NYTimes masthead

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—
November 2001

Friday, November 30, 2001:
On This Day: November 30 (Andrea Doria 11/30/1466-11/25/1560, Andrea Palladio 11/30/1508-8/19/1580, Jonathan Swift 11/30/1667-10/19/1745, Mark Twain 11/30/1835-4/21/1910, Wiston Churchill 11/30/1874-1/24/1965, I.J. Singer 11/30/1893-2/10/1944, Donald Ogden Stewart 11/30/1894-8/2/1980, Gordon Parks 1912, Efrem Zimbalist Jr. 1918, Shirley Chisholm 1924, Richard Crenna 1927, Dick Clark 1929, G. Gordon Liddy 1930, David Mamet 1947, June Pointer 1954, Billy Idol 1955, Bo Jackson 1962)
Clinton became the first U.S. President to visit Northern Ireland (NY Times, November 30, 1995)
* Churchill Dies at 90 At Home in London [11/30/1874-1/24/1965] (By ANTHONY LEWIS, January 24, 1965)
* George Harrison, Former Beatle, Dies at 58 (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 30, 2001)
John Dawson, 71, Authority on Plasma Physics, Dies (By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, Nov. 30, 2001)
Jamie Shannon, 40, Chef Who Embraced Creole Cuisine, Is Dead (By REGINA SCHRAMBLING, Nov. 30, 2001)
Rachel Gurney, Actress, Dies at 81; `Upstairs, Downstairs' Matriarch (By JESSE McKINLEY, Nov. 30, 2001)
Irwin Weiner, Entrepreneur and Sports Agent, Dies at 69 (By EDWARD WONG, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE INFORMANTS: Immigrants Offered Incentives to Help U.S. Fight Terrorism (By NEIL A. LEWIS, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE HOAXES: Suspect Named in Fake Anthrax Mailings to Abortion Clinics (By TAMAR LEWIN, Nov. 30, 2001)
WASHINGTON LETTER: Pondering the Mystery of the Taliban's Collapse (By R.W. APPLE JR., Nov. 30, 2001)
Afghan Women Trade Shadows for Washington's Limelight (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE DETAINEES: Justice Dept. Says Evidence Connects an Indonesian Man to the Hijackings
(By PHILIP SHENON & DON VAN NATTA Jr., Nov. 30, 2001)
WORLD: THE RELIEF: Level of Food Aid to Afghans Drops (By ELIZABETH BECKER, Nov. 30, 2001)
Afghan Militia Leader Cautions Alliance to Stay Out of Kandahar (By JAMES DAO with DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE AIRWAVES: Kunduz Radio Drops Hard Talk for Easy Listening (By C. J. CHIVERS, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE ALLIES: Many Eager to Help, but Few Are Chosen (By ERIC SCHMITT, Nov. 30, 2001)
FAMILY LEGACY: 2 Sons of Imprisoned Sheik Took Up the Taliban Cause (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR with TIM GOLDEN, Nov. 30, 2001)
* NY REGION: Warehouse Holds Trove for Artists (By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS, Nov. 30, 2001)
NEW YORK POLICE: All in Police Dept. Face Counseling (By RICHARD LEZIN JONES, Nov. 28, 2001)
N.Y.U. Shuts Down an Internet Venture [NYUonline] (NY TIMES, Nov. 30, 2001)
OBJECTS/FLOWER BULBS: New Daffodils for Garden That Outlived a Creator (By JIM DWYER, Nov. 30, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Confections of an Enterprising Candy Lover (By ROBIN FINN, Nov. 30, 2001)
BOLDFACE NAMES: Is One Who Acts an Actor? [Daniel Ellsberg] (By JAMES BARRON, Nov. 30, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Families Bush and Kennedy (NY TIMES, Nov. 30, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Pay Attention (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: ABROAD AT HOME: Wake Up, America (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Nov. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Martial Justice, Full and Fair (By ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Nov. 30, 2001)
OP-ED: Bankrupt Analysis [Enron, natural gas pipeline company] (By ADAM LASHINSKY, Nov. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: America Sends in the Marines (By Lt. Col. BETSY JUDGE et. al., Nov. 30, 2001)
LETTERS: Not All Wounds Heal [Closure?] (By ALICE E. BISK, Nov. 30, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Climb on Some Upbeat Reports on the Economy
[Dow +118, Nasdaq +45] (By REUTERS, Nov. 30, 2001)
Reports Suggest an Economic Recovery Soon (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE OVERVIEW: Ripples Spreading From Enron's Expected Bankruptcy
(By RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr. & ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Nov. 30, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: The Good Old Days Were Not as Good as We Thought (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 30, 2001)
BUSINESS: Bargains Galore, if You Make the List (By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Nov. 30, 2001)
Barnes & Noble's Loss Widens (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE SUITOR: Deal Is Over but Not Dynegy's Troubles (By ALEX BERENSON, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE DIRECTORS: Plenty of Unasked Questions Arise About the Board (By REED ABELSON, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE IMPACT: Californians See a Kind of Rough Justice for Enron (By LAURA M. HOLSON, Nov. 30, 2001)
* ART: ROY LICHTENSTEIN: Time Reveals the Delicacy in Playful Pop (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Nov. 30, 2001)
* ART: 'IMPRESSIONIST STILL LIFE': Quiet but Very Much Alive [Gauguin] (By HOLLAND COTTER, Nov. 30, 2001)
INSIDE ART: Musical Chairs in London? (By CAROL VOGEL, Nov. 30, 2001)
ANTIQUES: A Giant Armoire, 300 Years Old and Up for Sale (By WENDY MOONAN, Nov. 30, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE WRONG MAN': Jury of One Finds the Accused Not Guilty (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 30, 2001)
CABARET: MICHAEL FEINSTEIN: A Salute to the Holidays, in Red, White and Blue (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Nov. 30, 2001)
DANCE: ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER: A Gala, by Turns Exuberant and Subdued (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 30, 2001)
* FILM: WATCHING MOVIES WITH JOHN TRAVOLTA: You Never Get Over Yankee Doodle Fever
(By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 30, 2001)
* AT THE MOVIES: Opening Doors to Her Intuition [Jeanne Moreau] (By DAVE KEHR, Nov. 30, 2001)
FILM: 'THE AFFAIR OF THE NECKLACE': A Tale of the Necklace That Ate the Monarchy (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 30, 2001)
MUSIC: IVAN MORAVEC: Using the Pedal Sparingly and Overstating Nothing (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 30, 2001)
POP: ELTON JOHN: Relishing the 70's, With Newer Intrusions (By JON PARELES, Nov. 30, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: IMOGEN CUNNINGHAM: Sun-Dappled Innocence, Lustrous Sophistication (By MARGARETT LOKE, Nov. 30, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: Glorifying Powerful Women Without Their Power Suits (By SARAH BOXER, Nov. 30, 2001)
THEATER: 'A CHRISTMAS CAROL': Once Again, Banishing Hate and 'Humbug' (By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Nov. 30, 2001)
THEATER: The Art of Inhabiting Secondhand Roles (By PETER MARKS, Nov. 30, 2001)
TV: Turning Bloopers Into Comedies of Errors (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Nov. 30, 2001)
TV: 'PROJECT GREENLIGHT': Novice Directors, Be Careful What You Pray For (By CARYN JAMES, Nov. 30, 2001)
TV: 'BRIAN'S SONG': Football, Friendship and Cancer— Again (By KEN BELSON, Nov. 30, 2001)
WEEKEND EXCURSION: Atlantic City: A Boardwalk, but No Diving Horse (By JOE SHARKEY, Nov. 30, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: Inviting Birds for Dinner (But Not to Be Eaten) (By JAMES GORMAN, Nov. 30, 2001)

Thursday, November 29, 2001:
On This Day: November 29 (Gaetano Donizetti 11/29/1797-4/8/1848, Christian Doppler 11/29/1803-3/17/1853, Busby Berkeley 11/29/1895-3/14/1976, William Tubman 11/29/1895-7/23/1971, C.S. Lewis 11/29/1898-11/22/1963, Vin Scully 1927, Paul Simon 1928, Diane Ladd 1943, Suzy Chaffee 1946, Garry Shandling 1949, Cathy Moriarty 1960)
U.N. General Assembly resolution on partitioning of Palestine between Arabs and Jews (NY Times, November 29, 1947)
* Louisa M. Alcott Dead at 55: Authoress Dies on the Day of Her Father's Funeral [11/29/1832-3/6/1888] (NY Times, March 7, 1888)
Joe Modise, 72, Fighter Against Apartheid (By RACHEL L. SWARNS, Nov. 29, 2001)
Michael Hoffman, Director of Art Photography Publisher, Dies at 59 (NY TIMES, Nov. 29, 2001)
Dr. Francis Moore, 88, Dies; Innovative Leader in Surgery (By ERICA GOODE, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE CASUALTY: C.I.A. Names Agent Killed in Fortress (By JAMES RISEN, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE CASES: Al Qaeda Link Seen in Only a Handful of 1,200 Detainees (By DAVID FIRESTONE & CHRISTOPHER DREW, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: White House Says it Expects at Least 3 Years of Deficits (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 29, 2001)
* ANALYZING THE DANGERS: Scientists Find the New Field of Threat Assessment Full of Uncertainties
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Nov. 29, 2001)
OVERSEAS PUZZLE: U.S. Confirms Anthrax in Chilean Letter (By CLIFFORD KRAUSS and ANDREW C. REVKIN, Nov. 29, 2001)
BIOTERRORISM: U.S. Orders Vast Supply of Vaccine for Smallpox (By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG with MELODY PETERSEN, Nov. 29, 2001)
A TOWN REMEMBERS: Community Recalls a Native Son With Clear Goals (By KEVIN SACK, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE QUESTIONING: Memo Adds to Suspicions of Immigrants on Interviews (NY TIMES, Nov. 29, 2001)
MONEY TRAILS: House Votes to Combat Sale of Diamonds for War (By JOSEPH KAHN, Nov. 29, 2001)
AMERICAN JOURNAL / WASHINGTON: In the Capital, It's Scrooge's Season (By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE FORTRESS: At Site of Quelled Prisoner Revolt, Afghan Fort's Walls Tell a Tale of Death
(By CARLOTTA GALL, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE HIDE-OUT: Where's bin Laden? Here's One Hunch (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 29, 2001)
VOICES: Bazaar Is Newly Abuzz and the Talk Is of a New Era: After the Taliban, What? (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 29, 2001)
* THE AIR WAR: Newer Technology Is Shielding Pilots (By JAMES DAO, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE ADVANCE: Rebels May Push South of Kabul; Move Is Likely to Anger Pakistan (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 29, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Troop Buildup, an Aggressive Dragnet and the High Price of Terror (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 29, 2001)
TERRORISTS' CIRCLE: German Police Arrest Associate of Hijacker Cell (By JOHN TAGLIABUE, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE CONFERENCE: Afghans Plunge Into Talks, Differing on Peacekeepers (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Nov. 29, 2001)
AFTERMATH: Northern Alliance Troops Depart From Kunduz (By C. J. CHIVERS, Nov. 29, 2001)
NY REGION: As the Rich Do Without Extras, Service Workers Do Without (By STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Nov. 29, 2001)
* THE SITE: Engineers Suspect Diesel Fuel in Collapse of 7 World Trade Center (By JAMES GLANZ, Nov. 29, 2001)
* PUBLIC LIVES: Love and Religion Soothe a Wild Hip-Hop Queen [Mary J. Blige] (By LYNDA RICHARDSON, Nov. 29, 2001)
A SCHEME: Sept. 11 Death Faked, Police Say (By ROBERT F. WORTH, Nov. 29, 2001)
TRAFFIC: More Restrictions Are Eased for Drivers (By SUSAN SAULNY, Nov. 29, 2001)
Counting on Coffee Lovers (By SARAH KERSHAW, Nov. 29, 2001)
METRO MATTERS: Left Forlorn Not at Altar, but at Border (By JOYCE PURNICK, Nov. 29, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Casino Jinx (NY TIMES, Nov. 29, 2001)
An Implosion on Wall Street (NY TIMES, Nov. 29, 2001)
* EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Distracting Ourselves in the Glow of the Tube (By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Nov. 29, 2001)
* OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Tourism Crisis (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 29, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Enemy of My Enemy (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: Survivor Security (By NANCY J. ALTMAN, Nov. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: Survivor Security (By NANCY J. ALTMAN, Nov. 29, 2001)
OP-ED: A Constituency Ready for Peace (By J. J. GOLDBERG, Nov. 29, 2001)
* LETTERS: Transcending Trauma (By MARILYN MAY, Nov. 29, 2001)
* LETTERS: When Faith Is Taken to Extremes [Friedman's "The Real War"] (By TED GLEICHMAN et. al., Nov. 29, 2001)
BUSINESS: Investors Pull Back as Enron Drags Down Key Indexes
[Dow -161, Nasdaq -48] (By REUTERS, Nov. 29, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: A Big Fall Evoking Nasty Old Memories of a Run on a Bank (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE: Foundation Gives Way on Chief's Big Dream [Enron's Kenneth Lay]
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ and RICHARD A. OPPEL Jr., Nov. 29, 2001)
THE BOND MARKET: Enron's Woes Exacerbate Turmoil (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Nov. 29, 2001)
MEDIA: ABC's 'Millionaire' May Not Last Much Longer (By BILL CARTER, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE LAST RESORT: A Bankruptcy Filing Might Be the Best Remaining Choice (By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE LENDERS: Citigroup and J. P. Morgan Are Left With Exposure to Loans (By RIVA D. ATLAS, Nov. 29, 2001)
RATING AGENCIES: Debt Rankings Finally Fizzle, but the Deal Fizzled First (By ALEX BERENSON, Nov. 29, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Cure for Economic Ills of Our Democracy is More Democracy (By JEFF MADRICK, Nov. 29, 2001)
Fed's Survey Finds Few Signs of Relief From Jolt to Economy (By REUTERS, Nov. 29, 2001)
* Free Music Service Is Expected to Surpass Napster (By MATT RICHTEL, Nov. 29, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Post-Sept. 11 Tourism Ads Are Getting a Midcourse Correction (By ALLISON FASS, Nov. 29, 2001)
Time Inc. Said to Have Plans to Close 3 Small Magazines [Asiaweek, Family Life, On]
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT & ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Nov. 29, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Collecting $600 Million in Art, or a Tiger by the Tail (By ELIZABETH OLSON, Nov. 29, 2001)
* ART: Old Masters Pursued by Artistic Gumshoes [David Hockney "Art & Optics"]
(By MEL GUSSOW, Nov. 29, 2001)
BOOKS: Bodies Hang in California, and Bullets Fly in Florida (By JANET MASLIN, Nov. 29, 2001)
* MAKING BOOKS: Pluck and Publicity Elevate a Young Poet (By MARTIN ARNOLD, Nov. 29, 2001)
DANCE: BALLET HISPA´NICO: When Love Has Flown, Dreams Follow (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 29, 2001)
MUSIC: Making the Music Sway to Your Beat (By YUDHIJIT BHATTACHARJEE, Nov. 29, 2001)
OPERA: Giving Hidden Opera Classics a Moment in the Sun (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Nov. 29, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: The Old Rock Reborn as New (By NEIL STRAUSS, Nov. 29, 2001)
* THEATER: 'POETRY': Lou Reed, Exploring Poe's Plutonian Shore (By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 29, 2001)
TV CRITIC: Bin Laden on Trial: Television Anticipates (By JULIE SALAMON, Nov. 29, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 29, 2001)
In the Bronx, an Ounce of Connection (By YILU ZHAO, Nov. 29, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: An Elegant New Sony Handheld (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 29, 2001)
Afghan E-Mail Seen as Too Geek to Be True (By KATIE HAFNER, Nov. 29, 2001)
ID, Please? Digital Wallets Are Getting Another Try (By TOM DI NOME, Nov. 29, 2001)
* BASICS: Personal Shopper for Online Bargains (By RICHARD J. MEISLIN, Nov. 29, 2001)
New Uses Help Introduce Linux Operating System to Non-Geeks (By JOHN D. BIGGS, Nov. 29, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Sugarplum Visions Dance on the Web (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Nov. 29, 2001)
GAME THEORY: Speeding Breakneck Toward the Future, Dangerously Free (By CHARLES HEROLD, Nov. 29, 2001)
SAFETY: Smoke Alarm Can Distinguish Between Emergency and Bacon (By CATHERINE GREENMAN, Nov. 29, 2001)
SYSTEMS: Emulator Is the Software of a Thousand Interfaces (By HOWARD MILLMAN, Nov. 29, 2001)
FROM THE DESK OF DAVID POGUE: The Gadget Vernacular (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 29, 2001)
* Q & A: Photo Software: Fiddle a Little or a Lot (By J. D. BIERSDORFER, Nov. 29, 2001)
* HEALTH: Nutrients' Use in Heart Cases Is Questioned in New Study [Vitamin E] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 29, 2001)
HEALTH: Drop in Syphilis Infection Rate Raises Hopes for Elimination (By REUTERS, Nov. 29, 2001)
Artificial-Heart Patient Quickly Dies of Bleeding (By REUTERS, Nov. 29, 2001)

Wednesday, November 28, 2001:
On This Day: November 28 (Jean-Baptiste Lully 11/28/1632-3/22/1687, William Blake 11/28/1757-8/12/1827, William Froude 11/28/1810-5/4/1879, Friedrich Engels 11/28/1820-8/5/1895, Helen Magill White 11/28/1853-10/28/1944, Henry Bacon 11/28/1866-2/16/1924, Jose Iturbi 11/28/1895-6/30/1973, Berry Gordy Jr. 1939, Hope Lange 1931, Gary Hart 1936, Randy Newman 1943, Susan Spencer 1946, Paul Shaffer 1949)
* Roosevelt, Stalin, Churchill at Teheran Talks; 1500 More Tons of Bombs Dropped on Berlin (By JAMES B. RESTON, November 28, 1943)
* Nancy Mitford, Author, Dead; Satiric Novelist and Essayist [11/28/1904-6/30/1973] (By STEVEN R. WEISMAN, July 1, 1973)
* W. Glenn Campbell, Shaper of Hoover Center, Dies at 77 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 28, 2001)
Ralph Burns, Arranger and Composer From Big Bands to Broadway, Dies at 79 (BY PETER KEEPNEWS, Nov. 28, 2001)
Paul Hume, 85, Washington Music Critic (By BERNARD HOLLAND, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 28, 2001)
THE CHEF: A Smarter Cookie: Spicy, Bittersweet and Artful (By BILL YOSSES, Nov. 28, 2001)

Tuesday, November 27, 2001:
On This Day: November 27 (Anders Celsious 11/27/1701-4/25/1744, Robert Livingston 11/27/1746-2/26/1813, Fanny Kemble 11/27/1809-1/15/1893, Charles Beard 1127/1874-9/1/1948, James Agee 11/27/1909-5/16/1955, Alexander Dubcek 11/27/1921-11/7/1992, Jimi Hendrix 11/27/1942-9/18/1970, Caroline Kennedy Schlossberg 1957)
Ford Is Approved By Senate, 92-3; House Set To Act (By MARJORIE HUNTER, November 27, 1973)
* Chaim Weizmann Of Israel Is Dead at 77 [11/27/1874-9/9/1952] (NY Times, November 9, 1952)
Bo Belinsky, the Playboy Pitcher, Dies at 64 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Nov. 27, 2001)
Sol Forman, 98, Owner of Famed Steakhouse (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 27, 2001)
AIRLINE SECURITY: U.S. Pressures Foreign Airlines Over Manifests (By ROBERT PEAR, Nov. 27, 2001)
THE INTERVIEWS: Michigan 'Invites' Men From Mideast to Be Interviewed (By JODI WILGOREN, Nov. 27, 2001)
* A Harvard Professor's Baffling Vanishing (By FOX BUTTERFIELD, Nov. 27, 2001)
Baptist Head Urges Prayers for Muslim Conversion (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 27, 2001)
BIOTERRORISM: Plan for Smallpox Rules Out Mass Vaccination (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Nov. 27, 2001)
THE DETAINEE: Professor to Be Deported After Secret Evidence Case (By DANA CANEDY, Nov. 27, 2001)
THE INVESTIGATION: Careful Plan Devised for Anthrax Letter (By DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 27, 2001)
WORLD: Military Narrows Search for bin Laden and Followers (By DAVID STOUT, Nov. 27, 2001)
Marines Begin Directing Air Attacks (By THOM SHANKER & JAMES DAO, Nov. 27, 2001)
A WARNING: Readmit Inspectors, President Tells Iraq; 'Or Else' Is Unstated (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 27, 2001)
MILITARY ANALYSIS: Afghan South: Different War Than in North (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 27, 2001)
AFTERMATH: A Deathly Peace Settles on Kunduz's Streets (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 27, 2001)
RIYADH: Saudis Balk at U.S. Request to Freeze Bank Accounts (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Nov. 27, 2001)
THE LIAISON: She Spoke for Taliban and Now Pays a Price (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Nov. 27, 2001)
LONDON: British Official Says Troops for Afghanistan Are Off High Alert (By WARREN HOGE, Nov. 27, 2001)
MOSCOW: Russia Moves Equipment and Troops to Air Base (By SABRINA TAVERNISE, Nov. 27, 2001)
ISLAMABAD: Pakistanis Concerned Over Deaths of Prisoners (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Nov. 27, 2001)
KANDAHAR: Taliban Find Themselves Isolated in the South (By NORIMITSU ONISHI, Nov. 27, 2001)
MADRID: Spanish Police Watched Terrorism Suspects Before Sept. 11 (By SAM DILLON, Nov. 27, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Marines in Afghanistan's South, Riots in North, Invitations in Michigan
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Nov. 27, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Evaluating Athens, a City of Extremes (By CHRISTOPHER CLAREY, Nov. 27, 2001)
NY REGION: But for the Young and Brave, Love Conquers Fear (By WINNIE HU, Nov. 27, 2001)
THE LATEST CASE: Tests Negative From Near Where Woman Died (NY TIMES, Nov. 27, 2001)
Fight or Flight? Two Primal Urges at War (By RANDAL C. ARCHIBOLD, Nov. 27, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: A Cross, a Shield, and a Prayer for Firefighters (By GLENN COLLINS, Nov. 27, 2001)
TUNNEL VISION: PATH Trains No Longer Genteel Ride (By RANDY KENNEDY, Nov. 27, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Frontiers of Cloning (NY TIMES, Nov. 27, 2001)
EDITORIAL: War and Politics in Afghanistan (NY TIMES, Nov. 27, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Name of Recession (NY TIMES, Nov. 27, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The Real War (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 27, 2001)
OP-ED: Muslim Women as Symbols ‹ and Pawns (By RINA AMIRI, Nov. 27, 2001)
OP-ED: Catching the Urban Wave (By D. J. WALDIE, Nov. 27, 2001)
LETTERS: The Home Front, Through a Child's Eyes (By MARY-ELLEN SIEGEL et. al., Nov. 27, 2001)
BUSINESS: Three Major Indexes Reach Highest Points Since Sept. 11
[Dow +23, Nasdaq +38] (By REUTERS, Nov. 27, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Economists Make It Official: U.S. Is in Recession (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 27, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: Stock Promoters Are Touting Shares on News Sites' E-Mail (By FLOYD NORRIS & GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Nov. 27, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Survey Offers Insights on College Students' Mood Since Sept. 11 (By JANE L. LEVERE, Nov. 27, 2001)
Taiwan Carrier Finds That Not Being American Draws Customers (By MARK LANDLER, Nov. 27, 2001)
ARTS IN AMERICA: New Interest in Florida Paintings by a Group of Black Artists (By MARK DERR, Nov. 27, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'CHRIST': In Like a Lion but Out Like a Lamb (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 27, 2001)
DANCE: Ailey Troupe Goes in Search of Big Money (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 27, 2001)
DANCE: 'TWIN KINGDOMS': Choreography With a Touch of the Olympics (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 27, 2001)
MUSUC: JOSHUA BELL: Violinist Guides His Audience Across a Changing Landscape (By BERNARD HOLLAND, Nov. 27, 2001)
OPERA: 'MADAMA BUTTERFLY': Audience Stands Up to Cheer a Stand-In (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 27, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE STREETS OF NEW YORK': The Panic of 1837: Those Were the Days! (By ANITA GATES, Nov. 27, 2001)
THEATER: 'CHRISTMAS WITH THE CRAWFORDS': Dragging Out Essentials of a Holiday Perennial
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Nov. 27, 2001)
SCIENCE: Robots Learn Soccer (and the Game of Life) (BY YUDHIJIT BHATTACHARJEE, Nov. 27, 2001)
* Scientists Build Tiny Computer Using DNA Molecules (By REUTERS, Nov. 27, 2001)
Aircraft Safety and the Case of the Plastic Tail (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 27, 2001)
Under Tight Security, Shuttle Set for First Post-Sept. 11 Flight (By WARREN E. LEARY, Nov. 27, 2001)
A Practical Way to Make Power From Wasted Heat (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 27, 2001)
Rescue Season Follows Vacation Season for Rare Turtle (By DAPHNE PALMER GEANACOPOULOS, Nov. 27, 2001)
OBSERVATORY: It Takes a Thief (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Nov. 27, 2001)
Q & A: Skunk Versus Dog (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Nov. 27, 2001)
* HEALTH: For Radiation, How Much Is Too Much? (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 27, 2001)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Restless Legs: Treatable, if Recognized (By JANE E. BRODY, Nov. 27, 2001)
* With Biotechnology, a Potential to Harm (By ANDREW POLLACK, Nov. 27, 2001)
HEALTH: Cause and Effect: Off to Mars, Then to the Drugstore (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 27, 2001)
HEALTH: Scientists Ponder Limits on Access to Germ Research (By ANDREW POLLACK, Nov. 27, 2001)
Facing Up to Depression After a Bypass (By RANDI HUTTER EPSTEIN, Nov. 27, 2001)
CASES: Learning to Care for Patients, in Truest Sense (By ABIGAIL ZUGER, M.D., Nov. 27, 2001)
Mind and Body: In Heart Disease, Head Can Be an Ally (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 27, 2001)
Performance: Surgeons Need Steady Hand, and Sleep (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 27, 2001)
Prevention: Help for Those Willing to Kick a Habit (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 27, 2001)
Remedies: Keeping Malaria at Bay, With Garlic (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 27, 2001)
Briefer Regimen May Fight Breast Cancer (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 27, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: A Breakthrough on Cloning? Perhaps, or Perhaps Not Yet (By GINA KOLATA with ANDREW POLLACK, Nov. 27, 2001)
HEALTH: Bush Denounces Cloning and Calls for Ban (By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Nov. 27, 2001)

