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 October 2000
Tuesday, October 31, 2000:
On This Day: October 31 (Jan Vermeer 10/31/1632-12/15/1675, John Keats 10/31/1795-2/23/1821,
Juliette Low 10/31/1860-1/18/1927, Michael Landon 10/31/1936-7/1/1991, Norodom Sihanouk 1922,
Michael Collins 1930, Dan Rather 1931, Sally Kirkland 1944, Deidre Hall 1948, Jane Pauley 1950)
Indira Gandhi Slain, Is Succeded by Son
(By WILLIAM K. STEVENS, October 31, 1984)
Chiang Kai-shek: A Leader Who Was Thrust Aside by Revolution
[10/31/1887-4/5/1975] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, April 6, 1975)
Robert I. Levy Dies at 63; Studied Cholesterol
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 31, 2000)
Thomas King, 79, Who Opened Way to Cloning of Mammals
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 31, 2000)
Marriage Issue Splits Jews, Poll Finds
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Oct. 31, 2000)
Political Notebook: Read Gore's Lips: Many New Kisses
(By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA, Oct. 31, 2000)
Congressional Investigators Cite Safety Violations at Nursing Homes
(By ROBERT PEAR, Oct. 31, 2000)
Fans Paint the Town in Pinstripes Once Again
(By DAN BARRY, Oct. 31, 2000)
SPORTS: Boredom Is Absent; Students Are Present
(By IRA BERKOW, Oct. 31, 2000)
Amid All the Fondness, a Few Farewells [Yankees parade]
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 31, 2000)
Vision of CUNY as a Contender in Select Fields
(By KAREN W. ARENSON, Oct. 31, 2000)
North Korea Is All Smiles, and Bewildered by It All
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Oct. 31, 2000)
A Chess Match Is Waged for a World Title Whose Authenticity Is Challenged
(By DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN, Oct. 31, 2000)
OP-ED: PUBLIC INTERESTS: Hillary Gets a Rewrite
(By GAIL COLLINS, Oct. 31, 2000)
OP-ED: Decoding the Candidate
(By STEVEN PINKER, Oct. 31, 2000)
Blasé About the Boom
(By ROBERT M. DUNN JR., Oct. 31, 2000)
LETTERS: A Friendly DiMaggio
(By LEONARD B. ABRAMS, Oct. 31, 2000)
Market Place: Nasdaq, Dow and New Principles of Physics
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 31, 2000)
Blue Chips Stage Strong Rally While the Nasdaq Slides
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 31, 2000)
Dollar Makes the Good Life a Tourist Bargain in Europe/A>
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Oct. 31, 2000)
Magazine Group Agrees to Buy About.com
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 31, 2000)
Advertising: What Dot.coms Don't Know About Marketing
(By BERNARD STAMLER, Oct. 31, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: It May Be Small, but Reykjavik Rocks Big Time
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Oct. 31, 2000)
A Detour Into Naughty for Last Season's Nice Girls
(By GUY TREBAY, Oct. 31, 2000)
BOOKS: Plath's Journals: Charting Terrain on an Internal Landscape
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 31, 2000)
FRONT ROW: A Brilliant Photographer Who Happened to Do Fashion
(BY GINIA BELLAFANTE, Oct. 31, 2000)
The Week in Science: Evolution May Come Sooner Than Believed
(NY TIMES, Oct. 31, 2000)
Early Pharaohs' Ghostly Fleet
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 31, 2000)
A New Transplant Frontier: Intestines
(By DENISE GRADY, Oct. 31, 2000)
An Even Closer Look at Eros
(By WARREN E. LEARY, Oct. 31, 2000)
Martians Landing on Earth? If You Mean Bacteria, Maybe
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 31, 2000)
Cases: Diabetic's Olympian Triumph
(By ANNE L. PETERS, M.D., Oct. 31, 2000)
Newfound Protein Touches Off Race for New Therapies
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 31, 2000)
Major Medical Mystery: Why People Avoid Doctors
(By RANDI HUTTER EPSTEIN, Oct. 31, 2000)
Personal Health: Early Detection of Infant Deafness Is Vital
(By JANE E. BRODY, Oct. 31, 2000)
Making a Plus From the Deficit in A.D.D.
(By PERRY GARFINKEL, Oct. 31, 2000)
Chocolate a Health Food? Maybe, but Keep the Aspirin
(By LAURIE TARKAN, Oct. 31, 2000)
VITAL SIGNS: Patterns: When Counseling Makes Matters Worse
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Oct. 31, 2000)
Letters: Extinctions as Old as Time
(By DR JAMES T. CARLTON, Oct. 31, 2000)
Observatoy: Ancient Morsels
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 31, 2000)
Science Q&A: Brain Folds
(By C.CLAIBORNE DAY, Oct. 31, 2000)
USA Today Widens Its Lead in Daily Circulation Figures [Not Online]
(By Felicity Barringer, Oct. 31, 2000, C12)
Monday, October 30, 2000:
On This Day: October 30 (John Adams 10/30/1735-7/4/1826, Alfred Sisley 10/30/1839-1/29/1899,
Ezra Pound 10/30/1885-11/1/1972, Charles Atlas 10/30/1893-12/24/1972,
Dickinson W. Richards 10/30/1895-2/23/1973, Ruth Gordon 10/30/1896-8/28/1985,
Daniel Nathans 10/30/1928-11/16/1999, Louis Malle 10/30/1932-11/23/1995,
Claude Leloouch 1937, Henry Winkler 1945, Kevin Pollak 1958)
Ali Regains Title, Flooring Foreman
(By DAVE ANDERSON, October 30, 1974)
Fred W. Friendly, CBS Executive and Pioneer in TV News Coverage, Dies at 82
[10/30/1915-3/3/1998] (By ERIC PACE, March 5, 1998)
Edith Ginsberg, an Anchor For Poet Stepson, Dies at 94
(By GEORGE JAMES, Oct. 30, 2000)
THE RURAL LIFE: Chaste Weather
(By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Oct. 30, 2000)
Yankee Fever on the Canyon of Heroes
(By JULIAN E. BARNES, Oct. 30, 2000)
TOKYO JOURNAL: The City Isn't Quaking, but Maybe It Should Be
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Oct. 30, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: A Stark Memorial in Vienna Confronts a Dark Legacy
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Oct. 30, 2000)
Net Animations Nibble at TV's Turf
(By AMY HARMON, Oct. 30, 2000)
Investors Turn Back to Basics
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 30, 2000)
A State Grant Could Help Save Graham Studio
(By DOREEN CARVAJAL, Oct. 30, 2000)
American Ballet Theater: Everybody Loves Somebody Sometime, but Rarely Forever
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 30, 2000)
TV REVIEW: 'A History of Britain': 50 Centuries (Phew!) of That Blessed Plot
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 30, 2000)
Fixing a Vulnerable `Millionaire'
(By BILL CARTER, Oct. 30, 2000)
MUSIC REVIEW: Philharmonic Relaxes With a Visitor [Colin Davis]
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, Oct. 30, 2000)
REVISIONS: Tuning In Seems the Same as Turning Back the Clock
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, Oct. 30, 2000)
An Early Birthday Party for a 'Guys and Dolls' Guy
(By JESSE McKINLEY, Oct. 30, 2000)
BOOKS: A Dark Childhood Warmed by Footlights
(By HILMA WOLITZER, Oct. 30, 2000)
Net Incubators Face Hard Times
(By LAURA M. HOLSON, Oct. 30, 2000)
Magazines Mining Web for Readers
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Oct. 30, 2000)
E-Commerce Report: Web Sites Redesign Home Pages
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 30, 2000)
New Economy: Airborne and Grass Roots
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Oct. 30, 2000)
Lessons in Spam: A Nordstrom E-Mail Goes Astray
(By SUSAN STELLIN, Oct. 30, 2000)
W-h-e-r-re's Johnny? In the New Yorker
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 30, 2000)
It's a Small World: Jennings in Book Deal
(DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 30, 2000)
Copyright Office Backs Digital Law
(By AMY HARMON, Oct. 30, 2000)
Sun Microsystems Sets Wireless Strategy
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 30, 2000)
How Microsoft Spotted Hackers
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 30, 2000)
Sunday, October 29, 2000:
On This Day: October 29 (William Hayley 10/29/1745-11/12/1820, Fred Lazarus Jr. 10/29/1884-5/27/1973,
Richard Dreyfuss 1947, Kate Jackson 1948)
BLACK TUESDAY: STOCKS COLLAPSE IN 16,410,030-SHARE DAY
(NY Times, October 29, 1929)
Fanny Brice, Comedienne, Dies at the Age of 59
[born 10/29/1891-5/29/1951] (NY Times, May 30, 1951)
William Hurtz, `Actor With a Pencil' Who Changed Face of Animation, Is Dead at 81
(By RICK LYMAN, Oct. 29, 2000)
U.S. Plan Would Sacrifice Baby Eagles to Hopi Ritual
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 29, 2000)
IDEAS & TRENDS: Just What Politicians Needed: A Patron Saint
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Oct. 29, 2000)
MARKET WATCH: For AT&T, a Lesson in Ways of The Street
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 29, 2000)
Poised to Take Merrill by the Horns
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Oct. 29, 2000)
Trading on Hollywood's Future
(By BARBARA WHITAKER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Turning to the Former Chief for Help in Troubled Times
(By REED ABELSON, Oct. 29, 2000)
ECONOMIC VIEW: A Warning From One President to the Next
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Oct. 29, 2000)
Sad Return for a Lucent Executive
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 29, 2000)
Treacherous Stretch for a Busing Leader
(By TIMOTHY PRITCHARD, Oct. 29, 2000)
INVESTING: A Hunt for the Gems in Genomics
(By SANA SIWOLOP, Oct. 29, 2000)
MARKET INSIGHT: Fiber Optics? That Bear May Be Just a Shadow
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 29, 2000)
PORTFOLIOS: For the Adventurous, New Possibilities in Latin America
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Investing Michael J. Donnelly & Mark S. Kopinski: American Century Emerging Markets Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 29, 2000)
Much for the Imagination in G.E.-Honeywell Deal
(By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Oct. 29, 2000)
PERSONAL BUSINESS: A New Thorn in Divorces: Who Gets the Miles?
