller Covers, Dies
(By STEVEN HELLER, July 15, 2001)
Arnold Peyser, TV Writer, Dies at 80
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 15, 2001)
Bush Aides Weigh Legalizing Status of Mexicans in U.S.
(By ERIC SCHMITT, July 15, 2001)
Pentagon Officials Report Hit in Missile Defense Test
(By JAMES DAO, July 15, 2001)
How Bush Took Florida: Mining the Overseas Absentee Vote
(By DAVID BARSTOW & DON VAN NATTA Jr., July 15, 2001)
Lieberman Put Democrats in Retreat on Military Vote
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, July 15, 2001)
POLITICAL BRIEFING: 2004 Buzz: Bradley, Kerry, Gore and More
(By B. DRUMMOND AYRES JR., July 15, 2001)
Critics at Home Surfacing in Wake of China's Successful Bid
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 15, 2001)
Bush Senior, on His Son's Behalf, Reassures Saudi Leader
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 15, 2001)
Fighting Molestation, and a Stigma, in Japan
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, July 15, 2001)
From New York to Hollywood, Vieques Has Issues for Everyone
(By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ, July 15, 2001)
OUR TOWNS: Our Cave's Better Than Their Cave: Our Cows Actually Fell In
(By MATTHEW PURDY, July 15, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Embryo Taboos
(NY TIMES, July 15, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: I'm Still Here
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 15, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: A Latin Tragedy
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 15, 2001)
OP-ED: The Alchemy of Stem Cell Research
(By DAVID J. ANDERSON, July 15, 2001)
OP-ED: Nuclear Arms Still Keep the Peace
(By ROBERT S. McNAMARA & THOMAS GRAHAM Jr., July 15, 2001)
BUSINESS: Belt Tightening Seen as Threat to the Economy
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, July 15, 2001)
Against All Odds, a Telecom Rebirth
(By STEPHEN LABATON & RIVA D. ATLAS, July 15, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: A Tale of Woe in Cable Country
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, July 15, 2001)
Investing With David A. Katz: Matrix Advisors Value Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, July 15, 2001)
MARKET WATCH: What Government Gives, It Can Take Away
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 15, 2001)
Trouble in Argentina May Help Other Emerging Markets
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, July 15, 2001)
* PRELUDES: Have Your Freedom Now, or Later?
(By ABBY ELLIN, July 15, 2001)
An Online Auctioneer That Helps Cut Costs
(By ERLE NORTON, July 15, 2001)
A Showman Speeds the Makeover of Ted Turner's Empire [CNN]
(By JIM RUTENBERG, July 15, 2001)
As Rules Ease, More Citizens Choose to Fly 2 Flags
(By AMY CORTESE, July 15, 2001)
A Company Credo, as Applied or Not [LifeScan defect]
(By JEFFREY L. SEGLIN, July 15, 2001)
Hold the Homogeneity. Hot Dogs Stay Local.
(By GLENN COLLINS, July 15, 2001)
* MONEY & MEDICINE: When Doctors Feel Disposable
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, July 15, 2001)
* Virtual Revenge and the Decline of the Dot-Coms
(By AMY HARMON, July 15, 2001)
Who Said You Can't Be Too Rich?
(By DANNY HAKIM, July 15, 2001)
* ART: Harriet Casdin-Silver: A Science of Illusion in Her Art [Holography]
(By MILES UNGER, July 15, 2001)
* ART: Behind a Masterpiece May Be Another Masterpiece [Michelangelo]
(By SARAH BAYLISS, July 15, 2001)
BALLET: Sylvie Guillem: A Star Brings Tough Love to a Classic Ballet
(By ALAN RIDING, July 15, 2001)
DANCE: Keeping Two Talents in Balance
(By APOLLINAIRE SCHERR, July 15, 2001)
* FILM: Pinter's Films Intimidate With Words and Silence
(By DAVID THOMSON, July 15, 2001)
FILM: A British Director, His Swedish Films, a Lovely Muse
(By ALAN RIDING, July 15, 2001)
FILM: For Him/Her, the 'Hedwig' Film Is/Isn't the Same
(By PETER MARKS, July 15, 2001)
MUSIC: Old Sounds From the New World
(By JOSEPH HOROWITZ, July 15, 2001)
MUSIC: A Female Singer in Holiday's Class and in Her Shadow
(By FRANCIS DAVIS, July 15, 2001)
MUSIC: Beethoven, Mozart and... Hummel?
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, July 15, 2001)
MUSIC: A Judge's Work Isn't Easy When No One Is Guilty
(By TERRY TEACHOUT, July 15, 2001)
MUSIC: Through College and Life, In Harmony
(By EVAN EISENBERG, July 15, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: When a 'Late Style' Gets an Early Start
(By VICKI GOLDBERG, July 15, 2001)
THEATER: Harold Pinter: His Genius Is to Find the Drama Between the Words
(By MICHAEL BILLINGTON, July 15, 2001)
* THEATER: Notes on Pinter, Given by Pinter
(By MEL GUSSOW, July 15, 2001)
TV: The Inmates of 'Oz' Move Into a New Emerald City
(By LAUREN DAVID PEDEN, July 15, 2001)
FASHION: Fashionistas, Ecofriendly and All-Natural
(By RUTH LA FERLA, July 15, 2001)
FASHION: ON THE STREET: Bill Cunningham
(Photographs By BILL CUNNINGHAM, July 15, 2001)
LIVING: NOTICED: A Publicist Consumed by Fires She Fanned
(By RICK MARIN, July 15, 2001)
VOWS: Jaime Chapin and Timothy Miller
(By MEL WATKINS, July 15, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Justice Scalia Rises to a Linguistic Challenge
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 15, 2001)
* Questions for Barry Bonds
(By ALAN SCHWARZ, July 15, 2001)
* Faking It: The Internet Revolution Has Nothing to Do With the Nasdaq
(By MICHAEL LEWIS, July 15, 2001)
A Do-It-Yourself 'Star Wars'
(By J. HOBERMAN, July 15, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Firm Commitments
(By RANDY COHEN, July 15, 2001)
* FIVE FROM SEBASTIAO SELGADO: A Master Chooses Photojournalism's Best Shots
(By, July 15, 2001)
PHENOMENON: The Secret Agents of Capitalism Are All Around Us
(By JIM RUTENBERG, July 15, 2001)
What They Were Thinking [Shoes]
(Photo: DEIRDRE BRENNAN, Interview: CATHERINE SAINT LOUIS, July 15, 2001)
Fetal Surgery Is a Complicated Procedure Getting More So
(By MAGGIE JONES, July 15, 2001)
STYLE: BEST OF THE COLLECTIONS: Dance This Mess Around [Slide Show]
(By AMY M. SPINDLER, July 15, 2001)
FOOD DIARY: Lovin' Spoonfuls
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 15, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 15, 2001)
William F. Buckley Jr., 'Elvis in the Morning': The King and I
(By Robert Plunket, July 15, 2001)
* 'The Strength of Poetry': The Personal Is Poetical
(By Edward Mendelson, July 15, 2001)
* Lee Alan Dugatkin, 'The Imitation Factor': Guppy Love
(By Jon W. Turney, July 15, 2001)
Jenna Weissman Joselit, 'A Perfect Fit': Designing Women
(By Laura Shapiro, July 15, 2001)
Tales From Both Sides of the Hyphen [Asian-Americans]
(By Will Blythe, July 15, 2001)
THE CLOSE READER: Joseph J. Ellis and the Wound
(By JUDITH SHULEVITZ, July 15, 2001)
Saturday, July 14, 2001:
On This Day: July 14 (Jules, Cardinal Mazarin 7/14/1602-3/9/1661, John Gibson Lockhart 7/14/1794-11/25/1854,
James McNeill Whistler 7/14/1834-7/17/1903, Emmeline Pankhurst 7/14/1858-6/14/1928, Gustav Klimt 7/14/1862-2/6/1918,
Happy Chandler 7/14/1898-6/15/1991, Pancho Barnes 7/14/1901-3/?/1975, Irving Stone 7/14/1903-8/26/1989,
Woody Guthrie 7/14/1912-10/3/1967, Sir Geoffrey Wilkinson 7/14/1921-9/26/1996, Gloria Stewart 1910,
Gerald R. Ford 1913, Ingmar Bergman 1918, Dale Robertson 1923, Hary Dean Stanton 1926,
Nancy Olson 1928, Polly Bergen 1930, Rosey Grier 1932, Del Reeves 1932, Jerry Houser 1952, Matthew Fox 1966)
* Mariner 4 Makes Flight Past Mars [also Adlai Stevenson Dies at 65 in London]
(By WALTER SULLIVAN, July 14, 1965)
* James McNeill Whistler Dies at 69 in London
[7/14/1834-7/17/1903] (By NY Times, July 18, 1903)
Morris H. Bergreen, 83; Led Philanthropic Group Is Dead
(By ERIC PACE, July 14, 2001)
Maceo Anderson, Tap Dancer, Dies at 90
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 14, 2001)
John Holdridge, Ambassador And Asian Affairs Expert, Dies at 76
(By ERIC PACE, July 14, 2001)
* A Unique Portrait of Jesus by Jefferson
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, July 14, 2001)
Septuplets Born in Capital Are Third Set in the World Conceived
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, July 14, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Unexpected Priority: Stem Cell Research's Rise as a Test for Bush
(By FRANK BRUNI, July 14, 2001)
Indignities Mount for Peru's Ex-Spy Chief After Long Manhunt
(By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, July 14, 2001)
A Summit Meeting of Old Foes: India and Pakistan
(By CELIA W. DUGGER, July 14, 2001)
An Uncertain Cure for the Bleak Side of Niagara Falls
(By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr., July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: Beijing Wins Olympics Bid for 2008 Games
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: Being Host Keeps the Pressure on China
(By GEORGE VECSEY, July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: Joyous Vindication and a Sleepless Night in China
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: The Bill for These Games Could Exceed $20 Billion
(By MARK LANDLER, July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: TV MARKETING: Some Morning Events Will Be Live for 2008 Games
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: American Cities Upbeat for 2012 Olympics
(By FRANK LITSKY, July 14, 2001)
SPORTS: RED SOX 3, METS 1: Cone's Return to Shea Haunts Mets
(By TYLER KEPNER, July 14, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Cone Making the Most of Latest Last Chance
(By JACK CURRY, July 14, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Disappearance of Chandra Levy
(NY TIMES, July 14, 2001)
OP-ED: AT HOME ABROAD: Homage to Balanchine
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, July 14, 2001)
OP-ED: The New Laws of Nations
(By LAURA D. TYSON, July 14, 2001)
OP-ED: Can Communism Compete With the Olympics?