Monday, November 26, 2001:
On This Day: November 26 (William Cowper 11/26/1731-4/25/1800, Norber Wiener 11/26/1894-3/18/1964, Eugène Ionesco 11/26/1909-3/28/1994, Eric Sevareid 11/26/1912-7/9/1992, Robert Goulet 1933, Rich Little 1938, Tina Turner 1939)
Full 'Gas' Rationing Dec. 1 Ordered by President Roosevelt (NY Times, November 26, 1942)
* Charles M. Schulz, 'Peanuts' Creator, Dies at 77 [11/26/1922-2/12/2000] (By SARAH BOXER, February 14, 2000)
Jean-Louis Palladin, 55, a French Chef With Verve, Dies (By ERIC ASIMOV, Nov. 26, 2001)
Milton Shaw, 80, Who Oversaw First Nuclear Submarine Project (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 26, 2001)
3 Teenagers Held in Plot at Massachusetts School (By FOX BUTTERFIELD with ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Nov. 26, 2001)
For Most, Holiday Travel Is Light and Smooth (By REUTERS, Nov. 26, 2001)
RELIGION: As Attacks' Impact Recedes, a Return to Religion as Usual (By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Nov. 26, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Moving Bioterror From Back Burner Singed C.D.C., Forcing It to Learn Fast
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Nov. 26, 2001)
Company Says It Produced Human Embryo Clones (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 26, 2001)
Tired of Stereotyping, Bikers Turn to Law (By JOHN CARPENTER, Nov. 26, 2001)
Economy Puts Schools in Tough Position (By JACQUES STEINBERG, Nov. 26, 2001)
WHITE HOUSE LETTER: Cheney, Shrinking From View, Still Looms Large (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 26, 2001)
THE MARINES: Hundreds of U.S. Troops Land 12 Miles From Taliban Stronghold (By JAMES DAO, Nov. 26, 2001)
STRONGHOLD: Taliban Foes Say Kunduz Is Theirs (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 26, 2001)
THE P.O.W.'S: An American Is Said to Be Killed During a Failed Prison Uprising (By CARLOTTA GALL, Nov. 26, 2001)
THE FUTURE: Afghans Wait for Portents in Bonn Talks (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 26, 2001)
CAVES AND TUNNELS: Heavily Fortified 'Ant Farms' Deter bin Laden's Pursuers (By MICHAEL WINES, Nov. 26, 2001)
RAMPAGE: Former Inhabitants Trickle Back to Area Ravaged by Taliban (By BARRY BEARAK, Nov. 26, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Grisly Uprising, Famed Hide-Outs and Altered American Attitudes (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 26, 2001)
DRUG TRADE: With Taliban Gone, Opium Farmers Return to Their Only Cash Crop (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 26, 2001)
'SLAUGHTERHOUSE': Where Thousands of Drought Refugees Wait for Food or Death (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 26, 2001)
MOVIEGOERS: Film Critics With a Keen Eye for Violence (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 26, 2001)
U.N. TALKS: Delegate Seeks Larger Role for Women (By REUTERS, Nov. 26, 2001)
GEOLOGY: Nature Made the Perfect Hiding Place (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 26, 2001)
In Vancouver, Cosmopolitanism Has an Asian-Pacific Look (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Nov. 26, 2001)
BEIJING JOURNAL: Mao's Buried Past: A Strange, Subterranean City (By CRAIG S. SMITH, Nov. 26, 2001)
NY REGION: On Campuses, Seeing the Military With New Eyes After Sept. 11 (By DAVID W. CHEN, Nov. 26, 2001)
Flag to Carry Sentiments From Ground Zero to Afghanistan (By DAVID W. CHEN, Nov. 26, 2001)
Bloomberg a Man of Contradictions, but With a Single Focus (By DEAN E. MURPHY, Nov. 26, 2001)
BUSINESS: Cautious Optimism on Shopping (By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Nov. 26, 2001)
* Personal Finance Magazines Slump (By DAVID HANDELMAN, Nov. 26, 2001)
Intel Unveils Chip Advances (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Nov. 26, 2001)
Peter Arnett Is Off to a War, Again/A> (By JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 26, 2001)
Telecommunications Entrepreneur With a Colorful Résumé (By SIMON ROMERO, Nov. 26, 2001)
Barnes & Noble to Try to Squeeze Better Publisher Deals (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Nov. 26, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: Plans for Technology National Guard (By AMY CORTESE, Nov. 26, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Twenty Questions for the Marketing Industry (By STUART ELLIOTT, Nov. 26, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Mass Voicemailing Seeks Volunteers to Leave Jobs (By ANDREW ZIPERN, Nov. 26, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Professors Study Method for Doing Well on EBay (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 26, 2001)
ARTIST AT WORK: David Robertson: Rapport at the End of a Baton (By PETER MARKS, Nov. 26, 2001)
ARTS ONLINE: A War Game (Sort of), but You Can't Control the Action (By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Nov. 26, 2001)
ART: Power Meets Modern Art in Los Angeles (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Nov. 26, 2001)
BALLET: 'THE NUTCRACKER': A Rodent Infestation That Soothes the Soul (By JACK ANDERSON, Nov. 26, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE TRAGEDY OF GREAT POWER POLITICS': When Power Tipped the Scales (By PATRICIA COHEN, Nov. 26, 2001)
FILM: Are the Wizard's Numbers Just the Tip of the Iceberg? (By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 26, 2001)

Sunday, November 25, 2001:
On This Day: November 25 (Lope de Vega 11/25/1562-8/27/1635, Maria Henrietta 11/25/1609-9/10/1669, John Begelow 11/25/1817-12/19/1911, Joseph Krutch 11/25/1893-5/22/1970, Virgil Thomson 11/25/1896-9/30/1989, Lewis Thomas 11/25/1913-12/3/1993, Jow DiMaggio 11/25/1914-3/8/1999, Ricardo Mantalban 1920, Kathryn Crosby 1933, Amy Grant 1960)
Iran Payment Found Diverted To Contras; Reagan Security Adviser And Aide Are Out (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, November 25, 1986)
* Andrew Carnegie Started as a Bobbin Boy, Dies at 83 [11/25/1835-8/11/1919] (NY Times, August 12, 1919)
Irving Crane, a World Champion Who Brought Decorum to Billiards, Dies at 88 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 25, 2001)
E. H. Colbert, 96, Dies; Wrote Dinosaur Books (By ANAHAD O'CONNOR, Nov. 25, 2001)
Maurice Taylor, Author of Music Books, Dead at 95 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 25, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 25, 2001)
* WORLD: The World's Economies Slide Together Into Recession (By JOSEPH KAHN, Nov. 25, 2001)
THE SEIGE: Many Taliban and Allies Holding Out at Last Northern Stronghold (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 25, 2001)
THE FUGITIVE: Bin Laden Is Reported Spotted in a Fortified Camp in Eastern Afghanistan (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 25, 2001)
YESTERDAY'S HERO: Kabul's New Rulers Lament a Leader Who Died Too Soon (By BARRY BEARAK, Nov. 25, 2001)
* Counterfeiters Turn Magic Into Cash ["Harry Potter" DVD in China] (By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Nov. 25, 2001)
BIOLOGICAL WARFARE: Turner's Foundation to Spend Millions to Fight Bioterrorism (By JUDITH MILLER, Nov. 25, 2001)
In Taiwan a Discouraging Election Campaign Notable for Its Nastiness (By MARK LANDLER, Nov. 25, 2001)
NY REGION: SURVIVORS: As Sept. 11 Widows Unite, Grief Finds Political Voice (By DAN BARRY, Nov. 25, 2001)
Closure? A Buzzword Becomes a Quest (By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Nov. 25, 2001)
Hold the Mayo, and the Sandwich: Exchange Bans Deliveries (By EDWARD WYATT, Nov. 25, 2001)
* OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Uncivil Liberties? (By MAUREEN DOWD, Nov. 25, 2001)
TALKING MONEY: Behind the Glamorous Life, His-and-Hers Nest Eggs (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Nov. 25, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'The Feast of the Goat': Vargas Llosa's Demon (By WALTER KIRN, Nov. 25, 2001)
* Dot-Com Is Dot-Gone, and the Dream With It (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Nov. 25, 2001)
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE: 'Update' Anchor: The Brains Behind Herself (By Alex WITCHEL, Nov. 25, 2001)
THE AGE OF DISSONANCE: A Parents' Party? Make a Wish (By BOB MORRIS, Nov. 25, 2001)

Saturday, November 24, 2001:
On This Day: November 24 (Benedict Spinoza 11/24/1632-2/21/1677, Laurence Sterne 11/24/1713-3/18/1768, Junipero Serra 11/24/1713-8/28/1784, Zachary Taylor 11/24/1784-7/9/1850, Cass Gilbert 11/24/1859-5/17/1934, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 11/24/1864-9/9/1901, Scott Joplin 11/24/1868-4/1/1917, Itzhak Ben-Zvi 11/24/1884-4/23/1963, Margaret Anderson 11/24/1886-10/18/1973, William F. Buckley 1925, Pete Best 1941)
President's Assassin Shot To Death In Jail Corridor by a Dallas Citizen (By GLADWIN HILL, November 24, 1963)
* Dale Carnegie, Author, Is Dead at 66 [11/24/1888-11/1/1955] (NY Times, November 2, 1955)
Edith Schwartz Capa, Photography Collaborator, Dead at 88 (NY TIMES, Nov. 24, 2001)
THE BOSTON AIRPORT: Despite Ruling, Logan Official Predicts Ouster of Security Firm (NY TIMES, Nov. 24, 2001)
* Facing Decreased Demand for Coins, Mint Starts Layoffs (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* THE SKYSCRAPER: Condo Life at 1,000 Feet: Tight Security, Great View (By JODI WILGOREN, Nov. 24, 2001)
* RELIGION JOURNAL: American Islamic Media: Assorted and Aspiring (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Nov. 24, 2001)
WORLD: Vietnam Captures Third Wild Elephant (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 24, 2001)
INTELLIGENCE: A Powerful Combatant in France's War on Terror (By CHRIS HEDGES, Nov. 24, 2001)
Pakistanis Again Said to Evacuate Allies of Taliban (By DEXTER FILKINS and CARLOTTA GALL, Nov. 24, 2001)
Taliban Holdouts, Europe's Reservations and Anthrax Frustrations (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 24, 2001)
THE MARKETPLACE: In Herat, TV Man Is King, Burka Man Is Lonely (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 24, 2001)
NY REGION: The Mayor Prepares, Tearfully, to Depart (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Nov. 24, 2001)
THE DISEASE: No Anthrax Is Found at Victim's Home or Two Nearby Postal Centers (By PAUL ZIELBAUER, Nov. 24, 2001)
THE IMMIGRANTS: Afghans in U.S. Seek Role in Forming Homeland Government (By SARAH KERSHAW, Nov. 24, 2001)
THE FAMILIES: For Twins, a Lost Double and a Missing Half (By JANE GROSS, Nov. 24, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Revival of Lower Manhattan (NY TIMES, Nov. 24, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Liberating the Women of Afghanistan (NY TIMES, Nov. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: JOURNAL: Wait Until Dark (By FRANK RICH, Nov. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: AT HOME ABROAD/ABROAD AT HOME: Right and Wrong (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Nov. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: Better Gas Mileage, Greater Security (By ROBERT F. KENNEDY JR., Nov. 24, 2001)
OP-ED: The Return of the Shopper (By PACO UNDERHILL, Nov. 24, 2001)
LETTERS: If bin Laden Is Brought to Trial (By BARRY LATZER et. al., Nov. 24, 2001)
LETTERS: Harry Potter's Triumph (By MONICA EDINGER, Nov. 24, 2001)
LETTERS: Simplify, Simplify [Harvard's Prize Catch: Homi K. Bhabha] (By VIRGIL C. DIAS, Nov. 24, 2001)
BUSINESS: Stocks Rise, Retailers Lifted by Crowds
[Dow +125, Nasdaq +28] (By REUTERS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* View: Time to Buy? History Says 'Yes' (By REUTERS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* Indexes Flag Bull Market; Not All Agree (By REUTERS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* BUSINESS: For Holiday Shoppers, Sale Is the Only Thing (By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Nov. 24, 2001)
The Arbiters of Recession Stand Ready (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Nov. 24, 2001)
ARTS: No Room for Riches of the Indian Past (By CATHERINE C. ROBBINS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* ART: Grandpa Picasso: Terribly Famous, Not Terribly Nice (By ALAN RIDING, Nov. 24, 2001)
ARTS & IDEAS: An Organization on the Lookout for Patriotic Incorrectness (By EMILY EAKIN, Nov. 24, 2001)
DANCE: LIMÓN DANCE COMPANY: Acceptance, in a Revival, for an Abstract Work (By JACK ANDERSON, Nov. 24, 2001)
DANCE: BARNARD COLLEGE DANCE STUDENTS: Choreography That Makes the Most of Young Talent (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 24, 2001)
MUSIC: NEW JUILLIARD ENSEMBLE: New Works That Borrow As Much as They Create (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* MUSIC: RAVI SHANKAR: Saying Farewell in a Rush of Witty Ragas (By JON PARELES, Nov. 24, 2001)
THEATER: 'OEDIPUS THE KING': Turning Greek Tragedy Into Domestic Drama (By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, Nov. 24, 2001)
* THINK TANK: Jell-O, Jiggling Its Way Into History (By EMILY NUSSBAUM, Nov. 24, 2001)
SCIENCE: Mix of Physics and Politics May Produce Lab in Mine (By JAMES GLANZ, Nov. 24, 2001)
HEALTH: Doctors Hunt for a Solution to Obscure Vomiting Disorder (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 24, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Life on Mars? A New Study Reads Those Crystals Differently (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Nov. 24, 2001)

Friday, November 23, 2001:
On This Day: November 23 (Otto I 11/23/912-5/7/973, John Wallis 11/23/1616-10/28/1703, Franklin Pierce 11/23/1804-10/8/1869, Billy the Kid 11/23/1859-7/14/1881, Karl Branting 11/23/1860-2/24/1925, Manuel de Falla 11/23/1876-11/14/1946, Boris Karloff 11/23/1887-2/3/1969, Joe Eszterhas 1944, Susan Anspach 1945)
Ruined Berlin Afire After 2d Bombing; U. S. Planes Smash At Toulon and Sofia; 4 Japanese Destroyers Sunk In Battle (By WILLIAM L. WORDEN, November 23, 1943)
* Erte, a Master of Fashion, Stage and Art Deco Design, Is Dead at 97 [11/23/1892-4/21/1990] (By ALAN RIDING, April 22, 1990)
* Mary Kay Ash, Who Built a Cosmetics Empire, Dies at 83 (By ENID NEMY, Nov. 23, 2001)
Vladimir Pasechnik, 64, Germ Expert Who Defected (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 23, 2001)
Charles A. Crenshaw, 68, Doctor Who Faulted Finding on Oswald, Dies (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 23, 2001)
Byron Sanders, Actor in Soap Operas, Dead at 76 [Dali's "Crucifixion"] (NY TIMES, Nov. 23, 2001)
Gardner McKay, 69, TV Heartthrob Who Turned to Writing, Is Dead (By JOHN SULLIVAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
AIRPORT SECURITY: U.S. Airport Task Starts With Staff (By MICHAEL MOSS, Nov. 23, 2001)
* CONFIDENTIALITY: Breaking Law or Principles to Give Information to U.S. (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Nov. 23, 2001)
DRUG RESEARCH: U.S. Hunting Antiviral Drug to Use in Case of Smallpox (By NICHOLAS WADE, Nov. 23, 2001)
MAIL AND SECURITY: Postal Workers Union Urges Its Members Not to Work if Anthrax Is Found
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE HOME FRONT: They're Used to It: A Holiday Without Their Hero (By STEPHEN KINZER, Nov. 23, 2001)
POLITICS OF INTELLIGENCE: Inquiries Into Failures of Intelligence Community Are Put Off Until Next Year
(By JAMES RISEN and TODD S. PURDUM, Nov. 23, 2001)
* For Honesty, Sweet Reward (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 23, 2001)
* WHITE HOUSE LETTER: Big Government Is Back in Style (By R. W. APPLE JR., Nov. 23, 2001)
* Apocalyptic Theology Revitalized by Attacks (By KEVIN SACK, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE MUSLIMS: Blending Day of Feasting Into Month of Fasting (By JOHN W. FOUNTAIN, Nov. 23, 2001)
Some Mideast Immigrants, Shaken, Ponder Leaving U.S. (By GREG WINTER, Nov. 23, 2001)
* WORLD: THE BATTLE: Ugly Duckling Turns Out to Be Formidable in the Air (By JUDITH MILLER & ERIC SCHMITT, Nov. 23, 2001)
* WEAPONRY: A Crafty, Deadly Predator (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 23, 2001)
FRONT LINES: In Skirmish, Bold Rebel Attack Swerves to Retreat (By BARRY BEARAK, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE EMBASSY: Pakistan Closes Down Taliban's Last Link to Outside World (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE FRONTS: U.S. Hits Caves in bin Laden Hunt; Battle Rages in North (By THOM SHANKER, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Taliban Expel 100 Journalists, Canceling a Tour of Kandahar (By NORIMITSU ONISHI, Nov. 23, 2001)
CASUALTIES: Bomb Remnants Increase War's Toll (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
SIEGE: Fierce Fighting Erupts Near Kunduz, Despite Surrender Deal (By DEXTER FILKINS with CARLOTTA GALL, Nov. 23, 2001)
FORCE OF ISLAM: Democracy's Uneasy Steps in Islamic World (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Nov. 23, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: As America Gives Thanks, Military Seeks bin Laden, and Surrender (By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Nov. 23, 2001)
ANOTHER WARLORD: Gun Control Policy, Jalalabad Style: He Who Grabs All the Rifles Writes the Rules
(By TIM WEINER, Nov. 23, 2001)
* A Claim to Help Choose Baby's Sex Sets Off Furor in India (By CELIA W. DUGGER, Nov. 23, 2001)
Saudi Says Bush's Words May Soothe Arab Feelings (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Nov. 23, 2001)
NY REGION: In a Survey of Businesses, a Bleak View (NY TIMES, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE PARADE: A Parade Steeped in Pageantry, With a Core of Patriotism (By ANDREW JACOBS & SHAILA K. DEWAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
Disaster Gives the Uninsured Wider Access to Medicaid (By KATHERINE E. FINKELSTEIN, Nov. 23, 2001)
Since Attack, More Landlord-Tenant Clashes Downtown (By SUSAN SAULNY, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE SITE: It's a Working Holiday but With a Heaping Plate (By MICHAEL COOPER, Nov. 23, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Helping Countries, and People, to Heal (By LYNDA RICHARDSON, Nov. 23, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Terrorist Software (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: A World Not Neatly Divided (By AMARTYA SEN, Nov. 23, 2001)
OP-ED: We Have the Right Courts for Bin Laden (By HAROLD HONGJU KOH, Nov. 23, 2001)
* OP-ED: Bravery at Home (By JEAN S. ARBEITER, Nov. 23, 2001)
LETTERS: Why Does Terror Rear Its Head? (By JEFF OSTLER et. al., Nov. 23, 2001)
BUSINESS: Chase and J. P. Morgan's Paper Anniversary (By RIVA D. ATLAS, Nov. 23, 2001)
* THE COMPUTER NETWORKS: Cyberspace Seen as Potential Battleground (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Nov. 23, 2001)
* THE COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS: Attacks at Hubs Could Disrupt Phone Lines (By SIMON ROMERO, Nov. 23, 2001)
HOLIDAY SHOPPING: Malls Are Tightening Security as the Rush Begins (By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: From Sunbeam to Enron, Andersen's Reputation Suffers (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 23, 2001)
'Made in America,' and Never Mind the Gas Mileage (By NEELA BANERJEE, Nov. 23, 2001)
Adapting to a World Less Ready for a Party (By JAYSON BLAIR, Nov. 23, 2001)
AUTOS ON FRIDAY: Trucks of the Taliban: Durable, Not Discreet (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 23, 2001)
* ART REVIEW: The Timeless Spell of Empire (By ROBERTA SMITH, Nov. 23, 2001)
ART: RICHARD SERRA: A Spiraling Trip Through Space Without Seat Belts (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
* ART: ALBERT BIERSTADT: If Some Say Glory, Others Cry Hubris (By GRACE GLUECK, Nov. 23, 2001)
ANTIQUES: An Obsession Generated by Porcelain (By WENDY MOONAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
* BOOKS: SACRED MONSTERS, SACRED MASTERS': A Gallery of Intimate Portraits (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 23, 2001)
* FILM: Charmed 'Harry Potter' Is Poised to Set More Records (By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
* FILM: TAKING THE CHILDREN: No Education Is Complete Without Broomsticks 101 (By PETER M. NICHOLS, Nov. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'JUNG': Compassion in the Eye of a Storm (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 23, 2001)
FILM CRITIC: Lifting the Veil on a Far-Off World (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'IN THE BEDROOM': When Grief Becomes a Member of the Family (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Nov. 23, 2001)
FILM: 'BANGKOK DANGEROUS': A Born Deadeye Gets a Job as a Hit Man (By DAVE KEHR, Nov. 23, 2001)
MUSIC: Bruckner and Shostakovich in a Homecoming Program (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 23, 2001)
MUSIC: Fugues From a Foursome [Brentano Quartet, Beethoven's "Grosse Fuge"]
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Nov. 23, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: JOHN GUTMANN: Shades of Surrealism On San Francisco Streets (By SARAH BOXER, Nov. 23, 2001)
THEATER: Works by Playwrights Too Young to Drink (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 23, 2001)
TV: Adults Build Jalopies From Scratch (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Nov. 23, 2001)
TV WEEKEND: Pop Embraces the Teleconcert (By ANN POWERS, Nov. 23, 2001)
* WEEKEND EXCURSION: The House Where a Scandal Divided Emily Dickinson's Family (By GRACE GLUECK, Nov. 23, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: Seeking a Fly to Fool the Crafty Trout (By JAMES GORMAN, Nov. 23, 2001)
SCIENCE: 24 Cow Clones, All Normal, Are Reported by Scientists (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 23, 2001)