(By JANE WOLFE, Oct. 29, 2000)
MY MONEY, MY LIFE: The Librarian's Image, Unrevised
(By KAREN G. SCHNEIDER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Private Sector: Hold the Persian Pistachios, but the Carpets Are Flying In
(By RICK GLADSTONE, Oct. 29, 2000)
Fraudulent Marketers Capitalize on Demand for Sweat-Free Diets
(By GREG WINTER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Some Things Borrowed, All Things Yankee Blue
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 29, 2000)
SPORTS: New York Survives the Subway Series Just Fine, Thank You
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 29, 2000)
Mets Thwarted by Yanks' Use of Inches and Seconds
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 29, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Common Goal (Winning) For Owners of Dynasties
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 29, 2000)
A Team That Held Tough When Faced With Disaster
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 29, 2000)
Rivera Remains the Infallible One
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 29, 2000)
SPORTS: Cone Is Given a Moment to Cherish
(By DAVE ANDERSON, Oct. 29, 2000)
SPORTS: The One Who Got Away, And the One Who Stayed
(By HARVEY ARATON, Oct. 29, 2000)
ACROSS THE DIVIDE: At a Diner, the Series Is Food for Thought
(By ALAN FEUER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Cooperstown Series Displays
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 29, 2000)
BACKTALK: Yankee Hero Stays as Complicated as Legend
(By ROBERT LIPSYTE, Oct. 29, 2000)
RECKONINGS: Drawn and Quartered
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Oct. 29, 2000)
LETTERS: Why I'm Running, by Ralph Nader
(By Ralph Nader, Oct. 29, 2000)
EDITORIAL: Al Gore for President
(NY Times, Oct. 29, 2000)
A Voice From the Other Side
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Oct. 29, 2000)
Sorry, Lads, Now Men Are From Venus
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Oct. 29, 2000)
A Nonbeliever's Plaint: Who Let the Fans Out?
(By RICK MARIN, Oct. 29, 2000)
A NIGHT OUT WITH / THE A-LIST: Sitting Pretty at Shea
(By LINDA LEE, Oct. 29, 2000)
SHOPPING WITH / IAN THORPETeenage Olympian Learns to Wear Fame
(By MARION HUME, Oct. 29, 2000)
VIEW: Call Me Miss (and Fabulous and Single)
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Oct. 29, 2000)
You've Got Males
(By J. D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Irregular New Accounts Alerted Microsoft to Network Intruder
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 29, 2000)
When 'Just Sit Tight' Is the Wrong Advice
(By JOE SHARKEY, Oct. 29, 2000)
There'll Be a Quiz on This Tomorrow
(By KATE ZERNIKE, Oct. 29, 2000)
Nasty Habit or Creative Boost? A Nail-Biting Issue
(By Jane Fritsch, Oct. 29, 2000)
DOUBLE VISION: How Bush and Gore View the Role of Government
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Oct. 29, 2000)
The Age of the Mediathon
(By FRANK RICH, Oct. 29, 2000)
The Fossil Frenzy
(By LAWRENCE OSBORNE, Oct. 29, 2000)
On the Run With Wolf B36
(By SARA CORBETT, Oct. 29, 2000)
FOOD: Jumping Juniper: little berry packs a powerful punch
(By MOLLY O'NEILL, Oct. 29, 2000)
QUESTIONS FOR DICK CAVETT: Time Warp
(By DAVID RAKOFF, Oct. 29, 2000)
ON LANGUAGE: livid
(BY WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 29, 2000)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Pro Pharma: I love drug companies
(By ANDREW SULLIVAN, Oct. 29, 2000)
THE ETHICIST: Pushing the E-Envelope
(BY RANDY COHEN, Oct. 29, 2000)
EXPERT OPINION: Duck and Cover: don't wear khakis
(By J.R. ROMANKO, Oct. 29, 2000)
ARCHIVE: Thanks for Sharing: political endorsements no one really needed to know
(By ALICIA MONTGOMERY, Oct. 29, 2000)
Morocco's Veiled Charm
(By NANCY R. NEWHOUSE, Oct. 29, 2000)
TRAVEL ADVISORY: In Oakland, a Dynasty All but Restored
(By Christopher Hall, Oct. 29, 2000)
Restaurants Online: Not Yet Today's Special
(By ERIC ASIMOVS, Oct. 29, 2000)
Into Berber Country
(By STEVEN A. HOLMES, Oct. 29, 2000)
Nostalgia for the Fruits of Chaos in Chinese Model Operas
(By SHEILA MELVIN & JINDONG CAI, Oct. 29, 2000)
THEATER: Another Alice's Wonderland, as Susan Sontag Found It
(Talk with Richard Schechner, Oct. 29, 2000)
FILM: British New Wave Film Flourishes
(By NORA SAYRE, Oct. 29, 2000)
DANCE: The Serenity of Meditation on the Move
(By CAITLIN SIMS, Oct. 29, 2000)
ART: Brothers in Art as Well as Life
(By ALEXA OLESEN, Oct. 29, 2000)
FILM: 'Venus Beauty Institute': In a Paris Salon, Beauticians, Too, Have Private Lives
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 29, 2000)
THEATER: How Reality Can Be 'Realer' on the Stage Than Raw
(By TOM DONAGHY, Oct. 29, 2000)
THEATER: Let's Not Forgo Imagination for Voyeurism
(By CHARLES MAROWITZ, Oct. 29, 2000)
TELEVISION: After 34 Years, Unable to Let Go Of 'The Prisoner'
(By FRANZ LIDZ, Oct. 29, 2000)
ART: Images That Speak a Language of Art
(By ANDREW SOLOMON, Oct. 29, 2000)
ART: Allowing the Chinese to Look Chinese
(By VICKI GOLDBERG, Oct. 29, 2000)
TELEVISION: The Networks Barely Hear the Latin Boom Outside
(By THELMA ADAMS, Oct. 29, 2000)
Sunday Book Review: Contents
(NY Times, Oct. 29, 2000)
Baseball Was Very, Very Good to Him
[Richard Ben Cramer, "Joe DiMaggio"] (By WILFRID SHEED, Oct. 29, 2000)
Lullaby of Broadway [Frank Rich, "Ghost Light"]
(By JAMES SHAPIRO, Oct. 29, 2000)
All About Evil [Jonathan Glover, "Humanity"]
(By STEVEN PINKER, Oct. 29, 2000)
All Eyes on the Snow Globe [Gjertrud Schnackenberg, "Supernatural Love: Poems 1976-1992"]
(By ADAM KIRSCH, Oct. 29, 2000)
Sounds of Gravity [ Marcia Bartusiak, "Einstein's Unfinished Symphony"]
(By DAVID GOODSTEIN, Oct. 29, 2000)
You've Got Males [Kit Reed, "@expectations"]
(By J. D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 29, 2000)
Saturday, October 28, 2000:
On This Day: October 28 (Henry III 10/28/1017-10/5/1056, Eliphalet Remington 10/28/1793-8/12/1861,
Gilbert Grosvenor 10/28/1875-2/4/1966, Edith Head 10/28/1897-10/24/1981, Evelyn Waugh 10/28/1903-4/10/1966,
Francis Bacon 10/28/1909-4/28/1992, Suzy Parker 1933, Bruce Jenner 1949, Julia Roberts 1967)
Statue of Liberty Dedicated in New York Harbor by President Cleveland
(NY Times, October 28, 1886)
Dr. Jonas Salk, Whose Vaccine Turned Tide on Polio, Dies at 80
[10/28/1914-6/23/1995] (By HAROLD M. SCHMECK Jr., June 24, 1995)
Miriam M. Salpeter, 71, Expert on Neuromuscular Disorders
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 28, 2000)
Charles Gussman, 87, Spinner of Soap Operas, Dies
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 28, 2000)
Chipping Away at Statue's Myths [Statue of Liberty]
(By GLENN COLLINS, Oct. 28, 2000)
Religion Journal: With Texas Group's Proposal, Struggle Among Baptists Enters a New Phase
(By GUSTAV NIEBUHR, Oct. 28, 2000)
IRANDUBA JOURNAL: Snakes and Scorpions vs. the Census
(By LARRY ROHTER, Oct. 28, 2000)
How a Mighty Power Was Humbled by a Little Skiff [fishing boat bombs USS Cole]
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Oct. 28, 2000)
In Rural China, a Steep Price of Poverty: Dying of AIDS
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Oct. 28, 2000)
OP-ED: Got the Glue Sticks?