(By ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI, July 14, 2001)
OP-ED: Fighting Wildfires and the Lessons of Experience
(By MURRY TAYLOR, July 14, 2001)
LETTERS: Ah, Romance! Our Love, My Money
(By ARLENE G. DUBIN & TAMARA METZ, July 14, 2001)
BUSINESS: Dow Is Up 60.07 as Wall St. Expects Profit Improvement
[Dow +60, Nasdaq +9] (By REUTERS, July 14, 2001)
No Bailout Is Planned for Argentina
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, July 14, 2001)
U.S. Reports Weak Retail Sales, Casting Doubt on Early Recovery
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, July 14, 2001)
* Mutual Fund's Bet on Energy Appears Brilliant, Too Late
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, July 14, 2001)
DANCE: 'TAP CITY': The Old Tap and the New Team Up With Affection
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 14, 2001)
* IDEAS: The Many Veils of Meaning Left by Leonardo
(By SARAH BOXER, July 14, 2001)
* IDEAS: Correcting Her Idea of Politically Correct
(By ALAN RIDING, July 14, 2001)
OPERA: A Visually Elegant 'Orfeo ed Euridice'
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, July 14, 2001)
OPERA CONNECTIONS: How 'White Raven' Echoes 'Einstein' but Breaks Its Own New Ground
[Philip Glass] (By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, July 14, 2001)
THEATER: 'LA LUPE': Soul-Shaking Power of a Cuban Wonder
(By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, July 14, 2001)
Friday, July 13, 2001:
On This Day: July 13 (Simeon North 7/13/1765-8/25/1852, Otto Wagner 7/13/1841-4/11/1918,
Sidney Webb 7/13/1859-10/13/1947, Mordecai Ardon 7/13/1896-6/18/1992, Mickey Walker 7/13/1901-4/28/1981,
Sir Reginald Goodall 7/13/1901-5/5/1990, Dave Garroway 7/13/1913-7/21/1982, Alberto Ascari 7/13/1918-5/26/1955,
Charles Scribner, Jr. 7/13/1921-11/11/1995, Jack Kemp 1935, Patrick Stewart 1940, Robert Forster 1941,
Harrison Ford 1942, Roger McGuinn 1942, Louise Mandrell 1954, Cameron Crowe 1957, Victoria Shaw 1962)
Power Failure Blacks Out New York; Thousands Trapped In The Subways;
Looters & Vandals Hit Some Areas
(By Robert D. McFadden, July 13, 1977)
Death of General Nathan Bedford Forrest at 56, The Great Guerrilla's History
[7/13/1821-10/29/1877] (By NY Times, October 30, 1877)
* Abe Schrader, 100, a King of Seventh Avenue Fashion
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 13, 2001)
Heinz Prechter, Car Customizer and Bush Booster, Dies at 59
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, July 13, 2001)
Hal Goldman, Comedy Writer, Dies at 81
(NY TIMES, July 13, 2001)
Benjamin M. Kahn B'nai B'rith Official, 87
(NY TIMES, July 13, 2001)
Military Scuttles Strategy Requiring '2-War' Capability
(By THOM SHANKER, July 13, 2001)
From Nancy Reagan, a Nod Toward Embryonic Stem Cell Research
(By FRANK BRUNI, July 13, 2001)
* On Top in Bulgaria: New Premier Is the Old King
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, July 13, 2001)
Chinese Officials Avoid Tough Questions
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 13, 2001)
Beijing Is Selected as 2008 Host City
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 13, 2001)
BOLDFACE NAMES: Discovering the Inner Child [Marlon Brando]
(By JOYCE WADLER, July 13, 2001)
* PUBLIC LIVES: Appraiser Examines a Newfound Treasure: Fame [John A. Hays]
(By ROBIN FINN, July 13, 2001)
SPORTS: Others Need to Do Dirty Work for Red Sox
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, July 13, 2001)
SPORTS: Martínez's Injury Keeps Red Sox Guessing
(By JACK CURRY, July 13, 2001)
* TV SPORTS: ESPN Plays Games With the Classics
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, July 13, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Next Microsoft Windows
(NY TIMES, July 13, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The Rumsfeld Defense
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 13, 2001)
Overcome by Slavery
(By IRA BERLIN, July 13, 2001)
Real Test of Welfare Reform Still Lies Ahead
(By WILLIAM JULIUS WILSON & ANDREW J. CHERLIN, July 13, 2001)
* LETTERS: She's Got Bette Davis Eyes. Or Does She? [Walt Disney]
(By ROBERT DORFMAN, July 13, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Optimistic Outlook From Microsoft Lifts Shares Sharply
[Dow +238, Nasdaq +104] (By SHERRI DAY, July 13, 2001)
* Genetically Engineered Wine
(By ANDREW POLLACK, July 13, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: The Only Strong Thing at Corning is the Balance Sheet
(By FLOYD NORRIS, July 13, 2001)
AT&T Wireless Names Agency
(By ALLISON FASS, July 13, 2001)
Motorola Says It Expects Loss in 3rd Quarter
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, July 13, 2001)
Juniper Earnings Beat Sharply Reduced Forecasts for Quarter
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 13, 2001)
ART: CY TWOMBLY: An Artist Shows a Side of Tactile Eloquence
(By ROBERTA SMITH, July 13, 2001)
ART: 'RALPH FASANELLA'S AMERICA': American History, Sliced to Order
(By HOLLAND COTTER, July 13, 2001)
ART: Master Drawings from the Smith College of Art: Masters Who Put Thought on Paper
(By KEN JOHNSON, July 13, 2001)
INSIDE ART: A Plum to Sotheby's [Douglas S. Cramer's art collection]
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 13, 2001)
* ANTIQUES: Glass That Glowed in the Dark Ages
(By WENDY MOONAN, July 13, 2001)
* BOOKS: William Zinsser, 'Easy to Remember': That Beautiful Rhapsody of Love and Youth and Spring
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, July 13, 2001)
DESIGN: Century of Design, Part 4: 1975-2000: With All Those Chairs, Who Stood in the 80's?
(By GRACE GLUECK, July 13, 2001)
FILM: 'THE SCORE': Brando and De Niro Chill Over Ice
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 13, 2001)
FILM: 'MADE': A Couple of Chumps Mess Up the Big Deal
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 13, 2001)
FILM: 'LEGALLY BLONDE': A Rich Ditz Has Both Brains and the Last Laugh
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 13, 2001)
FILM: 'PANDAEMONIUM': Romantic Poets Offer Rewarding Company
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 13, 2001)
FILM: At the Movies: Two Roles, One Secret
(By DAVE KEHR, July 13, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: SEBASTIAO SALGADO: Can Suffering Be Too Beautiful?
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, July 13, 2001)
TV: 'The Natural History of the Chicken: Even Unfried, Chickens Are So Easy to Love
(By JULIE SALAMON, July 13, 2001)
VIDEO CRITIC: NY Video Festival: In the Flux of Reality Recomposed
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 13, 2001)
WEEKENED EXCURSION: How Dowdy Old Baltimore Turned Fashionable
(By DIANE COLE, July 13, 2001)
HEALTH: Artificial Heart Maker Restricts News of Patient's Condition
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 13, 2001)
HEALTH: Company Using Cloning to Yield Stem Cells
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, July 13, 2001)
HEALTH: Study Breaks New Ground on Variations in Genome
(By NICHOLAS WADE, July 13, 2001)
Thursday, July 12, 2001:
On This Day: July 12 (Julius Caesar 7/12/100 BC-3/15/44BC, Henry David Thoreau 7/12/1817-5/6/1862,
Eugene Boudin 7/12/1824-8/8/1898, Benjamin Altman 7/12/1840-10/7/1913, George Eastman 7/12/1854-3/14/1932,
Grederick Birkenhead 7/12/1872-9/30/1930, Amedeo Modigliani 7/12/1884-1/24/1920,
Kirsten Flagstad 7/12/1895-12/7/1962, Buckminister Fuller 7/12/1895-7/1/1983,
Oscar Hammerstein II 7/12/1895-8/23/1960, Pablo Neruda 7/12/1904-1973, Milton Berle 1908,
Andrew Wyeth 1917, Monte Hellman 1932, Van Cliburn 1934, Bill Cosby 1937, Denise Nicholas 1944,
Richard Simmons 1948, Jay Thomas 1948, Cheryl Ladd 1951, Kristi Yamaguchi 1971)
Geraldine Ferraro Is Chosen by Mondale as Running Mate, First Women on Major Ticket
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, July 12, 1984)
* Dr. Carver Is Dead at 81; Negro Scientist's Work Improved Agriculture
[7/12/1861-1/5/1943] (By NY Times, January 6, 1943)
Uzaemon Ichimura, Kabuki Actor, Dies at 84
(NY TIMES, July 12, 2001)
Lou Kusserow, Led Football Upset of Army, Dies at 73
(By FRANK LITSKY, July 12, 2001)
* Gerald L. Geison, 58, Historian Who Found a Flawed Pasteur, Dies
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, July 12, 2001)
In a Flash, Flood Leaves Town's Future in Question
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, July 12, 2001)
For Clinic, Stem Cell Test Is Rebirth of Old Debate
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, July 12, 2001)
Conservatives Pressure Bush in Cell Debate
(By ROBIN TONER, July 12, 2001)
Nationalists on Taiwan Try to Regroup
(By MARK LANDLER, July 12, 2001)
Fossils May Be Earliest Human Link
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, July 12, 2001)
Bugs Bunny to Lose His Hutch on Times Sq. in October
(By CHARLES V. BAGLI, July 12, 2001)
BOLDFACE NAMES: A Legal Eagle Surveys Prey
(By JOYCE WADLER, July 12, 2001)
SPORTS: Whether or Not Beijing Gets Olympics, There Will Be Dissatisfaction
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 12, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Beijing Olympic Bid
(NY TIMES, July 12, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Where Is Judge Crater?
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 12, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Get Well, George [George Harrison]
(By BOB HERBERT, July 12, 2001)
OP-ED: House Ethics and Gary Condit
(By LANNY J. DAVIS, July 12, 2001)
OP-ED: Virtual Hollywood
(By ANDY BOROWITZ, July 12, 2001)
* LETTERS: Now Batting for Boston: John Adams
(By OLGA COREN et. al., July 12, 2001)
BUSINESS: Small Gains Fall Back as Investors Read the Signs
[Dow +65, Nasdaq +9] (By REUTERS, July 12, 2001)
Microsoft to Give Computer Makers Greater Freedom
(By STEVE LOHR, July 12, 2001)
* Yahoo, Reporting a Loss, Looks for Joint Ventures
(By SAUL HANSELL, July 12, 2001)
Motorola Has Operating Loss of $232 Million in Quarter
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, July 12, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Can Good Looks Guarantee a Product's Success? [Power Mac G4 Cube]
(By VIRGINIA POSTREL, July 12, 2001)
Judge Grants Authors a Victory in Fight Over Digital-Book Rights
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 12, 2001)
AT&T to Weigh Comcast Offer for Cable Unit
(By SETH SCHIESEL, July 12, 2001)
CBS Expels Reality Show Contestant Over Threats
(By BILL CARTER, July 12, 2001)
ARTS IN AMERICA: A Patriarch of the Blues Burnishes His Own Legend
(By STEVEN KINZER, July 12, 2001)
BOOKS: Hornby and Buckley in Unfamiliar Waters
(By JANET MASLIN, July 12, 2001)
MAKING BOOKS: A New Jersey Literary Sensibility?