Thursday, November 22, 2001:
On This Day: November 22 (René-Robert La Salle 11/22/1643-3/19/1687, Abigail Adams 11/22/1744-10/28/1818, George Eliot 11/22/1819-12/22/1880, André Gide 11/22/1869-2/19/1951, Wiley Post 11/22/1899-8/15/1935, Hoagy Carmichael 11/22/1899-12/27/1981, Rodney Dangerfield 1921, Robert Vaughn 1932, Billie Jean King 1943, Mariel Hemingway 1961)
* KENNEDY IS KILLED BY SNIPER AS HE RIDES IN CAR IN DALLAS; JOHNSON SWORN IN ON PLANE
(By TOM WICKER, November 22, 1963)
* De Gaulle Rallied France in War and Strove to Lead Her to Greatness [11/22/1890-11/9/1970] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, November 11, 1970)
* Uncle Sam's Thanksgiving Dinner (Artist: Thomas Nast) (Harper's Weekly, November 22, 1869)
Raymond M. Downey Dies at 63, Headed Fire Rescue Units (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Nov. 22, 2001)
John W. Nason, Educator Who Helped Japanese-Americans, Dies at 96 (By PAUL LEWIS, Nov. 22, 2001)
Andrew McNally, Ex-Chief of Company Known for Maps, Dies at 92 (By ERIC PACE, Nov. 22, 2001)
Robert H. Heilbrunn, 93, Philanthropist, Is Dead (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 22, 2001)
John Babarovic, 69, Architect at Airports, Dies (NY TIMES, Nov. 22, 2001)
Charlotte Coleman, 33, Film Actress, Dies (NY TIMES, Nov. 22, 2001)
Salahuddin Abdul Aziz, Malay King and Islamic Leader, Dead at 75 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE INTERVIEWS: Police Are Split on Questioning of Mideast Men (By FOX BUTTERFIELD, Nov. 22, 2001)
TRAVEL: Airports Sleep Through Chase for the Turkey (By DAVID FIRESTONE, Nov. 22, 2001)
TELEVISION NEWS: A Struggle to Keep Up for TV Caption Writers (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Nov. 22, 2001)
A's Soar at Harvard, Nearing a Majority [48.5% get A's] ] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Says War May Go Beyond Afghan Border (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 22, 2001)
HOMELAND SECURITY: Ridge to Seek Big Increases for Fight on Terror (By ALISON MITCHELL, Nov. 22, 2001)
WORLD: Taliban in Kunduz Given Deadline to Surrender (By REUTERS, Nov. 22, 2001)
RIYADH: Saudi Sees No bin Laden-Iraq Link (By DOUGLAS JEHL, Nov. 22, 2001)
* THE BOND: How bin Laden and Taliban Forged Jihad Ties (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ & DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 22, 2001)
* THE HUNT: New Sensors Report, 'I Know They're in There, I Can See Them Breathing' (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Nov. 22, 2001)
* THE LAW: No TV, No Chess, No Kites: Taliban Penal Code, From A to Z (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE STANDOFF: Foreign Militants Seek Safe Passage From Afghan City (By DEXTER FILKINS with CARLOTTA GALL, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE TRANSITION: Afghan Undercuts U.S. Optimism on Talks (By MICHAEL R. GORDON & WARREN HOGE, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE BATTLE: U.S. Stokes the Fire, Adding Gunships and More (By STEVEN LEE MYERS & JAMES DAO, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE STRONGHOLD: Taliban Will Rise Again, Aide to Leader Tells Journalists (By NORIMITSU ONISHI, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE FERVOR: Taliban's Brand of Zeal May Survive Their Rule (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 22, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Talk of Surrender, an Influx of Weapons and Another Anthrax Death (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Nov. 22, 2001)
WOMEN'S RIGHTS: Relief Groups Seek a Peacekeeping Force for Afghanistan (By DAVID STOUT, Nov. 22, 2001)
Alliance Strikes Taliban Troops Outside Kabul (By BARRY BEARAK, Nov. 22, 2001)
YAMATO JOURNAL: Rover's Just a Robot, but a Great Pal for All That (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Nov. 22, 2001)
NY REGION: Developer Briefs Bloomberg on Plans to Rebuild Towers (By DIANE CARDWELL, Nov. 22, 2001)
Some Wonder Where Pataki Has Been During Uphill Fight for Billions (By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE LATEST CASE: Connecticut Woman, 94, Is Fifth to Die From Inhalation Anthrax (By PAUL ZIELBAUER, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE VICTIM: A Fan of Mysteries Is Now at the Center of One [Ottilie W. Lundgren] (By WINNIE HU with AL BAKER, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE THEORIES: Case in a Small Town Compounds a Puzzle for Epidemiologists (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Nov. 22, 2001)
Replacement for TV Tower Lost on Sept. 11 Is in Doubt (By JAYSON BLAIR, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE UNEMPLOYED: Ground Zero Cleanup Jobs Prove Slow to Materialize (By NINA BERNSTEIN, Nov. 22, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Feeding the Hungry, Spiritually and Spiritedly (By JOYCE WADLER, Nov. 22, 2001)
* OBJECTS: A Soothing Cup of Water, a Vessel of Plain Kindness (By JIM DWYER, Nov. 22, 2001)
* SPORTS: Some Special Thank-You Notes (By DAVE ANDERSON, Nov. 22, 2001)
SPORTS: Tiger Wins Fourth Grand Slam Title [record 12-under 132] (By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 22, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: The Deepest Thanks (NY TIMES, Nov. 22, 2001)
EDITORIAL: New Anthrax Evidence (NY TIMES, Nov. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Hunger in the City (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 22, 2001)
* OP-ED ESSAY: Welcome Back, Politics! (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 22, 2001)
* OP-ED: Just Crazy About the Place (By ROGER ROSENBLATT, Nov. 22, 2001)
OP-ED: Educating the World (By GENE SPERLING, Nov. 22, 2001)
LETTERS: The Road to a New Afghanistan (By JOEL R. CHARNY et. al., Nov. 22, 2001)
LETTERS: American Icons: My Flag and My S.U.V. (By JON MARCUS, Nov. 22, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Take Step Backward in Trading Before Holiday
[Dow -67, Nasdaq -5] (By REUTERS, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Reports Suggest Recovery Soon, but Not Exactly a Robust One (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Nov. 22, 2001)
Lots of Competition for 2001's Hit Toy (By STEPHANIE STROM, Nov. 22, 2001)
Vitamin Producers Fined $752 Million (By PAUL MELLER, Nov. 22, 2001)
30-Year Mortgage Rate Rises to 6.75% (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 22, 2001)
* ARTS ABROAD: French Writer Explores Two Cultures Entwined (By ALAN RIDING, Nov. 22, 2001)
BOOKS: 'FLESH AND BLOOD': The Case of the Good Girl Gone Bad (By JANET MASLIN, Nov. 22, 2001)
DANCE: NYC BALLET GALA BENEFIT: Ballet as Balm in a Tribute to a City on the Mend (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 22, 2001)
MUSIC: Where Old Pianos Go to Live (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 22, 2001)
MUSIC: ROBERT WHITE: Of Flames Flickering and Flaring (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Nov. 22, 2001)
MUSIC: RENÉE FLEMING: A Piano, a Voice and the Hours Between Dusk and Dawn (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 22, 2001)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: 'NEW YORK SEPT. 11': Catching the World in the Act of Changing (By SARAH BOXER, Nov. 22, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: There's Life After Pumpkins (By NEIL STRAUSS, Nov. 22, 2001)
THEATER: 'TWO ROOMS': Terror in Beirut, Frustration and Power Politics in Washington (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 22, 2001)
TV: 'BARBIE IN THE NUTCRACKER': Ken, Help! The Mice Are Coming (By CARYN JAMES, Nov. 22, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 22, 2001)
* Cell Yell: Why Do Phone Calls Turn Into Broadcasts? (By ERIC A. TAUB, Nov. 22, 2001)
What Did You Do Before the War? (By LISA GUERNSEY, Nov. 22, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: The Trade Show Must Go On (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 22, 2001)
WHAT'S NEXT: On Any Window or Wall, a Portable Touch Screen (By YUDHIJIT BHATTACHARJEE, Nov. 22, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Gift Wrap Is More Than the Sum of Its Parts (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Nov. 22, 2001)
Once Proudly Carried, and Now Mere Carrion (By SIMON ROMERO, Nov. 22, 2001)
HAND-HELDS: A New Personal Organizer Knows What Time It Is (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 22, 2001)
SURVEILLANCE: When Big Brother Is Watching, a Device Watches Back (By ANDREW ZIPERN, Nov. 22, 2001)
INCOMING: Birthing the Internet: Letters From the Delivery Room (By RICHARD C. NORRIS, Nov. 22, 2001)
* Q & A: Sluggish Internet? Diagnosing the Problem (By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Nov. 22, 2001)

Wednesday, November 21, 2001:
On This Day: November 21 (Jean Francois Voltaire 11/21/1694-5/30/1778, Sir Samuel Cunard 11/21/1787-4/28/1865, Sir Harold Nicolson 11/21/1886-5/1/1968, René Magritte 11/21/1898-8/15/1967, Eleanor Powell 11/21/1912-2/11/1982, Sid Luckman 11/21/1916-7/5/1998, Stan Musial 1920, Marlo Thomas 1937, Natalia Makarova 1940, Goldie Hawn 1945, Ken Griffey Jr. 1969)
* Verrazano Bridge Opened to Traffic (By GAY TALESE, November 21, 1964)
Coleman Hawkins, Tenor Saxophonist, Is Dead at 64 [11/20/1925-6/6/1968] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, May 20, 1969)
Malaysian King Salahuddin Dies at 75 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 21, 2001)
Augustus C. Long, Chief of Texaco in 50's and 60's, Is Dead at 97 (By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
Jerry Jerome, Tenor Saxophonist of Big Band Era and Beyond, Dies at 89 (NY TIMES, Nov. 21, 2001)
Billy Vessels, Heisman Trophy Winner, Dies at 70 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE INTERVIEWS: A Police Force Rebuffs F.B.I. on Querying Mideast Men (By FOX BUTTERFIELD, Nov. 21, 2001)
Artificial-Heart Patient Is Bleeding in the Brain (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
White House Cancels Christmas Tours (By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE YEMENI STUDENT: Man Linked to Hijackers Gains Bail (By JAMES STERNGOLD, Nov. 21, 2001)
LESSONS: Putting the Chalk in the Right Hands (By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE HOW-TO BOOK: In Utah, a Government Hater Sells a Germ-Warfare Book (By PAUL ZIELBAUER with WILLIAM J. BROAD, Nov. 21, 2001)
* WORLD: U.S. Ready to Send Additional Troops to Hunt bin Laden (By THOM SHANKER and JAMES DAO, Nov. 21, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Direction of Global War on Terror Raises Unsettling Questions
(By PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 21, 2001)
BIN LADEN'S ALLIES: An Investigation in Egypt Illustrates Al Qaeda's Web
(By SUSAN SACHS, Nov. 21, 2001)
A BATTLEFIELD: In 3-Sided Battle for Northern Town, 2 Sides Plan Talks (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 21, 2001)
POWER: Afghan Factions to Meet and Discuss Interim Rule (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Nov. 21, 2001)
RELIEF: Food Drops Go Awry, Damaging Homes (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
GOVERNING: First, Order Comes to Herat, Then Maybe an Election (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
WAR CORRESPONDENTS: More Access, but Less Security for Journalists (By FELICITY BARRINGER & JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE HARD CORE: Defiant Taliban Let Refugees Meet the Press (By NORIMITSU ONISHI, Nov. 21, 2001)
KANDAHAR: Fearful City Wonders Whether Taliban Will Leave Quietly or Fight (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 21, 2001)
RIGHTS: The Women, Veils Shed, Demonstrate (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 21, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW : Afghan Caves, an Egyptian Courtroom and the Trade Center Toll (By KIRK JOHNSON, Nov. 21, 2001)
China Breaks Up a Protest by Falun Gong Foreigners (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Nov. 21, 2001)
NY REGION: Toll From Attack at Trade Center Is Down Sharply (By ERIC LIPTON, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE SPORES: Inhalation Anthrax Is Diagnosed in Connecticut Woman, 94 (By PAUL ZIELBAUER, Nov. 21, 2001)
* THE ECONOMY: Battered by Sept. 11, Chinatown Economy Remains Crippled (By JENNIFER 8. LEE, Nov. 21, 2001)
A 40-Foot Heron Returns, This Time With a Permit (By ELISSA GOOTMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Like the BBC Without Accents, or 'NPR on Drugs' (By GLENN COLLINS, Nov. 21, 2001)
Students Get Back to Routine, but Sept. 11 Fears Linger (By YILU ZHAO, Nov. 21, 2001)
* SPORTS: In Any Language, Suzuki Is A.L.'s Best (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 21, 2001)
* SPORTS: Pray Devoutly and Then Hammer (By IRA BERKOW, Nov. 21, 2001)
SPORTS: Yankees Begin Courting Giambi (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Thanksgiving Impulse (NY TIMES, Nov. 21, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Mixed Signals for the Markets (NY TIMES, Nov. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Blessings and Bombings (By MAUREEN DOWD, Nov. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: The 55-Cent Solution (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
OP-ED: Help Iraqis Take Their Country Back (By KANAN MAKIYA, Nov. 21, 2001)
* LETTERS: Harry Potter and the Publisher's Dream (By JANE DYSTEL, Nov. 21, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Pull Back as Sellers Try to Lock In Recent Gains
[Dow -75, Nasdaq -54] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 21, 2001)
TECHNOLOGY: Microsoft Aims to Settle Suits by Equipping 12,500 Schools (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 21, 2001)
BUSINESS TRAVEL: Women Fliers Complain About Treatment by Male Security Guards (By JOE SHARKEY, Nov. 21, 2001)
In Network News Battle, ABC Is Gaining Ground (By BILL CARTER, Nov. 21, 2001)
* THE DISSENTERS: Protesters Find the Web to Be a Powerful Tool (By AMY HARMON, Nov. 21, 2001)
MANAGEMENT: Consultants Put Aside Rivalries for New York (By MAGGIE JACKSON, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE BOSS: Vacations as Early Education (By CHARLES HERINGTON, Nov. 21, 2001)
WORKPLACE: Incompetent and Maddeningly Oblivious (By EVE TAHMINCIOGLU, Nov. 21, 2001)
* LIFE'S WORK: Rules Change Along With Psyches (By LISA BELKIN, Nov. 21, 2001)
Longtime Brokerage Executive Leaving Fidelity [Robert P. Mazzarella] (By REUTERS, Nov. 21, 2001)
ARTS: Foundation Starts $50 Million Fund for Arts Groups Hurt by Terrorism (By KAREN W. ARENSON, Nov. 21, 2001)
BOOKS: 'MOLTO AGITATO': An Opera Company With a Story for Every Season (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: The Rules That Lead to 'The Envelope, Please' (NY TIMES, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'SPY GAME': A Friendship Tested as the Cold War Thaws (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'Monsters, Inc.' and 'Shrek' Are Likely Foes for New Oscar (By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE': Dodging Bombs and Ghosts in Civil War Spain (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'OUT COLD': Like Old Times, but on Snowboards, Not Surfboards (By DAVE KEHR, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'THE WAY WE LAUGHED': In 60's Turin, Brotherly Love and Deception (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'BLACK KNIGHT': Medieval Times for a Traveler Far From King Arthur's Court
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Nov. 21, 2001)
FILM: 'SIDEWALKS OF NEW YORK': A Green Light for Love at the Frazzled Corners of Life
(By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 21, 2001)
MUSIC: BOB DYLAN: Along a Watchtower, Closely Watching the World (By JON PARELES, Nov. 21, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE WORLD OF NICK ADAMS': Hemingway Papafest for Paul Newman Charity (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 21, 2001)
* DINING: The Hunt for a Truly Grand Turkey, One That Nature Built (By MARIAN BURROS, Nov. 21, 2001)
* EATING WELL: Another Reason to Eat Cranberries (By MARIAN BURROS, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE MINIMALIST: The Usual Suspects? Look Again [3 recipes] (By MARK BITTMAN, Nov. 21, 2001)
THE CHEF: Where Ginger Is the Boss [2 recipes] (By BILL YOSSES, Nov. 21, 2001)
COOKING: Turkey Tips: Bringing Flavor to the Bird (Until It Brings Its Own) (By DENISE LANDIS, Nov. 21, 2001)
COOKING BY THE BOOK: Childhood Recipe Horrors Exorcised (By REGINA SCHRAMBLING, Nov. 21, 2001)
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH: At an Anthrax Lab, the World Changed Quickly (By JIM YARDLEY, Nov. 21, 2001)
HEALTH: 3 Knee Patients Die, Apparently of Rare Germ (By SANDRA BLAKESLEE, Nov. 21, 2001)

Tuesday, November 20, 2001:
On This Day: November 20 (Otto von Guericke 11/20/1602-5/11/1686, Selma Lagerlöf 11/20/1858-3/16/1940, Kenesaw Mountain Landis 11/20/1866-11/25/1944, James M. Curley 11/20/1874-11/12/1958, Norman Thomas 11/20/1884-12/19/1968, Edwin Powell Hubble 11/20/1889-9/28/1953, Alexandra Danilova 11/20/1903-7/13/1997, Emilio Pucci 11/20/1914-11/29/1982, Alistair Cooke 1908, Robert Byrd 1917, Estell Parsons 197, Judy Woodruff 1946, Bo Derek 1956, Sean Young 1959)
Allies Open Trial Of 20 Top Germans For Crimes Of War (By KATHLEEN MCLAUGHLIN, November 20, 1945)
* Robert Francis Kennedy: Attorney General, Senator and Heir of the New Frontier [11/20/1925-6/6/1968] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, June 6, 1968)
* "Do It Now!": Cartoon on President William Howard Taft (Artist: Edward Windsor Kemble) (Harper's Weekly, November 20, 1909)
Ex-Senator Harrison A. Williams Jr., 81, Dies; Went to Prison Over Abscam Scandal
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 20, 2001)
High School Seniors' Science Test Scores Drop (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 20, 2001)
THE EVANGELIST: Muslim Group Seeks to Meet Billy Graham's Son (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Nov. 20, 2001)
More False I.D. Charges (By, Nov. 20, 2001)
Holiday Travel Volume Looks Steady, but Americans Are Staying Close to the Ground
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Nov. 20, 2001)
THE INQUIRY: Investigators Liken Anthrax in Leahy Letter to That Sent to Daschle
(By JUDITH MILLER & DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 20, 2001)
U.S. Muslims Push Stamp as Symbol of Acceptance (By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Nov. 20, 2001)
Gore Joining a Financial Services Company (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Nov. 20, 2001)
WORLD: Alliance in Kabul Will Share Power, U.S. Envoy Reports (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 20, 2001)
* BROADCASTS: U.S. Tells Afghans of Rewards for bin Laden (By JAMES RISEN & THOM SHANKER, Nov. 20, 2001)
* CULTURE: The Music Makers Return and, Hesitantly, a City Sings Again (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 20, 2001)
INTERNATIONAL: Powell Pledges New U.S. Role in Middle East (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 20, 2001)
4 Foreign Journalists, Ambushed, Are Believed Killed by Taliban (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 20, 2001)
ARMED CAMPS: In Herat, Two Warlords Start Perilous Struggle for Credit (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 20, 2001)
MAZAR-I-SHARIF: Conflicting Tales Paint Blurry Picture of Siege (By CARLOTTA GALL, Nov. 20, 2001)
Announcement of a U.S. Reward [$25 million for bin Laden] (NY TIMES, Nov. 20, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Talks About the Future, Pressure on the Taliban, Suspects in the West
(By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Nov. 20, 2001)
* SHANGHAI JOURNAL: Jiang's a Poet Up There With Mao (on Billboards) (By CRAIG S. SMITH, Nov. 20, 2001)
BIOTERROR: U.S. Calls for Global Action to Counter Germ Weapons (By ELIZABETH OLSON, Nov. 20, 2001)
NY REGION: Inquiry Focus: Pilot Training in Emergencies (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 20, 2001)
Manhattan's U.S. Attorney Built Legacy of Fighting Terror (By BENJAMIN WEISER, Nov. 20, 2001)
* TUNNEL VISION: The 53rd St. River Tunnel Is Like a Vision of Dante's (By RANDY KENNEDY, Nov. 20, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: Just in Time, Grandma Is Out of Retirement (By GLENN COLLINS, Nov. 20, 2001)
Thefts Using Fake A.T.M. Cards Are Investigated Coast to Coast (By JACOB H. FRIES, Nov. 20, 2001)
THE PAPERWORK: Awash in Grief After Attack, Adrift in a Sea of Paperwork (By JANNY SCOTT, Nov. 20, 2001)
* Nobody-Wants-to-Travel Guides (By MICHAEL BRICK, Nov. 20, 2001)
* SPORTS: Bonds Is Voted M.V.P. (By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Nov. 20, 2001)
SPORTS: Budgets Will Stretch for Giambi and Bonds (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 20, 2001)
* EDITORIAL: Harry's Big Weekend (NY TIMES, Nov. 20, 2001)
Op-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Today's News Quiz (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 20, 2001)
Op-ED: Islam Is Part of the West, Too (By WOLFGANG PETRITSCH, Nov. 20, 2001)
Op-ED: A Better Chance for Free Trade (By MICHAEL M. WEINSTEIN, Nov. 20, 2001)
Op-ED: The Opportunist's Friend (and Foe): States' Rights (By GARRETT EPPS, Nov. 20, 2001)
LETTERS: Women in Afghanistan, and Here (By BILL MARSANO et. al., Nov. 20, 2001)
LETTERS: Harry Potter's Appeal (By DAVID B. PICKER, Nov. 20, 2001)
BUSINESS: Indexes Gain as Prospects Look Rosier for 2002 Rebound
[Dow +109, Nasdaq +36] (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 20, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: A Rebound in Search of a Reason (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Nov. 20, 2001)
* Tokyo Fears China May Put an End to 'Made in Japan' (By JAMES BROOKE, Nov. 20, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: For This 'Merger of Equals,' Little Need for a Wink (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Nov. 20, 2001)
ADVERTISING: A Master Deal Maker Got More Than He Bargained For (By SUZANNE KAPNER, Nov. 20, 2001)
Pearson and Chinese Network in Educational TV Venture (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 20, 2001)
ART: The Guggenheim's Scaled-Back Ambition (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Nov. 20, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: 20th-Century Latin American Art Finally Gets a Home (By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, Nov. 20, 2001)
* BOOKS: NEW STORIES BY ALICE MUNRO: Home Is Where the Heart Is, an Independent One
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 20, 2001)
* DANCE: Balanchine's All-American Dedication (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 20, 2001)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: Masur Delivers a Message From Shostakovich, Darkly (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Nov. 20, 2001)
OPERA: LYRIC OPERA OF CHICAGO: Innocence, Desire and Evil Amid the Sails and Salty Air
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 20, 2001)
POP MUSIC: HARRY CONNICK: Connick's Favorite Songs, Some of Which He Wrote (By BEN RATLIFF, Nov. 20, 2001)
THEATER: 'BROADWAY BASH!': They Happen to Like Singing to Beat the Band (By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 20, 2001)
THEATER: '[SIC]': Three People at an Uncertain Stage Making Their Uncertain Way
(By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 20, 2001)
STYLE: For a Shopping Spree, the Closet's the Place (By GUY TREBAY, Nov. 20, 2001)
SCIENCE TIMES: Something Missing in Fragile Cloud Forest: The Clouds (By CAROL KAESUK YOON, Nov. 20, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: Why Time Stands Still (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Nov. 20, 2001)
Government Reviving Ties to Scientists (By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Nov. 20, 2001)
Plan Calls for Using Oceans to Soak Up CO2; Critics Cite Perils (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 20, 2001)
New Clues and Puzzles in Boston Strangler Case (By PHILIP J. HILTS, Nov. 20, 2001)
Q & A: Cluster Flies? (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Nov. 20, 2001)
* Letters: Tale of the 'Fever Fiend' & The Mind of Feynman (By WADE HALL; DENNIS MEREDITH, et. al., Nov. 20, 2001)
HEALTH: FACING OFF: Of Doctors and Detectives (By GALE SCOTT, Nov. 20, 2001)
* Treatment Can Ease Lingering Trauma of Sept. 11 (By ERICA GOODE, Nov. 20, 2001)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: When a Woman Loses Hair: New Insights (By JANE E. BRODY, Nov. 20, 2001)
* Memories Hold Clues to Coping (By ERICA GOODE, Nov. 20, 2001)
THE DOCTOR'S WORLD: How to Assist Failing Hearts? New Questions Emerge (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D., Nov. 20, 2001)
A New Test for Women at High Risk For Cancer (By JUDITH GROCH, Nov. 20, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS: Treatments: Easing Pain Rooted in Nervous System (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 20, 2001)
Remedies: Making the Case for Plain Old Aspirin (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 20, 2001)
Cause and Effect: Libido Loss? Don't Blame Licorice (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 20, 2001)
Patterns: Lyme Ticks May Be Rolling on the River (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 20, 2001)
At Risk: 'Kangaroo' Care for Underweight Infants (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 20, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: In Trying Times of Childhood, What's 'Normal'? (By JOHN LANGONE, Nov. 20, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Help in Controlling a Frustrating Disorder (By JOHN LANGONE, Nov. 20, 2001)