(By EUGENIE ALLEN, Oct. 28, 2000)
OP-ED: The Mets Win! The Mets Win!
(By ANDY BOROWITZ, Oct. 28, 2000)
A Fan's Unanswered Prayers
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Oct. 28, 2000)
After Riveting Ride, Decisions for a Dynasty
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 28, 2000)
SPORTS: For Mets and Yankees, a Sense of Closure
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Oct. 28, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: With Ice in Their Veins, Yankees Took Charge
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 28, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Yanks Know How to Get Job Done
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 28, 2000)
SPORTS: Torre Stands at Top of Class
(By IRA BERKOW, Oct. 28, 2000)
Pinstripes' Enduring Appeal
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 28, 2000)
TUNNEL VISIONS: A Ride to Work, a Replay of Victory
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Oct. 28, 2000)
Big Fantasy Camp Suddenly Evaporates
(By DAN BARRY, Oct. 28, 2000)
210.50 Gain in Dow Leads Major Gauges
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 28, 2000)
Economic Growth Slowed Sharply in Third Quarter
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Oct. 28, 2000)
Microsoft Says Online Break-in Lasted 6 Weeks
(By JOHN MARKOFF and JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 28, 2000)
Selling Evolution in Ways Darwin Never Imagined
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 28, 2000)
Media Giants in Joint Deal for Harcourt
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 28, 2000)
IDEAS: Looking for That Brain Wave Called Love
(By EMILY EAKIN, Oct. 28, 2000)
THEATER REVIEW: Stuck Inside a Bowler Hat, Marceau Retains Charm
(By DAVID DeWITT, Oct. 28, 2000)
SHELF LIFE: Defending Lincoln's Legacy From a Confederacy of Culture Warriors
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Oct. 28, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: A Hybrid Unfurls in Miniaturized Form
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 28, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: In the Idioms of Ballet and Not-Ballet
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Oct. 28, 2000)
Professors Use Brain Scans to Study Moral Choices
(NY Times, Oct. 28, 2000)
10 Writers Receive Whiting Awards
(NY Times, Oct. 28, 2000)
CUTTINGS: Here Lies a Land for the Living
(By MARTY ROSS, Oct. 28, 2000)
Friday, October 27, 2000:
On This Day: October 27 (Catherine of Valois 10/27/1401-1/3/1437, Desiderius Erasmus 10/27/1466-7/12/1536,
James Cook 10/27/1728-2/14/1779, Niccolo Paganini 10/27/1782-5/27/1840, Isaac M. Singer 10/27/1811-7/23/1875,
Marcellin Berthelot 10/27/1827-3/18/1907, Theodore Roosevelt 10/27/1858-1/6/1919, Dylan Thomas 10/27/1914-11/9/1953, Roy Liechtenstein 10/27/1923-9/29/1997,
Teresa Wright 1918, Ralph Kiner 1922, Warren Christopher 1925)
IRT SUBWAY OPEN, 150,000 TRY IT
(NY Times, October 27, 1904)
Sylvia Plath: Her Poetry, Not Her Death, Is Her Triumph
[born 10/27/1932-2/11/1963] (By ROSALYN DREXLER, January 13, 1974)
Dr. Ramzi S. Cotran, 67, of Harvard, Long a Leading Pathologist
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 27, 2000)
Medical School Applications Dip Sharply; Minorities' Rise Slightly
(By DIANA JEAN SCHEMO, Oct. 27, 2000)
Shaken NASA Offers New Plan for Mars Exploration Missions
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 27, 2000)
Mars Rock Could Have Carried Life, Study Shows
(By REUTERS, Oct. 27, 2000)
Jewish and Catholic Scholars Seek Pius XII's Files
(By ALESSANDRA STANLEY, Oct. 27, 2000)
FOREIGN AFFAIRS: The Five Myths
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Oct. 27, 2000)
LETTERS: Too Many Know Too Much About Us
(By JAY BUTE, Oct. 27, 2000)
The Dimming Lights of Silicon Alley
(By LESLIE EATON & JAYSON BLAIR, Oct. 27, 2000)
Nasdaq Closes Up After Early Dive
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 27, 2000)
The Devolved AT&T: Are 4 Parts More Promising Than One?
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 27, 2000)
It's Time for Big Oil to Step Up Its Efforts to Find More Oil
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 27, 2000)
Kellogg Agrees to Buy Keebler Foods for $3.86 Billion
(By GREG WINTER, Oct. 27, 2000)
Former Magellan Manager Is Closing His Hedge Fund
[Jeffrey N. Vinik] (By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 27, 2000)
Barnes & Noble to Coordinate Online Sales
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 27, 2000)
WorldCom Intends to Focus on Internet and Data Services
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 27, 2000)
Advertising: A Gerbil-Free Campaign for Go.com
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 27, 2000)
U.S. Has Traced Most of Biotechnology Corn
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 27, 2000)
Public Profile: Now (Still) Cleaning Up - Topps Company
(By JOYCE WADLER, Oct. 27, 2000)
YANKEES 4, METS 2: Yankees Win a Third Straight Title
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 27, 2000)
SPORTS: A Not-So-Hostile Takeover at Shea
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 27, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: With Torre Steering, the Yankees Win Again
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 27, 2000)
The Mets Lose, but Their Pride Is Intact
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 27, 2000)
M.V.P. Jeter Says This Title Is Most Gratifying
(By DAVE ANDERSON, Oct. 27, 2000)
Leiter Goes One Out Too Far
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 27, 2000)
TV SPORTS: McCarver's Foresight Nearly 20-20
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Oct. 27, 2000)
ACROSS THE DIVIDE: In a Nun's Soul, a Love of Baseball
(By ALAN FEUER, Oct. 27, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Yoko Ono: Painter, Sculptor, Musician, Muse
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Oct. 27, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Henri Michaux: An Escape From Words, Into a Sea of Teeming Energy
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Oct. 27, 2000)
ART REVIEW: In Indian Miniatures, Men Strut Like Gods and Devotion Takes All Forms
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Oct. 27, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Thomas Sully: The American Painter Who Conquered a Queen
(By JOHN RUSSELL, Oct. 27, 2000)
BOOKS: Tom Wolfe: Both a Social Pointillist and a Cultural Partisan
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 27, 2000)
Ballet Folklorico de Mexico: It's Kick-Up-Your-Heels Time With a Mexican Flourish
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Oct. 27, 2000)
FILM: 'Lucky Numbers': It Sure Takes More Than a Dollar and a Dream
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 27, 2000)
FILM: 'Loving Jezebel': A Guy in Love With Love Keeps Seeking Ms. Right
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 27, 2000)
FILM: 'Venus Beauty Institute': Vanity Is Hardly Skin-Deep
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 27, 2000)
FILM: 'The Bridge': There's No Stoppin' Mom's Cheatin' Heart
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 27, 2000)
FILM: 'Stardom': A Star Is Borne Aloft to a Make-Believe Heaven
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 27, 2000)
FILM: 'Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2' Burkittsville Revisited, With More Mind Games
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 27, 2000)
TV Weekend: Nervous and Paranoid? Well, You Should Be
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Oct. 27, 2000)
Family Fare: A Halloween of Holy Smoke
(By LAUREL GRAEBER, Oct. 27, 2000)
ON THE ROAD: Spinning Mirages Like Cotton Candy [Las Vegas]
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Oct. 27, 2000)
Thursday, October 26, 2000:
On This Day: October 26 (Domenico Scarlatti 10/26/1685-7/23/1757,
Georges Jacques Danton 10/26/1759-4/5/1794, Beryl Markham 10/26/1902-8/3/1986,
Jackie Coogan 10/26/1914-3/1/1984, Pat Sajak 1946, Hillary Rodham Clinton 1947, Jaclyn Smith 1947)
Israel Prime Minister Rabin and Jordan Prime Minister Majali Signed Peace Treaty
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 26, 1994)
Mahalia Jackson, Gospel Singer, And a Civil Rights Symbol, Dies
[born 10/26/1911] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, January 28, 1972)
Dirk J. Struik; Historian Was 106
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Oct. 26, 2000)
Martin Rich, 95, Who Conducted at the Met
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Oct. 26, 2000)
Charles Rembar, 85, Dies; Lawyer Fought Censorship
(By LAURA MANSNERUS, Oct. 26, 2000)
Astronomers Discover Four New Moons Orbiting Saturn [Saturn now has 22 moons]
(By REUTERS, Oct. 26, 2000)
Astronomers Find Large Asteroid Near Pluto
(By REUTERS, Oct. 26, 2000)
OP-ED: Emotions Under Hat
(By LIONEL TIGER, Oct. 26, 2000)
LETTERS: A 5-Year-Old's Life: Work and Play
(By ANNE MARTIN, Oct. 26, 2000)
Literary Sleuth Casts Doubt on the Authorship of an Iconic Christmas Poem
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 26, 2000)
A Museum Wing to Bear Witness to Jewish Life
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Oct. 26, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: Filming in Iran's Rugged Corner, Hoping Prayer Works
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Oct. 26, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: American Ballet Theater: Pairing Off to Show Off the Ballet Theater
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 26, 2000)
MAKING BOOKS: An Agent's Role in the New Age
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, Oct. 26, 2000)
BOOKS: 'Merrick': So Bewitched, Why, He Feels Almost Human
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 26, 2000)
YANKEES 3, METS 2: Yanks Push Mets Toward the Edge
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 26, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Alfonzo and Perez Can't Get Started
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 26, 2000)
SPORTS: Mets Seem Outsiders in This Showdown
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 26, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Williams Frustrated by Lack of Production
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 26, 2000)
Piazza Is Down, in Games and Spirit
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 26, 2000)
Alfonzo Is 2 for 16 but Still Has Faith
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 26, 2000)
ACROSS THE DIVIDE: Using Baseball Talk as an Opening Verse
(By ALAN FEUER, Oct. 26, 2000)
Stocks Tumble as Nortel Disappoints on Sales Gain
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 26, 2000)
Market Place: Bond Market Signals Worry Over Economy
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 26, 2000)
Bioengineered Corn Reportedly Detected in Japan
(By STEPHANIE STROM, Oct. 26, 2000)
AT&T, in Pullback, Will Break Itself Into 4 Businesses
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 26, 2000)
News Analysis: AT&T Realigns Its Planets
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 26, 2000)
The Wireless Unit: Cellular Legacy Leaves Home
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 26, 2000)
The Employees: Some Ready to Embrace Corporate Change, Some to Resist It
(By RONALD SMOTHERS, Oct. 26, 2000)
THE AGITATOR: An Architect of Finance, Creativity and Intrigue [John C. Malone]
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT & ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Oct. 26, 2000)
Economic Scene: Are Bush and Gore Flip-Flopping Over How to Manage the Economy?