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, July 12, 2001)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: Bernstein Is Signed, Sealed, Postmarked & Delivered With Exuberance
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 12, 2001)
MUSIC CRITIC: Beyond Borders, Without Boundaries
(By JON PARELES, July 12, 2001)
OPERA: 'WHITE RAVEN': From Philip Glass, a Journey to Realms Off the Charts
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, July 12, 2001)
OPERA: 'LUCI MIE TRADITRICI': Conflating Cause and Effect, and Reducing All to Bare Lines
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, July 12, 2001)
THEATER: 'A THOUSAND CLOWNS': Back When Oddballs Roamed the Earth
(By BRUCE WEBER, July 12, 2001)
THEATER: 'EDDA': Dark-Age Obscurities Pulled Into the Light
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, July 12, 2001)
TV: 'NIGHT VISIONS': Four Not-So-Spooky Summertime Minidramas
(By RON WERTHEIMER, July 12, 2001)
HOME: Just Divorced, Gone Shopping
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, July 12, 2001)
HOME: A Little Hangar in the Hamptons [Dean & DeLuca]
(By RAUL A. BARRENECHE, July 12, 2001)
HOME: Close to Home: Where the City Is Horizons Away
(By MAGGIE KIRN, July 12, 2001)
HOME: Art Appreciation in a New Light
(By JOHN YUNIS, July 12, 2001)
HOME: The Sale of a Lifetime [Designer Clothing]
(By DONNA PAUL, July 12, 2001)
GARDEN Q & A: Harvesting a Friend's Roses
(By LESLIE LAND, July 12, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 12, 2001)
Summer, the Silicon Season
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, July 12, 2001)
* STATE OF THE ART: A Final Internet Freebie on the Phone
(By DAVID POGUE, July 12, 2001)
* Through the Looking Glass, to Holographic Data Storage
(By ANNE EISENBERG, July 12, 2001)
* A Quick Way to Search for Images on the Web
(By ANDREW ZIPERN, July 12, 2001)
* To Cash In on a Lifestyle, Apple Hits the Mall
(By JENNIFER 8. LEE, July 12, 2001)
Books for the Blind Go Digital
(By CATHERINE GREENMAN, July 12, 2001)
This Summer, Computer Camp Awaits
(By KATIE HAFNER, July 12, 2001)
The Videoconference as a Bicoastal Pas de Deux
(By HOWARD MILLMAN, July 12, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: When to Buy Summer Shoes Online
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, July 12, 2001)
A Class Reunion? Relax. You Don't Have to See Them.
(By DEBRA A. KLEIN, July 12, 2001)
A Bigger Hard-Disk Drive For Those With Room to Grow
(By ANDREW ZIPERN, July 12, 2001)
For Better Mousing, a Better Mousetrap
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 12, 2001)
Tips for the Era Of Constant Connection
(By IAN AUSTEN, July 12, 2001)
Q & A: Ensnared on the Web? How to File a Complaint
(By J. D. BIERSDORFER, July 12, 2001)
HEALTH: Artificial Heart Recipient Has Another Procedure
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 12, 2001)
Wednesday, July 11, 2001:
On This Day: July 11 (Robert I, the Bruce 7/11/1274-6/7/1329, John Quincy Adams 7/11/1767-2/23/1848,
John Fowler 7/11/1826-12/1864, John Wanamaker 7/11/1838-12/2/1922, Leon Bloy 7/11/1846-11/2/1917,
Harry Kellar 7/11/1849-3/10/1922, Georgiana Barryomore 7/11/1854-7/2/1893, Sir Joseph Larmor 7/11/1857-5/19/1942,
Roger de La Fresnaye 7/11/1885-11/27/1925, Arthur Tedder 7/11/1890-6/3/1967, E. B. White 7/11/1899-10/1/1985,
Rudolf Abel 7/11/1903-11/15/1971, Yul Brynner 7/11/1920-10/10/1985, Brett Somers 1927, Tab Hunter 1931,
Bonnie Pointer 1951, Stephen Lang 1952, Leon Spinks 1953, Sela Ward 1956)
Skylab Debris Hits Australian Desert; No Harm Reported
(By RICHARD D. LYONS, July 11, 1979)
* E.B. White, Essayist and Stylist, Dies
[7/11/1899-10/1/1985] (By HERBERT MITGANG, Oct. 2, 1985)
John Carroll-Abbing, 88, Dies; Founded Italian Boys' Town
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 11, 2001)
Eugene Cronkite, Dies at 86; Found Cancer's Links to Radiation
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, July 11, 2001)
Fred Neil, Folk Singer and Composer, Dies at 64
(NY TIMES, July 11, 2001)
Otto Rosenberg, Gypsy Who Survived Auschwitz, Dies at 74
(By ERIC PACE, July 11, 2001)
Report Looks at a Generation, and Caring for Young and Old
(By TAMAR LEWIN, July 11, 2001)
U.S. Won't Block China's Bid for Olympics
(By JANE PERLEZ, July 11, 2001)
Beijing Stages War Games, Mostly for Taiwan
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 11, 2001)
U.S. Professor to Be Tried in Beijing on Spying Charge
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 11, 2001)
Beijing Must Wait and Worry About 2008 Olympics
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 11, 2001)
In New York, Bush Visits Sites Evocative of His Philosophy
(By ADAM NAGOURNEY, July 11, 2001)
In Population Ranks, an Ascent of Asians
(By JANNY SCOTT, July 11, 2001)
Moving This Heron Required a Crane (and a Nasty 3-Year Court Battle)
(By ELISSA GOOTMAN, July 11, 2001)
* ALL-STAR GAME: Ripken Steals the All-Star Show
(By MURRAY CHASS, July 11, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Managing Kenya's Masai Mara
(NY TIMES, July 11, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: The Lost Girls
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 11, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Outside the Box
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 11, 2001)
OP-ED: Soft Money's Scanty Leftovers
(By DONNA BRAZILE, July 11, 2001)
OP-ED: Unprepared for Class
(By JONATHAN ZIMMERMAN, July 11, 2001)
BUSINESS: Sour News From Corning Helps Push Down Shares Sharply
[Dow -124, Nasdaq -64] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 11, 2001)
* Brokerage Puts Limits on Stock Analysts
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 11, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Compaq Announces More Layoffs [eliminate 1,500 more jobs]
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 11, 2001)
A Top Editor Is Appointed at Time Inc. [John Huey]
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, July 11, 2001)
* MANAGEMENT: Tracking Sales and the Cashiers
(By JENNIFER 8. LEE, July 11, 2001)
* THE BOSS: Keeping the Band Together
(By WILLIAM G. PARRETT, President, Deloitte & Touche, July 11, 2001)
* WORKPLACE: Sorting Out a Future After Dot-Com
(By SUSAN STELLIN, July 11, 2001)
Front Row Seat on the Road of Life
(By TOM SWEENEY, July 11, 2001)
N.F.L.'s Internet Deal Will Be Largest Ever
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, July 11, 2001)
ART: Suit Seeks Fee in Looted Art's Recovery
(By TERRY PRISTIN, July 11, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Undeterred by Crises, São Paulo Biennial Celebrates at 50
(By LARRY ROHTER, July 11, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'Libraries in the Ancient World': Shh! There's No Talking in the Papyrus Section
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, July 11, 2001)
BOOK CRITIC: Isaac Babel May Yet Have the Last Word
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, July 11, 2001)
Culture Notes: Falling in Love
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 11, 2001)
* DANCE: 'SYMBIOSIS': The Yin and Yang of Adam and Eve
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 11, 2001)
FILM: 'Final Fantasy: The Spirit Within': She's Lovely, but Alas, She's Only Software
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 11, 2001)
THEATER: 'Blue Window': More Banter, Please, and Pass the Emotional Indigestion
(By BRUCE WEBER, July 11, 2001)
THEATER: 'Where's My Money?': A Woman With Everything, or Maybe Nothing
(By ANITA GATES, July 11, 2001)
TV NOTES: Internal Tension on 'Big Brother'
(By BILL CARTER, July 11, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Second Look Backs Doubts on Finding Key Particle
(By JAMES GLANZ, July 11, 2001)
HEALTH: In a Shift, an H.M.O. Rewards Doctors for Quality Care
(By MILT FREUDENHEIM, July 11, 2001)
HEALTH: Scientists Create Scores of Embryos to Harvest Stem Cells
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, July 11, 2001)
Tuesday, July 10, 2001:
On This Day: July 10 (John Calvin 7/10/1509-5/27/1564, Sir William Blackstone 7/10/1723-2/14/1780,
Robert Chambers 7/10/1802-3/17/1871, Camille Pissarro 7/10/1830-11/13/1903, Adolphus Busch 7/10/1839-10/10/1913,
Nikoli Tesla 7/10/1856-1/7/1943, Finley Peter Dunne 7/10/1867-4/24/1936, Marcel Proust 7/10/1871-11/18/1922,
Mary McLeod Bethune 7/10/1875-5/18/1955, Carl Orff 7/10/1895-3/29/1982, Kurt Alder 7/10/1902-6/20/1958,
Jorge Icaza 7/10/1906-5/26/1978, David Brinkley 1920, Jake LaMotta 1921, Eunice Kennedy Shriver 1921,
David Dinkins 1927, Jerry Herman 1933, Ivan Passer 1933, Lawrence Pressman 1939, Virginia Wade 1945,
Ron Glass 1945, Sue Lyon 1946, Arlo Guthrie 1947, Jessica Simpson 1980)
* 100 Planes Clash in Battle Over a Convoy in Channel; Fight Off Italy Indecisive
(By JAMES MACDONALD, July 10, 1940)
* Arthur Ashe, Tennis Star, Is Dead at 49
[7/10/1943-2/6/1993] (By ROBIN FINN, February 8, 1993)
* Charles Neider, Writer and Scholar of Mark Twain, Dies at 86
(NY TIMES, July 10, 2001)
Rolim A. Amaro, 58, Dies; Built Up Brazil's TAM Airline
(By SIMON ROMERO, July 10, 2001)
Christl Haas, Skier, Dies at 57
(By AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, July 10, 2001)
Japan's Refusal to Revise Textbooks Angers Neighbors
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, July 10, 2001)
* Public Lives: The (Mostly Late) Greats, in New Circulation [dead authors]
(By ROBIN FINN, July 10, 2001)
OP-ED: Destiny Revisits the Great Plains
(By RICHARD MANNING, July 10, 2001)
OP-ED: The Declining Terrorist Threat
(By LARRY C. JOHNSON, July 10, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Policy by Obituary
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 10, 2001)
LETTERS: A National Deficit, of Teachers
(By HAROLD O. LEVY et. al., July 10, 2001)
BUSINESS: Key Stock Gauges Gain Modestly
[Dow +43, Nasdaq +23] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 10, 2001)
News Analysis: For AT&T, Breaking Up Is Hard to Do
(By SETH SCHIESEL, July 10, 2001)
Uncertainty for Consumers if Comcast Buys AT&T Cable
(By SIMON ROMERO, July 10, 2001)
Market Place: Investor Uncertain of Comcast Deal
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, July 10, 2001)
AT&T Splits Off Wireless Subsidiary
(NY TIMES, July 10, 2001)
Online Grocer Webvan Calls It Quits After Running Out of Money
(By SAUL HANSELL, July 10, 2001)
LVMH's Shares Rise Sharply as It Reports Sales Gains
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, July 10, 2001)
ARTS: Arts Abroad: Closing La Scala to Open It Up
(By ALAN RIDING, July 10, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Yonder Stands Your Orphan': Giving In to the Urge to Do Bad in the South
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, July 10, 2001)
DANCE: Puppets and People Tell Tales of Antiquity
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 10, 2001)
MUSIC: Summergarden Concerts: Ensemble Pluckily Confronts Rush Hour
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, July 10, 2001)
POP: Manu Chao: Embracing the World With a Perky Beat
(By JON PARELES, July 10, 2001)
POP REVIEW: Mouse on Mars: Visitors From Another Plane
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 10, 2001)
STORY-TELLING: Introducing Urbanites to the Lure of a Well-Told Tale
(By CELESTINE BOHLEN, July 10, 2001)
THEATER: 'A Prophet Among Them': A Full Life as Lived and Invented