Monday, November 19, 2001:
On This Day: November 19 (Charles I 11/19/1600-1/30/1649, Mikhail Lomonosov 11/19/1711-4/15/1765, Ferdinand Lesseps 11/19/1805-12/7/1894, James Garfield 11/19/1831-9/19/1881, Richard Avenarius 11/19/1843-11/18/1896, Allen Tate 11/19/1899-2/9/1979, Tommy Dorsey 11/19/1905-11/26/1956, Roy Campanella 11/19/1921-6/26/1993, Jeanne Kirkpatrick 1926, Larry King 1933, Dick Cavett 1936, Ted Turner 1938, Garrick Utley 1939, Calvin Klein 1942, Ahmad Rashad 1949, Kathleen Quinlan 1954, Jodie Foster 1962, Gail Devers 1966)
* The Heroes of July: Lincoln's Gettysburg Address (NY Times, November 19, 1863)
* Indira Gandhi Assassinated, Born to Politics, Left Her Own Imprint on India [11/19/1917-10/31/1984] (By LINDA CHARLTON, November 1, 1984)
Tommy Flanagan, Elegant Jazz Pianist, Is Dead at 71 (By BEN RATLIFF, Nov. 19, 2001)
Laid Low by Last Recession, California Is Ready for Next (By JAMES STERNGOLD, Nov. 19, 2001)
POLITICAL MEMO: Sept. 11 Attacks Refocused the Spotlight (By RICHARD L. BERKE, Nov. 19, 2001)
WHITE HOUSE LETTER: The Politics of Plight and the Gender Gap (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 19, 2001)
NY REGION: LOWER MANHATTAN: Since Sept. 11, Vacant Offices and Lost Vigor (By CHARLES V. BAGLI, Nov. 19, 2001)
United in Grief and Prayer, Sharing the Common Language of Tears (By SHAILA K. DEWAN & SARAH KERSHAW, Nov. 19, 2001)
* With Love, From Pupils in Heartland (By ABBY GOODNOUGH, Nov. 19, 2001)
* METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary (By ENID NEMY, Nov. 19, 2001)
* NEW PALTZ JOURNAL: Speck of Light, a Shower of Stars, a Wave of Aahs (By WINNIE HU, Nov. 19, 2001)
N.Y. REGION: A Workhorse of the Skies, Perhaps With a Deadly Defect (By MATTHEW L. WALD & AL BAKER, Nov. 19, 2001)
METRO MATTERS: For the Jobless, the Waiting Stretches On (By JOYCE PURNICK, Nov. 19, 2001)
SPORTS: Intrigue and a Looming Tyson [Lewis-Tyson] (By DAVE ANDERSON, Nov. 19, 2001)
SPORTS: For Baseball, a Five-Star Menu (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Specter of Nuclear Terror (NY TIMES, Nov. 19, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Trimming Beards and Ideologies in Modern Afghanistan (By STEVEN R. WEISMAN, Nov. 19, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Big Mo (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: The Vanishing Act (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: The Job Nobody Trained For [Homeland Defense] (By ROBERT M. GATES, Nov. 19, 2001)
OP-ED: A Fireball Too Far (By JAMES W. HALL, Nov. 19, 2001)
LETTERS: At an Islamic School in Pakistan (By OMAR NOMAN et. al., Nov. 19, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Companies Compete to Provide Saudi Internet Veil (By JENNIFER 8. LEE, Nov. 19, 2001)
* TECHNOLOGY: Online Travel Is Active Despite Economy (By SAUL HANSELL, Nov. 19, 2001)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Retailers Stick With Web Gift Lists (By BOB TEDESCHI, Nov. 19, 2001)
* Fast Search Engine Says It Now Offers Quick News Updates (By, Nov. 19, 2001)
* Paying for Web Content Is a Tough Sell (By MATT RICHTEL, Nov. 19, 2001)
A New Story for 2 Rival Reporters From the 1970's [Woodward & Hersh] (By FELICITY BARRINGER, Nov. 19, 2001)
Wild Welcome Greets Rivera at Fox News (By JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 19, 2001)
NEW ECONOMY: New Math for Fiber Optic Networks (By BARNABY J. FEDER, Nov. 19, 2001)
Escapism and Fantasy Lift TV Ratings (By BILL CARTER, Nov. 19, 2001)
Signs of Slow Holiday Sales Worry Book Publishers (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Nov. 19, 2001)
* Themes of Gloom and Doom Fill Japanese Bookstores (By KEN BELSON, Nov. 19, 2001)
BOOKS: 'GREAT AMERICAN PLAIN': For a Trio at the State Fair, No Grand Nights for Singing
(By RICHARD EDER, Nov. 19, 2001)
DANCE: LIMÓN DANCE COMPANY: So Many Sailors but So Little Love (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 19, 2001)
* FILM: 'Potter' Movie Sets Box Office Record (By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 19, 2001)
* FILM: Young Viewers Like Screen Translation of 'Potter' Book (By SETH SCHIESEL, Nov. 19, 2001)
OPERA: A Call to Arms and All the Intricacies of a Triangle [Verdi's "La Battaglia di Legnano"]
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 19, 2001)
OPERA: 'DIE MEISTERSINGER': In Nuremberg With a Renewal of Hope (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Nov. 19, 2001)
THEATER: 'TWO ROOMS': Terror in Beirut, Frustration in Washington (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 19, 2001)
* THEATER: 'QED': Iconoclastic Physicist for All Occasions [Richard Feynman]
(By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 19, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Hemingway's Blessing, Copland's Collaboration (By A. E. HOTCHNER, Nov. 19, 2001)

Sunday, November 18, 2001:
On This Day: November 18 (Carl Maria von Weber 11/18/1786-6/5/1826, Louis-Jacques Daguerre 11/18/1787-7/10/1851, Sir William Gilbert 11/18/1836-5/29/1911, Ignacy Paderewski 11/18/1860-6/29/1941, Jacques Maritain 11/18/1882-4/28/1973, Gio Ponti 11/18/1891-9/15/1979, Patrick Blackett 11/18/1897-7/13/1974, Eugene Ormandy 11/18/1899-3/12/1985, George Gallup 11/18/1901-7/26/1984, George Wald 11/18/1906-4/13/1997, Johnny Mercer 11/18/1909-6/25/1976, Imogen Coca 1908, Brenda Vaccaro 1939, Linda Evans 1942, Andrea Marcovicci 1948)
Spain's Parliament Approves Election And Its Own Demise (By JAMES M. MARKHAM, November 18, 1976)
* Alan B. Shepard Jr. Is Dead at 74; First American to Travel in Space [11/18/1923-7/21/1998] (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, July 23, 1998)
Melvin Burkhart, 'Human Blockhead' in Vanishing Sideshow Culture, Dies at 94
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
* Satguru Subramuniyaswami, Hindu Spiritual Leader, Dies at 74 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
Albert C. Todd, 74, Professor and Translator, Dies (NY TIMES, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE ANTHRAX INQUIRY: Officials Hope for New Clues in Senate Mail (By PHILIP SHENON & SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Nov. 18, 2001)
HIGHWAY SECURITY: Urgent Efforts to Prevent Thefts of Trucks for Use as Bombs
(By EVELYN NIEVES with ANDREW C. REVKIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE FIRST LADY: Mrs. Bush Cites Abuse of Women and Children by the Taliban (By DAVID STOUT, Nov. 18, 2001)
Prayer Warriors Fight Church-State Division (By JOHN W. FOUNTAIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
PUBLIC HEALTH: He Routed Smallpox, Now Tackles Bioterror (By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE TERRORISM FIGHT: Despite Some Concerns, Civil Liberties Are Taking a Back Seat
(By ROBIN TONER, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL: From Election Loss, Ashcroft Goes to Top in Antiterror Campaign
(By DAVID JOHNSTON & TODD S. PURDUM, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE STUDENTS: Universities Persuade Senator to Drop Plan to Limit Visas (By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO, Nov. 18, 2001)
* WORLD: THE INVESTIGATION: Retracing a Trail to Sept. 11 Plot (By JOHN TAGLIABUE, Nov. 18, 2001)
STRATEGY: U.S. to Press Afghan Rebels Not to Form Government (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 18, 2001)
HOLDOUTS: The Taliban Remain in Kandahar, Saying They'll Fight to the Last (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 18, 2001)
TERRORIST'S COOKBOOK: A Taliban Researcher Practiced Crude Science (By JAMES GLANZ with DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 18, 2001)
Foreigners Allied With Taliban Cling to a Surrounded Stronghold (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 18, 2001)
Afghans, Elated Yet Wary, Greet New Way of Life (By, Nov. 18, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Taliban Holdouts, and Support for Civil Liberties and Afghan Women
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 18, 2001)
Royal Baby Is Due Soon, And Apathy Grips Japan (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Nov. 18, 2001)
Unexpected Guests Warm Hearts in the Frozen North (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Nov. 18, 2001)
N.Y. REGION: Arts Groups Reeling From Downturn After Attack (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE WORKERS: As Dig Goes On, Emotions Are Buried Deep (By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE CLERGY: Seeking Guideposts to Help in No-Man's Land (By DANIEL J. WAKIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
Shops Near Ground Zero Were Insured, but Not Enough (By JOSEPH P. FRIED, Nov. 18, 2001)
WEST SIDE JOURNAL: A Gritty Neighborhood, Perfect for Photo Ops (By JAMES BARRON, Nov. 18, 2001)
Where Death Fell From Sky, Lives Intersect (By JIM DWYER, Nov. 18, 2001)
EDITORIAL: How to Survive Anthrax (NY TIMES, Nov. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Cleopatra and Osama (By MAUREEN DOWD, Nov. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: The Oil-Hog Cycle (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Nov. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: The Pox and Human Progress (By ELIZABETH A. FENN, Nov. 18, 2001)
OP-ED: American Ramadan (By JONATHAN E. SMABY, Nov. 18, 2001)
LETTERS: Liberty and Security in the Age of Terror (By STEPHEN M. FLATOW et. al., Nov. 18, 2001)
* BUSINESS: Clash Over Legacy Fuels Computer Merger Battle [HP-Compaq] (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 18, 2001)
Telecom's Pied Piper: Whose Side Was He On? [Jack Grubman] (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Nov. 18, 2001)
MARKET WATCH: An Insider Shadow Looms Over a Stock's Party [FalconStor Software]
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Nov. 18, 2001)
Bullish, and Patient, on Energy Stocks (By JAN M. ROSEN, Nov. 18, 2001)
* ECONOMIC VIEW: What Detroit Can Teach Washington (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Nov. 18, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: Luxuries Are Looking Like Durable Goods (By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
Keeping Up With the Nielsen (Executive) Family (By JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE RIGHT THING: Diversity Without a Distinction (By JEFFREY SEGLIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
* STRATEGIES: Why Small-Cap Stocks Are So Hot in Cold Weather (By MARK HULBERT, Nov. 18, 2001)
INVESTING WITH: Steven Romick of UAM FPA Crescent Portfolio (By CAROLE GOULD, Nov. 18, 2001)
Some Restaurants Thrive in Slowdown (By MICHELLE LEDER, Nov. 18, 2001)
PRELUDES: An Old-Fashioned Job Hunt (By ABBY ELLIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
MONEY AND MEDICINE: Health Care Is Another Terror Victim (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Nov. 18, 2001)
* ARTS: History Is Impatient to Embrace Sept. 11 (By JONATHAN MANDELL, Nov. 18, 2001)
ARCHITECTURE: Can New York Take Risks in Architecture? (By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Nov. 18, 2001)
DANCE: How to Spot the Classics in the Crowd of Modern Dance (By VALERIE GLADSTONE, Nov. 18, 2001)
DANCE: The Fun, and Rewards, of Toying With Tradition (By MATTHEW GUREWITSCH, Nov. 18, 2001)
MUSIC: John Cohen: His Worst Critic Proved Wrong (By BLAKE ESKIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Pictures Simply There for the Taking (By GREIL MARCUS, Nov. 18, 2001)
THEATER: Now on Stages: From the Sublime to the Aerobic (By MARGO JEFFERSON, Nov. 18, 2001)
* THEATER: Pitching In for Paul Newman and Other American Icons (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Nov. 18, 2001)
* TV: The Undying Magic of Bob Ross's Happy Little Trees [Joy of Painting]
(By CAMERON MORFIT, Nov. 18, 2001)
TV: 'Alias': A Modern Cinderella, No Prince Needed (By JOYCE MILLMAN, Nov. 18, 2001)
STYLE: The Night People's Favorite Night (By JESSE McKINLEY, Nov. 18, 2001)
MIRROR, MIRROR: Tempest Rises in a Cappuccino Cup (By PENELOPE GREEN, Nov. 18, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT WITH Iman: A Legend in One Volume (By RUTH LA FERLA, Nov. 18, 2001)
Victoria's Secret on TV: Another First for Women (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Nov. 18, 2001)
VOWS: Alicia Rangel and Howard Haughton (By JOYCE WADLER, Nov. 18, 2001)
The Skin Game, With New Wrinkles (By RUTH LA FERLA, Nov. 18, 2001)
For the Man With a 15.95-Inch Neck (By DAVID COLMAN, Nov. 18, 2001)
ON THE STREET: A Splash Of Red (Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Nov. 18, 2001)
* LEARNING CURVE: Surprise. War Works After All. (By ERIC SCHMITT, Nov. 18, 2001)
Leasing an Anti-Taliban Coalition (By MICHAEL WINES, Nov. 18, 2001)
* WHAT PRICE SECURITY?: Testing the Resilience of American Values (By JEFFREY ROSEN, Nov. 18, 2001)
* CORRESPONDENCE: In a Wasteland, Casual Brutality and Acts of Startling Kindness
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 18, 2001)
CRY FOR HELP: This Industry Doesn't Fly (By ALEX BERENSON, Nov. 18, 2001)
GEARHEAD NATION: A Time Out for Technophilia (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 18, 2001)
Terrorism's Troubadours (By SIMON ROMERO, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE VOTE: Count Omits A Verdict on the Court (By LINDA GREENHOUSE, Nov. 18, 2001)
The End of the Embargo? [Cuba] (By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Nov. 18, 2001)
* Hair as a Battlefield for the Soul (By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Nov. 18, 2001)
* WITHDRAWAL SYMPTOMS: First Steps (By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., Nov. 18, 2001)
* Psychodelia's Middle-Aged Head Trip [Ken Kesey] (By JOHN LELAND, Nov. 18, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Von Clausewitz Strikes Again (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 18, 2001)
* Other Woes [multiculturalism] (By MARGARET TALBOT, Nov. 18, 2001)
Questions for Mario Vargas Llosa on Why a Dictator Isn't Necessarily a Fanatic
(By AMY BARRETT, Nov. 18, 2001)
* IDEA LAB: If You Publish It... (By JAMES ATLAS, Nov. 18, 2001)
* Symbol Making (By Charles Baldwin, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Shower Away (By RANDY COHEN, Nov. 18, 2001)
* IN THE MAGAZINE: What the Muslim World Is Watching (By FOUAD AJAMI, Nov. 18, 2001)
How a Camp Becomes a City (By PETER MAASS, Nov. 18, 2001)
* The Sultry Chef From Britain Comes to These Shores (By LYNN HIRSCHBERG, Nov. 18, 2001)
The Journey of a 15-Year-Old From Mali Who Sold Himself Into Bondage (By MICHAEL FINKEL, Nov. 18, 2001)
FOOD: Peanut Butter and Jammies (By JONATHAN REYNOLDS, Nov. 18, 2001)
STYLE: Cold Comfort: modern design is furniture [slide show] (Photographs by ANDREAS BLECKMANN, Nov. 18, 2001)
APPEARANCES: One Too Many? [beauty biz to the rescue] (By MARY TANNEN, Nov. 18, 2001)
LIVES: Streetwise (By SALAR ABDOH, Nov. 18, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 18, 2001)
* 'The Complete Works of Isaac Babel': At War With Himself (By JONATHAN ROSEN, Nov. 18, 2001)
Peter L. Bergen, 'Holy War, Inc.': 21st-Century Jihad (By ETHAN BRONNER, Nov. 18, 2001)
* Meryle Secrest, 'Somewhere for Me': The Sound of His Music [Richard Rodgers]
(By GERARD ALESSANDRINI, Nov. 18, 2001)
'In the Shadow of Our House': The Powerlessness of Language (By JULIE GRAY, Nov. 18, 2001)
'Upheavals of Thought': Martha Nussbaum's Philosophy of Love (By WENDY STEINER, Nov. 18, 2001)
'Living With Saints': Stories of Spiritual Hunger (By MEGHAN O'ROURKE, Nov. 18, 2001)
A READING LIST: Beyond the Khyber Pass (By JOHN SIFTON, Nov. 18, 2001)
THE CLOSE READER: Eulogy for a Little Magazine [Lingua Franca] (By JUDITH SHULEVITZ, Nov. 18, 2001)

Saturday, November 17, 2001:
On This Day: November 17 (Joost van den Vondel 11/17/1587-2/5/1679, Louis XVIII 11/17/1755-9/16/1824, Gregorio Lopez y Fuentes 11/17/1895-12/10/1966, Isamu Noguchi 11/17/1904-12/30/1988, Rock Hudson 11/17/1925-10/2/1985, Bob Mathias 1930, Martin Scorsese 1942, Danny DeVito 1944, Lauren Hutton 1944)
Nixon Declares He Didn't Profit From Public Life: "I'm Not a Crook" (By R.W. APPLE. JR., November 17, 1973)
* Lee Strasberg of Actors Studio Dead at 80 [11/17/1901-2/17/1982] (By MEL GUSSOW, February 18, 1982)
Max Hunter, 79, Rocket Engineer With Wealth of Ideas for Space (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 17, 2001)
Panama Francis, Jazz Drummer of Swing Era, Dead at 82 (By BEN RATLIFF, Nov. 17, 2001)
Franz Hoskins, 86, Dies; Aided in Surgery on Sub (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Nov. 17, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Suspicious Letter to Senator Tests Positive for Anthrax (By PHILIP SHENON, Nov. 17, 2001)
THE BUREAU: F.B.I. Chief Says Failed Sept. 11 Hijackers May Remain at Large
(By PHILIP SHENON, Nov. 17, 2001)
Usefulness of SAT Test Is Debated in California (By JACQUES STEINBERG, Nov. 17, 2001)
* RELIGION JOURNAL: Iran's President Speaks on Faith and Civilization (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Nov. 17, 2001)
AIRPORT SECURITY: Man Runs. Airport Empties. Flights Stop. Travelers Stew. (By DAVID FIRESTONE, Nov. 17, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Neither Side Blinks as Ideological Rift Stalls Progress on Stimulus Package
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 17, 2001)
THE SCREENERS: Airport Workers See Bill as Ticket to a Better Life (By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Nov. 17, 2001)
PENNSYLVANIA RAID: U.S. Agents Were Doing 'Their Jobs,' 3 Men Say (By SARA RIMER, Nov. 17, 2001)
AMERICAN JOURNAL: Perseverance, Not Vindictiveness, in a Family Bereaved by Terrorism
(By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Nov. 17, 2001)
WORLD: THE CAPTIVES: Relief Workers Tell of Fear and Faith (By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Nov. 17, 2001)
THE BATTLE: Leader Described as Ready to Flee Taliban¹s Bastion (By THOM SHANKER and JAMES DAO, Nov. 17, 2001)
AL QAEDA: Death of bin Laden Aide Confirmed (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 17, 2001)
AL QAEDA: Bin Laden Aide Reported Killed by U.S. Bombs (By JAMES RISEN, Nov. 17, 2001)
KABUL: In 2 Abandoned Kabul Houses, Some Hints of Al Qaeda Presence (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 17, 2001)
A CRUCIAL LEADER: Long at bin Laden's Side, and, It Seems, Very Busy (By BENJAMIN WEISER, Nov. 17, 2001)
KANDAHAR: Taliban Reportedly Transferring Control of Stronghold to Two Founding Supporters
(By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 17, 2001)
IN HERAT: The Warlord, in Charge Again, Thanks the West but Wants It Gone (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 17, 2001)
SIEGE: Rebels Pause for Ramadan, but Vow Swift Attack on Kunduz (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 17, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Setback for Al Qaeda, Vote for Air Safety, Money for New York
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 17, 2001)
SKEPTICISM: Was Paper on Bomb a Parody? (By NICHOLAS WADE, Nov. 17, 2001)
NY REGION: Wall St. Jobs Are Migrating to New Jersey After Attack (By IVER PETERSON, Nov. 17, 2001)
THE FIREFIGHTERS: A Quiet Plea Moved the City to Restore Staffing at Site (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Nov. 17, 2001)
THE CRASH OF FLIGHT 587: F.A.A. Orders Study of Planes, as Queens Neighborhood Mourns (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Taliban Retreat (NY TIMES, Nov. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Retaining Smallpox Stocks (NY TIMES, Nov. 17, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Abraham Lincoln Speaks to Us of Slavery ‹ and Freedom ‹ in 2001
(By BRENT STAPLES, Nov. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: In a State of Denial (By BILL KELLER, Nov. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: AT HOME ABROAD/ABROAD AT HOME: Waiting for America (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Nov. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: Al Qaeda Should Be Tried Before the World (By ANNE-MARIE SLAUGHTER, Nov. 17, 2001)
OP-ED: How to Be the Newspaper of Record (By SUSAN E. TIFFT and ALEX S. JONES, Nov. 17, 2001)
BUSINESS: Interest Rates on Treasuries Return to Pre-Sept. 11 Levels (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Nov. 17, 2001)
COMPUTER SECURITY: To Forestall a 'Digital Pearl Harbor,' U.S. Looks to System Separate From Internet
(By ALISON MITCHELL, Nov. 17, 2001)
Hewlett Son Goes to S.E.C. in Fight Against Compaq Deal (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 17, 2001)
ARTS: Cells That Save Lives Are a Mother's Legacy (By REBECCA SKLOOT, Nov. 17, 2001)
ARTS: Harvard's Prize Catch, a Delphic Postcolonialist (By EMILY EAKIN, Nov. 17, 2001)
CABARET: CHRISTINE EBERSOLE: Effervescing From Song to Song (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Nov. 17, 2001)
CONNECTIONS: Exploring the Flaws in the Notion of the 'Root Causes' of Terror
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Nov. 17, 2001)
DANCE: LIMÓN DANCE COMPANY: The Limón Company Stretches and Steps Into the Jazz Age
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 17, 2001)
DANCE: PURCHASE DANCE CORPS: From Airy Beatles Hits to a Prayer for the Dead
(By JACK ANDERSON, Nov. 17, 2001)
TV: 'THE NIGHTCLUB YEARS': Get Comfortable and Revel in Nostalgic Nightclub Nights
(By RON WERTHEIMER, Nov. 17, 2001)

Friday, November 16, 2001:
On This Day: November 16 (Rodolph Kreutzer 11/16/1766-1/6/1831, Charles Eliot Norton 11/16/1827-10/21/1908, Arthur B. Krock 11/16/1886-4/12/1974, George Kaufman 11/16/1889-6/2/1961, Burgess Meredith 11/16/1907-9/9/1997, Oksana Baiul 1977)
United States Recognizes Soviet, Bullitt Named First Ambassador (By WALTER DURANTY, November 16, 1933)
* W. C. Handy, Composer, Is Dead at 84; Author of 'St. Louis Blues' [11/16/1873-3/28/1958]
(By EDITH EVANS ASBURY, March 29, 1958)
Frank Messer, Former Yankees Announcer, Dies at 76 (By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Nov. 16, 2001)
Peggy Mount, British Actress Who Made Grown Men Tremble, Dies at 85 (By PAUL LEWIS, Nov. 16, 2001)
David W. Brumbaugh; Was, 'Mr. Zip' at Time Inc., Dies at 93 (By ERIC PACE, Nov. 16, 2001)
U.S. Says Top Bin Laden Aide Believed Killed in Airstrike (By TERENCE NEILAN, Nov. 16, 2001)
A Quick Change in Fortune Dulls the Glimmer of Houston [Compaq & Enron takeovers] (By JIM YARDLEY, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE SUSPECT: Investigators Think Yemeni Man Was Meant to Be 20th Hijacker (By MICHAEL MOSS, Nov. 16, 2001)
IN THE COCKPIT: Recording Details Takeover of Downed Flight 93 (By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Nov. 16, 2001)
F.B.I. Visits Provoke Waves of Worry in Middle Eastern Men (By GREG WINTER, Nov. 16, 2001)
AIRLINE SAFETY: United Plans to Equip Pilots With Stun Guns (By REUTERS, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE DISEASE: U.S. Advises Anthrax Drug for Visitors to a Publisher (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 16, 2001)
HOMELAND DEFENSE: Ridge Agrees Taliban Losses May Lead to New Terrorism (By ALISON MITCHELL, Nov. 16, 2001)
* SHAPING OPINION: First Lady to Speak About Afghan Women (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 16, 2001)
RAMADAN: Muslims See Acceptance and Scrutiny as Holy Month Nears (By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Nov. 16, 2001)
RELIEF AFTER RELEASE: Hometown Is Jubilant Aid Workers Are Free (By ROSS E. MILLOY, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE SCREENERS: Security Bill Is Criticized by Those It Would Displace (By DAVID FIRESTONE, Nov. 16, 2001)
WORLD: GERM WARFARE: U.S. Set to Retain Smallpox Stocks (By JUDITH MILLER, Nov. 16, 2001)
REINFORCEMENTS: Allies Building Force to Keep Order in a Vacuum
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON & STEVEN LEE MYERS, Nov. 16, 2001)
* THE RANCH: Before and After Bush and Putin's Banter, No Agreement on Missile Defense
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 16, 2001)
AFGHANISTAN REDUX: Warlords Are Vying to Fill Vacuum Left by the Taliban (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE OUTLOOK: Now, the Battle to Feed the Afghan Nation (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE TRAP: Talks Fail With Taliban Besieged in Kunduz (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 16, 2001)
STRONGHOLD: Alliance Commander Near Kandahar Says Taliban's Leader Refused a Peace Offer
(By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE JOURNALISTS: British News Organizations Aided by a Cooperative Government and Afghan Fans
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY & BILL CARTER, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE DISPLACED: Afghans Returning Home, Vindicated and Vengeful (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 16, 2001)
REFUGEES: 'It's All Dust': A Family That Withstood Weeks of War Finally Leaves Kabul (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE WEAPONS: Trail of Clues Left by Al Qaeda Hints Darkly at Arms Plan (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 16, 2001)
FOOD DROPS: Two Roles for Military: Supplying Guns and Butter (By JAMES DAO, Nov. 16, 2001)
French Move to Control Secret Fund of Leaders (By SUZANNE DALEY, Nov. 16, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Missile Impasse: The Shape of the Deal (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 16, 2001)
Putin Visits World Trade Center Ruins (By REUTERS, Nov. 16, 2001)
NY REGION: UNEMPLOYMENT: Loss of 79,000 Jobs Adds to City's Economic Woes (By LESLIE EATON, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE CRASH OF FLIGHT 587: Data Shows Jet Shook After Hitting Wake of 747 (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE SITE: Workers Shore Up Wall Keeping Hudson's Waters Out (By JAMES GLANZ and ERIC LIPTON, Nov. 16, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: A Time of Mourning, and a Rare Time in the Sun (By ROBIN FINN, Nov. 16, 2001)
BOLDFACE NAMES: Funny Faces, Sad Topic [Bill Murray & Sigourney Weaver] (By JAMES BARRON, Nov. 16, 2001)
NOTEBOOKS: Facing Criticism, the City Again Adds Firefighters to the Search (NY TIMES, Nov. 16, 2001)
SPORTS: Clemens Wins His 6th Cy Young (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 16, 2001)
Yanks' Off-Season Moves Hinging on Giambi's (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 16, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Barbecues and Missile Shields (NY TIMES, Nov. 16, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Breaking the Circle (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 16, 2001)
OP-ED: Bush by 537; Gore by 537,179 (By MARTIN PLISSNER, Nov. 16, 2001)
OP-ED: Writing History to Executive Order (By RICHARD REEVES, Nov. 16, 2001)
* OP-ED: Reading Magic [J. K. Rowling's "Harry Potter"] (By MARIA TATAR, Nov. 16, 2001)
LETTERS: When Afghanistan Is Free of War (By PHYLLIS CHESLER et. al., Nov. 16, 2001)
Blue Chips Up, but Cut in Economic Forecast Limits Gains (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 16, 2001)
BUSINESS: Oil Prices Tumble to 2-Year Low (By SABRINA TAVERNISE with NEELA BANERJEE, Nov. 16, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: Did Ken Lay Understand What Was Happening at Enron? (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 16, 2001)
Dell Rebounds After a 2nd-Quarter Loss (By CHRIS GAITHER, Nov. 16, 2001)
Falling Oil Prices Set to Bolster American Economy (By DAVID BARBOZA, Nov. 16, 2001)
Executive Bonuses Included in the Hewlett-Compaq Deal (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 16, 2001)
AOL-AT&T Cable Talks Said to Be Advancing/A> (By SETH SCHIESEL & ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Nov. 16, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Value and Price Are New Themes for Holiday Shopping (By STUART ELLIOT, Nov. 16, 2001)
* ART: ASIA SOCIETY AND MUSEUM: Cosmopolitan Trove on the Road to China (By HOLLAND COTTER, Nov. 16, 2001)
* ART: NEUE GALERIE NEW YORK: In German and Austrian Art, Small Is Beautiful (By ROBERTA SMITH, Nov. 16, 2001)
ARTS: Central Asian Jews Create 'Queensistan' (By SANDEE BRAWARSKY, Nov. 16, 2001)
ART: Seeing the Circus Without Peanuts and Cotton Candy (By GRACE GLUECK, Nov. 16, 2001)
INSIDE ART: A Homegrown Biennial (NY TIMES, Nov. 16, 2001)
ANTIQUES: When Men Were Plumed in Silk (By WENDY MOONAN, Nov. 16, 2001)
BOOKS: 'FEAST OF THE GOAT': Mario Vargas Llosa's Portrait of a Dictator (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 16, 2001)
DANCE: NEXT WAVE FESTIVAL: Exposed to the Elements in an Existential No Man's Land
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 16, 2001)
DESIGN REVIEW: Luxury for the Rich, Opportunity for Women (By GRACE GLUECK, Nov. 16, 2001)
* FILM: 'HARRY POTTER AND THE SORCERER'S STONE': Wizard School Without the Magic
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Nov. 16, 2001)
THEATER: 'GLORY OF LIVING': In Her World, Normalcy Includes the Grotesque (By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 16, 2001)
THEATER: 'AND GOD CREATED GREAT WHALES': Ahab Composes an Opera (NY TIMES, Nov. 16, 2001)
THEATER: 'SPEAKING IN TONGUES': With Smoke and Mirrors, Love of Sorts (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 16, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE SUICIDE BOMBER': A Possible Whydunit Turns Into a Whodunit (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Nov. 16, 2001)
TV REVIEW: Days of War and Wonder in Afghanistan (By CARYN JAMES, Nov. 16, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: Admiring (Yes, Really) Rocks Along the Road (By JAMES GORMAN, Nov. 16, 2001)
HEALTH: New Cancer Radiation Therapy Shows Promise (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 16, 2001)