(By JEFF MADRICK, Oct. 26, 2000)
Circuits: Index
(NY Times, Oct. 26, 2000)
STATE OF THE ART: The Web Gets New Dashboard
(By DAVID POGUE, Oct. 26, 2000)
PlayStation 2 as Trojan Horse
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 26, 2000)
HOW IT WORKS: Sensor Fish Brave the Bumps to Tame Dams for Young Salmon
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 26, 2000)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Book Bargains Hard to Come By
(by MICHELLE SLATALLA, Oct. 26, 2000)
WHAT'S NEXT: Quantum Leap May Transform Chips
(By IAN AUSTEN, Oct. 26, 2000)
Who Says Surfers Are Antisocial?
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 26, 2000)
A Heady 'Cosmic Baseball'
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Oct. 26, 2000)
SCREEN GRAB: Trying to Touch the Top Untouchable on the Web
(By MICHAEL POLLAK, Oct. 26, 2000)
Q & A: Print Only the Pages That Fit Your Needs
(By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 26, 2000)
NEWS WATCH: Tiny Changes, Big Ideas In AOL's Version 6.0
(By DAVID POGUE, Oct. 26, 2000)
Trying to Make Package Delivery as Easy as Shopping Online
(By J.D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 26, 2000)
'Face Time,' With a Twist
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 26, 2000)
Every Game System Needs At Least One Great Game
(By PETER OLAFSON, Oct. 26, 2000)
Kodak Camera Lets User Point, Shoot and Pick
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 26, 2000)
Wednesday, October 25, 2000:
On This Day: October 25 (Evariste Galois 10/25/1811-5/31/1832,
Johann Strauss, Jr. 10/25/1825-6/3/1899, Georges Bizet 10/25/1838-6/3/1875,
Henry Steele Commager 10/25/1902-3/2/1998, Minnie Pearl 10/25/1912-3/4/1996,
Bobby Thomson 1923, Helen Reddy 1941)
United Nations Admits Mainland China and Expels Taiwan
(By TAD SZULC, Oct. 25, 1971)
Picasso: Protean and Prodigious, the Greatest Single Force in 70 Years of Art
[born 10/25/1881] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, April 9, 1973)
Perry W. Gilbert, 87, Dies; Shark Expert and Defender
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 25, 2000)
Charles Perkins, 64, Advocate for Aborigines in Australia, Dies
(By CARMEL McCOUBREY, Oct. 25, 2000)
Gene-Modified Corn Turns Up in U.S. Exports to Japan
(By STEPHANIE STROM, Oct. 25, 2000)
OP-ED: LIBERTIES: Boys Going Batty
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Oct. 25, 2000)
LETTERS: To Preserve Our Culture, Byte by Byte
(By JOHN BRYANT, Oct. 25, 2000)
LETTERS: Clemens, Piazza and a Bad Call
(By FRED POLVERE, JAMES O. CHAMBERLAIN, Oct. 25, 2000)
LETTERS: Praise, Without Rules
(By JULIE E. MAYBEE, Oct. 25, 2000)
THEATER REVIEW: 'Proof': When the Mind and Heart Share an Elusive Equation
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 25, 2000)
BOOKS: 'A Woman Unknown': A Double Expatriate Struggling Within One Body
[Lucia Graves, "A Woman Unknown"] (By RICHARD EDER, Oct. 25, 2000)
Smoked Salmon That's Much Too Good for a Bagel
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Oct. 25, 2000)
EATING WELL: Take Steaming Seriously? Chefs Do
(By MARIAN BURROS, Oct. 25, 2000)
Master Chef, Patricia Yeo: Shellfish in Spicy Coconut Sauce
(By Patricia Yeo, Oct. 25, 2000)
BY THE BOOK: The Dish That Made New England Famous
[Jasper White, "50 Chowders"]
(By FLORENCE FABRICANT, Oct. 25, 2000)
TEMPTATION: Cute, Ghoulish and Sweet, and Just in Time for Halloween
[Mexican candy skulls]
(By MELISSA CLARK, Oct. 25, 2000)
Yankees' Clemens Is Fined $50,000
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 25, 2000)
SPORTS: Designated Hitter Gimmick Emboldens Clemens
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 25, 2000)
SPORTS: The Yankees Will Continue to Evolve
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Oct. 25, 2000)
METS 4, YANKEES 2: Mets Derail the Yankee Express
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 25, 2000)
SPORTS: Door Swings Open to Wild and the Great
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 25, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Magic Touch Finally Abandons Hernández
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 25, 2000)
The Dow Posts a Nice Little Gain, but the Nasdaq Slumps
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 25, 2000)
Xerox to Sell Many Operations
(By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Oct. 25, 2000)
Amazon.com Surpasses Forecast
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 25, 2000)
Market Place: Computer Associates Still Lacks Credibility
(By ALEX BERENSON, Oct. 25, 2000)
AT&T Board Said to Meet on Overhaul
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 25, 2000)
Compaq Results Exceed Forecasts
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 25, 2000)
Excite@Home meets forecasts, reports jump in subscribers
(By COREY GRICE, CNET NEWS.COM, Oct. 25, 2000)
E-COMMERCE SPECIAL SECTION: In a Health Revolution, a Hospital's Baby Steps
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 25, 2000)
Dr. Spock Lives On in Books; Coming Soon, the Web Site
(By DAN BREKKE, Oct. 25, 2000)
Five Views on the Web's Role for Consumers
(NY Times, Oct. 25, 2000)
No Fun for Sisyphus: the Woes of WebMd and Medscape
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 25, 2000)
Residents Discover a Handy Helpmate
(By SANDEEP JAUHAR, M.D., Oct. 25, 2000)
Reams of Information, Some of It Even Useful
(By ABIGAIL ZUGER, M.D., Oct. 25, 2000)
Moving Beyond The Basics: Internet as Tool for Innovation
(By JOHN H. CUSHMAN Jr., Oct. 25, 2000)
If a Site Is All About Your Health, Who Else Might Be Peeking?
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 25, 2000)
How Do You Invest in Online Health? Very, Very Carefully
(By JONATHAN BURTON, Oct. 25, 2000)
A Web Bazaar Turns Into a Pharmaceutical Free-for-All
(By SUSAN COBURN, Oct. 25, 2000)
He Loves to Swap. She Loves to Swap. Where's the Profit?
(By BARBARA WHITAKER, Oct. 25, 2000)
Where to Find Gifts for Your 2,000 Closest Corporate Friends
(By DONNA WILKINSON, Oct. 25, 2000)
Christmas Is Coming! Time for Another Fight to the Death!
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 25, 2000)
A Case Study That Starts in a Botanical Garden
(By DEA BIRKETT, Oct. 25, 2000)
The Fears May Be Needless, but Here Come the Secure Cards
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Oct. 25, 2000)
Merchants Eagerly Vie to Add Services to Their Services
(By DAVID J. WALLACE, Oct. 25, 2000)
Sex Sites, Once Pioneers, Search for New Frontiers
(By COREY KILGANNON, Oct. 25, 2000)
Can a Story Told on Film Be Brought to Life on the Web?