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, July 10, 2001)
THEATER: 'Edward III': Restored to the Canon, Plus Funny Bits
(By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, July 10, 2001)
LIVING: Nostalgia Tripping to the Mysterious East and Psychedelia
(By CATHY HORYN, July 10, 2001)
LIVING: Front Row: New Star at Gucci
(By CATHY HORYN, July 10, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Mating Dances Go On and On
(By NATALIE ANGIER, July 10, 2001)
* A Tree Project Helps the Genes of Champions Live On
(By JIM ROBBINS, July 10, 2001)
* Particle Physicists Plan the Next Big Thing
(By JAMES GLANZ, July 10, 2001)
* Mars Gets Its Close-Up
(NY TIMES, July 10, 2001)
Mission Will Add New Portal to Space Station
(By WARREN E. LEARY, July 10, 2001)
Toxic Algae Found in Chesapeake Bay and Adjacent Waterways
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 10, 2001)
Q&A: Rodents and Rabies
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, July 10, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: Pesky Bug Buildup
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 10, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: The Weight on the World [snow deforms earth's crust]
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 10, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: A Good Swift Chomp [getting wasps to work]
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 10, 2001)
* HEALTH: Scientist's Stem Cell Work Creates Uproar
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, July 10, 2001)
* HEALTH: National Cancer Institute to Buy Access to Rival's Genome Data
(By NICHOLAS WADE, July 10, 2001)
* DOCTOR'S WORLD: A Risky Operation: Building a Better Heart
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D., July 10, 2001)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Easing Parents' Anxiety Over a Child's Fever
(By JANE E. BRODY, July 10, 2001)
Certainty and Uncertainty in Treatment of Lyme Disease
(By PHILIP J. HILTS, July 10, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / BEHAVIOR: Clearing the Air for Children of Smokers
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 10, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / STANDARDS: Study Says Asthma Care Lags for Blacks
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 10, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / DIAGNOSIS: More Samples Urged in Prostate Testing
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 10, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / TESTING: Quality of Herbal Sleep Aid Is Criticized
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 10, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / REACTIONS: A Note of Caution on Bee Sting Allergies
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, July 10, 2001)
Monday, July 9, 2001:
On This Day: July 9 (Thomas De La Warr 7/9/1577-6/7/1618, Thomas Davenport 7/9/1802-7/6/1851,
Elias Howe 7/9/1819-10/3/1867, Ottorino Respighi 7/9/1879-4/18/1936, Mikhail Borodin 7/9/1887-5/15/1976,
Samuel Eliot Morison 7/9/1887-5/15/1976, Dorothy Thompseon 7/9/1894-1/30/1961,
Albert Wedemeyer 7/9/1897-12/17/1989, Carmen Franco 7/9/1900-2/6/1988, Meryn Peake 7/9/1911-11/17/1968,
Edward Heath 1916, Ed Ames 1927, Donald Rumsfeld 1932, James Hampton 1936, Brian Dennegy 1938,
Richard Roundtree 1942, Dean Koontz 1945, O.J. Simpson 1947, Chris Cooper 1951, John Tesh 1952,
Debbie Sledge 1954, Lisa Banes 1955, Tom Hanks 1956, Kelly McGillis 1957, Courtney Love 1964,
Fred Savage 1976)
William Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech at Chicago's Democratic National Convention
(NY TIMES, July 9, 1896)
Hassan II of Morocco Dies at 70; A Monarch Oriented to the West
[7/9/1929-7/23/1999] (By JOSEPH R. GREGORY, July 24, 1999)
Cartoon about the American Indian burial mounds
(Harper's Weekly, July 9, 1887)
Tove Jansson, Who Created Universe of Trolls, Dies at 86
(By ERIC PACE, July 9, 2001)
John F. Hotchkin, a Leader of Catholic Ecumenical Efforts, Dies at 66
(By ERIC PACE, July 9, 2001)
H. S. Grossbardt, 85, Record Store Founder, Dies
(By MATT SEDENSKY, July 9, 2001)
Jack Gwillim, Actor, Dies at 91
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 9, 2001)
White House Memo: Amazing Amazement in Bush at Play
(By FRANK BRUNI, July 9, 2001)
Phnom Penh Journal: An Artist Preserving Life's Little Moments
(By SETH MYDANS, July 9, 2001)
Metropolitan Diary [Perry Como]
(By ENID NEMY, July 9, 2001)
Deep in the Red, Indie Film Force Fades to Black
(By TERRY PRISTIN, July 9, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Barry Bonds Chases a Record
(NY TIMES, July 9, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: The C.I.A.'s China Tilt
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 9, 2001)
OP-ED: The Ichiro Effect [Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle Mariners rookie]
(By MASARU IKEI, July 9, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Death-Penalty Dissenters
(By BOB HERBERT, July 9, 2001)
BUSINESS: Microsoft Sees Clear Victory on 'Bundling'
(By STEVE LOHR, July 9, 2001)
Pursuing a New Line in Optical Research [JDS Uniphase, Lucent, Corning]
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, July 9, 2001)
* Me-Zine Journalism for Fun and (Sometimes) Profit
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, July 9, 2001)
* Market Place: AT&T Spins off Wireless Company
(By SIMON ROMERO, July 9, 2001)
A Rival Is Offering $44.5 Billion for AT&T's Cable TV Business
(By MICHAEL BRICK & SETH SCHIESEL, July 9, 2001)
LightSurf Piggybacks a Tiny Camera on a Cell Phone
(By LAURIE J. FLYNN, July 9, 2001)
E-Commerce Report: Sites Offer Data to Boost Value
(By BOB TEDESCHI, July 9, 2001)
On Television: Reality TV Genre Is Maturing
(By BILL CARTER, July 9, 2001)
Setting New Frontiers in the Autobiography
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 9, 2001)
Some Prefer Online 'A.I.' Tie-In to the Movie
(By DAVID F. GALLAGHER, July 9, 2001)
Compressed Data: A College Paper's Role in the Microsoft Appeal
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, July 9, 2001)
* Compressed Data: Painting Some Pictures of the Online Shopper
(By SUSAN STELLIN, July 9, 2001)
Patents: Putting One's Affairs in Order
(By SABRA CHARTRAND, July 9, 2001)
Dustin Hoffman Loses Appeals Court Case
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 9, 2001)
ART: A Familiar Mural Finds Itself Without a Wall
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 9, 2001)
* ARTS ONLINE: So Is It or Isn't It a Museum? Only the Web Suffix Knows
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, July 9, 2001)
* BOOK: Discovering the Facts of a Man Who Lived a Monstrous Fiction
(By MEL GUSSOW, July 9, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Mary George of All-northover': A Young Woman Adrift Amid Britain's Debris
(By RICHARD EDER, July 9, 2001)
OPERA CRITIC: Breakfast Could Be a Singing Career's First Course
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, July 9, 2001)
OPERA: 'Otello': How an Opera by Rossini Interpreted Shakespeare
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, July 9, 2001)
POP: Emmylou Harris: Still Finding Joy in a Broken Heart
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 9, 2001)
HEALTH: Medical Journals to Offer Lower Rates in Poor Nations
(By MELODY PETERSEN, July 9, 2001)
Sunday, July 8, 2001:
On This Day: July 8 (Samuel Gross 7/8/1805-5/6/1884, Alfred Binet 7/8/1857-10/18/1911,
Kathe Kollwitz 7/8/1867-4/22/1945, Percy Grainger 7/8/1882-2/28/1961, Ernst Bloch 7/8/1885-8/4/1977,
Alec Waugh 7/8/1898-9/3/1981, David Lilienthat 7/8/1899-1/15/1981, Nelson Rockefeller 7/8/1908-1/26/1979,
Louis Jordan 7/8/1908-2/4/1975, Billy Eckstine 7/8/1914-3/8/1993, Roone Arledge 1931, Jerry Vale 1932,
Steve Lawrence 1935, Cynthia Gregory 1946, Kim Darby 1948, Raffi 1948, Anjelica Huston 1951,
Kevin Bacon 1958, Toby Keith 1961, Rob Burnett 1962)
* Truman Names MacArthur to Head U.N. Force in Korea
(By WALTER H. WAGGONNER, July 8, 1950)
* John Davison Rockefeller Dies at 97, Financier's Fortune in Oil Amassed in Industrial Era of 'Rugged Individualism'
[7/8/1839-5/23/1937] (NY TIMES, May 24, 1937)
Maximus V Dies, the Patriarch of Greek Catholics, Dies at 93
(By PAUL LEWIS July 8, 2001)
William J. Mouton, Engineer and Professor, Dies at 70
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 8, 2001)
Caroline Jones, 59, Founder of Black-Run Ad Companies, Dies
(By STUART ELLIOTT, July 8, 2001)
Asoka Roy, 85, a Pioneer in Nurse-Midwifery, Is Dead
(By JENNIFER CHIU, July 8, 2001)
Barry Levin, Notable Lawyer in Los Angeles, Found Dead
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 8, 2001)
Bush Weighs Stem Cell Decision Amid Reminders of Suffering
(By FRANK BRUNI, July 8, 2001)
Taiwan's Hard Times Rekindle 'One China' Debate
(By MARK LANDLER, July 8, 2001)
The Irish and Europe: A Time for Soul-Searching
(By BRIAN LAVERY, July 8, 2001)
Iran's Reformers Set Out to Save the Economy
(By NAZILA FATHI, July 8, 2001)
U.S. Rejects China's $1 Million Plane-Parking Bill
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 8, 2001)
Where a Little Coca Is as Good as Gold
(By JUAN FORERO, July 8, 2001)
Where Have All the Windmills Gone?
(By JAMES STERNGOLD, July 8, 2001)
Prayer Vigil Near Times Square Shows Support for Muslim Cleric
(By YILU ZHAO, July 8, 2001)
Telemarketing Schemes Burn Twice, Taking Money and Then Selling Lists
(By JOSEPH P. FRIED, July 8, 2001)
SPORTS: Baseball's Disputed Origin Is Traced Back, Back, Back
(By EDWARD WONG, July 8, 2001)
SPORTS: Beijing Expected to Get 2008 Summer Games
(By JERE LONGMAN, July 8, 2001)
OP-ED: Fictions About the Failure at Camp David
(By ROBERT MALLEY, July 8, 2001)
I.R.A. Guns and the Irish Impasse
(By JACK HOLLAND, July 8, 2001)
LIBERTIES: Camelot, With Older Babes
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 8, 2001)
RECKONINGS: A Leap in the Dark
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 8, 2001)
BUSINESS: A Strong Dollar Clouds Prospects for Quick Rebound
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 8, 2001)
Market Watch: Robust Dollar May Be Too Mighty for Its Own Good
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 8, 2001)
* A Wall Street 'Short' Is Part Investor, Part Detective
(By ALEX BERENSON, July 8, 2001)
* In Good Times or Bad, Funds Offer Managers Rich Lures
(By DANNY HAKIM, July 8, 2001)
* A Quarter of Gains, but Doubt Persists
(By DANNY HAKIM, July 8, 2001)
Is Healthy Fast Food Leaving a Slow Profit Lane?
(By KATE MURPHY, July 8, 2001)
How to Regain a Mouthful of Luster, for a Price
(By ANDREA HIGBIE, July 8, 2001)
Economic View: Surplus Magic Works Both Ways
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, July 8, 2001)
Market Insight: Can Retailers Rebound? Only the Consumer Knows
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, July 8, 2001)
Five Questions for Harry J. Pearce: Honesty Policy on Executive Illness
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER, July 8, 2001)
Backslash: Here's to a Really Useful Machine
(By MATT RICHTEL, July 8, 2001)
After Stocks Slump, Fund Fees Cause More Pain
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, July 8, 2001)
* Off the Shelf: When Disney Winked, Florida Swooned
(By ALECIA SWASY, July 8, 2001)
At 76, a Buy-and-Hold Manager Is Learning to Let Go, Bit by Bit
(By ABBY SCHULTZ, July 8, 2001)
* Strategies: Do Funds Charge Investors for Negative Value Added?