Thursday, November 15, 2001:
On This Day: November 15 (William Pitt the elder 11/15/1708-5/11/1778, William Herschel 11/15/1738-8/25/1822, Felix Frankfurter 11/15/1882-2/22/1965, Marianne Moore 11/15/1887-2/5/1972, Averell Harriman 11/15/1891-7/26/1986, Erwin Rommel 11/15/1891-10/14/1944, Curtis LeMay 11/15/1906-10/1/1990, Joseph Wapner 1919, Howard H. Baker 1925, Ed Asner 1929, Petula Clark 1932)
50,000 War Protesters Stage Peaceful Rally In Washington; Militants Stir Clashes Later (By JOAN HERBERS, November 15, 1969)
* Georgia O' Keeffe Dead at 98; Shaper of Modern Art in U.S. [11/15/1887-3/6/1986] (By EDITH EVANS ASBURY, March 7, 1986)
* Nathan Pusey, Harvard President Through Growth and Turmoil Alike, Dies at 94 (By ANDREW L. YARROW, Nov. 15, 2001)
* Kesey's Words Resonate at the End of a Long Trip (By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Nov. 15, 2001)
* Albert Hague, Tony-Winning Composer, Dies at 81 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 15, 2001)
Michael DeMarco, a Judge and a Councilman in New York, Dies at 65 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 15, 2001)
Dutch Warmerdam, Pole-Vaulter, Dies at 86 (By FRANK LITSKY, Nov. 15, 2001)
George A. Kiersch, 83, Field Geologist and Professor, Is Dead (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 15, 2001)
University of California Moves to Widen Admissions Criteria (By BARBARA WHITAKER, Nov. 15, 2001)
Deaths of Women in Car Crashes Is on the Rise, Study Says (By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE TRIBUNALS: Closer Look at New Plan for Trying Terrorists (By WILLIAM GLABERSON, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE INTERVIEWS: Prosecutors Begin Effort to Interview 5,000, but Basic Questions Remain (By JODI WILGOREN, Nov. 15, 2001)
IMMIGRATION: Ashcroft Says I.N.S. Will Be Split to Refocus Responsibilities (By DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE AFGHAN REFUGEES: Joy Is Muted in California's Little Kabul (By CHRIS GAITHER, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE MILITARY PILOTS: Two Pilots Praise Passengers Who Fought Hijackers (By KEVIN SACK, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE ROUT: Taliban Are On the Run; bin Laden Is at Large (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Nov. 15, 2001)
OPERATIONS: Special Forces Hunt Al Qaeda on the Ground (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 15, 2001)
HOSTAGES: U.S. Rescues 8 Aid Workers South of Kabul (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 15, 2001)
RETREAT: Taliban Troops Move Across Border Into Pakistan (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 15, 2001)
Alliance Force, in Charge, Tries to Ease Fears (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 15, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Measuring Success: At Least the Talks Didn't Collapse [WTO] (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 15, 2001)
MILITARY PLANNING: Rapid Changes on the Ground Lead the Pentagon to Focus on Counterguerrilla Tactics
(By THOM SHANKER & STEVEN LEE MYERS, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE STRONGHOLD: Taliban Fight On in Kandahar, Shakily (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 15, 2001)
INTELLIGENCE: Blair Says New Evidence Ties bin Laden to Attacks (By WARREN HOGE, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE HOLDOUTS: Taliban Negotiating Surrender of Kunduz, Their Last Stronghold in Afghanistan's North
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 15, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: A Widening Rout, Civil Liberties Issues, a Red Cross Retreat (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 15, 2001)
* A Holy Quest in Tibet: Prostrate, and Miles to Go (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Nov. 15, 2001)
* REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: Putin Is Target of the Pecan Pie Tactic (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 15, 2001)
Tuberculosis Group Tries to Spur Research for New Antibiotics (By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr., Nov. 15, 2001)
TOKYO JOURNAL: Japan's Red Light 'Scouts' and Their Gullible Discoveries (By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Nov. 15, 2001)
NY REGION: Crash Inquiry Focuses on Tail Fin That Broke Off (By MATTHEW L. WALD and AL BAKER, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE RED CROSS: Red Cross Pledges All of Terror Fund to Sept. 11 Victims
(By DIANA B. HENRIQUES and DAVID BARSTOW, Nov. 15, 2001)
PUBLIC LIVES: The Man Who Put Kissinger in the Dirt, Softly (By JOYCE WADLER, Nov. 15, 2001)
BOLDFACE NAMES: Moving Fast, With Anchor [Dan Rather] (By JAMES BARRON, Nov. 15, 2001)
Below Rubble, a Tour of a Still-Burning Hell (By JAMES GLANZ, Nov. 15, 2001)
Windows as Mirrors of a City's Mood (By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Nov. 15, 2001)
SPORTS: 49,000 Hugs Should Heal Kim's Psyche (By DAVE ANDERSON, Nov. 15, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Poison Politics (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 15, 2001)
OP-ED ESSAY: Seizing Dictatorial Power (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 15, 2001)
* OP-ED: A Place for the Pashtuns (By VARTAN GREGORIAN, Nov. 15, 2001)
LETTERS: The Battle for Afghanistan: The Tide Is Turned (By ANDY JENNINGS et. al., Nov. 15, 2001)
BUSINESS: Share Prices Advance on a Record Surge in Retail Sales
[Dow +73, Nasdaq +11] (By REUTERS, Nov. 15, 2001)
* MARKET PLACE: Yahoo's Chief Moves the Company Away From Its Old Culture (By SAUL HANSELL, Nov. 15, 2001)
Hewlett Profit, Off 89%, Still Stirs Optimism (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 15, 2001)
BUSINESS: Henry Blodget to Leave Merrill Lynch (By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Nov. 15, 2001)
Boss on Cover Raises Issues for Magazine [Gerald M. Levin] (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Nov. 15, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Common Sense for Improving Airport Security (NY TIMES, Nov. 15, 2001)
Retail Sales Increase 7.1%, Mostly From Car Incentives (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 15, 2001)
ARTS IN AMERICA: Bringing Hollywood Pizazz to Military Training (By HUGH HART, Nov. 15, 2001)
ARTS: Lincoln's Words and Other Treasures (By MEL GUSSOW, Nov. 15, 2001)
ART: Postwar Art Fails to Meet Expectations at Christie's (By CAROL VOGEL, Nov. 15, 2001)
* BOOKS: Another Bend in the River for Naipaul (By MEL GUSSOW, Nov. 15, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THEODORE REX': Scaling the Nation in a Single Bound (By JANET MASLIN, Nov. 15, 2001)
BOOKS: 'Corrections' Is Winner of Top Prize for Fiction (By DINITIA SMITH, Nov. 15, 2001)
DANCE: LIMON DANCE COMPANY: Complexities in a Battle of the Sexes (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 15, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: For Musicians, Microsoft's Xbox Is No Jackpot (By NEIL STRAUSS, Nov. 15, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE PETRIFIED FOREST': A Depression Diner, Brimming With Danger and Dreams (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Nov. 15, 2001)
TV: 'SAUDI TIME BOMB?': Gauging Fissures in U.S.-Saudi Solidarity (By LESLIE CAMHI, Nov. 15, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Team Is Ready to Publish Full Set of Dead Sea Scrolls (By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Nov. 15, 2001)
HEALTH: Severe Stroke for 1st Patient Who Received Heart Device (By REUTERS, Nov. 15, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 15, 2001)
A Holiday Buying Guide to Technology (NY TIMES, Nov. 15, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Searching for Gifts When the Spirit Is Weak (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Nov. 15, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: PC Vintage: Full-Bodied, Mellow Price (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 15, 2001)
Forget Store Windows: Web Wares Beckon (By SARAH MILSTEIN, Nov. 15, 2001)
TECHNOLOGY IN ART: Filmmakers Send a Message With Lego as the Medium (By SARA IVRY, Nov. 15, 2001)
TECHNOLOGY ON THE ROAD: What Evil Lurks in the Hearts (and Hard Drives) of Men? (By LYNN HARRIS, Nov. 15, 2001)
After Attacks, Selective Shopping Aids the Bereft (By SARAH MILSTEIN, Nov. 15, 2001)
FROM THE DESK OF DAVID POGUE: The Wireless Future. Maybe. (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 15, 2001)

Wednesday, November 14, 2001:
On This Day: November 14 (Robert Fulton 11/14/1765-2/24/1815, Claude Monet 11/14/1840-12/5/1926, Jawaharlal Nehru 11/14/1889-5/27/1964, Aaron Copeland 11/14/1900-12/2/1990, Boutros Boutros-Ghali 1922, Prince Charles 1948, P. J. O'Rourke 1947)
* Dow Jones Finishes Above 1,000 (NY Times, November 14, 1972)
Death of King Hussein; Cautious King Took Risks In Straddling Two Worlds [11/14/1935-2/7/1999] (By JUDITH MILLER, February 8, 1999)
* Percy Ross, Columnist and Philanthropist, Dies at 84 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 14, 2001)
* David Hopkins, 79, Authority on Land Bridge of First Ice Age, Dies (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 14, 2001)
Bob Eckhardt, 88; Served 14 Years in U.S. House (By DAVID STOUT, Nov. 14, 2001)
Ray Kelly, Babe Ruth's Little Pal, Dies at 83 (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Nov. 14, 2001)
Richard Martin Stern, Award-Winning Writer, Dies at 86 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 14, 2001)
Bobby Bass, Stuntman, Dies at 65 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 14, 2001)
Leon Gray, All-Pro Football Lineman, Dies at 49 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 14, 2001)
THE NUCLEAR JUNKYARD: Where Warheads Are Made, and Where a Good Pair of Pliers Can Put Them to Rest
(By JAMES GLANZ and DENNIS OVERBYE, Nov. 14, 2001)
ACCORDING TO THE TIMES... The Pied Piper (By THE NEW YORK TIMES, Nov. 14, 2001)
THE CHEF: A Dash of Single Malt, and Voilà [2 recipes] (By BILL YOSSES, Nov. 14, 2001)

Tuesday, November 13, 2001:
On This Day: November 13 (Saint Augustine 11/13/354-8/28/430, Johann Albert Eck 11/13/1486-2/10/1543, Edwin Booth 11/13/1833-6/7/1893, Louis Brandeis 11/13/1856-10/5/1941, Jean Seberg 11/13/1938-9/8/1979, Whoopi Goldberg 1955)
High Court Rules Bus Segregation Unconstitutional (By LUTHER A. HUSTON, November 13, 1956)
* Death of R. L. Stevenson [11/13/1925-8/5/1984] (NY Times, December 18, 1894)
Carrie Donovan, One-of-a-Kind Fashion Editor, Dies at 73 (By CATHY HORYN, Nov. 13, 2001)
John Simon White, City Opera Director, Dies at 91 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 13, 2001)
Dorothy Dunnett, Novelist of Scotland, Is Dead at 78 (By HELEN VERONGOS, Nov. 13, 2001)
Citing 'New Day' in U.S.-Russia Relations, Bush Pledges Warhead Cuts (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE TRAVELERS: Fliers Take Solace in Absence of Apparent Ties to Terrorism (By DAVID FIRESTONE, Nov. 13, 2001)
TELEVISION: Anchors Try to Avoid Speculation on Cause of Crash (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY and JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 13, 2001)
NORTH PLATTE JOURNAL: Espresso Oasis Halfway Between Yuck! and Foo! (By JODI WILGOREN, Nov. 13, 2001)
WORLD: COMBAT: Northern Alliance Moves Into Kabul (By DAVID ROHDE with TERENCE NEILAN, Nov. 13, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Global Kaleidoscope: Powell Notes Shifts After Sept. 11 (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 13, 2001)
In Fallen Taliban City, a Busy, Busy Barber (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE NEWS MEDIA: Two French Journalists and a German Are Killed in Taliban Ambush
(By SUZANNE DALEY, Nov. 13, 2001)
MILITARY ANALYSIS: Two Wars, Many Fears (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 13, 2001)
Taliban Takes Foreign Aid Workers Out of Kabul (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE CRASH: Rattling Noises Were Heard Before Jet Crash, Officials Say (By SHERRI DAY, Nov. 13, 2001)
NY REGION: THE SCENE: Horror Arrives in a Serene Haven (By JIM DWYER and JANNY SCOTT, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE BLACK BOX: Voice Recorder Indicates Plane Crash Was Accident (By REUTERS, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE MOOD: Wounded City Finds More Tears to Shed (By DAN BARRY, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE PLANE: Engine Failure Seen as Likely Cause of Jet's Sudden Destruction (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 13, 2001)
SECURITY: Lessons From Sept. 11 Are Followed in Quick Transportation Shutdowns and Restarts
(By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Nov. 13, 2001)
SPORTS: For McGwire, the End Came too Soon (By MURRAY CHASS, Nov. 13, 2001)
EDITORIAL: The Prankster's Death [Ken Kesey] (NY TIMES, Nov. 13, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Another Plane Crashes (NY TIMES, Nov. 13, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: In Pakistan, It's Jihad 101 (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 13, 2001)
OP-ED: Can Bush and Putin Control Russia's Arsenal? (By CHRISTOPHER J. DODD and CHUCK HAGEL, Nov. 13, 2001)
OP-ED: A Homeland in Search of Security (By DANIEL BENJAMIN and STEVEN SIMON, Nov. 13, 2001)
* THE MARKETS: Stocks End Mixed as Fears of Terrorism as Crash's Cause Abate
[Dow -54, Nasdaq +12] (By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE AIRLINE : Crash Inflicts Heavy Blow on Prospects of American (By LAURENCE ZUCKERMAN, Nov. 13, 2001)
An Increase in Households Owning Mutual Funds (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 13, 2001)
THE DRUG MAKERS: Antibiotics Business Is Again Popular (By ANDREW POLLACK, Nov. 13, 2001)
ARTS: At Least for the Moment, a Cooling Off in the Culture Wars (By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 13, 2001)
BOOKS: 'REACHING FOR GLORY': Johnson Tapes Show a Man Full of Doubt, Even as Victor
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 13, 2001)
DANCE: Taking Off for Points Unknown (By JACK ANDERSON, Nov. 13, 2001)
DANCE: WOOD AND RACE: Striving for Equity in Things Like Mountain Climbing (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 13, 2001)
DANCE: BALLET NACIONAL DE CUBA: Adding a Touch of Newness to a Cuban Troupe's Evening
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 13, 2001)
JAZZ: ELVIS COSTELLO & MINGUS ORCHESTRA: Joining the Mingus Legacy, Just Like the Other Fans
(By JON PARELES, Nov. 13, 2001)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: An Elegant Bridge to a World in Upheaval (By BERNARD HOLLAND, Nov. 13, 2001)
MUSIC: ORPHEUS: Less Can Be More for an Ensemble in a Small Space (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 13, 2001)
OPERA: 'LILITH': Very First Feminist's Eerie Revenge on Men (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 13, 2001)
OPERA: 'VALIS': Tolstoy Nobleman, Trying to Do the Right Thing (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 13, 2001)
TV: 'BIOTERROR': On Preparing to Wage War With Germs, Guilt Aplenty (By ED REGIS, Nov. 13, 2001)
TV CRITIC: A Cable Channel Focused on the Past Turns to the Present (By JULIE SALAMON, Nov. 13, 2001)
STYLE: Tortured Bodies: Vanity Through the Ages (By GUY TREBAY, Nov. 13, 2001)
FRONT ROW: Spotting a Trend (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Nov. 13, 2001)
* SCIENCE: Coming Soon: Prime View of a Meteor Shower (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 13, 2001)
* On Stage, a Day in the Life of an Idiosyncratic Physicist (By DENNIS OVERBYE, Nov. 13, 2001)
* Weather Forecasters Look Ahead, Far Ahead (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Nov. 13, 2001)
* Persian Canal Discovery Is Testament to Ancient Engineering Skills (By YUDHIJIT BHATTACHARJEE, Nov. 13, 2001)
Accident Curbs Japan Research Into Cosmos's Ghostly Particles (By HOWARD W. FRENCH with DENNIS OVERBYE, Nov. 13, 2001)
Giant Roaches Also Roamed the Earth (NY TIMES, Nov. 13, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: Long-Shot Asteroids (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Nov. 13, 2001)
Q & A: The Thinking Apple Tree (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Nov. 13, 2001)
* HEALTH: New York Was Bioterrorism Target, in 1864 (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 13, 2001)
DOCTOR'S WORLD: When Everything Changed at the C.D.C. (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D., Nov. 13, 2001)
Studies Aim to Preserve Fertility of Women in Chemotherapy (By RANDI HUTTER EPSTEIN, Nov. 13, 2001)
* Young Love: The Good, the Bad and the Educational (By WINIFRED GALLAGHER, Nov. 13, 2001)
Bioterror Drugs Stall Over Rules and Logistics (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 13, 2001)
Treatments: Arthritis Patients Embrace the Tiger (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 13, 2001)
Prevention: Cavity Fighters, Financed by Medicaid (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 13, 2001)
Therapies: Early Walking for Babies With Down's (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 13, 2001)
* Patterns: Beauty, It Turns Out, Lights the Brain (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 13, 2001)
VITAL SIGNS: Diagnosis: After Angioplasty, Silent Symptoms (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 13, 2001)
When Rating Male Fertility, Appearance Counts (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 13, 2001)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Growing Old, With the Bones in One Piece (By JANE E. BRODY, Nov. 13, 2001)
HEALTH: Pump Seen Extending Life of Heart Failure Patients (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Nov. 13, 2001)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Asperger's: Information and Advice (By DAVID CORCORAN, Nov. 13, 2001)

Monday, November 12, 2001:
On This Day: November 12 (Aleksandr Borodin 11/12/1833-2/27/1887, Auguste Rodin 11/12/1840-11/17/1917, Harry Blackmun 11/12/1908-3/4/1999, Buck Clayton 11/12/1911-12/8/1991, Roland Barthes 11/12/1915-3/25/1980, Grace Kelly 11/12/1929-9/14/1982, Kim Hunter 1922, Nadia Comaneci 1961)
Our Men In Drives On Guadalcanal (By CHARLES HURD, November 12, 1942)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton Dies at Her Home, Nearly 87 [11/12/1815-10/26/1902] (NY Times, October 27, 1902)
Anthony Shaffer, Author of Long-Running 'Sleuth,' Dies at 75 (By PAUL LEWIS, Nov. 12, 2001)
* Ruth Limmer, Poetry Editor Who Aided Tenement Museum, 73 (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 12, 2001)
Eunice Simpson, 80, O. J. Simpson's Mother (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 12, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 12, 2001)
260 People Were on Board; No Survivors Found (By SHERRI DAY, Nov. 12, 2001)