(By KIT MILLER, Oct. 25, 2000)
The Net Is Turning Into a Total Zoo
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 25, 2000)
Cupid Goes Online for Romances That Click
(By PERRY GARFINKEL, Oct. 25, 2000)
What's Your Sign-On? I've Been Admiring Your Beautiful Pixels
(By PERRY GARFINKEL, Oct. 25, 2000)
Call It What You Want, It's Gossip and I Love It
(By LIA MILLER, Oct. 25, 2000)
A Fourth for Bridge or a Cozy Chat in an All-Night Bingo Hall
(By HILARY APPELMAN, Oct. 25, 2000)
Tuesday, October 24, 2000:
On This Day: October 24 (Antoine van Leeuwenhoek 10/24/1632-8/26/1723,
Sarah J. Hale 10/24/1788-4/30/1879, Moss Hart 10/24/1904-12/20/1961,
Y.A. Tittle 1926, F. Murray Abraham 1939)
UN CHARTER BECOMES 'LAW OF NATIONS,' 29 RATIFYING IT
(By BERTRAM D. HULEN, Oct. 24, 1945)
Bob Kane, 83, the Cartoonist Who Created 'Batman,' Is Dead
[born 10/24/1915] (By SARAH BOXER, November 7, 1998)
Robert Lax, 84, Minimalist Poet Known for Experimental Forms
(By ERIC PACE, Oct. 24, 2000)
Robert Chapman, 81, Playwright and Retired Harvard Professor
(By ERIC PACE, Oct. 24, 2000)
Now a Majority: Families With 2 Parents Who Work
(By TAMAR LEWIN, Oct. 24, 2000)
AZAMGARH JOURNAL: Back to Life in India, Without Reincarnation
(By BARRY BEARAK, Oct. 24, 2000)
FOREIGN AFFAIRS: Cultural Revolutions
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Oct. 24, 2000)
LETTERS: Clemens and the Bat: The Wrong Lesson
(By KAREN MANASSE, Oct. 24, 2000)
Public Lives: She's Happy. Hirschfeld's Happy. The Secret?
(By ROBIN FINN, Oct. 24, 2000)
FASHION: In Spring's Tough Chic, It's Boy Meets Girl
(By CATHY HORYN, Oct. 27, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Clemens's Act Marring Yanks' Quest for Greatness
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 24, 2000)
SPORTS: Clemens's Fire Doesn't Burn Piazza
(By HARVEY ARATON, Oct. 24, 2000)
Torre Discusses Clemens; The Volcano Calms Down
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 24, 2000)
On Express Train to Queens, Please Watch Flying Barbs
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 24, 2000)
THE FANS: After the Bat, a City Looks At the Belfry
(By N. R. KLEINFIELD, Oct. 24, 2000)
TV SPORTS: Clemens Threw a Bat, Fox Dropped the Ball
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Oct. 24, 2000)
Please, Let Mets Win One
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 24, 2000)
Thus Far, It's Painful to Watch
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Oct. 24, 2000)
A Game Complicated by Rooting for Home
(By MIREYA NAVARRO, Oct. 24, 2000)
AT&T Plans to Split Up Again
(By SETH SCHIESEL with ANDREW ROSS SORKIN, Oct. 24, 2000)
Chairman of Lucent Is Ousted
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 24, 2000)
Market Place: The Rise of an Internet Analyst
(By ALEX BERENSON, Oct. 24, 2000)
Shangri-La in a Bottle?
(By BARRY MEIERy, Oct. 24, 2000)
New Tool From Lotus Notes Creator
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Oct. 24, 2000)
CYBERTIMES EDUCATION: Hold the Arts & Crafts: After-School Programs Go Digital
(By REBECCA S. WEINER, Oct. 24, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: Joffrey Ballet: In Copland Tribute, Two Odes to the Open Frontier
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 24, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: Battery Dance Company: Embracing the Music, Twisting in Its Charms
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 24, 2000)
MUSIC REVIEW: Murray Perahia:
For Bach and Soulmate, Song Is Hardly the Whole Story
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Oct. 24, 2000)
THEATER REVIEW: 'As You Like It':
All the World's a Stage? One Storefront Sure Is
(By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, Oct. 24, 2000)
BOOKS: The Caviar Begrudged, and Other Mortal Slights
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 24, 2000)
Extinction Turns Out to Be a Slow, Slow Process
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 24, 2000)
The Week in Science: Drowning in a Sea of Plenty
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 24, 2000)
THE FAT EPIDEMIC: Watching Volunteers Eat, Psychiatrists Seek Clues to Obesity
(By ERICA GOODE, Oct. 24, 2000)
Personal Health: Fat but Fit: A Myth About Obesity Is Slowly Being Debunked
(By JANE E. BRODY, Oct. 24, 2000)
Unlocking Secrets of Magnetic Fields' Power
(By JAMES GLANZ, Oct. 24, 2000)
Plentiful Sandhill Cranes Blaze Trail for Rare Relatives
(By ELIZABETH STANTON, Oct. 24, 2000)
Scientists' Hopes Raised for a Front-Row Seat to Evolution
(By CAROL KAESUK YOON, Oct. 24, 2000)
Observatory: Penguins and Climate
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 24, 2000)
For Back Pain Sufferers, a Technique Under Study May Offer Hope
(By KAREN FREEMAN, Oct. 24, 2000)
Cases: Easy Answer May Not Be the Right One
(By HOWARD MARKEL, M.D., Oct. 24, 2000)
BOOKS: When Friends and Family Fill Most of a Patient's Medical Needs
(By JOHN LANGONE, Oct. 24, 2000)
Plague Can Wax When Rats Wane
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 24, 2000)
VITAL SIGNS: Prevention: Photography, the New Cavity-Fighter
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 24, 2000)
Science Q&A: Cricket Thermometers
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Oct. 24, 2000)
Monday, October 23, 2000:
On This Day: October 23 (Pierre Larousse 10/23/1817-1/3/1875,
Adlai Ewing Stevenson 10/23/1835-6/15/1914, Felix Bloch 10/23/1905-9/10/1983,
Pele 1940, Michael Crichton 1942)
Beirut Death Toll at 161 Americans; French Casualties Rise in Bombings
(By Thomas E. Friedman, Oct. 23, 1983)
John W. Heisman, Noted Coach, Dies
[born 10/23/1869] (NY Times, October 4, 1936)
Jacquelyn Reinach, Writer Known for an A-to-Z Menagerie, Dies at 70
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Oct. 23, 2000)
Wall Street Meets Pornography
(By TIMOTHY EGAN, Oct. 23, 2000)
BEIJING JOURNAL: Chinese Scholar Learns the Danger of Criticizing
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Oct. 23, 2000)
No Time for Napping in Today's Kindergarten
(By KATE ZERNIKE, Oct. 23, 2000)
OP-ED: My Data, Mine to Keep Private
(By LINDA R. MONK, Oct. 23, 2000)
OP-ED: A Little Democracy on Wall Street
(By DANIEL GROSS, Oct. 23, 2000)
OP-ED: Baseball's Innocence
(By BOB HERBERT, Oct. 23, 2000)
LETTERS: If the Shoe Doesn't Fit, Why Wear It?
(By SUE K. LEVINE, ART GRILLO, HELENE BENARDO, Oct. 23, 2000)
YANKEES 6, METS 5: Clemens Throws a Bat, Then Dominates
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 23, 2000)
For Yanks, Game 1 Is Worth the Wait
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 23, 2000)
SPORTS: Yankees Leave Mets Fans Gasping for Air
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Oct. 23, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Opener Lived Up to All the Buildup
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 23, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Clemens at His Best, and Most Bizarre
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 23, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: No Excuse for Pitcher Being a Bully
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 23, 2000)
Mets Are Searching for an Explanation
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 23, 2000)
Game 1 Casts Its Spell on the City
(By DAN BARRY, Oct. 23, 2000)
SPORTS: Inexperience Is Both Blessing and Curse
(By WILLIAM C. RHODEN, Oct. 23, 2000)
Topic No. 1: Benitez's Blown Save(s)
(By TYLER KEPNER, Oct. 23, 2000)
SPORTS: Baseball Has Long-Running Problem
(By IRA BERKOW, Oct. 23, 2000)
AT&T Considers a Split
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 23, 2000)
Qualcomm's Shrinking Act Could Pay Off Big
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 23, 2000)
Time, AOL and Early Illusions
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 23, 2000)
NEW ECONOMY: Name-Your-Own-Price Misnomers
(By TIM RACE, Oct. 23, 2000)
Geeks for Gore, but Bosses Choose Bush
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 23, 2000)
PeoplePC Finds Corporate Niche
(By LAURIE J. FLYNN, Oct. 23, 2000)
Site Lifts Presence Through Charity
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Oct. 23, 2000)
The Prizes Are Ready, but the E-Books Aren't
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 23, 2000)
Patents: Disproving Idea Ownership
(By SABRA CHARTRAND, Oct. 23, 2000)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: Public Broadcasting on Sale