(By MARK HULBERT, July 8, 2001)
No Boardwalk or Top Hat, but It Does Have a Small Cap
(By ALEX BERENSON, July 8, 2001)
Rate Cuts Translate Into Gains for Bank Sector Funds
(By RIVA D. ATLAS, July 8, 2001)
The Rich Aren't That Different: Their Funds Can Plummet, Too
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, July 8, 2001)
A Longtime Star Hopes It's a Short-Term Slump
(By JANE TANNER, July 8, 2001)
Going Back to the Well, or Rather, the Cauldron [Book on Stock Trading]
(By EDWARD WYATT, July 8, 2001)
A Market Rebound Is Their Springboard
(By CAROLE GOULD, July 8, 2001)
A First Line of Defense, Armed With Headsets [Vanguard Index Fund]
(By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., July 8, 2001)
Wal-Mart Leader Charged With Continuing Legend
(By CONSTANCE L. HAYS, July 8, 2001)
Look Sharp: Trying to Run a Country Like a Corporation
(By DAVID E. SANGER, July 8, 2001)
WORD FOR WORD / The Long Gray Line: For Tomorrow's Army, Cadets Full of Questions
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, July 8, 2001)
How Many Poor Children Is Too Many?
(By SOMINI SENGUPTA, July 8, 2001)
* It Was a Dark and Stormy Life... [obituary writer]
(By JANNY SCOTT, July 8, 2001)
Dear World: Loose Lips Sink More Than Ships
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, July 8, 2001)
They Don't Just Kidnap Americans
(By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, July 8, 2001)
Designated Demon: The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Hitter [Barry Bonds]
(By ALAN SCHWARZ, July 8, 2001)
The Airport Wants You to Shop Till You Drop
(By JOE SHARKEY, July 8, 2001)
Merge? Yes and Non [GE & Honeywell]
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, July 8, 2001)
ART: David Hickey: In Santa Fe, Searching for the Meaning of Beauty
(By MICHAEL RUSH, July 8, 2001)
ART: Museum Planned for Works by 'Mad Potter'
(By RITA REIF, July 8, 2001)
DANCE: Paying Heed to the Mysteries of Trisha Brown
(By WENDY PERRON, July 8, 2001)
FILM: Seeking to Map Brando's Island
(By PATRICIA BOSWORTH, July 8, 2001)
FILM: Movie Stars Fear Inroads by Upstart Digital Actors
(By RICK LYMAN, July 8, 2001)
* MUSIC: Philip Glass: His Success, Like His Music, Keeps Repeating
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 8, 2001)
TV: 'SpongeBob SquarePants': The Cartoon World of a Joyful Sponge
(By JOYCE MILLMAN, July 8, 2001)
LIVING: FASHION: Hedi Slimane Puts the Sexy in Suit
(By CATHY HORYN, July 8, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Summer's Bold and Beautiful [15 photos]
(Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, July 8, 2001)
OUT THERE / MILAN: The Sons of Hercules Again Flex Their Muscles
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, July 8, 2001)
Vows: Marcia Lewis, Fred Bryan
(By KATHRYN SHATTUCK, July 8, 2001)
VIEW: Seeking the Ultimate Hard-Core Massage
(By DALE HRABI, July 8, 2001)
* TRAVEL: A Pompeii in Slow Motion
(By MEGAN HARLAN, July 8, 2001)
* TRAVEL ESSAY: Don't Take Boswell to the Beach
(By JENNIFER MOSES, July 8, 2001)
* On Language: How to Quote-Unquote Verbalize Your Punctuation
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 8, 2001)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Beginning and End: Why Are We Surprised That Childbirth Might Lead to Tragedy?
(By LAUREN SLATER, July 8, 2001)
* Questions for Jean-Paul Gaultier: An Artist? Moi?
(By LYNN HIRSCHBERG, July 8, 2001)
Salient Facts: Beach Hazards
(By AUSTIN BUNN, July 8, 2001)
The Ethicist: Charity Bytes
(By RANDY COHEN, July 8, 2001)
Russian Mothers Are Saving Their Sons in Chechnya
(By ELIZABETH RUBIN, July 8, 2001)
* It's Only Rhyming Quatrains, but I Like It: Do Songs Succeed as Poetry
(By JOHN LELAND, July 8, 2001)
Wicket Good: Jacques Fournier Is the Tiger Woods of Croquet
(By JOHN GROSSMANN, July 8, 2001)
LIVES: Parallels: Divorce period in the lives of his mother & sister
(Photos By Doug Dubois, Text by Courtney Eldridge, July 8, 2001)
Style: A Trip to Cyprus, the Homeland of Fashion Designer Hussein Chalayan
(By NEVILLE WAKEFIELD, July 8, 2001)
Food: A Few Literary Thoughts on the Ultimate Outdoor Spread
(By JULIA REED, July 8, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 8, 2001)
* The Great Leap Backward [May-lee Chai & Winberg Chai, 'The Girl From Purple Mountain']
(By GARY KRIST, July 8, 2001)
Lord of the Fliers [Walter Kirn, 'Up in the Air']
(By CHRISTOPHER BUCKLEY, July 8, 2001)
The Reproducers [Mark Ridley, 'The Cooperative Gene']
(By, July 8, 2001)
Maud Lavin, "Clean New World: Culture, Politics, and Graphic Design"
(By LESLIE CHESS FELLER, July 8, 2001)
Where the West Begins [Dominic Lieven's "Empire: The Russian Empire and Its Rivals"]
(By STEVEN MERRITT MINER, July 8, 2001)
* ON WRITERS AND WRITING: We Are All Tourists
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, July 8, 2001)
Saturday, July 7, 2001:
On This Day: July 7 (Joseph-Marie Jacquard 7/7/1752-8/7/1834, Abraham Cahan 7/7/1860-8/31/1951,
Gustave Mahler 7/7/1860-5/18/1911, Marc Chagall 7/7/1887-3/28/1985, George Cukor 7/7/1899-1/24/1983,
Vittorio De Sica 7/7/1901-11/13/1974, Robert Heinlein 7/7/1907-5/8/1988, Lawrence O'Brien 7/7/1917-9/28/1990,
Ezzard Charles 7/7/1921-5/28/1975, Gian Carlo Menotti 1911, Pinetop Perkins 1913, Pierre Cardin 1922,
Doc Severinsen 1927, David McCullough 1933, Ringo Starr 1940, Joe Spano 1946, Linda Williams 1947,
Shelley Duvall 1949, Roz Ryan 1951, Michelle Kwan 1980)
Reagan Nominates Sandra Day O'Connor as First Woman to Serve on Supreme Court
(By STEVEN R. WEISMAN, July 7, 1981)
* Satchel Paige, Black Pitching Star, Is Dead at 75
[7/7/1906-6/8/1982] (By JOSEPH DURSO, June 9, 1982)
Ernie K-Doe, 65, Who Sang 'Mother-in-Law' Is Dead
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 7, 2001)
Robert Hupka, 81, Toscanini Photographer, Dies
(NY TIMES, July 7, 2001)
Stephen Ailes, Former Secretary of Army, Is Dead at 89
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 7, 2001)
Tony Leswick, Rangers' Mighty Mouse, Dies at 78
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, July 7, 2001)
Ex-Agent Pleads Guilty in Spy Case
(By JAMES RISEN, July 7, 2001)
Among Nuptial Agreements, Post- Has Now Joined Pre-
(By TAMAR LEWIN, July 7, 2001)
Theft of Painkiller Reflects Its Popularity on the Street
(By FOX BUTTERFIELD, July 7, 2001)
Bush Banters, Works and Plays on Birthday With His Family
(By FRANK BRUNI, July 7, 2001)
Aunt of Missing Intern Says Lawmaker Is Impeding Search
(By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, July 7, 2001)
Beliefs: A Look at Pentecostalism From a Former Insider
(By PETER STEINFELS, July 7, 2001)
Smithsonian Official's Artifacts Investigated
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, July 7, 2001)
German Loggers to Leave 'African Eden' Untouched
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, July 7, 2001)
China Sets Trials of U.S.-Based Scholars
(By REUTERS, July 7, 2001)
Peixian Journal: Local Treat Angers World Pet Lovers
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 7, 2001)
NYC: How to Make a Pied Piper Obsolete [genetically modified cat]
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, July 7, 2001)
OP-ED: While Waiting for a War [Macedonia]
(By LAURA SECOR, July 7, 2001)
Desperate Parents and Dangerous Choices
(By MARTHA TOD DUDMAN, July 7, 2001)
JOURNAL: It's Good to Be the King
(By FRANK RICH, July 7, 2001)
AT HOME ABROAD: Bush: Sign of a Shift
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, July 7, 2001)
* Stocks Fall on Warnings by Key Technology Companies
[Dow -227, Nasdaq -76] (By MICHAEL BRICK, July 7, 2001)
Asian Electronics Slump, Hurting Market Indexes
(By DON KIRK, July 7, 2001)
Marconi, in 'Difficult Times,' Says Designated Chief Has Resigned
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 7, 2001)
ARTS: Andy Warhol's Montauk Estate Is on the Market for $50 Million
(By AL BAKER, July 7, 2001)
ART: Boston Artists Use Art to Fight Eviction Threats
(By JULIE FLAHERTY, July 7, 2001)
* IDEAS: What Is The Next Big Idea? Buzz Is Growing for 'Empire'
(By EMILY EAKIN, July 7, 2001)
IDEAS: Social Warming: Japan's Disabled Gain New Status
(By STEPHANIE STROM, July 7, 2001)
MUSIC: A Second Life for Historic Pipe Organs
(By ROBIN POGREBIN, July 7, 2001)
POP REVIEW: Echoes of a Vanished Brazil In the Subtle Bossa Nova
(By JON PARELES, July 7, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Evolving Reality TV Tests the Audience's Endurance
(By JULIE SALAMON, July 7, 2001)
Q&A With Kathleen M. Coleman: On Romans and the Gladiators
(NY TIMES, July 7, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Tiny Discovery May Answer a Question About the Big Bang
(By JAMES GLANZ, July 7, 2001)
Friday, July 6, 2001:
On This Day: July 6 (John Paul Jones 7/6/1747-7/18/1792, Sir William Hooker 7/6/1785-8/12/1865,
Maximilian 7/6/1832-6/19/1867, Vernor von Heidenstam 7/6/1859-5/20/1940, Godfrey Malvern 7/6/1883-5/8/1971,
Marc Bloch 7/6/1886-6/16/1944, Axel Theorell 7/6/1903-8/15/1982, Dorothy Kirsten 7/6/1910-11/18/1992,
Billy Haley 7/6/1925-2/9/1981, Nancy Reagan 1921, William Schallert 1922, Merv Griffin 1925,
Janet Leigh 1927, Della Reese 1931, Ned Beatty 1937, Gene Chandler 1937, George W. Bush 1946,
Fred Dryer 1946, Sylvester Stallone 1946, Burt Ward 1946, Shelley Hack 1952, Nanci Griffith 1953)
* Althea Gibson Becomes First Black to Win Wimbledon Tennis
(By FRED TUPPER, July 6, 1957)
* Frida Kahlo, Artist, Diego Rivera's Wife, Dies at 44
[7/6/1907-7/13/1954] (NY TIMES, July 14, 1954)
Leonard Pines, Former Owner of Hebrew National, Dies at 90
(By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON, July 6, 2001)
Hannelore Kohl, Ex-Chancellor's Wife, Commits Suicide
(NY TIMES, July 6, 2001)
Ronald Monchak, Dies at 65, Advertising Executive
(NY TIMES, July 6, 2001)
Leading Colleges Adopt New Guidelines for Awarding Financial Aid
(By KAREN W. ARENSON, July 6, 2001)
Bush Calls Jiang, Voicing Concerns Over Detentions
(By DAVID E. SANGER, July 6, 2001)
In Bucolic Normandy, the Earth Is Plunging
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, July 6, 2001)