Sunday, November 11, 2001:
On This Day: November 11 (Paracelsus 11/11/1493-9/24/1541, Johann Albert Fabricius 11/11/1668-4/30/1736, Paul Signac 11/11/1869-12/28/1947, Victor Emmanuel III 11/11/1869-12/28/1947, Maude Adams 11/11/1872-7/17/1953, Rene Clair 11/11/1898-3/15/1981, Sam Spiegel 11/11/1903-12/31/1985, Kurt Vonnegut 1922, Demi Moore 1962)
* Armistice Signed, End Of The War! Berlin Seized By Revolutionists; New Chancellor Begs For Order (Associated Press, November 11, 1918)
* Patton's Career A Brilliant One [11/11/1885-12/21/1945] (NY Times, December 22, 1945)
* OBITUARIES: Ken Kesey, Author of 'Cuckoo's Nest,' Is Dead at 66 (By CHRISTOPHER LEHMANN-HAUPT, Nov. 11, 2001)
Dr. Marian Fischman, Dies at 62; Studied the Effects of Cocaine (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 11, 2001)
Rabbi Chaim Stern, 71, Jewish Liturgist, Dies (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 11, 2001)
BUSINESS: World Trade Organization Admits China, Amid Doubts (By JOSEPH KAHN, Nov. 11, 2001)
Suddenly, 'Idea Wars' Take On a New Global Urgency (By AMY HARMON, Nov. 11, 2001)
Seeking Privacy Online, Even as Security Tightens (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Nov. 11, 2001)
Health Care as Main Engine: Is That So Bad? (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Nov. 11, 2001)
STYLE: On the Road Again, Bound for a State of Mind (By JULIA CHAPLIN, Nov. 11, 2001)
STYLE: Charting the Outer Limits of Inner Beauty (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Nov. 11, 2001)
STYLE: 15 Minutes of Fame Has Lasted 35 Years [Warhol's "Holly"] (By BOB MORRIS, Nov. 11, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT: Heather Matarazzo: She Loves a Cabaret (By WILLIAM LEONE, Nov. 11, 2001)
OUT THERE: Paris: Glittering Aromas From a Low-Key Star (By CATHY HORYN, Nov. 11, 2001)
VOWS: Lydia Peelle and Ketch Secor (By ABBY ELLIN, Nov. 11, 2001)
STREET BRAWL: The New Power of Arab Public Opinion (By JOHN KIFNER, Nov. 11, 2001)
AL QAEDA INC.: Running Terrorism as a Business (By DON VAN NATTA Jr., Nov. 11, 2001)
DOUBLE BIND: Acting Normal When Nothing Is Normal (By GEORGE JOHNSON, Nov. 11, 2001)
IT AIN'T OVER... Baseball in a Minor Key (By ALLEN BARRA, Nov. 11, 2001)
THE NEW MAYOR: Breaking the Laws in New York City (By JAMES TRAUB, Nov. 11, 2001)
* THE ECONOMY: Troubled Times for the Whole World (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Nov. 11, 2001)
* THE UNTOLD STORY: Why They Don't Know Us (By STEPHEN KINZER, Nov. 11, 2001)
* Go Figure (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Nov. 11, 2001)
* Our Feathered and Furry Shield (By SCOTT VEALE, Nov. 11, 2001)
Reading Italy's Signs of the Cross (By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Nov. 11, 2001)
Sticks, Stones and Kalashnikovs (By PAUL ZIELBAUER, Nov. 11, 2001)
Know Your Homeland Defense Agency (By BRUCE McCALL, Nov. 11, 2001)
WAYNE'S WORLD: A Military Disaster Waiting to Happen (By BILL GEIST, Nov. 11, 2001)
Five-Alarm Chic (By TOM KUNTZ, Nov. 11, 2001)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 11, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Nobody Named it Ground Zero, but That's the Name (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 11, 2001)
Lost and Found (By COLSON WHITEHEAD, Nov. 11, 2001)
SIGHTLINES: The View From Out Here (By VINCE PASSARO, Nov. 11, 2001)
A Second Look: Recovery Process Is Already in Full Swing [slide show] (NY TIMES, Nov. 11, 2001)
PRESCRIPTION: How New York Can Get Its Groove Back (By JOHN LELAND, Nov. 11, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Case Study Study (By RANDY COHEN, Nov. 11, 2001)
What They Were Thinking: Starting Over [CEOs on 9-11] (Photographs by HENRY LEUTWYLER, Interviews by SUSAN BURTON, Nov. 11, 2001)
INTRODUCTION: The Return of New York (By JACOB WEISBERG, Nov. 11, 2001)
MANIFESTOES FOR THE NEXT NEW YORK: Frank Rich on Times Square (By Frank Rich, Nov. 11, 2001)
MANIFESTOES FOR THE NEXT NEW YORK: Amy M. Spindler on Style (By AMY M. SPINDLER, Nov. 11, 2001)
MANIFESTOES FOR THE NEXT NEW YORK: (Michael Lewis on the Financial District (By Michael Lewis, Nov. 11, 2001)
* Mending a Psyche (By SUSAN DOMINUS, Nov. 11, 2001)
Conversations From the New New York (By RICHARD PRICE, Nov. 11, 2001)
Sonuvagun, if It Isn't Dominion (By JIM DWYER, Nov. 11, 2001)
REIMAGINE: What to Build [Panel of architects] (MODERATED BY TERENCE RILEY, Nov. 11, 2001)
RECONSTRUCT: Life Without Father (By LISA BELKIN, Nov. 11, 2001)
ENDPAPER: In Sorrow's Wake: They Still Chose to Make the City Their Home [slide show]
(Photographs by JESSICA WYNNE, Nov. 11, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 11, 2001)
* Roy Jenkins's 'Churchill': His Finest Hour (By HAROLD EVANS, Nov. 11, 2001)
'Alexander Hamilton': The Un-Jefferson (By CALEB CRAIN, Nov. 11, 2001)
* 'The Last Canyon': John Wesley Powell's Paradise of Loss (By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Nov. 11, 2001)
* Peter Gay's 'Schnitzler's Century': Victoria's Secret (By PHYLLIS ROSE, Nov. 11, 2001)
* 'The Age of Science': Back Issues (By LOREN GRAHAM, Nov. 11, 2001)
'The Age of Homespun': Learning About the Past From Objects (By JOHN DEMOS, Nov. 11, 2001)
'Molto Agitato': Divas, Dwarfs and Dogs (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 11, 2001)
Boox: A Comic [Bob Dylan's Memoir] (By Mark Alan Stamaty, Nov. 11, 2001)

Saturday, November 10, 2001:
On This Day: November 10 (Martin Luther 11/10/1483-2/18/1546, François Couperin 11/10/1668-9/12/1733, William Hogarth 11/10/1697-10/26/1764, Oliver Goldsmith 11/10/1730-4/4/1774, Vachel Lindsay 11/10/1879-12/5/1931, El Lissitzky 11/10/1890-12/30/1941, John P. Marquand 11/10/1893-7/16/1960, John K. Northrop 11/10/1893-2/18/1981)
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Opened to Visitors in Washington D.C. (NY Times, Nov. 10, 1982)
* Richard Burton, 58, is Dead; Rakish Stage and Screen Star [11/10/1925-8/5/1984] (By MAUREEN DOWD, August 6, 1984)
Giovanni Leone, Italy's Ex-President, Dies at 93 (By WILLIAM H. HONAN, Nov. 10, 2001)
* Bella C. Wexner, 93, Matriarch of a Retail Chain, Dies (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 10, 2001)
Warren E. Henry, Physicist and Educator, Dead at 92 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 10, 2001)
Lawrence Jacobs, 63, Pioneer in Treating Multiple Sclerosis, Dies (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 10, 2001)
ARTICLE (By, Nov. 10, 2001)
ARTS & IDEAS: Islam Experts Off on a Wild Ride, Willing or Not (By ALEXANDER STILLE, Nov. 10, 2001)
* BOOKS: Dissecting the Era of Virgins and Satyrs [Peter Gay] (By DINITIA SMITH, Nov. 10, 2001)
* Q & A: Why Are Deep Thinkers Shallow About Tyranny? (NY TIMES, Nov. 10, 2001)

Friday, November 9, 2001:
On This Day: November 9 (Benjamin Banneker 11/9/1731-10/25/1806, Stanford White 11/9/1853-6/25/1906, James Schuyler 11/9/1923-4/12/1991, Anne Sexton 11/9/1928-10/4/1974, Whitey Herzog 1931, Bob Graham 1936)
Northeast Blackout Lasts Over 13 Hours (NY Times, Nov. 9, 1965)
* Carl Sagan, an Astronomer Who Excelled at Popularizing Science, Is Dead at 62 [11/9/1934-12/20/1996]
(By WILLIAM DICKE, December 21, 1996)
Patricia Locke, Champion of American Indians, Dies at 73 (By MATT SEDENSKY, Nov. 9, 2001)
Rose Shapiro, 97, Is Dead; Led School Board in 1960's (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 9, 2001)
Elmer Balaban, Cinema Magnate, Dies at 92 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 9, 2001)
Roy Boulting, English Film Producer, Dies at 87 (NY TIMES, Nov. 9, 2001)
B. K. Nehru, Indian Envoy, Dies at 92 (By PAUL LEWIS, Nov. 9, 2001)
Earle K. Moore, 79, Advocate of Public Voice in TV License, Dies (By PAUL LEWIS, Nov. 9, 2001)
Mildred R. Newman, 81, Psychologist and Popular Author, Is Dead (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 9, 2001)
FLIGHT SECURITY: The Leader in Airport Security, and in Lapses (By DAVID FIRESTONE, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE INQUIRY: Experts See F.B.I. Missteps Hampering Anthrax Inquiry
(By William J. Broad, David Johnston, Judith Miller and Paul Zielbauer, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE PRESIDENT: Bush Seeks New Volunteer Force for Civil Defense (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE REORGANIZING: Ashcroft Plan Would Recast Justice Dept. in a War Mode (By DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 9, 2001)
32,000 Taking Anthrax Drugs, Study Says (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 9, 2001)
PUBLIC ATTITUDES: Americans Say Bioterrorism Has Not Made Them Panic (PHILIP J. HILTS, Nov. 9, 2001)
* THE FIRST LADY: From Laura Bush, a View of Life After Sept. 11 (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 9, 2001)
Anthrax Scare Hits Groups Backing Right to Abortion (By TAMAR LEWIN, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE NETWORKS: Only ABC Broadcasts Bush Talk (By BILL CARTER, Nov. 9, 2001)
NEWS COVERAGE: British Take a Blunter Approach to War News (By CARYN JAMES, Nov. 9, 2001)
AMERICAN JOURNAL: Once Busy, an Airport Is Awaiting Comeback (By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Opponents of War Are Scarce on Television (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE COAST GUARD: A New, Experienced Protector for the Navy in Home Waters (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 9, 2001)
WORLD: Pakistan Tries to Split Army From Mullahs (By NORIMITSU ONISHI, Nov. 9, 2001)
FORCE OF ISLAM: Shackles Off, Russia's Muslims Are Still Chafing (By AMY WALDMAN, Nov. 9, 2001)
PARIS: French Reporter Tells of Days Held in Jail by the Taliban (By SUZANNE DALEY, Nov. 9, 2001)
No Jerry Lewis, but Saudi Telethon Reaches Goal (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE STRATEGY: U.S. Commander, Saying Rebels Need Help, Hints More Troops (By THOM SHANKER with DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 9, 2001)
MESSAGE: As U.N. Meets, bin Laden Tape Sets Off Alarms (By PATRICK E. TYLER and ELAINE SCIOLINO, Nov. 9, 2001)
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: To the Stranger, a Wild Land, Strangely Awesome (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 9, 2001)
Saudi Charges Bush With Failure to Broker Mideast Peace (By ELAINE SCIOLINO and PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 9, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: No Quick Victory, U.N. on Alert, Stepping Up Counterterror Effort (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE BRIEFING: Front and Center, Franks Faces the Media (By ERIC SCHMITT, Nov. 9, 2001)
INQUIRY: Book and Disk Drives Seen as Evidence in Rebel's Slaying (By RAYMOND BONNER, Nov. 9, 2001)
CRACKDOWN: Pakistan Orders the Taliban to Close Karachi Consulate (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 9, 2001)
AMERICANS: Shadowy U.S. Military Presence in an Afghan Town (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 9, 2001)
On the Sly, Iran Weighs Closer Ties With U.S. (By NAZILA FATHI, Nov. 9, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A Homeland Pep Talk (NY TIMES, Nov. 9, 2001)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: The Meaning of That Star-Spangled Hard Hat (By BRENT STAPLES, Nov. 9, 2001)
FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Beware of Icebergs (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 9, 2001)
It's Still a Safe World for Microsoft (By LAWRENCE LESSIG, Nov. 9, 2001)
Separating Death From Agony (By JEROME GROOPMAN, Nov. 9, 2001)
Why the Chicanery in Connecticut? (By COLIN McENROE, Nov. 9, 2001)
LETTERS: One Month Into the Afghan War (By VICTOR PARKER et. al., Nov. 9, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Are Mixed Despite an Early Boost From Europe
[Dow +33, Nasdaq -10] (By REUTERS, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE MAIL: Post Office Needs $5 Billion in Aid, Chief Tells Congress (By REUTERS, Nov. 9, 2001)
Nanowires May Lead to Superfast Computer Chips (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 9, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: Does Enron Trust Its New Numbers? It Doesn't Act Like It (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 9, 2001)
Surest Steps Are Propelling Dynegy Past Enron (By NEELA BANERJEE, Nov. 9, 2001)
ART: JACOB LAWRENCE: Patterns of a Can-Do Idealist (By HOLLAND COTTER, Nov. 9, 2001)
ART: JOE BRAINARD: Knitting Images and Words Into a Deft, Knowing Style (By ROBERTA SMITH, Nov. 9, 2001)
ART: Realizing That Modern Is Something Antique (By KEN JOHNSON, Nov. 9, 2001)
ARTS: Fort Tilden: A Onetime War Maker Now Makes Peace (By MICHAEL CREWDSON and MARGARET MITTELBACH, Nov. 9, 2001)
INSIDE ART: A Pedigree With Pull (By CAROL VOGEL, Nov. 9, 2001)
ANTIQUES: Diverse Styles at the Birth of Porcelain (By WENDY MOONAN, Nov. 9, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE EVIDENCE AGAINST HER': Family Life, Without the Meditations (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 9, 2001)
DANCE: BALLET NACIONAL DE CUBA: Saluting a Star With a Galaxy of Her Own Making (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 9, 2001)
MUSIC: 'Lilith' Is Made Flesh (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Nov. 9, 2001)
MUSIC: ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER: Helping Mozart Along (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Nov. 9, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Black Photographers Who Are Trying to Get Blackness Right (By SARAH BOXER, Nov. 9, 2001)
POETRY: Poets' Academy to Cut Its Staff (By DAVID KIRKPATRICK, Nov. 9, 2001)
* TV CRITIC: The Troops at the Front as Poets for Future Readers (By JULIE SALAMON, Nov. 9, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: King of Shores (and Parking Lots) (By JAMES GORMAN, Nov. 9, 2001)

Thursday, November 8, 2001:
On This Day: November 8 (Edmond Halley 11/8/1656-1/14/1742, Bram Stoker 11/8/1847-4/20/1912, Gottlob Frege 11/8/1848-7/26/1925, Hermann Rorschach 11/8/1884-4/2/1922, June Havoc 1916, Dr. Christiaan Barnard 1922, Morley Safer 1931, Bonnie Raitt 1949, Mary Hart 1951, Christie Hefner 1952)
* John F. Kenneday Defeats Richard M. Nixon for Presidency (NY Times, Nov. 8, 1960)
* Margaret Mitchell, Author of "Gone With the Wind", Dead of Injuries at 49 [11/8/1900-8/16/1949] (NY Times, August 17, 1949)
THE DISEASE: Worker Who Died Suspected Anthrax Was Root of Illness (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE DETAINEE: U.S. Explores Indicting a Possible Member of the Hijackers' Squad (By DON VAN NATTA Jr., Nov. 8, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Networks Pause, Then Some Show bin Laden Tape of Children (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE DIAGNOSTIC TESTS: New Tools Emerging to Speed Anthrax Detection (By KENNETH CHANG, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE SPORES: Hospital Worker's Infection Poses Troubling Possibilities (By NICHOLAS WADE, Nov. 8, 2001)
HOLLYWOOD: White House Sets Meeting With Film Executives to Discuss War on Terrorism
(By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 8, 2001)
HOMELAND SECURITY: Ridge Offers Hope of End to the Anthrax Attacks, but Inquiry Is Still Stalled
(By ALISON MITCHELL, Nov. 8, 2001)
WORLD: Taiwan Lifts Restrictions on Investment in China (By MARK LANDLER, Nov. 8, 2001)
MONEY TRAIL: U.S. Moves to Cut 2 Financial Links for Terror Group
(By DAVID E. SANGER & KURT EICHENWALD, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE SCHOOL: Defectors Cite Iraqi Training for Terrorism (By CHRIS HEDGES, Nov. 8, 2001)
MONTH 1: A Month in a Difficult Battlefield: Assessing U.S. War Strategy (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 8, 2001)
MONTH 1: A Reading List for a Troubled Land (By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Nov. 8, 2001)
MONTH 1: Eight Centuries of Afghan Conflict (NY TTIMES, Nov. 8, 2001)
NEWS MEDIA: Taliban Ambassador Is Told Not to Assail U.S. Bombing (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 8, 2001)
BATTLEFIELDS: Cave Redoubts Are Formidable, Rebel Leader Says (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 8, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Pursuit of Terror Funds, Anthrax Victim on Tape, Partisan Sniping (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 8, 2001)
MUSLIM ALLY: Musharaff Urges Bombing Halt for Ramadan (By SUZANNE DALEY, Nov. 8, 2001)
NUREMBERG JOURNAL: The Architect Who Speared His Own Nazi Demon (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Nov. 8, 2001)
NEW YORK: As Democrats Bicker, Bloomberg Era Begins (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Nov. 8, 2001)
GROUND ZERO: More Firefighters Added to Crew to Calm Dispute at Trade Center
(By DANIEL J. WAKIN and KEVIN FLYNN, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE MAYOR-ELECT: Proven Politician's Day 1: Getting Plenty of Advice and Keeping a Promise
(By DEAN E. MURPHY, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE INCUMBENT: Giuliani's Possibilities Multiply as His Days Left in Office Dwindle (By ERIC LIPTON, Nov. 8, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: To the Crawford Summit (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 8, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Mark Green's Problem (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 8, 2001)
OP-ED: No Strings, No Loyalists (By ANDREW WHITE, Nov. 8, 2001)
LETTERS: In Desperate Times, Talking of Torture (By VINCENT IACOPINO, M.D. et. al., Nov. 8, 2001)
BUSINESS: Shares Lose Momentum and Give Up Sharp Gains
[Dow -37, Nasdaq +2] (By REUTERS, Nov. 8, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: The Decline of the Muslim Middle East, and the Roots of Resentment (By VIRGINIA POSTREL, Nov. 8, 2001)
Suit Contends Lost Millions Weren't 'Lost' (By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON & BECKY GAYLORD, Nov. 8, 2001)
Holiday Air Travel Is Expected to Be Off Sharply (By JOE SHARKEY, Nov. 8, 2001)
Incredibly Shrinking AT&T and the Armstrong Agenda (By SETH SCHIESEL, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE TREATMENTS: 3 Smaller Companies Say Their Vaccines Are Cheaper (By KEITH BRADSHER, Nov. 8, 2001)
Trade Group Predicts Turnaround in Chip Sales Next Year (By CHRIS GAITHER, Nov. 8, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Relatives May Spoil Deal Between Hewlett-Packard and Compaq (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 8, 2001)
Procter & Gamble Gets Approval for Clairol Deal (By JULIAN E. BARNES, Nov. 8, 2001)
* ARTS IN AMERICA: Throngs at Art Institute of Chicago Say Go van Gogh (By STEPHEN KINZER, Nov. 8, 2001)
ARTS: Colleen Dewhurst Mementos Are Sold in Low-Key Auction (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Nov. 8, 2001)
* BOOKS: 'WITTGENSTEIN'S POKER': From a Clash of Titans, a Window on a Century (By JANET MASLIN, Nov. 8, 2001)
MAKING BOOKS: In the Bookstore With Care (By MARTIN ARNOLD, Nov. 8, 2001)
BOOKS: Publishers and Magazines Avoiding Unsolicited Mail (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Nov. 8, 2001)
DANCE: GARTH FAGAN DANCE: Finding a True Humanity Along With the Doodles (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 8, 2001)
DANCE: PINA BAUSCH: Sun, Surf and Sexuality in a Pina Bausch Romp (By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 8, 2001)
THE POP LIFE: A Living Link to Roots Music (By NEIL STRAUSS, Nov. 8, 2001)
THEATER: 'ELAINE STRITCH AT LIBERTY': Elaine Stritch in the Role of a Lifetime (By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 8, 2001)
TV: 'THE TICK': In a Tight Blue Costume, a Bird, a Plane or a Guy? (By NEIL GENZLINGER, Nov. 8, 2001)
* A House in the Round Comes Full Circle [Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion]
(By MICHAEL WEBB, Nov. 8, 2001)

Wednesday, November 7, 2001:
On This Day: November 7 (Andrew White 11/7/1832-11/4/1918, Lise Meitner 11/7/1878-10/27/1968, Leon Trotsky 11/7/1879-8/20/1940, Chandrasekhara Raman 11/7/1888-11/21/1970, Herman Mankiewicz 11/7/1897-3/5/1953, Konrad Lorenz 11/7/1903-2/27/1989, Albert Camus 11/7/1913-1/4/1960, Billy Graham 1918, Dame Joan Sutherland 1926)
* Russia's Bolshevik Revolution led by Lenin overthrew Alexander Kerensky's provisional governmennt (NY Times, Nov. 7, 1917)
* Mme. Curie Is Dead; Martyr to Science [11/7/1867-7/4/1934] (NY Times, July 5, 1934)
* E. H. Gombrich, Author and Theorist Who Redefined Art History, Is Dead at 92
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Nov. 7, 2001)
Paul Rogers Screvane Dies at 87; Held Many Political Offices (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 7, 2001)
Angelo Ippolito, an Artist and Professor, Dies at 79 (NY TIMES, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE CALIFORNIA ALERT: F.B.I. Lifts the Warning About West Coast Bridges (By PHILIP SHENON, Nov. 7, 2001)
LESSONS: Politics and Curriculum: How History Is Taught (By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE INQUIRY: Senators Told of Lack of Answers in F.B.I. Inquiry on Bioterrorism
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG & DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE FIRST MAILINGS: Anthrax Is Familiar Threat at Nation's Abortion Clinics
(By TAMAR LEWIN, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE MEDIA: Network Coverage a Target of Fire From Conservatives (By JIM RUTENBERG & BILL CARTER, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Plan to Gas Offices Is Abandoned (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE SEAPORTS: On the Dock, Holes in the Security Net Are Gaping (By PETER T. KILBORN, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE WHITE HOUSE: U.S. Takes Steps to Bolster Bloc Fighting Terror
(By DAVID E. SANGER & MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 7, 2001)
INTERNATIONAL: China's Upbeat Governor in Tibet Promises Investment (By ERIK ECKHOLM, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE DISSIDENT: U.S. Plucks Rebel From Afghanistan for 'Consultations'
(By JANE PERLEZ with STEVEN LEE MYERS, Nov. 7, 2001)
BERLIN: Germany Ready to Send Force of 3,900 (By STEVEN ERLANGER, Nov. 7, 2001)
In President's Words: 'Lift This Dark Threat' (By, Nov. 7, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: More Troops, More Accusations, More Economic Stimulus (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 7, 2001)
NYON JOURNAL: Sky Falls In on the Swiss: Tranquillity Is a Victim (By ELIZABETH OLSON, Nov. 7, 2001)
NEW YORK: Hospital in Manhattan Reopens After Anthrax Case (By MIRTA OJITO & LAURA MANSNERUS, Nov. 7, 2001)
MAN IN THE NEWS: Finding a New Mission: Michael Rubens Bloomberg (By DEAN E. MURPHY, Nov. 7, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Under Giuliani's Shadow: Leadership Was Top Issue After Terrorist Attack (By DAN BARRY, Nov. 7, 2001)
METRO MATTERS: No Doubt: Money Wins Elections (By JOYCE PURNICK, Nov. 7, 2001)
SPORTS: Baseball Votes to Drop 2 Teams [Minnesota Twins & Montreal Expos] (By MURRAY CHASS, Nov. 7, 2001)
Torre May Be Needed to Recruit Giambi (By JACK CURRY, Nov. 7, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Mayor-Elect Michael Bloomberg (NY TIMES, Nov. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Talkin' Ain't Fightin' (By MAUREEN DOWD, Nov. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: A Cross of Dollars (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Nov. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: Leftovers From an Old War ( By KARL F. INDERFURTH, Nov. 7, 2001)
OP-ED: Losing Isn't a Loss (By YOGI BERRA, Nov. 7, 2001)
LETTERS: America's Resolve, Then and Now (By JOHN VAN AMBURG et. al., Nov. 7, 2001)
BUSINESS: Technology Shares Lead Gains After Fed Cuts Rates
[Dow +150, Nasdaq +41] (By REUTERS, Nov. 7, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: 10th Fed Rate Cut This Year Raises Hopes for a Recovery (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 7, 2001)
Hewletts Vow to Oppose Hewlett-Packard Merger With Compaq (By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Nov. 7, 2001)
Postal Service Is Expected to Ask U.S. for Bailout (By ANTHONY DePALMA with CLAUDIA DEUTSCH, Nov. 7, 2001)
MANAGEMENT: A Firm's Revival Comes in Crisis (By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Nov. 7, 2001)
Smallpox Vaccine Costlier Than Expected (By KEITH BRADSHER, Nov. 7, 2001)
Fed Reduces Rates a Half Point, Lowest Level Since 1961 (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Nov. 7, 2001)
Consolidation Is Continuing at Lucent (By SIMON ROMERO, Nov. 7, 2001)
AT&T Is Sticking to Timetable on Cable Unit (By SETH SCHIESEL, Nov. 7, 2001)
* ADVERTISING: Direct Marketing Woes (By BERNARD STAMLER, Nov. 7, 2001)
* THE BOSS: With Medicine, It's Personal (By DR. JOHN W. ROWE, Written with Patricia R. Olsen, Nov. 7, 2001)
WORKPLACE: Terror Follows Immigrants to America (By ABBY ELLIN, Nov. 7, 2001)
LIFE'S WORK: Charms of Bittersweet Solidarity (By LISA BELKIN, Nov. 7, 2001)
ART: Big Hits and Misses in Auction at Christie's (By CAROL VOGEL, Nov. 7, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Tom Murphy Is the Best-Kept Secret of Irish Theater (By BRIAN LAVERY, Nov. 7, 2001)
BOOKS: NPR's Story Project Proves Truth Is Stranger (By DINITIA SMITH, Nov. 7, 2001)
BOOKS: 'GAUDÍ: A Portrait of an Architect Who Was Drunk on Form (By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Nov. 7, 2001)
BOOKS: Write What You Know? Why, No (By MEL GUSSOW, Nov. 7, 2001)
DANCE: LES BALLETS JAZZ DE MONTREAL: A Stew of Choreographic Styles, Seasoned With Ingenuity
(By JACK ANDERSON, Nov. 7, 2001)
OPERA: 'LA TRAVIATA': A 'Traviata' About Soul, Not Scenery (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 7, 2001)
POETRY: Poets' Group Ousts Chief, Igniting Ire of Members (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Nov. 7, 2001)
THEATER: RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL CHRISTMAS SPECTACULAR: Holiday Joy in All Its Burnished Glory
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Nov. 7, 2001)
THE CHEF: Poundcake With a French Squeeze [3 recipes] (By BILL YOSSES, Nov. 7, 2001)