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 23, 2000)
Asia and Latin America Lead PC Sales Surge
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Oct. 23, 2000)
Media Titan Surveys His Empire at Frankfurt Book Fair
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 23, 2000)
Eve.com Ceases Doing Business
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 23, 2000)
WRITERS ON WRITING: Alice Walker: After 20 Years, Meditation Still Conquers Inner Space
(By ALICE WALKER, Oct. 23, 2000)
THEATER REVIEW: 'Tantalus': 10 Hours on the Aegean, Masked and Mythic
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 23, 2000)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art: Beyond Tans and Tinsel
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Oct. 23, 2000)
Mikis Theodorakis: Once Banned, Now a Hero of Greek Music
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Oct. 23, 2000)
THEATER REVIEW: 'Orpheus and Eurydice': Greek Lovers in a Hip, Rock Setting
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, Oct. 23, 2000)
TV REVIEW: 'Balzac: A Life of Passion':
Oversize Appetite for Life and Letters
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 23, 2000)
TV REVIEW: 'Hate.com': The Web as Home for Racism and Hate
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 23, 2000)
BOOKS: 'The Perfect Heresy': Early Lessons in Tyranny, Repeated in Modern Times
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Oct. 23, 2000)
Sunday, October 22, 2000:
On This Day: October 22 (Franz Liszt 10/22/1811-7/31/1886, George Beadle 10/22/1903-6/9/1989,
Constance Bennett 10//22/1904-7/24/1965, Jimmie Foxx 10/22/1907-7/21/1967,
Joan Fontaine 1917, Annette Funicello 1942, Catherine Deneuve 1943, Jeff Goldblum 1952)
President Kennedy Announced Blockade of Cuba
(By ANTHONY LEWIS, Oct. 22, 1968)
Timothy Leary, Pied Piper Of Psychedelic 60's, Dies at 75
[born 10/22/1920] (By LAURA MANSNERUS, June 1, 1996)
Katherine Fanning, an Editor, Is Dead at 73
(By EDWARD WONG, Oct. 22, 2000)
Zeke Manners, 'Hillbilly' Who Ruled Radio, Dies at 89
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 22, 2000)
As Biggest Business, Wal-Mart Propels Changes Elsewhere
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Oct. 22, 2000)
Al Gore's Journey: Gore Has Explored a Range of Beliefs From Old Time to New Age
(By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Oct. 22, 2000)
Gore on the Bible and Ecology
(NY Times, Oct. 22, 2000)
MATTERS OF FAITH: Bush Uses Religion as Personal and Political Guide
(By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Oct. 22, 2000)
THE RUNNING MATE: Cheney, an Alpha Candidate, Casts His Line in a Sea of Men
(By MICHAEL COOPER, Oct. 22, 2000)
Kellogg Shuts Memphis Plant Over Genetically Altered Corn
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 22, 2000)
Melvin A. Cook, 89, Creator of Explosives Used by Allies
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 22, 2000)
NEWARK JOURNAL: Carved All in Schmaltz: Glory That Was Newark
(By ANDREW JACOBS, Oct. 22, 2000)
YANKEES 4, METS 3, 12 INNINGS: 5 Hours Later, Vizcaino Single Beats Mets
(By BUSTER OLNEY, Oct. 22, 2000)
SPORTS: This One Was Worth Waiting For
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 22, 2000)
SPORTS: Rest of the World Is Also Watching
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Oct. 22, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: These Are Wild Times, Even for Wild Cards
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 22, 2000)
SPORTS: An Instant Museum Exhibit in the Bronx
(By DAVE ANDERSON, Oct. 22, 2000)
BASEBALL NOTEBOOK: Managers Look Smart When Trades Work Out
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 22, 2000)
Finally, Mets and Yankees Are Good Enough to Be the Best
(NY Times, Oct. 22, 2000)
BACKTALK: There Is No Choice but to Love the Yankees
(By ROBERT LIPSYTE, Oct. 22, 2000)
CUTTINGS: At Home, The Grass Is Greener
(By ANNE RAVER, Oct. 22, 2000)
IDEAS & TRENDS: American Homes Get Bigger
(By TRACIE ROZHON, Oct. 22, 2000)
ARAB LEADERS' CHOICE: Unleashed, Anger Can Bite Its Master
(By SUSAN SACHS, Oct. 22, 2000)
CHINESE STREET JUSTICE:
A Fender-Bender Becomes a Journey Down the Path of Least Resistance
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Oct. 22, 2000)
GOD AND NATURE: Saving Souls and Salmon
(By JIM ROBBINS, Oct. 22, 2000)
The Oys of Yiddish
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Oct. 22, 2000)
OP-ED: Because of the Pitcher's Eyes
(By FRANK McCOURT, Oct. 22, 2000)
RECKONINGS: Unsound Bytes?
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Oct. 22, 2000)
LIBERTIES: Dare Speak His Name
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Oct. 22, 2000)
PHOTO: The Eternal Question: If you're a rooster...
(Associated Press, Oct. 22, 2000)
CEO ROUND TABLE: When That Corner Office Is Also a Dorm Room
(By AMY HARMON, Oct. 22, 2000)
MARKET WATCH: Some Gateway Numbers Stay Inside the Box
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 22, 2000)
Next Hurdle: The 'Credit Divide'
(By GREG WINTER, Oct. 22, 2000)
BOOK VALUE: It Certainly Glitters, but What Is It Worth?
(By FRED ANDREWS, Oct. 22, 2000)
INVESTING: Funds That Vanguard Hates to Love
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 22, 2000)
Investing With Paul A. Blaustein: Whitehall Growth Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 22, 2000)
MIDSTREAM: Keeping Up With the Croesuses
(By JAMES SCHEMBARI, Oct. 22, 2000)
PERSONAL BUSINESS: The Foreign Assignment: An Incubator, or Exile?
(By MELINDA LIGOS, Oct. 22, 2000)
For Funds, Ripples From the Middle East
(By JOSEPH B. TREASTER, Oct. 22, 2000)
STRATEGIES: Two Ways to Get Ahead of a Global Index Curve
(By MARK HULBERT, Oct. 22, 2000)
Private Sector: Finding a Woman's Place on the Web and in the Market
(By ALLEN R. MYERSON, Oct. 22, 2000)
List of Movie Web Sites' Visitors
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 22, 2000)
Blacks Appreciate Internet's Value
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 22, 2000)
MUSIC: Al Jolson: A Megastar Long Buried Under a Layer of Blackface
(By TED GIOIA, Oct. 22, 2000)
An Al Jolson Immitator With Aging Fans
(By JOE HAGAN, Oct. 22, 2000)
ARCHITECTURE: A Rare Opportunity for Real Architecture in New York
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Oct. 22, 2000)
OPERA: Taming Wagner and His Ilk, All in Good Time
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Oct. 22, 2000)
ART: Osvaldo Romberg: A Lifetime of Kinship With Borges's Ambitions
(By MICHAEL RUSH, Oct. 22, 2000)
DANCE: American Ballet Theater Dances to Lost-and-Found Songs
(By VALERIE GLADSTONE, Oct. 22, 2000)
DANCE: Choreographer Ralph Lemon's Unfinished Work
(By MARCIA B. SIEGEL, Oct. 22, 2000)
THEATER: Japanese Playwright Shows the Quiet Profundity of Ordinary Life
(By PAMELA RENNER, Oct. 22, 2000)
THEATER: Chorus Repertory Theater of Manipur: Together, They Live, Work and Perform
(By MINDY ALOFF, Oct. 22, 2000)
FILM: In Hollywood's Las Vegas, Happiness Is Luck
(By DAVID THOMSON, Oct. 22, 2000)
THEATER: Laurence Fishburne: Making People on the Margin Real
(By PETER MARKS, Oct. 22, 2000)
Vincent Canby: A Steady Gaze at Stage and Screen
(NY Times, Oct. 22, 2000)
TELEVISION: New 'Fugitive' Runs Away From a Daunting Television Legacy
(By STANLEY FISH, Oct. 22, 2000)
Ernst Krenek: An Exile-to-Be Hymns Farewell to His Fatherland
(By MATTHEW GUREWITSCH, Oct. 22, 2000)
Virgil Fox: An Organ Legend in Vivid Memory
(By CRAIG R. WHITNEY, Oct. 22, 2000)
NOTICED: Guess What Sells Cars. Guess Again
(By NANCY HASS CRAIG R. WHITNEY, Oct. 22, 2000)
Bargains Under Tropical Skies
(By FRANCES FRANK MARCUS, Oct. 22, 2000)
A Waterside Perch as Colorful as a Parrot
(By SETH MARGOLIS, Oct. 22, 2000)
Doing Nothing Is a Fine Art
(By LISA FUGARD, Oct. 22, 2000)
Shopping the Mall Called Seoul
(By DAISANN McLANE, Oct. 22, 2000)
Walking Under Water, With a Helmet
(By CAROL GRANT GOULD, Oct. 22, 2000)
The Guts of Times Square
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Photographs by STEPHEN WILKES, Oct. 22, 2000)
STYLE: A New Balance: Lee Radziwill finds serenity in Paris
(By WILLIAM NORWICH, Oct. 22, 2000)
FOOTNOTES: Lee Radziwill Article
(By WILLIAM NORWICH, Oct. 22, 2000)
FOOD: Meat Loaf The Musical
(By JONATHAN REYNOLDS, Oct. 22, 2000)
LIVES: The Nature of the Beast: Alexis Rockman and his friends talk about wild art
(Interviews by CATHERINE SAINT LOUIS, Oct. 22, 2000)
ON LANGUAGE: enjoy!