OP-ED: Mideast Peace Can Only Be Made in America
(By DAVID KIMCHE, July 6, 2001)
OP-ED: How to Train ‹ and Retain ‹ Teachers
(By VARTAN GREGORIAN, July 6, 2001)
OP-ED: Stem Cell Debate Revives an Old Political Battle
(By RUTH J. KATZ, July 6, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Red Tide Rising
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, July 6, 2001)
Stocks Slump, Slammed by New Warnings
(By REUTERS, July 6, 2001)
* ART: French Paintings Embody Proustian Idylls of the Good Life
(By HOLLAND COTTER, July 6, 2001)
Inside Art: An Old Master Out of Hiding
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 6, 2001)
Antiques: A Lasting Imprint on Fabrics
(By WENDY MOONAN, July 6, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Schooling': Too Much to Say to Worry About Punctuation
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, July 6, 2001)
DANCE: Terpsichore Taps to Manhattan
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 6, 2001)
FILM: 'Kiss of the Dragon': In a Tough Spot? Fight Your Way Out
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 6, 2001)
FILM: 'Baise-Moi': Femmes Fatales Who Take the Term Literally
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 6, 2001)
FILM: Taking the Children: All He Wants Is His Mother, but She Doesn't Want Him
(By PETER M. NICHOLS, July 6, 2001)
FILM: 'Under the Fluttering Military Flag': A War Widow's Battle for the Truth
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, July 6, 2001)
FILM: 'Jump Tomorrow': Taking the Leap Into Love
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 6, 2001)
FILM: At the Movies: Cats, Dogs and Balance
(By RICK LYMAN, July 6, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Photos of Indian Women, Revered and Reviled
(By MARGARETT LOKE, July 6, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Quick as a Shutter, Group Photo Shows Shatter Conventional Wisdom
(By ROBERTA SMITH, July 6, 2001)
TV Weekend: Before Hollywood's `Traffic' Came the Elegant 'Traffik'
(By JULIE SALAMON, July 6, 2001)
LIVING: THE OUTSIDER: Revisiting the Analog World With a Longbow and Arrow
(By JAMES GORMAN, July 6, 2001)
WEEKEND EXCURSION: Charlottesville: The Other Utopia Jefferson Founded
(By PAULA DEITZ, July 6, 2001)
SCIENCE: Ancient Remains Block High-Rise in Miami
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 6, 2001)
Artificial Heart Patient Speaks With His Family and Doctors
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 6, 2001)
Thursday, July 5, 2001:
On This Day: July 5 (David Farragut 7/5/1801-8/14/1870, Robert Fitzroy 7/5/1805-4/30/1865,
Cecil Rhodes 7/5/1853-3/26/1902, Edouard Herriot 7/5/1872-3/26/1957, Judah Leon Magnes 7/5/1877-10/27/1948,
Dwight Davis 7/5/1879-11/28/1945, Wanda Landowska 7/5/1879-8/16/1959, Willem Drees 7/5/1886-5/14/1988,
John Howard Northrop 7/5/1891-5/27/1987, Henry Cabot Lodge 7/5/1902-2/27/1985, Georges Pompidou 7/5/1911-4/2/1974,
Manolete 7/5/1917-8/29/1947, Jatherine Helmond 1934, Shirley Knight 1936, Julie Nixon Eisenhower 1948,
Rich "Goose" Gossage 1951, Marc Cohn 1959)
* Ashe Topples Connors for Crown at Wimbledon
(By FRED TUPPER, July 5, 1975)
* Phineas T. Barnum, The Great Showman Dead at 80
[7/5/1810-4/7/1891] (NY TIMES, April 8, 1891)
Ely Callaway, Golf Club Maker, Dies at 82
(By CLIFTON BROWN, July 5, 2001)
Laura Foreman, Director of Dance Program at New School, Dies at 64
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 5, 2001)
John Trubin, Political Insider and Aide to Javits, Dies at 83
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 5, 2001)
Sect Clings to the Web in the Face of Beijing's Ban
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 5, 2001)
In China Labor Camp, Deaths Are Disputed
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 5, 2001)
Found in Clutter, a Relic of Lincoln's Death
(By PAUL ZIELBAUER, July 5, 2001)
OP-ED: Mexico's Growing Trade Advantage
(By ROBERT M. DUNN JR., July 5, 2001)
OP-ED: Romancing the Suburbs
(By CAMERON STRACHER, July 5, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Empathy for a Killer
(By BOB HERBERT, July 5, 2001)
* OP-ED ESSAY: Stem Cell Hard Sell
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 5, 2001)
LETTERS: Love Me Tender: Life in the Animal Kingdom
(By BONNIE STEINBOCK & HERBERT S. LEWIS, July 5, 2001)
BUSINESS: Overseas Shares Fall on Concerns About Technology
[Dow -91, Nasdaq -61] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 5, 2001)
Pursuing an American Dream While Following the Koran
(By SUSAN SACHS, July 5, 2001)
Loans, Interest Rates and a Religious Principle [Koran forbids riba or usury]
(By SHIRA J. BOSS, July 5, 2001)
Turnaround Specialists Land Atop Recruiters' Wish Lists
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER, July 5, 2001)
Shares of Marconi Plummet After It Projects Profit Shortfall
(By ALAN COWELL, July 5, 2001)
Tycoon Ends Online Venture in Hong Kong
(By MARK LANDLER, July 5, 2001)
Digital Recorder Can Blend MP3s With the Office Memos
(By IAN AUSTEN, July 5, 2001)
Play Money? Not to These News Investors
(By SARA ROBINSON, July 5, 2001)
Untangling the Online Gaming Web
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, July 5, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Not Exactly New, Not Exactly Circus, but a Magical Mix
(By ALAN RIDING, July 5, 2001)
BOOKS: A German Novelist's Dissent to His Country's Postwar 'Miracle'
(By RICHARD EDER, July 5, 2001)
BOOKS: David Lodge Writes of Intelligence: Academic, Artificial and Amorous
(By MEL GUSSOW, July 5, 2001)
DANCE: A Monkey Saves a Monk, Who Thereby Is Made Wiser
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 5, 2001)
OPERA: Puccini Arias Alfresco Can Be Yours for a Song
(By DAVID JAY LASKY, July 5, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: Club Master Has His Eye on Brooklyn
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 5, 2001)
TV: Aftershocks of Racial Tension on a Paris Street
(By ANITA GATES, July 5, 2001)
LIVING: A Canvas the Artist Curls Up In
(By ELAINE LOUIE, July 5, 2001)
Personal Shopper: Black and White Create a Standout Backdrop [6 photos]
(By MARIANNE ROHRLICH, July 5, 2001)
And the Decorators Said, Let There Be Pink
(By MARIANNE ROHRLICH, July 5, 2001)
HOUSE PROUD: For Two Worlds, Gently Colliding, Design Is a Passion
(By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, July 5, 2001)
An Island Getaway Without the Island
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, July 5, 2001)
Garden Q&A: Blotch Is Back
(By DORA GALITZKI, July 5, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 5, 2001)
* You've Got Maelstrom: Dealing With Too Much E-Mail
(By ROBERT STRAUSS, July 5, 2001)
* State of the Art: Portable Keyboards Let You Process Words Anywhere
(By DAVID POGUE, July 5, 2001)
* Online Shopper: Here's a Concept: Fixed Prices at EBay
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, July 5, 2001)
* Slow and Steady Wins, if Not Lost in the Mail [Turtle Postage Stamps]
(By SHELLY FREIERMAN, July 5, 2001)
10 Folders or 2? Some Tips for Organizing E-Mail
(By ROBERT STRAUSS, July 5, 2001)
Glitches Stymie Medical School Applicants
(By SALLY McGRANE, July 5, 2001)
* LETTERS: Borrowing Others' Ideas [Internet Cut & Paste]
(By ROBERT E. KAY, M.D. et. al., July 5, 2001)
* What's Next: Inside the Virtual Laboratory, Ideas Percolate Faster Than Rivalries
(By IAN AUSTEN, July 5, 2001)
* How It Works: Giving Diabetics (and Their Sore Fingers) a Break
(By JEFFREY SELINGO, July 5, 2001)
HEALTH: Artificial-Device Recipient Said to Make Excellent Progress
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 5, 2001)
Wednesday, July 4, 2001:
On This Day: July 4 (Jean-Pierre Blanchard 7/14/1753-3/7/1809, Nathaniel Hawthorne 7/4/1804-5/19/1864,
Giuseppe Garibaldi 7/4/1807-6/2/1882, E. R. Squibb 7/4/1819-10/25/1900, Stephen Foster 7/4/1826-1/13/1864,
Rube Goldberg 7/4/1883-12/7/1970, Louis B. Mayer 7/4/1885-10/29/1957, Gertrude Lawrence 7/4/1898-9/6/1952,
George Murphy 7/4/1902-5/3/1992, Lionel Trilling 7/4/1905-11/5/1975, Mitch Miller 1911, Abigail Van Buren 1918,
Ann Landers 1918, Eva Marie Saint 1924, Meil Simon 1927, Gina Lollobrigida 1928, George Steinbrenner 1930,
Ray Pillow 1937, Karolyn Grimes 1940, Geraldo Rivera 1943, Pam Shriver 1962)
Nation and Millions in City Joyously Hail Bicentennial
(By RICHARD F. SHEPARD, July 4, 1976)
Calvin Coolidge Dies at 60, Unusual Political Career, Never Defeated for an Office
[7/4/1872-1/5/1933] (NY TIMES, January 6, 1933)
* Carole Klein, 67; Biographer and Writer on Youth, Is Dead [Doris Lessing]
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 4, 2001)
Gina Cigna, Operatic Soprano, Dies at 101
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 4, 2001)
Ruth Sanger Dies at 82; Expert on Blood Grouping
(NY TIMES, July 4, 2001)
Margaret Kilgallen, a San Francisco Artist, Dies at 33
(By ROBERTA SMITH, July 4, 2001)
Mordecai Richler, Novelist Who Showed a Street-Smart Montreal, Dies at 70
(By ANTHONY DePALMA, July 4, 2001)
Archaeologists Find Evidence of Historic Fort
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 4, 2001)
Lessons: True or False or a Bit of Both
(By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, July 4, 2001)
Guitars Gently Weep as Nashville Pays Tribute to Chet Atkins
(By DAVID FIRESTONE, July 4, 2001)
Word of Falun Gong Deaths Sets Off Dispute on Cause
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 4, 2001)
143 Are Reported Dead in Crash of Russian Airplane in Siberia
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, July 4, 2001)
Terrorist Details His Training in Afghanistan
(By LAURA MANSNERUS & JUDITH MILLER, July 4, 2001)
History Is Remade, One Bronzed Gentleman After Another [Washington was 6'2"]
(By ANDY NEWMAN, July 4, 2001)
NYC: When a Billionaire Wants to Be Mayor, He's Just Mike
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, July 4, 2001)
OP-ED: Black Patriotism Enlarges the American Tradition
(By ROGER WILKINS, July 4, 2001)
OP-ED: Curious Fallout From Bush v. Gore