Tuesday, November 6, 2001:
On This Day: November 6 (Hans Sachs 11/6/1494-1/19/1576, Washington Allston 11/6/1779-7/9/1843, Antoine-Joseph Sax 11/6/1814-2/7/1894, Joseph Smith 11/6/1832-12/10/1914, Charles Henry Dow 11/6/1851-12/4/1902, Walter Johnson 11/6/1887-12/10/1946, Harold Ross 11/6/1892-12/6/1951, James Jones 11/6/1921-5/9/1977, Mike Nichols 1931, Sally Field 1946, Maria Shriver 1955)
* Abraham Lincoln Defeated Three Other Candidates for President (NY Times, November 6, 1860)
* John Philip Sousa, Band Leader, Dies at 77 [11/6/1854-3/6/1932] (NY Times, March 6, 1932)
Jack Manning, Photographer With a Long Career at The Times, Dead at 80 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 6, 2001)
Edward P. Boland, 90, Dies; a Longtime Representative (By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Nov. 6, 2001)
THE CALIFORNIA ALERT: Bay Area's Bridge-Wary Jam Ferries and Trains (By EVELYN NIEVES, Nov. 6, 2001)
AIRLINE SECURITY: F.B.I. Says Man Carried Knives Past Screeners (By JODI WILGOREN, Nov. 6, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Anthrax Danger Delays Inspection of Millions of Letters (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Nov. 6, 2001)
New Tapes Indicate Johnson Doubted Attack in Tonkin Gulf (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 6, 2001)
* WORLD: FORCE OF ISLAM: Bin Laden's Wildfire Threatens Saudi Rulers (By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Nov. 6, 2001)
ASIAN ALLY: U.S. and India Map Path to Military Cooperation (By CELIA W. DUGGER, Nov. 6, 2001)
MYSTERY: Taliban Assert American Died After Arrest in Spy Case (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 6, 2001)
NORTHERN ALLIANCE: Rebels' General Came, Saw, and Said Nothing (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 6, 2001)
Putin Grows in Job, Raising the Question: For Good or Ill? (By MICHAEL WINES, Nov. 6, 2001)
PUBLIC OPINION: U.S. Tries to Rally Public Support Overseas (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 6, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: A War on Two Fronts, and in the Anthrax Laboratories (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Nov. 6, 2001)
MOSCOW JOURNAL: The Worker's State Is History, and Fashion Reigns (By MICHAEL WINES, Nov. 6, 2001)
NY REGION: MAYOR: Bloomberg & Green Battle Right Up to the Last Minute (By ADAM NAGOURNEY, Nov. 6, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Under Giuliani's Shadow: Leadership Was Top Issue After Terrorist Attack
(By DAN BARRY, Nov. 6, 2001)
THE MYSTERY: Detectives Ask for Help in Tracing Victim's Steps (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Nov. 6, 2001)
THE UNEMPLOYED: Attacks Hit Low-Pay Jobs the Hardest (By LESLIE EATON & EDWARD WYATT, Nov. 6, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Solace in Sports (NY TIMES, Nov. 6, 2001)
* OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Fighting bin Ladenism (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 6, 2001)
OP-ED: On the Home Front, a Winnable War (By BRUCE ACKERMAN, Nov. 6, 2001)
OP-ED: A New Start for National Service (By JOHN McCAIN and EVAN BAYH, Nov. 6, 2001)
OP-ED: If the Guinea Pig Dies, Beware (By EDWARD M. CANER & LAWRENCE M. KRAUSS, Nov. 6, 2001)
LETTERS: Roads to Victory in This War (By ERIC BRANDON et. al., Nov. 6, 2001)
LETTERS: The Art of Afghanistan (By ROSANNE KLASS, Nov. 6, 2001)
BUSINESS: THE MARKETS: Shares Rise on Expectations That Fed Will Cut a Rate
[Dow +118, Nasdaq +48] (By MICHAEL BRICK, Nov. 6, 2001)
U.S. and Some States Split on Microsoft, Risking New Delay (By STEPHEN LABATON with STEVE LOHR, Nov. 6, 2001)
Rate Reduction Expected, but How Big? (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 6, 2001)
The Heartland Hunkers Down (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Nov. 6, 2001)
MARKET PLACE: Cisco Manages a Quarter-to-Quarter Sales Increase (By CHRIS GAITHER, Nov. 6, 2001)
ADVERTISING: Growing List of Airlines Resume Image Advertising (By STUART ELLIOTT, Nov. 6, 2001)
Ziff Davis to Cut 11 Percent of Its Staff (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 6, 2001)
ART: First Art Auction of Season Indicates a Healthy Market (By CAROL VOGEL, Nov. 6, 2001)
ARTS ABROAD: Comics, Muslim and Jewish, Sharing a Toronto Stage (By ANDREW CLARK, Nov. 6, 2001)
BOOKS: 'HOLY WAR, INC.': How Osama bin Laden Became a Global Celebrity (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 6, 2001)
DANCE: AMERICAN BALLET THEATER: Contrasting Tudor and, at Season's End, Balanchine
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 6, 2001)
MUSIC: Where Mexico (Not Salsa) Is King (By MIREYA NAVARRO, Nov. 6, 2001)
OPERA: 'TURANDOT: Principessa, Don't Be Cruel to a Heart That's True (By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Nov. 6, 2001)
THEATER: 'THE SQUARE': Asian-American Vignettes Spread Across 120 Years (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 6, 2001)
THEATER: A Sudden Breakout Moment, and Kate Burton Is Loving It (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Nov. 6, 2001)
TV: '24': Racing in Real Time to Track Down an Assassin and a Daughter (By JULIE SALAMON, Nov. 6, 2001)
STYLE: FRONT ROW: The Case of the Killer Heels (By GUY TREBAY, Nov. 6, 2001)
* SCIENCE TIMES: Evicting an Unwelcome Tenant: Anthrax (By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Nov. 6, 2001)
Keiko Makes It Clear: His 'Free Willy' Was Just a Role (By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr., Nov. 6, 2001)
* OBSERVATORY: Water-Hoarding Beetle (By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Nov. 6, 2001)
Q & A: Snowbirds in the City (By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Nov. 6, 2001)
Letters: Islamic Science, Language and Limits (By DR. BERTON C. PRESSMAN, Nov. 6, 2001)
* HEALTH: When Bioterror First Struck the U.S. Capital (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 6, 2001)
* Traumatic Moments End, but Reminders Still Linger (By ERICA GOODE, Nov. 6, 2001)
H.I.V. Practices Face Grim Financial Times (By DAVID TULLER, Nov. 6, 2001)
Habits: Focus on Health, One Problem at a Time (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 6, 2001)
Testing: Facing Up to the Helplessness Factor (By JOHN O'NEIL, Nov. 6, 2001)
HEALTH: New Work May Provide Stem Cells While Taking Baby From Equation (By ANDREW POLLACK, Nov. 6, 2001)

Monday, November 5, 2001:
On This Day: November 5 (Anna Leonowens 11/5/1834-1/19/1914, Paul Sabatier 11/5/1854-8/14/1941, Eugen V. Debs 11/5/1855-10/20/1926, Will Durant 11/5/1885-11/7/1981, Vivien Leigh 11/5/1913-7/8/1967, Art Garfunkel 1941, Tatum O'Neal 1963)
Nixon Wins By A Thin Margin, Pleads For Reunited Nation (By MAX FRANKEL, November 5, 1968)
Ida M. Tarbell, 86, Dies in Bridgeport [11/5/1857-1/6/1944] (NY Times, January 7, 1944)
Spike Robinson, Jazz Saxophonist, Dies at 71 (NY TIMES, Nov. 5, 2001)
Barbara Tropp, 53, a Scholar Who Became an Innovative Chef (By ERIC PACE, Nov. 5, 2001)
Neil Tillotson, 102, First Presidential Voter (By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Nov. 5, 2001)
J. P. Miller, 81, Dies; Writer of Teleplays (By PETER M. NICHOLS, Nov. 5, 2001)
Charles R. Ebersol Executive, 85 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 5, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Anthrax Contamination Found in Pentagon Mail Boxes (By DAVID STOUT, Nov. 5, 2001)
THE RESISTANCE LEADER: Son of Executed Afghan Rebel Leads Mourners (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 5, 2001)
7 Security Workers Fired at O'Hare; Man Rearrested by F.B.I. (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 5, 2001)
* THE PRESIDENT: For a President at War, Refuge at Camp David (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 5, 2001)
* THE ECONOMY: Staving Off a Recession When Only Old Scripts Are at Hand in a New Age
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 5, 2001)
THE HEALTH SYSTEM: Struggling to Reach a Consensus on Getting Ready for Bioterrorism
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Nov. 5, 2001)
MILITARY: U.S. May Gain Use of More Air Bases to Strike Taliban (By MICHAEL R. GORDON with C. J. CHIVERS, Nov. 5, 2001)
MONEY TRAIL: U.S. Gets Help in Finding and Freezing bin Laden's Funds (By JEFF GERTH & JUDITH MILLER, Nov. 5, 2001)
RESCUE: Americans Rescue Soldier Who Fell Ill (By JAMES DAO and THOM SHANKER, Nov. 5, 2001)
TALIBAN FOE: An Afghan Trying to Do 'Big Things' at Big Risk (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 5, 2001)
THE MAINSTAY: Musharraf, the Indispensable Ally, Grows More Confident (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 5, 2001)
THE NORTH: Team of American Military Personnel Arrives in Rebel Territory in Afghanistan
(By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 5, 2001)
FRONT LINE: U.S. Jets Pound Taliban Positions in Heaviest Bombing Yet (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 5, 2001)
STRATEGY: Rumsfeld Says Ramadan Won't Halt U.S. Attacks (By TIM WEINER, Nov. 5, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Lull in Tension, Traveling Diplomacy and New Help in the War Zone (By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Nov. 5, 2001)
KANDAHAR: A Bazaar Erupts in Fury on a Tour of Everyday Life (By Robert Nickelsberg, Nov. 5, 2001)
* COTOVELO DO XINGU JOURNAL: A Collector's Item Costs Brazilian Divers Dearly
(By LARRY ROHTER, Nov. 5, 2001)
NEW YORK REGION: Spores Found on a Package Sent by NBC to City Hall (By ERIC LIPTON, Nov. 5, 2001)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary (By ENID NEMY, Nov. 5, 2001)
SPORTS: NYC MARATHON: Jifar and Okayo Wear the Laurels (By FRANK LITSKY, Nov. 5, 2001)
WORLD SERIES: In Final Twist, Yanks Fall in Ninth (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 5, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Rivera Fails to Make Good on His Promise (By JACK CURRY, Nov. 5, 2001)
Clutch Conclusion to a Trying Season (By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Nov. 5, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Let the Debate Begin Over Use of Schilling (By MURRAY CHASS, Nov. 5, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Brenly's Use of Schilling Will Surely Draw Comment (By MURRAY CHASS, Nov. 5, 2001)
SPORTS MEDIA AND BUSINESS: McCarver Doubles as a Seer (By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Nov. 5, 2001)
SPORTS: Arizona Makes New History (By GEORGE VECSEY, Nov. 5, 2001)
Yankees Will Probably Remake Their Lineup (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 5, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Rookie Knoblauch Played Key Role in Another Game 7 (By JACK CURRY, Nov. 5, 2001)
SPORTS: Yanks and Arizona Make Game 7 History (By GEORGE VECSEY, Nov. 5, 2001)
WORLD SERIES NOTEBOOK: Arizona's Two Aces: Got 'Em, Need 'Em (By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Nov. 5, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Half a Commander in Chief (NY TIMES, Nov. 5, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Harnessing the Spirit of Sept. 11 (NY TIMES, Nov. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: 3 Nights in the Bronx (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: The Turkey Card (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: The F.B.I. Can't Do It Alone (By DANIEL J. OATES, Nov. 5, 2001)
OP-ED: Thurmonds Forever: By DAVID BRUCK (By, Nov. 5, 2001)
LETTERS: Islam and the Response to Terror (By BOB STILLMAN et. al., Nov. 5, 2001)
BUSINESS: Some I.B.M. Software Tools to Be Put in Public Domain (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 5, 2001)
* NEW ECONOMY: Chronicling, and Living the Internet Revolution (By ERIC J. SAVITZ, Nov. 5, 2001)
* An Energized Brokaw Is in the Middle of the Story (By BILL CARTER, Nov. 5, 2001)
* ONLINE HOLIDAY OUTLOOK: Web Is Now Vulnerable to the Weak Economy (By SAUL HANSELL, Nov. 5, 2001)
Torture Seeps Into Discussion by News Media (By JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 5, 2001)
Time Finds a New Role for Life in Special Issues (By DAVID HANDELMAN, Nov. 5, 2001)
THE VACCINE: U.S. Looks for More Vaccine Sources (By KEITH BRADSHER with MICHAEL WINES, Nov. 5, 2001)
Cartoonists Find Issues for Humor (By BARBARA STEWART, Nov. 5, 2001)
Publishers Joust Over Merit of Terrorist Leader's Words (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Nov. 5, 2001)
For Shaky Shopping Season, Fresh Ideas and Aged Whiskey (By TERRY PRISTIN, Nov. 5, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: May the Force/Boss Be With You, in 3-D (By CAREN CHESLER, Nov. 5, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Access to Documents From Afar, Securely (By CHRIS GAITHER, Nov. 5, 2001)
COMPRESSED DATA: Sony Tightens Leash on Its Robotic Dog (By AMY HARMON, Nov. 5, 2001)
ARTS: Patriotism Replaces Glitter at Emmy Awards (By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Nov. 5, 2001)
BOOKS: 'THE DIARIES OF KENNETH TYNAN': Last Refuge for a Withering Ego (By RICHARD EDER, Nov. 5, 2001)
DANCE: A Dancer Casts a Spell and Becomes a Cloud [Kei Takei] (By JACK ANDERSON, Nov. 5, 2001)
FILM: Sudden Resonance for an Iranian Film About Afghanistan (By ALAN RIDING, Nov. 5, 2001)
FILM: Afghan Exile Turned Reluctant Star (By KATRINA ONSTAD, Nov. 5, 2001)
MUSIC: 'WOMEN IN LOVE': 4 Women in the Spotlight, With Strauss the Token Male (By BERNARD HOLLAND, Nov. 5, 2001)
Rewarded for Putting Stages in the Right Light (By ROBIN POGREBIN, Nov. 5, 2001)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Returning to the Character Who Started It All (By SUSAN ISAACS, Nov. 5, 2001)
* HEALTH: Study Finds Genetic Link Between Intelligence and Size of Some Regions of the Brain
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Nov. 5, 2001)

Sunday, November 4, 2001:
On This Day: November 4 (Guido Reni 11/4/1575-8/18/1642, George Edward Moore 11/4/1873-10/24/1958, Walter Cronkite 1926, Art Carney 1928, Yanni 1954)
Teheran Students Seize U.S Embassy And Hold Hostages (By REUTERS, November 4, 1979)
* Will Rogers: Adventure Marked Life of Humorist [11/4/1879-8/15/1935] (NY Times, August 17, 1935)
Frank Craighead, 85, an Outdoorsman and a Protector of the Grizzly, Dies (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 4, 2001)
D. B. Blanchard, 58, Investment Adviser, Is Dead (NY TIMES, Nov. 4, 2001)
U.S. Sets Up Plan to Fight Smallpox in Case of Attack (By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Nov. 4, 2001)
THE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY: Secret C.I.A. Site in New York Was Destroyed on Sept. 11 (By JAMES RISEN, Nov. 4, 2001)
THE NUCLEAR THREAT: Reactors and Their Fuel Are Among the Flanks U.S. Needs to Shore Up
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 4, 2001)
TERROR BY THE BOOK / A SPECIAL REPORT: Hijackers' Meticulous Strategy of Brains, Muscle and Practice
(By DON VAN NATTA Jr. & KATE ZERNIKE, Nov. 4, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Taking On Another War, Against Mixed Messages (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 4, 2001)
* AMERICAN JOURNAL/TAOS, N.M.: Coming to Terms With Ground Zero in a World Apart (By FRANCIS X. CLINES, Nov. 4, 2001)
* Struggling to Be Both Arab and American (By JODI WILGOREN, Nov. 4, 2001)
* Coming Soon: Harry Potter and Hollywood's Cash Cow (By RICK LYMAN, Nov. 4, 2001)
LOS EBANOS JOURNAL: Echoes of Sept. 11 on the Rio Grande (By SAM DILLON, Nov. 4, 2001)
THE ALLIANCE: Afghan Rebels Seem a Reluctant Force So Far (By DAVID ROHDE with DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 4, 2001)
MILITARY ANALYSIS: A Vigorous Debate on U.S. War Tactics (By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Nov. 4, 2001)
DIPLOMACY: Rumsfeld, on Visit to Russia and Central Asia, Meets Putin (By MICHAEL WINES, Nov. 4, 2001)
ALLY'S FUTURE: U.S. Pondering Saudis' Vulnerability (By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Nov. 4, 2001)
THE VIDEO: Bin Laden, in a Taped Speech, Says Attacks in Afghanistan Are a War Against Islam
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Nov. 4, 2001)
More and More, War Is Viewed as America's (By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr., Nov. 4, 2001)
THE REFUGEES: Many Flee From War to Cities, Not Camps (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 4, 2001)
MILITARY CAMPAIGN: U.S. Special Forces Soldier Is Rescued From Afghanistan (By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., Nov. 4, 2001)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: That Yankee Magic (By MAUREEN DOWD, Nov. 4, 2001)
OP-ED: Guns Won't Win the Afghan War (By JOHN J. MEARSHEIMER, Nov. 4, 2001)
OP-ED: RECKONINGS: Making Windows Transparent (By PAUL KRUGMAN, Nov. 4, 2001)
MARKET WATCH: Hands Out, Even in a Time of Crisis (By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Nov. 4, 2001)
ECONOMIC VIEW: Rumbles of Warning as Housing Weakens (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Nov. 4, 2001)
A Phone Upstart, Still Annoying the Giants (By EVE TAHMINCIOGLU, Nov. 4, 2001)
In the Great Job Desert, Some Hidden Oases (By BARBARA WHITAKER, Nov. 4, 2001)
DRUG INDUSTRY: A Muscular Lobby Tries to Shape Nation's Bioterror Plan
(By LESLIE WAYNE & MELODY PETERSEN, Nov. 4, 2001)
Learning to Love Fannie and Freddie (By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Nov. 4, 2001)
Microsoft Explores a New Territory: Fun (By CHRIS GAITHER, Nov. 4, 2001)
GRASS-ROOTS BUSINESS: Comfort Shopping, Premium Pricing (By LYNNLEY BROWNING, Nov. 4, 2001)
INVESTING WITH: Clifford Greenberg, Baron Small Cap Fund (By CAROLE GOULD, Nov. 4, 2001)
The Choices Grow for Betting on Japan (By KEN BELSON, Nov. 4, 2001)
* STRATEGIES: Who Best Protects Shareholders? The Shareholders (By MARK HULBERT, Nov. 4, 2001)
MARKET INSIGHT: Drugs Aside, Drugstores Feel the Pain of Prudence (By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Nov. 4, 2001)
ON THE CONTRARY: It's Time for Teamwork on New Drugs (By DANIEL AKST, Nov. 4, 2001)
SENIORITY: Crisis Through a Generational Lens (By FRED BROCK, Nov. 4, 2001)
* Living in a World Without Women (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Nov. 4, 2001)
STUPID ANTHRAX TRICKS: You've Got to Be Kidding (By DAN BARRY, Nov. 4, 2001)
UNDER THE TENT: The Coalition Is Broad, But Can It Hold? (By R. W. APPLE Jr., Nov. 4, 2001)
HIGH VS. LOW: Seizing the Literary Middle [Jonathan Franzen] (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 4, 2001)
The Boom Is Over. What's Next? (By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Nov. 4, 2001)
The Ripples From a Life Lost (By AMY WILENTZ, Nov. 4, 2001)
WORD FOR WORD: Academe on War: Man (and Woman) The Psychobabble Detectors! (By TOM KUNTZ, Nov. 4, 2001)
PHOTO ESSAY: Allure Must Be Covered. Individuality Peeks Through [hijab]
(Text and Photographs by RUTH FREMSON, Nov. 4, 2001)
ART: A Renaissance Bronze With a Story to Tell (By DEBORAH WEISGALL, Nov. 4, 2001)
ART: Roni Horn: A Builder of Paradoxes That Turn Viewers Inward (By LYLE REXER, Nov. 4, 2001)
DANCE: A Cuban Master's Progeny Bear Her Art in Their Bones (By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 4, 2001)
FILM: Hollywood in Wartime: Lessons of Pearl Harbor (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 4, 2001)
* MUSIC: Not Much in Common Except Beautiful Music [Billie Holiday & Artie Shaw]
(By TERRY TEACHOUT, Nov. 4, 2001)
* MUSIC: Leonard Bernstein: The Man Who Mainstreamed Mahler (By DAVID SCHIFF, Nov. 4, 2001)
MUSIC: Measuring Kurt Masur's Giant Strides (By JAMES R. OESTREICH, Nov. 4, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Kenro Izu: One Who Listens to Ruins That Speak of Mortality
(By ELEANOR MUNRO, Nov. 4, 2001)
THEATER: Designing Man Meets 'The Women,' and Fur Flies (By MARJORIE ROSEN, Nov. 4, 2001)
TV: Television, Like the Country, Loses Its Footing (By CARYN JAMES, Nov. 4, 2001)
* STYLE: Looking for a Way Home for the Holidays (By NANCY HASS and LESLIE KAUFMAN, Nov. 4, 2001)
The Sex-Worker Literati (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Nov. 4, 2001)
A NIGHT OUT WITH Jerry Stahl: A Funny Thing Happened (By KIMBERLY STEVENS, Nov. 4, 2001)
NOTICED: Against the Tide, Two Movies Go to War (By KIM MASTERS, Nov. 4, 2001)
Colombia: Who's the Fairest of Them All? (By JUAN FORERO, Nov. 4, 2001)
Student Designers Undaunted by the Prospects (By GUY TREBAY, Nov. 4, 2001)
FRONT ROW: Earth Shoe Returns, Walking Tall (By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Nov. 4, 2001)
Magazines Fly the Flag, Offering Upbeat Chic (By RUTH LA FERLA, Nov. 4, 2001)
ON THE STREET: Move Over, Goblins (Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Nov. 4, 2001)
SHOPPING WITH Steve Martin: The Last of the Small Spenders (By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Nov. 4, 2001)
VOWS: Rebecca Odes and Craig Kanarick (By EMILY EAKIN, Nov. 4, 2001)
TRAVEL: Exploring Around New York's Edges (By RANDY KENNEDY, Nov. 4, 2001)
One Man's Essential Manhattan (By ALEX WARD, Nov. 4, 2001)
What's Changed, and What's Not, Around New York (By DENNY LEE, Nov. 4, 2001)
PRACTICAL TRAVELER: New York Hotels Offer Discounts (By SUSAN STELLIN, Nov. 4, 2001)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 4, 2001)
* ON LANGUAGE: Eviscerate: A Verb That Goes for the Guts (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 4, 2001)
United Nations (By ANDREW SULLIVAN, Nov. 4, 2001)
Questions for Ryan Adams on Rock During Wartime (By HUGO LINDGREN, Nov. 4, 2001)
THE ETHICIST: Get a Leash (By RANDY COHEN, Nov. 4, 2001)
Post-Rudy (By JAMES TRAUB, Nov. 4, 2001)
The Uncomfortable Question of Anti-Semitism (By JONATHAN ROSEN, Nov. 4, 2001)
The Defectors (By ANTHONY LOYD, Nov. 4, 2001)
How 'The Simpsons' Survives (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 4, 2001)
STYLE: Raising the Roof (By PILAR VILADAS, Nov. 4, 2001)
FOOD: Genius Down Under (By JONATHAN REYNOLDS, Nov. 4, 2001)
ENDPAPER: Grounded (Photos by MICHAEL EDWARDS, Text by WALTER KIRN, Nov. 4, 2001)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 4, 2001)
* Oliver Sacks, 'Uncle Tungsten': Over the Volcano (By NATALIE ANGIER, Nov. 4, 2001)
* 'The Godfather of Silicon Alley': Flash in the Pan (By ROB WALKER, Nov. 4, 2001)
* 'Where the Stress Falls': The Radical Imagination (By WILLIAM DERESIEWICZ, Nov. 4, 2001)
* A Woman's Education': Continuing Ed (By WILLIAM R. EVERDELL, Nov. 4, 2001)
* 'The Universe at Midnight': Cosmic Stuff (By MICHAEL S. TURNER, Nov. 4, 2001)
'The Kennedy Men': Looking Again at J.F.K. (By MICHAEL LIND, Nov. 4, 2001)
'Go To': Geeks Win (By ELLEN ULLMAN, Nov. 4, 2001)
'The Bulgari Connection': Your Ad Here (By SYLVIA BROWNRIGG, Nov. 4, 2001)
'Against Love Poetry': Map of Love (By MELANIE REHAK, Nov. 4, 2001)
'Red Dust': Cultural Evolution (By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Nov. 4, 2001)
Books in Brief: 'Portrait in Sepia' [Isabel Allende] (By ANDREW ERVIN, Nov. 4, 2001)