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 22, 2000)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: The Gray American Novel
(By CHARLES MCGRATH, Oct. 22, 2000)
SALIENT FACTS: The Way of Some Flesh
(That excised tumor is valuable to someone)
(By HOPE REEVES, Oct. 22, 2000)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY Times, Oct. 22, 2000)
Behind the Veil [Elaine Sciolino, "Persian Mirrors"]
(By DIANE JOHNSON, Oct. 22, 2000)
Here's Your Host [Carl Zimmer, "Parasite Rex"]
(By KEVIN PADIAN, Oct. 22, 2000)
Riding on a Pony [John Dizikes, "Yankee Doodle Dandy"]
(By D. J. R. BRUCKNER, Oct. 22, 2000)
Attention, Shoppers [Howard Kurtz, "The Fortune Tellers"]
(By JAMES SUROWIECKI, Oct. 22, 2000)
Rotting? Stinking? Perfect! [Midas Dekkers, "The Way of All Flesh"]
(By DICK TERESI, Oct. 22, 2000)
The Last Victorian [Roland Hill, "Lord Acton"]
(By JOHN T. NOONAN JR., Oct. 22, 2000)
BOOKEND: Return to Gitche Gumee [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]
(By J. D. MCCLATCHY, Oct. 22, 2000)
Saturday, October 21, 2000:
On This Day: October 21 (Samuel Taylor Coleridge 10/21/1772-7/25/1834, Alfred Nobel 10/21/1833-12/10/1896,
Ted Shawn 10/21/1891-1/9/1972, Louis L'Amour 10/21/1908-6/10/1988, Sir George Solti 10/21/1912-9/5/1997,
Whitey Ford 1928, Benjamin Netanyahu 1949)
Thomas Edison Invented Electric Light
(NY Times, Oct. 21, 1879)
Dizzy Gillespie, Who Sounded Some of Modern Jazz's Earliest Notes, Dies at 75
[born 10/21/1917] (By PETER WATROUS, January 7, 1993)
John Worsley, 81, Artist Whose Wartime Creation Outfoxed the Nazis
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Oct. 21, 2000)
Willie Cook, 76, Lead Trumpeter With Gillespie and Ellington
(By BEN RATLIFF, Oct. 21, 2000)
Jean Peters, Actress of the 50's, Dies at 73
(By RICK LYMAN, Oct. 21, 2000)
Maybe I Remember DiMaggio's Kick
(By DAVID HALBERSTAM, Oct. 21, 2000)
Carter Sadly Turns Back on National Baptist Body
(By SOMINI SENGUPTA, Oct. 21, 2000)
IDEAS: Modern and Postmodern, the Bickering Twins
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Oct. 21, 2000)
IDEAS: Satire in the Ivory Tower Gets Rough
(By SARAH BOXER, Oct. 21, 2000)
THINK TANK: Bicycles, Roman Toilets and Other Microscholarship
(By JOYCE JENSEN, Oct. 21, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: Ukrainian Troupe Brings a Legend From the Caucasus
(By JACK ANDERSON, Oct. 21, 2000)
A Filipino Linked to 'Love Bug' Talks About His License to Hack
(By MARK LANDLER, Oct. 21, 2000)
1956 vs. 2000? It's Déjà Vu All Over Again
(By GLENN COLLINS, Oct. 21, 2000)
In the Dugouts, Opposites Distract
(By JACK CURRY, Oct. 21, 2000)
TUNNEL VISIONS: Subway Cars of the 1950's Also Evoke Nostalgia
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Oct. 21, 2000)
Study: Government Web Sites Track Users
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 21, 2000)
Elway's MVP.com Misses Fourth Quarter Payment
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 21, 2000)
Friday, October 20, 2000:
On This Day: October 20 (Andrea Della Robbia 10/20/1435-8/4/1525, Sir Christopher Wren 10/20/1632-2/25/1723,
Arthur Rimbaud 10/20/1854-11/10/1891, Charles Edward Ives 10/20/1874-5/19/1954, Bela Lugosi 10/20/1884-8/16/1956,
Sir James Chadwick 10/20/1891-7/24/1974, Dame Anna Neagle 10/20/1904-6/3/1986, Mickey Mantle 10/20/1931-8/13/1995,
Art Buchwald 1925, Arlene Francis 1908)
Nixon Discharges Cox For Defiance; Abolishes Watergate Task Force;
Richardson And Ruckelshaus Out
(By DOUGLAS E. KNEELAND, Oct. 20, 1973)
Dr. John Dewey Dead at 92; Philosopher a Noted Liberal
[born 10/20/1859] (NY Times, June 2, 1952)
David Golub, Pianist and Conductor Known for Chamber Music, Dies at 50
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 20, 2000)
Art Coulter, 91, Defenseman and Captain of 1940 Rangers, Dies
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Oct. 20, 2000)
Al Gore's Journey: Once Close to Clinton, Gore Keeps a Distance
(By MELINDA HENNEBERGER & DON VAN NATTA Jr., Oct. 20, 2000)
From Agbayani to Zimmer: A Primer
(By DAN BARRY, Oct. 20, 2000)
SPORTS: Unlikely Hero Of '55 Series. Well, Sort Of [Don Zimmer]
(By IRA BERKOW, Oct. 20, 2000)
Reflections From the Men Who Played
(By DAVE ANDERSON, Oct. 20, 2000)
TV SPORTS: The Way It Was and the Way It Will Be [Mel Allen & Vin Scully]
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Oct. 20, 2000)
Alfonzo Grows on the Field and in the Dugout
(By RAFAEL HERMOSO, Oct. 20, 2000)
Kucks Remembers Old Glory in Game 7 [1956 World Series]
(By HARVEY ARATON, Oct. 20, 2000)
Guggenheim and Hermitage to Marry in Las Vegas
(By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Oct. 20, 2000)
OP-ED: That Curve Ball Was Just Spin
(By FRANK CAMMUSO & HART SEELY, Oct. 20, 2000)
Erasmus, Class of '35 [Sid Luckman taking Latin]
(By MILTON ALLENSON, Oct. 20, 2000)
Nasdaq Surges as Investors Flock to Technology Shares
(By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Oct. 20, 2000)
Does an International Bear Market Mean World Recession?
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 20, 2000)
When Companies Talk, Who Gets to Listen?
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 20, 2000)
EBay Tops Expectations
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 20, 2000)
Buffett Shows Gillette's Chief the Door
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Oct. 20, 2000)
Nokia's Earnings Surge
(By ALAN COWELL, Oct. 20, 2000)
Advertising: Eerie TV Spots Predict a Future Without Stock Exchanges
(By BERNARD STAMLER, Oct. 20, 2000)
Study Finds That Many Large Companies Pay No Taxes
(By DAVID CAY JOHNSTON, Oct. 20, 2000)
DESIGN REVIEW: Giorgio Armani: Where Ego Sashays in Style
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Oct. 20, 2000)
Vikings: To the Sea They Went, Roving and Raiding
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 20, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Weaving Tassels on Rock's Fringe
(By JON PARELES, Oct. 20, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Images of Still Water That Always Run Deep
(By SARAH BOXER, Oct. 20, 2000)
ART REVIEW: When Jews and Muslims Uneasily Shared Morocco
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Oct. 20, 2000)
PHOTOGRAPHY REVIEW: A Master Who Can Perceive Unorthodoxy in the Ordinary
(By MARGARETT LOKE, Oct. 20, 2000)
Antiques: Long in Love With Artifacts of the Indians
(By WENDY MOONAN, Oct. 20, 2000)
ART REVIEW: From Roman Rarities to Mickey Mouse, a Global Bazaar
(By GRACE GLUECK, Oct. 20, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Pay It Forward': What Goes Around Comes Around?
Doing Good Deeds in a Bad World
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 20, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Bedazzled': The Devil Made Him Do It, Didn't She?
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 20, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Legend of Drunken Master': Set 'Em Up, Joe, for Roaring Kung Fu
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 20, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Calle 54': A Tribute to Latin Jazz and the Artists Behind It
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 20, 2000)
At the Movies: Little Shop of Learning
(By DAVID KEHR, Oct. 20, 2000)
TV Weekend: Hollywood Glamour but No Shopping on the Steppes
[Wild Horses of Mongolia With Julia Roberts]
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 20, 2000)
BOOKS: Dreams Chained in Place Restrain a Pair of Lives
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 20, 2000)
Thursday, October 19, 2000:
On This Day: October 19 (Sir Thomas Brown 10/19/1605-10/19/1682, Leigh Hunt 10/19/1784-8/28/1859,
Alfred Dreyfus 10/19/1859-7/12/1935, Auguste Lumiere 10/19/1862-4/10/1954, John Le Carre 1931,
Peter Max 1937, Patricia Ireland 1945)
STOCKS PLUNGE 508 POINTS, A DROP OF 22.6%; 604 MILLION VOLUME NEARLY DOUBLES RECORD
(By LAWRENCE J. De MARIA, October 19, 1987)
Charles Merrill, Broker, Dies; Founder of Merrill Lynch Firm
[born 10/19/1885] (By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, Oct. 7, 1986)
Gwen Verdon, Redhead Who High-Kicked Her Way to Stardom, Dies at 75
(By ROBERT BERKVIST, Oct. 19, 2000)
Julie London, Sultry Singer and Actress of 50's, Dies at 74
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 19, 2000)
Harry Cooper, Unlucky Golfer, Is Dead at 96
(By DAVE ANDERSON, Oct. 19, 2000)
THE FAT EPIDEMIC: As Children Grow Fatter, Researchers Try to Find Solutions
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 19, 2000)
Ancient Bacterium Is Reported Found
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 19, 2000)
SHANGHAI JOURNAL: In This Job, the Suspense Might Really Be Killing
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Oct. 19, 2000)
OP-ED: Freud at the Ballpark
(By STEPHEN JAY GOULD, Oct. 19, 2000)
ESSAY: King Pyrrhus's Victory [Gore-Bush Debates]
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 19, 2000)
Market Place: Gyrations in a Confused and Divided Market
(By Floyd Norris, Oct. 19, 2000)
Xerox: The Faded Copier King
(By Claudia Deutsch, Oct. 19, 2000)
Microsoft Handily Beats Estimates, Aided by Windows
(By John Markoff, Oct. 19, 2000)
Apple Posts Results That Narrowly Miss Analysts' Estimates
(By Chris Gaither, Oct. 19, 2000)
AOL and Time Warner Slioghtly Beat Profit Estimates
(By Saul Hansell, Oct. 19, 2000)
Sun Microsystems Reports Record Quarterly Earnings
(By Matt Richtel, Oct. 19, 2000)
Dow Comes Back From Plunge but Ends Below 10,000
(By Robert D. Hershey, Jr., Oct. 19, 2000)
Euro Falls to Another Low; Intervention Seen as Unlikely
(By Edmund L. Andrews, Oct. 19, 2000)
It's Root, Root, Root, but for Which Team?