(By ALAN M. DERSHOWITZ, July 4, 2001)
OP-ED: An Economy for Kosovo, One Building Block at a Time
(By DAVID A. MOSS & BRUCE R. SCOTT, July 4, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: The Relaxation Response
(By MAUREEN DOWD, July 4, 2001)
BUSINESS: Warnings on Profits and Holiday Lull Keep Shares Flat
[Dow -23, Nasdaq -8] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 4, 2001)
Web Sales of Airline Tickets Are Making Hefty Advances
(By SAUL HANSELL, July 4, 2001)
Workplace: A Local Institution Makes His Rounds [UPS]
(By PATRICIA R. OLSEN, July 4, 2001)
Management: Why Not to Stonewall in the Midst of a Scandal
(By KURT EICHENWALD, July 4, 2001)
Life's Work: Rootless as the Zip Codes Churn
(By LISA BELKIN, July 4, 2001)
The Boss: Attuned to Hear 'Ka-Ching'
(By DAVID DYER CEO, Lands' End, Dodgeville, Wis., July 4, 2001)
Apple Will Halt Production of Its Cube-Shaped Computer
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 4, 2001)
* ARTS: Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Oratory
(By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, July 4, 2001)
* ARTS ABROAD: 30 Years Later, Jim Morrison Still Lights His Fans' Fire
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, July 4, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Yanks': We're Coming Over, and We Won't Come Back Till It's Over Over There
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, July 4, 2001)
DANCE: Pilobolus Dance Theater: Spiritual Ecstasy and Klezmer Frenzy
(By JACK ANDERSON, July 4, 2001)
DANCE: Nicholas Leichter Dance: Bodies Surge as Lives Are Lived in a Night
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 4, 2001)
DANCE: American Dance Festival: A Stream of Images Inspired by Surrealism
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 4, 2001)
FILM: 'Cats and Dogs': Can Good Public Relations Beat Brains? Look Around
(By A. O. SCOTT, July 4, 2001)
FILM: 'Scary Movie 2': They See Dead People, and Lots More
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, July 4, 2001)
FOOD: A Parade of Floats Up and Down the Avenues
(By FLORENCE FABRICANT, July 4, 2001)
FOOD: A Delicacy From the Land of Palms {Palm Salad]
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 4, 2001)
The Chef, Geoffrey Zakarian: Cooling Off With Fruit
(By GEOFFREY ZAKARIAN & FLORENCE FABRICANT, July 4, 2001)
The Minimalist: Potato Salad With a Bang [mussels & vinaigrette]
(By MARK BITTMAN, July 4, 2001)
5.2 Million Young Americans May Have Hearing Problems
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 4, 2001)
Patient Receives First True Artificial Heart
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 4, 2001)
Tuesday, July 3, 2001:
On This Day: July 3 (Robert Adam 7/3/1728-3/3/1792, Samuel Huntington 7/3/1731-1/5/1796,
John Singleton Copley 7/3/1738-9/9/1815, Dankmar Adler 7/3/1844-4/16/1900, Charlotte Gilman 7/3/1860-8/17/1935,
Franz Kafka 7/3/1883-6/3/1924, M.F.K. Fisher 7/3/1908-6/22/1992, Stavros Spyros Niarchos 7/3/1909-4/15/1996,
Dorothy Kilgallen 7/3/1913-11/8/1965, Ken Russell 1927, Pete Fountain 1930, Tom Stoppard 1937, Jay Tarses 1939,
Michael Cole 1945, Dave Barry 1947, Montel Williams 1956, Laura Branigan 1957, Tom Cruise 1962, Hunter Tylo 1962)
* Battle of Gettysburg ended after three days in a major victory for the North
(NY TIMES, July 3, 1863)
* George M. Cohan, 64, Dies at Home Here Overlooking Central Park
[7/3/1878-11/5/1942] (NY TIMES, November 6, 1942)
* Physicist Nikolai Basov Dies at 78; Won Nobel for Laser Research
(By KENNETH CHANG, July 3, 2001)
Kenneth S. Lynn, Biographer of Hemingway and Chaplin, Dies at 78
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, July 3, 2001)
Joe Henderson, Saxophonist and Composer, Dies at 64
(By BEN RATLIFF, July 3, 2001)
Cheney, Back at Work, Says He's Feeling 'Pretty Good'
(By ERIC SCHMITT, July 3, 2001)
News Analysis: Critics of Health Industry Shaped Debate on Patients' Rights
(By ROBERT PEAR, July 3, 2001)
Miami Herald's Top Editor to Lead The Boston Globe
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, July 3, 2001)
Critic of China Flees to U.S., Fearing Arrest in Crackdown
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 3, 2001)
* Shunned by Mother, Tiger Gets a Human Surrogate
(NY TIMES, July 3, 2001)
Woman Admits Guilt in Internet Case
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 3, 2001)
OP-ED: The Wrong Way to Protect the Jewish Past
(By SAMUEL GRUBER, July 3, 2001)
* OP-ED: Is John Adams Overrated?
(By FLOYD ABRAMS, July 3, 2001)
OP-ED: A Delicacy's Delicate Future [caviar]
(By JACQUES PÉPIN, July 3, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The Summer of '82
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, July 3, 2001)
LETTERS: Dick Cheney, Medical Role Model
(By JONATHAN SCHARFSTEIN, M.D. et. al., July 3, 2001)
LETTERS: Mortimer Adler's Legacy
(By JOSEPH P. HEALEY, July 3, 2001)
BUSINESS: Blue Chips Start the Quarter on a Largely Positive Note
[Dow +91, Nasdaq -14] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 3, 2001)
* Sales of Computer Chips Decline
(By CHRIS GAITHER, July 3, 2001)
* U.S. Charges Internet Operation Was a Huge Scam
(By KURT EICHENWALD, July 3, 2001)
Market Place: Stock Analyst Disclosure
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 3, 2001)
Sara Lee to Buy Earthgrains, a Top Bread Maker
(By GREG WINTER, July 3, 2001)
Computer Associates Attacks Plan
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, July 3, 2001)
ARTS IN AMERICA: An Indian Craftsman Sees Glass Full of Possibilities
(By STEPHEN KINZER, July 3, 2001)
BOOKS: John Irving's 'The Fourth Hand': Losing a Hand, Gaining a Soul
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, July 3, 2001)
DANCE: A Satellite School in Brazil to Train Tomorrow's Ballet Stars
(By LARRY ROHTER, July 3, 2001)
DANCE: American Dance Festival: A Ceremony Evokes Truth That Hides in Mourning
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 3, 2001)
MUSIC: 30 Years After the Music's Over, Morrison Still Attracts Crowds
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, July 3, 2001)
POP: Depeche Mode: An Old (Not Oldies) Band That Still Casts a Spell
(By NEIL STRAUSS, July 3, 2001)
THEATER: 'Random Harvest': Sharing a Fear (of Success) With a Ghost
(By ANITA GATES, July 3, 2001)
THEATER: 'Lulu': Men Were Her Victims, or So She Thought
(By BEN BRANTLEY, July 3, 2001)
TV: 'Primetime Glick': How Not to Interview
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, July 3, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Climate Research: The Devil Is in the Details
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, July 3, 2001)
Venerable Institution in a Season of Turmoil
(By DENNIS OVERBYE, July 3, 2001)
MAN IN THE NEWS / John Marburger: Balancing the Equation of Science and Politics
(By JAMES GLANZ, July 3, 2001)
* An Old Observatory Finds a New Life
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, July 3, 2001)
* Discovering the Tricks of Fireflies' Summertime Magic
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 3, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: Sea Lions' Fish of Choice
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 3, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: The Rockets' Red Glare
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 3, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: The Role of Plants' Pores
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 3, 2001)
Santa Lucía Journal: Flipper's Trainer Fights for Dolphin Liberation
(By DAVID GONZALEZ, July 3, 2001)
Q&A: Doomed Bamboo
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, July 3, 2001)
* Letters: Of Time and Space
(By MILOS W. B. DOBROSLAVIC et. al., July 3, 2001)
* CASES: In Psychiatry, Mundane Remarks Speak Volumes About the Personality
(By ANNA FELS, M.D., July 3, 2001)
* VITAL SIGNS / PATTERNS: Gauging the Health of Surviving Spouses
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 3, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / SYMPTOMS: That Pain in Your Back Could Be a Bug
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 3, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / BACTERIA: Special Milk May Help Children's Health
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 3, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS / PROGNOSIS: A Clue for Predicting Chronic Whiplash
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 3, 2001)
* VITAL SIGNS / PREVENTION: Clues to Benefits of Fruit and Vegetables
(By JOHN O'NEIL, July 3, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Through the Information Maze
(By JOHN LANGONE, July 3, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Examining How Babies Sleep
(By Avi Sadeh, July 3, 2001)
Monday, July 2, 2001:
On This Day: July 2 (Thomas Cranmer 7/2/1489-3/21/1556, Christoph Glück 7/2/1714-11/15/1787,
Richar Henry Stoddard 7/2/1825-5/12/1903, Frederick Gates 7/2/1853-2/6/1929, Clarence Barron 7/2/1855-10/2/1928,
Hermann Hesse 7/2/1877-8/9/1962, Hugh Dryden 7/2/1898-12/2/1965, Sir Tyrone Guthrie 7/2/1903-10/9/1995,
Sir Alec Douglas-Home 7/2/1903-10/9/1995, Medgar Evers 7/2/1925-6/12/1963, Patrice Lumumba 7/2/1925-1/?/1961,
Brock Peters 1927, Imelda Marcos 1929, Ahmad Jamal 1930, Robert Ito 1931, Polly Holliday 1937,
John Sununu 1949, Ron Silver 1946, Luci Baines Johnson Turpin 1947, Roy Bittan 1949, Jerry Hall 1956)
Miss Earhart Forced Down at Sea, Howland Isle Fears; Coast Guard Begins Search
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 2, 1937)
Thurgood Marshall, Civil Rights Hero, Dies at 84
[7/2/1908-1/24/1993] (By LINDA GREENHOUSE, January 25, 1993)
Roy Longmore, Australian 'Legend' Who Survived Gallipoli, Dies at 107
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, July 2, 2001)
Lewis L. Coriell, Virologist Who Set Stage for Polio Vaccine, Dies at 90
(By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, July 2, 2001)
Kenneth Lynn, Hemingway Biographer, Dies at 78
(NY TIMES, July 2, 2001)
Raelian Cult Agrees Not to Clone Human in U.S.