Saturday, November 3, 2001:
On This Day: November 3 (Stephen Austin 11/3/1793-12/27/1836, William Cullen Bryant 11/3/1794-6/12/1878, Vincenzo Bellini 11/3/1801-9/23/1835, Leopold III 11/3/1901-9/25/1983, Andre Malraux 11/3/1901-11/23/1976, James Reston 11/3/1909-12/6/1995, Bob Feller 1918, Charles Bronson 1921, Michael Dukakis 1933)
Roosevelt Sweeps The Nation; His Electoral Vote Exceeds 500 (By ARTHUR KROCK, November 3, 1936)
* Walker Evans Dies; Artist With Camera [11/3/1903-4/10/1975] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, April 11, 1975)
Eileen Shanahan, 77, Former Times Reporter, Dies (By IRVIN MOLOTSKY, Nov. 3, 2001)
Rabbi Eliezer Schach, Leader of Orthodox in Israel, Dies at 103 (By JOEL GREENBERG, Nov. 3, 2001)
Ernest R. Hilgard, Leader in Study of Hypnosis, Dies at 97 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 3, 2001)
Sandy Lehmann-Haupt, One of Ken Kesey's Busmates, Dead at 59 (By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Nov. 3, 2001)
WEST COAST ALERT: As Troops Guard Bridges, Davis's Warning Is Debated
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB with NEIL A. LEWIS, Nov. 3, 2001)
SAN FRANCISCO: Despite Governor's Warning, It's Business as Usual on Crowded Bay Bridges
(By EVELYN NIEVES, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE GOVERNOR: Gov. Davis's Warning Brings Heat on Him (By JAMES STERNGOLD, Nov. 3, 2001)
Baffled F.B.I. Asks for Aid in Solving Riddle of Anthrax (By DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE LOCAL RESPONSE: For Neighborhood Watch Groups, New Interest, New Mission
(By PAM BELLUCK, Nov. 3, 2001)
RELIGION JOURNAL: In Devastation's Shadow, a Landmark's Renewal (By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Gas Will Be Used to Kill Bacteria in Senate Office Building (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Nov. 3, 2001)
* Muslims Nurture Sense of Self on Campus (By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Nov. 3, 2001)
SPECIAL FORCES: Crash Injures 4 Assisting Secret Mission (By STEVEN LEE MYERS & JAMES DAO, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE MONEY TRAIL: U.S. Widens Net to Snare Terror Assets; Expands List
(By JOSEPH KAHN and PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE OPPOSITION: Exiled Rebel Leader Re-enters Afghanistan to Recruit Some Allies
(By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 3, 2001)
TECHNOLOGY: U.S. Is Using More Drones, Despite Concern Over Flaws (By JAMES DAO, Nov. 3, 2001)
An Indian Novelist Turns Her Wrath on the U.S. [Arundhati Roy] (By CELIA W. DUGGER, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE AFGHANS: Away From Taliban, Recurring Evidence of Ethnic Harmony (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 3, 2001)
RELIEF: U.S. Orders New Aid to Help Avert Famine in Afghanistan (By ELIZABETH BECKER, Nov. 3, 2001)
NUCLEAR EXPERTISE: Pakistan Releases 3 Scientists Questioned on Ties to Taliban
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 3, 2001)
SECURITY: Experts Agree on the Need to Safeguard Nuclear Sites (By JOHN TAGLIABUE, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE MAIL: Pakistan Businesses Receive Anthrax-Tainted Letters (By BARRY BEARAK, Nov. 3, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Bad Economic News, Troops on the Golden Gate, Angry Firefighters
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 3, 2001)
PANAMA CITY JOURNAL: 12 Years Later, Scars of the U.S. Invasion Remain (By DAVID GONZALEZ, Nov. 3, 2001)
NY REGION: THE MAYOR: Blunt Words to Describe Grim Reality at the Site (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE SITE: Twin Towers Are at Center of Brawl Over Payments and Rebuilding
(By STEPHEN LABATON & JONATHAN D. GLATER, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE CASES: Experts Say It's Unlikely That Hospital Worker Was Victim of a New Anthrax Attack
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN & KATHERINE E. FINKELSTEIN, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE FIREFIGHTERS: Firefighters in Angry Scuffle With Police at Trade Center
(By DAN BARRY & KEVIN FLYNN, Nov. 3, 2001)
Michelangelo of the Hard Sell [used-car salesman] (By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Nov. 3, 2001)
* SPORTS: For Yankees, Is It Simply in the Stars? (By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Nov. 3, 2001)
WORLD SERIES: Love 'em or Hate 'em, It's Been Quite a Run (By MURRAY CHASS, Nov. 3, 2001)
YANKEES LEAD SERIES, 3-2: Searching for an Explanation, Yankees Find Only Belief
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 3, 2001)
Schilling Insists He'll Be Able to Start a Game 7 (By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Nov. 3, 2001)
Kim Learns How Cruel the Game Can Be (By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Nov. 3, 2001)
NOTEBOOK: O'Neill Finds It Tough to Take Off the Pinstripes (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 3, 2001)
Knoblauch Is in the Mood to Reminisce (By JACK CURRY, Nov. 3, 2001)
Soriano's Small Mitt Makes a Big Play (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 3, 2001)
OP-ED: CORRESPONDENT: Up With Moguls! Exploit the Rich! (By BILL KELLER, Nov. 3, 2001)
OP-ED: AT HOME ABROAD/ABROAD AT HOME: A Strangled People (By ANTHONY LEWIS, Nov. 3, 2001)
OP-ED: What If Cipro Stopped Working? (By ELLEN K. SILBERGELD & POLLY WALKER, Nov. 3, 2001)
OP-ED: Our History Is in Our Mail (By NICOLS FOX, Nov. 3, 2001)
LETTERS: What These Yankees Have Done for Us (By ALAN TONELSON et. al., Nov. 3, 2001)
BUSINESS: Equities Withstand Some Shaky News on the Economy
[Dow +60, Nasdaq -1] (By SHERRI DAY, Nov. 3, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Unemployment Jumps to 5.4%, a 5-Year High (By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Nov. 3, 2001)
A Mainstay of U.S. Job Creation Is Hit Hard by Sept. 11 (By MARY WILLIAMS WALSH, Nov. 3, 2001)
CONNECTIONS: The Law of Computer Evolution and the Law of the Land (By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Nov. 3, 2001)
* ARTS & IDEAS: Suddenly, Americans Trust Uncle Sam (By ALEXANDER STILLE, Nov. 3, 2001)
ARTS: Experts on Islam Pointing Fingers at One Another (By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Nov. 3, 2001)
DANCE: 'AMAZED IN BURNING DREAMS': A Showcase of Stamina to a Film's Score
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 3, 2001)
MUSIC: LEIPZIG GEWANDHAUS ORCHESTRA: A Master of the Pause Takes the Helm (By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Nov. 3, 2001)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: Disparate Works Connected by Barely Visible Threads
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 3, 2001)
OPERA: 'MADAMA BUTTERFLY': A 'Butterfly' With Substitutes at the Top (By ANNE MIDGETTE, Nov. 3, 2001)
THEATER: 'EVERYTHING THAT RISES...': Southern Stories, on the Stage and on Their Own
(By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 3, 2001)

Friday, November 2, 2001:
On This Day: November 2 (Jean-Baptiste Chardin 11/2/1699-12/6/1779, Marie-Antoinette 11/2/1755-10/16/1793, James Knox Polk 11/2/1795-6/15/1849, Maurice Blondel 11/2/1861-6/4/1949, Luchino Visconti 11/2/1861-6/4/1949, Burt Lancaster 11/2/1913-10/20/1994, Patrick J. Buchanan 1938, Stefanie Powers 1942, Shere Hite 1942)
Carter Victor In Tight Race; Ford Loses New York State (By R. W. APPLE JR., November 2, 1976)
President Warren G. Harding, a Farm Boy Who Rose by Work, Dies at 57
[11/2/1865-8/2/1923] (NY Times, August 3, 1923)
Eliezer Shach, Ultra-Orthodox Rabbi, Dies at 107 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 2, 2001)
Juan Bosch, Dominican President, Dies at 92 (By PAUL LEWIS, Nov. 2, 2001)
Dr. Jeffrey Isner, 53, Creator of Cardiovascular Procedure (By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Nov. 2, 2001)
John P. Roberts, a Producer of Woodstock and Its Revivals, Dies at 56 (By BEN SISARIO, Nov. 2, 2001)
* THE THREATS: California Governor Warns of Threat at State's Bridges (By EVELYN NIEVES with GREG WINTER, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE ALERT: In Overheard Calls, Terrorists Spoke of Major Attack, Officials Say
(By JAMES RISEN & DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE ANTIBIOTICS: Warning Raised Against a Drug [doxycycline] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 2, 2001)
AIRPORT SAFETY: Security Lapses Close Terminal (By MATTHEW L. WALD, Nov. 2, 2001)
HATE GROUPS: U.S. Groups Have Some Ties to Germ Warfare (By JO THOMAS, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE CAMPUSES: Mail Throws a Wrench Into College Admissions (By KAREN W. ARENSON, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE POSTAL SERVICE: Mail Delays Are Minimal Despite Anthrax Problems (By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Nov. 2, 2001)
* Massachusetts Clears Five Witches in Salem Trials (NY TIMES, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE OUTBREAKS: Clusters of Illness Suggest That Most Infections Came From Two Mailings (By NICHOLAS WADE, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE WHITE HOUSE: Bush Plans Speeches With Coherent, Unified Message
(By DAVID E. SANGER with JIM RUTENBERG, Nov. 2, 2001)
Bush Keeps a Grip on Presidential Papers (By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Nov. 2, 2001)
Pride, Sorrow and Unity at California Home of Slain Afghan's Son (By EVELYN NIEVES, Nov. 2, 2001)
A Partnership Forged to Thwart Terrorism [Ashcroft & Mueller] (By PHILIP SHENON & DAVID JOHNSTON, Nov. 2, 2001)
WORLD: STRATEGY: War Wins Supporters in Pakistan (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 2, 2001)
NUCLEAR FEARS: Arrested Pakistani Atom Expert Is a Taliban Advocate (By DENNIS OVERBYE & JAMES GLANZ, Nov. 2, 2001)
MISSILE DEFENSE: Bush Will Offer Nuclear Cuts to Sway Russia (By MICHAEL R. GORDON & DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 2, 2001)
* NUCLEAR FEARS: Arrested Pakistani Atom Expert Is a Taliban Advocate [djinni]
(By DENNIS OVERBYE and JAMES GLANZ, Nov. 2, 2001)
ATOMIC ANXIETY: A Warning From an Official About an Increased Possibility of Nuclear Terror
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, Nov. 2, 2001)
IN TEHRAN: Step Right Up! On Show in Iran, Sins of Uncle Sam (By NAZILA FATHI, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE BATTLE: Trouble in Deploying Commandos Is Said to Hurt U.S. Air Campaign
(By ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER, Nov. 2, 2001)
FRONT LINE: Taliban's Foes Say Bombing Is Poorly Aimed and Futile (By DEXTER FILKINS, Nov. 2, 2001)
GERM WARFARE: Bush, in Reversal, Seeks Rules for Enforcing Biological Treaty (By PATRICK E. TYLER, Nov. 2, 2001)
JIHAD MESSAGE: Bin Laden Letter Calls Upon Pakistanis to Defend Islam (By SUSAN SACHS, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE OPPOSITION: Anti-Taliban Leader O.K. After Clash, Brother Says (By JANE PERLEZ, Nov. 2, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Domestic Warnings, a Baffling Death, Help From Turkey (By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 2, 2001)
NY REGION: THE INVESTIGATION: Terror Inquiry Is Using Law on Sedition (By BENJAMIN WEISER, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Familiar Anthrax Strain Is Seen in Woman's Death (By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Nov. 2, 2001)
* BOLDFACE NAMES: An Honestly Grateful Man [V. S. Naipaul] (NY TIMES, Nov. 2, 2001)
* PUBLIC LIVES: A 24/7 Superwoman, Living La Vida Loca in Style [Vera Wang]
(By LYNDA RICHARDSON, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE IMAM: New Head of Mosque Wants Proof (By DANIEL J. WAKIN, Nov. 2, 2001)
LOWER MANHATTAN: Workers and Residents Are Safe, Officials Say (By DIANE CARDWELL, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE PILLMAKER: Mix of Routine and Urgency at Sole U.S. Maker of Cipro (By WINNIE HU, Nov. 2, 2001)
* SPORTS: WORLD SERIES: Yankees Rally in 9th Again and Win in 12 (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 2, 2001)
* SPORTS: Guess What? Yankees Just Did It Again (By GEORGE VECSEY, Nov. 2, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Getting Ready for a Ground War (NY TIMES, Nov. 2, 2001)
OP-ED: FOREIGN AFFAIRS: One War, Two Fronts (By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Nov. 2, 2001)
OP-ED: Yes, This Is About Islam (By SALMAN RUSHDIE, Nov. 2, 2001)
OP-ED: Better Cars, Cleaner Air (By DANIEL F. BECKER, Nov. 2, 2001)
LETTERS: We Need Answers on Anthrax (By DAVID GOLDBERG, M.D. et. al., Nov. 2, 2001)
BUSINESS: Share Prices Gain on Prospect of a Microsoft Settlement
[Dow +189, Nasdaq +56] (By SHERRI DAY, Nov. 2, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Antitrust Deal Is Called Big Victory for Microsoft (By STEVE LOHR, Nov. 2, 2001)
Strategy Shift Puts Pictures With Words [British adds TV to telephone & Internet]
(By SUZANNE KAPNER, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE ECONOMY: Low Mortgage Rates Spur Big Surge in Refinancing (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Nov. 2, 2001)
Berkshire Set to Acquire Apparel Giant [Fruit of the Loom] (By DAVID BARBOZA, Nov. 2, 2001)
FLOYD NORRIS: For the First Time Since Ike, a Whiff of U.S. Deflation (By FLOYD NORRIS, Nov. 2, 2001)
More Gloomy Economic News as Consumer Spending Slumps (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Nov. 2, 2001)
Cantor Survivors Are Rebuilding and Remembering (By DIANA B. HENRIQUES, Nov. 2, 2001)
In a Surprise Move, AOL Replaces Its Chief Financial Officer (By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Nov. 2, 2001)
* ARTS: Even Now, a Skyline of Twins (By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Nov. 2, 2001)
* ART: NORMAN ROCKWELL: Flags, Mom and Apple Pie (By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Nov. 2, 2001)
ART: Some Shaker Gifts That Are Anything but Simple (By HOLLAND COTTER, Nov. 2, 2001)
INSIDE ART: Donors Bestow a Rare Stella (By CAROL VOGEL, Nov. 2, 2001)
ANTIQUES: Dalmatians Not for Sale (By WENDY MOONAN, Nov. 2, 2001)
BOOKS: 'FALLING ANGELS': Trysting in a Cemetery Where Death Is a Metaphor (By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Nov. 2, 2001)
DANCE: AMERICAN BALLET THEATER: Enshrouded in Mysteries and Reveling in Oddity
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Nov. 2, 2001)
* FILM: 'MONSTERS, INC.': Monsters of Childhood With Feelings and Agendas (By ELVIS MITCHELL, Nov. 2, 2001)
FILM: 'HAPPENSTANCE': Parallel Universes That Sometimes Collide (By A. O. SCOTT, Nov. 2, 2001)
MUSIC: The Mystery of Kissin on Display (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 2, 2001)
MUSIC: Levine Leads a Celebration of Schoenberg (By ALLAN KOZINN, Nov. 2, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: A Sample of the Riches From a Scottish Trove (By MARGARETT LOKE, Nov. 2, 2001)
THEATER: 'NOISES OFF': A Voyage to Hilarity (By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 2, 2001)
THEATER: 'WONDER OF THE WORLD': Setting Forth, the Wind in Her Sails (By BEN BRANTLEY, Nov. 2, 2001)
THEATER: 'KING LEAR': When Shakespeare Could Use a Warning Label (By BRUCE WEBER, Nov. 2, 2001)
TV: Surrounded by Terror but Ready to Die Fighting (By JULIE SALAMON, Nov. 2, 2001)
THE OUTSIDER: Nature's Bounty: Birds and Solitude (By JAMES GORMAN, Nov. 2, 2001)

Thursday, November 1, 2001:
On This Day: November 1 (Crawford W. Long 11/1/1815-6/16/1878, Sholem Asch 11/1/1880-7/10/1957, Sakutaro Hagiwara 11/1/1886-5/11/1942)
EXPERIMENTS FOR HYDROGEN BOMB HELD SUCCESSFULLY AT ENIWETOK (By JAY WALZ, Nov. 1, 1952)
* Stephen Crane Dead: Author of "The Red Badge of Courage" [11/1/1871-6/5/1900] (NY Times, June 6, 1900)
Paul Warnke, a Leading Vietnam Dove, Dies at 81 (By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, Nov. 1, 2001)
John Springer, Hollywood Publicist, Dies at 85 (By MEL GUSSOW, Nov. 1, 2001)
Robert Rosenthal, Ran Apparel Stores, Is Dead at 87 (NY TIMES, Nov. 1, 2001)
William E. Sauro, Times Photographer, Dies at 78 (By ERIC PACE, Nov. 1, 2001)
H. Gerard Bissinger II, Former Bond Firm President, Is Dead at 75 (By WOLFGANG SAXON, Nov. 1, 2001)
Art Wall Jr., Golfer, Dies at 77 (ASSOCIATED PRESS, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE THREATS: Assessing Risks, Chemical, Biological, Even Nuclear
(By William J. Broad, Stephen Engelberg & James Glanz, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE DISEASE: Sterilized Mail to Be Scanned for Evidence (By DAVID E. ROSENBAUM, Nov. 1, 2001)
VACCINES: Doctors Say Call to Get Flu Shots Could Backfire (By GINA KOLATA, Nov. 1, 2001)
MEDICATIONS: Bioterrorism and Anxiety Are Swelling Prescriptions (By TAMAR LEWIN, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE SYMPTOMS: Disease Experts Struggle to Help Doctors Discern the Early Flu From Early Anthrax
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE OPPOSITION: Brothers Act Behind the Scenes to Build a Taliban Alternative (By STEPHEN KINZER, Nov. 1, 2001)
WORLD: Saudis Freeze Funds of 66 on U.S. List (NY TIMES, Nov. 1, 2001)
U.N. Acting to Keep Somalia From Becoming a Terrorist Haven (By REUTERS, Nov. 1, 2001)
NEWS MEDIA: The Right 'Fixer' (and $30) Puts News People on an Afghan Tour (By BILL CARTER, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE AID: U.S. Will Buy Asian Wheat to Give Afghans (By ELIZABETH BECKER, Nov. 1, 2001)
AN OVERVIEW: Plan for More G.I.'s on the Ground, Economic Slump, Anthrax Unease
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Nov. 1, 2001)
KANDAHAR: On a Taliban-Guided Tour, Facts Prove Elusive (By ROBERT NICKELSBERG with BARRY BEARAK, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE REBELS: Sight of a B-52 Makes Northern Alliance Troops Shout With Joy (By DAVID ROHDE, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE IMAGES: Battling the Skepticism of a Global TV Audience (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Nov. 1, 2001)
NUCLEAR FEARS: Pakistan Atom Experts Held Amid Fear of Leaked Secrets (By JOHN F. BURNS, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE CONTINENT: Public Apprehension Felt in Europe Over the Goals of Afghanistan Bombings
(By WARREN HOGE, Nov. 1, 2001)
BIOTERROR TREATY: U.S. Seeks Changes in Germ War Pact (By JUDITH MILLER, Nov. 1, 2001)
NY REGION: THE SITE: Citing Safety, City Will Cut Work Force for Recovery (By ROBERT WORTH, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE INQUIRY: In Fourth U.S. Fatality, Woman in Bronx Dies of Inhalation Anthrax (By ERIC LIPTON, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE VAULT: Below Ground Zero, Silver and Gold (By JIM DWYER, Nov. 1, 2001)
Beelzebub, Pussycats and Bomb Squads (By AL BAKER and WINNIE HU, Nov. 1, 2001)
NEW JERSEY: As Anthrax Cases Mount, the Tranquil Rhythms of Suburban Havens Are Disrupted
(By DAVID W. CHEN and STEVEN GREENHOUSE, Nov. 1, 2001)
* SPORTS: Midnight Thunder in the Bronx (By DAVE ANDERSON, Nov. 1, 2001)
* WORLD SERIES: Martinez and Jeter Rescue Yanks, Even Series (By BUSTER OLNEY, Nov. 1, 2001)
ON BASEBALL: Brenly's Good Moves Don't Matter (By MURRAY CHASS, Nov. 1, 2001)
SPORTS: New Month, Old Tricks (By GEORGE VECSEY, Nov. 1, 2001)
Yanks' Power Gives Pitcher a Lesson (By TYLER KEPNER, Nov. 1, 2001)
Martinez and Jeter Pump Life Into Yankees (By JACK CURRY, Nov. 1, 2001)
Renaissance Man Has His Own Renaissance [Miguel Batista] (By TYLER KEPNER, Nov. 1, 2001)
Bullpens Are the Difference Yet Again (By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Nov. 1, 2001)
SPORTS: Game 7 Would Be Classic Duel [Clemens vs. Schilling] (BY DAVE ANDERSON, Nov. 1, 2001)
EDITORIAL: A Puzzling Anthrax Death (NY TIMES, Nov. 1, 2001)
EDITORIAL: Tough Economic Times Ahead (NY TIMES, Nov. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: ESSAY: Pushto Comes to Shove (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Nov. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: IN AMERICA: Hungry and Jobless (By BOB HERBERT, Nov. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: Ensuring a Safe Flight (By JAMES McKENNA, Nov. 1, 2001)
OP-ED: The Worry Trap (By RICHARD FORD, Nov. 1, 2001)
LETTERS: The Afghan Front: Lessons of Vietnam (By ELLEN WILLIS et. al., Nov. 1, 2001)
BUSINESS: THE MARKETS: Technology Shares Rebound, With the Nasdaq Up 22.79
[Dow -47, Nasdaq +23] (By SHERRI DAY, Nov. 1, 2001)
Rising Star at Lockheed Is Point Man on Prize Contract (By LAURA M. HOLSON, Nov. 1, 2001)
BELT-TIGHTENING: After 8 Years, U.S. Economy Finally Falters (By DAVID LEONHARDT, Nov. 1, 2001)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Entangled With War on Terror, Threat of Global Recession (By DAVID E. SANGER, Nov. 1, 2001)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Rich Nations Have Been Too Insensitive to Poverty (By JEFF MADRICK, Nov. 1, 2001)
Computers Hit Around Globe by New Form of Old Virus (By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Nov. 1, 2001)
THE IMAGES: Battling the Skepticism of a Global TV Audience (By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Nov. 1, 2001)
Rivals Are Moving to Lure Top Authors From Penguin (By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Nov. 1, 2001)
* ART: Afghan Art Dispersed by the Winds of War (By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Nov. 1, 2001)
BOOKS: 'POX AMERICANA': When a Killer Disease Held a Continent in Fear (By JANET MASLIN, Nov. 1, 2001)
* MAKING BOOKS: Poetic History of the Heart (By MARTIN ARNOLD, Nov. 1, 2001)
CABARET: PAULA WEST: Like That Other Dame, She's Definitely No Angel (By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Nov. 1, 2001)
DANCE: GARTH FAGAN DANCE: A Distinct Style in Odd Shapes and Lightning Leaps and Turns
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Nov. 1, 2001)
FILM: 'MYSTERIOUS OBJECT AT NOON': From Thailand, Adventures in (By ELVIS MITCHELL, Nov. 1, 2001)
MUSIC CRITIC: Hothouse Romantic Brooding Under the California Sun (By BERNARD HOLLAND, Nov. 1, 2001)
PHOTOGRAPHY: The Legends Are Life-Size, and That's a Lot for a Photo (By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Nov. 1, 2001)
* HEALTH: Slightly High Blood Pressure Shown to Raise Risk for Heart (By REUTERS, Nov. 1, 2001)
CIRCUITS: Contents (NY TIMES, Nov. 1, 2001)
As Security Trumps Indulgence, Gadget Tastes Are Shifting (By LISA GUERNSEY, Nov. 1, 2001)
STATE OF THE ART: Erasing C From VCR, With a Disc (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 1, 2001)
FROM THE DESK OF DAVID POGUE: What's in a Product Name? (By DAVID POGUE, Nov. 1, 2001)
BASICS: Web Addresses Sprout New Suffixes, Needed or Not (By SUSAN STELLIN, Nov. 1, 2001)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Birthday Presents That Won't Be Ignored (By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Nov. 1, 2001)
SOFTWARE: America Online as VCR and Social Secretary (By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Nov. 1, 2001)

| Top of Page | Dec.2001 | Oct.2001 | Sept.2001 | Aug.2001 | July.2001 | June.2001 | May.2001 | Apr.2001 |
| Mar.2001 | Feb.2001 | Jan.2001 | Dec.2000 | Nov.2000 | Oct.2000 | Sept.2000 | Aug.2000 | July.2000 |
| June.2000 | May.2000 | NYTimes-2000 | NYTimes Archive | Dates | A-Z Portals | News | References | Home |

© Peter Y. Chou, WisdomPortal.com
P.O. Box 390707, Mountain View, CA 94039
email: peter@wisdomportal.com