(NY TIMES, July 2, 2001)
London Journal: Writer, Actor, M.P. (and a Reliable Source of Spice)
(By WARREN HOGE, July 2, 2001)
Chinese Leader Urges Widening Communist Party Membership
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, July 2, 2001)
On Land and Sea, Florida Plans for Turmoil After Castro's Death
(By DANA CANEDY, July 2, 2001)
Burden Seems to Be on Japan to Salvage Climate Treaty
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, July 2, 2001)
Metropolitan Diary
(By ENID NEMY, July 2, 2001)
City's History Rewritten From Municipal Archives
(By GLENN COLLINS, July 2, 2001)
OP-ED: Getting the Charity Debate Back on Track
(By ROBERT A. SIRICO, July 2, 2001)
OP-ED: A Coney Island Kind of Fun
(By KEVIN BAKER, July 2, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: The New Patriotism
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 2, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Message in the Sinking Polls
(By BOB HERBERT, July 2, 2001)
LETTERS: A Certain Age, Uncertain Income
(By MARILYN MAY et. al., July 2, 2001)
BUSINESS: A Changing World Is Forcing Changes on Managed Care
(By MILT FREUDENHEIM, July 2, 2001)
Star Witness Against Microsoft Finds a Wary Vindication
(By JOHN MARKOFF, July 2, 2001)
THE MEDIA GIANTS: For Disney's Eisner, the Business Is Content, Not Conduits
(By SETH SCHIESEL, July 2, 2001)
Book Returns Rise, Signaling a Downturn in the Market
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, July 2, 2001)
Advertising: Questions About CBS Sales Strategy
(By STUART ELLIOTT, July 2, 2001)
* New Economy: Selling a Vision of the Future Beyond Folders
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, July 2, 2001)
* Gene Data to Be Kept Private so Company Can Make Drugs
(By ANDREW POLLACK, July 2, 2001)
Faith of Investors Is Based in Part on a Company Name
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, July 2, 2001)
E-Commerce Report: Internet Ads Are Getting More Attention
(By BOB TEDESCHI, July 2, 2001)
Compresed Data: Site That Monitors Exercise Is Running on Wobbly Legs
(By KAREN J. BANNAN, July 2, 2001)
Compressed Data: Group Encourages Workers to Turn In Software Pirates
(By SUSAN STELLIN, July 2, 2001)
Patents: Measure How Much Water You Drink
(By SABRA CHARTRAND, July 2, 2001)
* ART: Monet's Haystacks Ignites Bidding at Sotheby's in London
(By CAROL VOGEL, July 2, 2001)
BALLET: New Queen Rules Over Balanchine's Magic Forest
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, July 2, 2001)
BOOKS: Dark Streets, Stolen Goods and a Hard-Bitten Dame
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, July 2, 2001)
DANCE: A Sophisticated Square Dance, Called by Tharp
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, July 2, 2001)
* FILM: It's Raining Tigers and Dragons in the Land of Film
(By MARK LANDLER, July 2, 2001)
JAZZ: Nina Simone: A Diva Who Holds Fans in the Palm of Her Hand
(By ANN POWERS, July 2, 2001)
OPERA: 'Fidelio': The Heroic Life, Captured by Beethoven, Lived by All
(By, July 2, 2001)
TV: The Airmen and Women Who Made a Leap of Faith
(By RON WERTHEIMER, July 2, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Timeless Tact Helps Sustain a Literary Time Traveler
(By GERALDINE BROOKS, July 2, 2001)
Sunday, July 1, 2001:
On This Day: July 1 (Gottfried Leibniz 7/1/1646-11/14/1716, Jean-Baptiste Rochambeau 7/1/1725-5/10/1807,
George Sand 7/1/1804-6/8/1876, Susan Glaspell 7/1/1882-7/27/1948, James Cain 7/1/1892-10/27/1977,
Charles Laughton 7/1/1899-12/15/1962, William Wyler 7/1/1902-7/27/1981,
Mary Steichen Calderone 7/1/1904-10/24/1998, William Dixon 7/1/1915-1/29/1992,
Jean Stafford 7/1/1915-3/26/1979, Diana, Princess of Wales 7/1/1961-8/31/1997,
Olivia de Havilland 1916, Farley Granger 1925, Leslie Caron 1931, Claude Berri 1934,
Jamie Farr 1934, Jean Marsh 1934, Pat McCormick 1934, Sydney Pollack 1934, David Prowse 1935,
Wally Amos 1936, Twyla Tharp 1941, Karen Black 1942, Genevieve Bujold 1942, Deborah Harry 1945,
Michael Pressman 1950, Dan Aykroyd 1952, Carl Lewis 1961, Pamela Anderson 1967, Liv Tyler 1977)
A New Leader Outlines His Vision for Hong Kong
(By EDWARD A. GARGAN, July 1, 1997)
Walter White, 61, Dies in Home Here
[7/1/1893-3/21/1955] (NY TIMES, March 22, 1955)
* Chet Atkins, Country Guitarist and Producer, Is Dead at 77
(By BEN RATLIFF, July 1, 2001)
Rabbi Ira Eisenstein, 94, Dies; Led Reconstructionist Jews
(By ERIC PACE, July 1, 2001)
Lyubov Sokolova, Actress in More Than 300 Russian Films Dies at 79
(By ERIC PACE, July 1, 2001)
James T. Ellis, 45, a Developer of Internet Discussion Network, Is Dead
(By KATIE HAFNER, July 1, 2001)
Charles S. Whitehouse, Diplomat and C.I.A. Official, Dies at 79
(By PAUL LEWIS, July 1, 2001)
* Doctors Implant Heart Regulator in Cheney's Chest
(By DAVID E. SANGER & LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 1, 2001)
News Analysis: Despite Optimism, Cheney's Health Is a Concern
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, July 1, 2001)
Bloomberg Starts Filling in the Gaps in His Public Portrait
(By ADAM NAGOURNEY, July 1, 2001)
Truths, Half-Truths, and the Census
(By JANNY SCOTT, July 1, 2001)
* MS. MOFFET'S FIRST YEAR: 'S' Is for Satisfactory, Not for Satisfied
(By ABBY GOODNOUGH, July 1, 2001)
* SPORTS: Decline in Hitting Coincides With Change in Baseball's Strike Zone
(By MURRAY CHASS, July 1, 2001)
BUSINESS: Market Watch: Behind a Closed Door
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, July 1, 2001)
For the Rich, a Hedge Fund With an Eye on Taxes
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, July 1, 2001)
* The Search for the Family Tree Moves to the Web
(BY COREY KILGANNON, July 1, 2001)
* On the Contrary: A Corner Office Has Little Room for Books
(By DANIEL AKST, July 1, 2001)
Economic View: Forecasts May Reduce Your Wealth
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, July 1, 2001)
* Strategies: Their Euphemisms Aside, the Analysts Are Usually Right
(By MARK HULBERT, July 1, 2001)
Market Insight: Microsoft Wins a Chance to Focus
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, July 1, 2001)
Polaroid Makes a Digital Leap, but Is It Enough?
(By LYNNLEY BROWNING, July 1, 2001)
Seniority: A Special Invitation (to Anyone)
(By FRED BROCK, July 1, 2001)
Love & Money: Is My Mom Better Than Yours?
(By ELLYN SPRAGINS, July 1, 2001)
Investing With Richard C. Pell & Rudolph-Riad Younes: Julius Baer International Equity Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, July 1, 2001)
Fun and Games at the Fed, But Not for the Chairman
(Compiled by RICK GLADSTONE, July 1, 2001)
Business Diary: Chicken, Beef or Fish? (Please Pick Something)
(By Jane L. Levere, July 1, 2001)
Investing Diary: The Shifting Fortunes of a Prognosticator
(By Patrick McGeehan, July 1, 2001)
Personal Business Diary: Preparing Boomers for Long-Time Care
(By Julie Flaherty , July 1, 2001)
Shoot It, Howl at It, Buy It [Moon Rocks]
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, July 1, 2001)
Morality and Medicine: Reconsidering Embryo Research
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, July 1, 2001)
The Land of Monopolies [Microsoft]
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, July 1, 2001)
A Time to Judge What Began and Ended in Kosovo
(By ROGER COHEN, July 1, 2001)
Leveling the Playing Field, but for Whom?
(By STEVEN A. HOLMES, July 1, 2001)
* Shape-Shifting at Little Bighorn
(By ALLEN BARRA, July 1, 2001)
The Age of Revolution: Founding Fathers Dreamed of Uprisings, Except in Haiti
(By THOMAS BENDER, July 1, 2001)
WORD FOR WORD / Internet Complaint Sites: How Come Pizza Hut Doesn't Deliver to My Trailer Park?
(By TOM KUNTZ, July 1, 2001)
New Mexican Mystery Village
(By STEPHEN KINZER, July 1, 2001)
* Timeless Mesa Verde [8 photos]
(By JUDITH ANDERSON, July 1, 2001)
What's Doing in Cooperstown
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, July 1, 2001)
PERFORMING ARTS: Selling Big Dreams on the Potomac
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, July 1, 2001)
ART / ARCHITECTURE: A Loner Who Found a Universe in His Studio
(By ALAN RIDING, July 1, 2001)
ART: For Six Decades, a Colorful Mirror of Popular Culture [LP Show]
(By EDWARD M. GOMEZ, July 1, 2001)
DANCE: A Teenager Who Dispenses All the Right Moves
(By VALERIE GLADSTONE, July 1, 2001)
FILM: Film Goes All the Way (In the Name of Art)
(By KRISTIN HOHENADEL, July 1, 2001)
FILM: 'Crazy/Beautiful': Teenagers' Traumas, Without the Clichés
(By JAMIE MALANOWSKI, July 1, 2001)
Wielding a Magic of Uncanny Images
(By ANDREW JOHNSTON, July 1, 2001)
MUSIC: Taking Liberties With Bach
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, July 1, 2001)
MUSIC: Rock Groups That No Longer Rock
(By KELEFA SANNEH, July 1, 2001)
MUSIC: Glimmerglass: Where Opera Is a Natural Pastime
(By ALLAN KOZINN, July 1, 2001)
THEATER: John Rando Just Can't Say No (to Directing)
(By PETER MARKS, July 1, 2001)
TV: Alan Bennett: Walking a High Wire of Words
(By STEVE VINEBERG, July 1, 2001)
VIDEO: Digital Editions of Kubrick Films: Two New, One 'Improved'
(By KEVIN FILIPSKI, July 1, 2001)
VIDEO: A Century of Legends of the Bolshoi
(By ROBERT GRESKOVIC, July 1, 2001)
VIDEO: A Dangerous Pursuit of Beauty, in Life and on the Screen
(By NANCY RAMSEY, July 1, 2001)
LIVING: Bloomberg and the A-List: The Mutual Hug
(By RUTH LA FERLA, July 1, 2001)
A Little Bit of the East, on Fifth Avenue
(By ABBY ELLIN, July 1, 2001)
On the Street: Scissor Rebellion [15 photos]
(Photographs By BILL CUNNINGHAM, July 1, 2001)
Vows: Evette Beckett and Reginald Tuggle
(By MARCELLE S. FISCHLER, July 1, 2001)
* On Language: Quick, Henry, the Emollient!
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, July 1, 2001)
You Had to Be There, Man: The Cachet of Having Been a Witness to History
(By DAVID OSHINSKY, July 1, 2001)
Questions for Friedrich St.Florian: The Greatest Veneration
(By THOMAS KEENAN, July 1, 2001)
Salient Facts: Extreme Gardening
(By EMILY NUSSBAUM, July 1, 2001)
* Process: The Liberty Bell Gets a Physical
(By JAY KIRK, July 1, 2001)
The Ethicist: Lax Behavior
(By RANDY COHEN, July 1, 2001)
The Made-to-Order Savior: Producing a Perfect Baby Sibling
(By LISA BELKIN, July 1, 2001)
Parasites in Prêt-à-Porter are Threatening Japan's Economy
(By PEGGY ORENSTEIN, July 1, 2001)
The Poor Man's Capitalist: Hernando de Soto
(By MATTHEW MILLER, July 1, 2001)
What Are Friends For?
(By KEN GROSS, July 1, 2001)
Food Diary: Our Hostess Pulls It Off With the Help of Her Inner Julia Child
(By AMANDA HESSER, July 1, 2001)
Lives: I Was Both an Enemy and Worthy of the Ethiopian Government's Praise
(BY MEKBIB GEMEDA AS TOLD TO ROBERT MACKEY, July 1, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, July 1, 2001)
Patriotic Gore [Gore Vidal, "The Last Empire"]
(By PAUL BERMAN, July 1, 2001)
Rewriting History [Dorothy Thompson, "The Essential E. P. Thompson"]
(By DAVID A. BELL, July 1, 2001)
The Reigns in Spain [Henry Kamen, "Philip V of Spain"]
(By RICHARD HERR, July 1, 2001)
8.3 [Dan Kurzman, "Disaster: Great San Francisco Earthquake & Fire of 1906"]
(By DAVID TRAXEL, July 1, 2001)
'I Used to Be Snow White, but I Drifted' [Erika Krouse, "Come Up and See Me Sometime"]
(By MARIA RUSSO, July 1, 2001)
Chitr Banerjee Divakaruni, "The Unknown Errors of Our Lives"
(By SUDIP BOSE, July 1, 2001)
THE CLOSE READER: Ahead of Her Time [Mary Wollstonecraft]
(By JUDITH SHULEVITZ, July 1, 2001)
SCIENCE: NASA Launches Observatory to Study Universe's Oldest Light
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, July 1, 2001)
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