(By N. R. Kleinfield, Oct. 19, 2000)
SPORTS: The Old Dodger Dread Resurfaces
(By George Vecsey, Oct. 19, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Mets vs. Yankees: A Brief History
(By Murray Chass, Oct. 19, 2000)
If Yankees and Mets Are Up, Dow Isn't
(By Floyd Norris, Oct. 19, 2000)
Piazza Ready to Move Past Head Games
(By Tyler Kepner, Oct. 19, 2000)
Human Nature: Autumn's Promise to Spring
(By Anne Raver, Oct. 19, 2000)
Boxes Full of the Past, but Loved by So Few
(By TRACIE ROZHON, Oct. 19, 2000)
Her Home Page Takes Care of the Home
(By FRED BERNSTEIN, Oct. 19, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Utopia, and the Rest of All Possible Worlds
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Oct. 19, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: 'Strange Attractors': Controlled Chaos Theory, Via Superheroes
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Oct. 19, 2000)
ARTS IN AMERICA: The Topkapi Treasures Find Friends in South Florida
(By AMIE PARNES, Oct. 19, 2000)
MAKING BOOKS: A Dialogue From Auschwitz
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, Oct. 19, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: Sculptural and Sensual, It's Odissi
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 19, 2000)
BOOKS: Family's In-House Hacker Gets an Eyeful
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 19, 2000)
Digital Legerdemain: Irish Mists Into Music
(By MELISSA P. McNAMARA, Oct. 19, 2000)
New Media Meets an Old Medium in the Phone Book
(By JOYCE COHEN, Oct. 19, 2000)
A New Digital Radio
(By ERIC A. TAUB, Oct. 19, 2000)
STATE OF THE ART: Microsoft Redesigns Mac Office
(BY J. D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 19, 2000)
A Techie Volunteer Corps
(By SHAILA DEWAN, Oct. 19, 2000)
ONLINE SHOPPER: Catalogs for the In Box, Not the Mailbox
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Oct. 19, 2000)
GAME THEORY: A 3-D Undersea Playground
(By PETER OLAFSON, Oct. 19, 2000)
What Does a Start-Up Need? Poetry
(By KATIE HAFNER, Oct. 19, 2000)
The Internet Appliance That Lets You Wander
(By BRUCE HEADLAM, Oct. 19, 2000)
In Modern E-Mail Romance 'Trash' Is Just a Click Away
(By ED BOLAND, Oct. 19, 2000)
Taking On the Oceans, Alone in a Rowboat
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 19, 2000)
SCREEN GRAB: World's Dying Languages, Alive on the Web
(By MICHAEL POLLAK, Oct. 19, 2000)
WHAT'S NEXT: D.S.P. Is the Leaner, Nimbler Chip
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 19, 2000)
Flipping Through Photos Instead of Watching Football
(By IAN AUSTEN, Oct. 19, 2000)
Printing Envelopes Presents a Problem for Desktop Computers
(By CATHERINE GREENMAN, Oct. 19, 2000)
The Quackatorium and Other Web Troves [museumspot.com]
(By SHELLY FREIERMAN, Oct. 19, 2000)
Q & A: A Faster Bucket Brigade For Moving Files to iMac
(by J. D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 19, 2000)
Wednesday, October 18, 2000:
On This Day: October 18 (Pope Pius II 10/18/1405-8/14/1464, Canaletto 10/18/1697-4/20/1768,
Robert L. Stevens 10/18/1787-4/20/1856, Henri Bergson 10/18/1859-1/4/1941,
Melina Mercouri 10/18/1925-3/6/1994, Chuck Berry 1926, Terry McMillan 1951,
Martina Navratilova 1956, Wynton Marsalis 1961)
2 Black Power Advocates Ousted From Olympics
(By JOSEPH M. SHEEHAN, Oct. 18, 1968)
Pierre Trudeau Is Dead at 80; Dashing Fighter for Canada
[born 10/18/1919] (By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, September 29, 2000)
Konrad E. Bloch, 88, Nobelist Who Studied Cholesterol, Dies
(By CARMEL McCOUBREY, Oct. 18, 2000)
Pietro Palazzini, 88, Cardinal Honored for Holocaust Rescue
(NY Times, Oct. 18, 2000)
New Advice for Parents: Saying `That's Great!' May Not Be
(By PAM BELLUCK, Oct. 18, 2000)
THE SCENE: Gestures Said Much More Than Words
(By FRANK BRUNI, Oct. 18, 2000)
THE FAT EPIDEMIC / Chronic Dieters: Days Off Are Not Allowed, Weight Experts Argue
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 18, 2000)
High-Tech Festival Takes High-Anxiety Turn
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Oct. 18, 2000)
I.B.M. Meets Profit Estimates
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 18, 2000)
Market Place: Intel's Passing Grades Come With an Asterisk
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 18, 2000)
Management: Big Corporations Are Getting Religion on Ethics
(By AMY ZIPKIN, Oct. 18, 2000)
When Greenland Exports, It's Ice Bottled Water and Cube Sales to Seekers of Boutique Purity
(By JAMES BROOKE, Oct. 18, 2000)
The Boss: Calculus and Tomatoes
(By AMY ZIPKIN, Oct. 18, 2000)
POP REVIEW: Show Tunes, From Personality to Propulsion
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 18, 2000)
The Pop Life: Uzbekistan Dreams Made of Music
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Oct. 18, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: At Boston's Gala, Morsels for All
(By JAMES R. OESTREICH, Oct. 18, 2000)
BOOKS: Idol of Millions Yet a Bit of a Phantom [Joe DiMaggio]
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Oct. 18, 2000)
The Minimalist: Classic Sauce Takes On a New Partner
(By MARK BITTMAN, Oct. 18, 2000)
Doughnuts: In Search of Perfection in the Round
(By AMANDA HESSER, Oct. 18, 2000)
Peanuts: Not Just for Beer, Ball and Jelly Fans
(By JOHN WILLOUGHBY &d CHRIS SCHLESINGER, Oct. 18, 2000)
Step, Wince, Step, Wince
(By DEBORAH L. RHODE, Oct. 18, 2000)
OP-ART: It's the Last Great I.P.O. of the "Web Street" Era... It's OutOfBusiness.com!
(By Ward Sutton, Oct. 18, 2000, A31) [Not Online]
Tuesday, October 17, 2000:
On This Day: October 17 (Frederick Hassam 10/17/1859-8/27/1935, Jean Arthur 10/17/1900-6/19/1991,
Nathanael West 10/17/1903-12/22/1940, Pope John Paul I 10/17/1912-9/28/1978,
Montgomery Clift 10/17/1920-7/23/1966, Arthur Miller 1915, Jimmy Breslin 1930)
CAPONE CONVICTED OF DODGING TAXES; MAY GET 17 YEARS
(By MEYER BERGER, Oct. 17, 1931)
Rita Hayworth, Movie Legend, Dies
[born 10/17/1918] (By ALBIN KREBS, May 16, 1987)
Gus Hall, Unreconstructed American Communist of 7 Decades, Dies at 90
(By SAM TANENHAUS, Oct. 17, 2000)
Britt Woodman, Big-Band Trombonist, Dies at 80
(By BEN RATLIFF, Oct. 17, 2000)
A Deserved Peace Prize
(EDWARD W. POITRAS, Oct. 17, 2000)
SURABAYA JOURNAL: Yielding to the Dreamy Tug of Ancient Shadows
(By CALVIN SIMS, Oct. 17, 2000)
Ruins May Be Ancient City Swallowed by Sea
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 17, 2000)
THE FAT EPIDEMIC / New Clues From the Lab: How the Body Knows When to Gain or Lose
(By GINA KOLATA, Oct. 17, 2000)
THE FAT EPIDEMIC / Working It Off: One-Two Punch for Losing Pounds: Exercise and Careful Diet
(By JANE E. BRODY, Oct. 17, 2000)
THE FAT EPIDEMIC: Personal Health: Planning Healthier Suburbs,
Where Cars Sit Idle and People Get Moving
(By JANE E. BRODY, Oct. 17, 2000)
SCIENTIST AT WORK / Joan Roughgarden:
A Theorist With Personal Experience of the Divide Between the Sexes
(By CAROL KAESUK YOON, Oct. 17, 2000)
Electronics Based on Plastic
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 17, 2000)
The Week in Science: Epidemic of Obesity
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 17, 2000)
U.S. and Russia Sign Pact to Protect the Polar Bear
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 17, 2000)
Tools Offer Glimpse of Long-Ago Science [slide show]
(NY Times, Oct. 17, 2000)
Hubble Unveils an Ancient Cataclysm
(NY Times, Oct. 17, 2000)
Science Q&A: Gauging the Rain
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Oct. 17, 2000)
Observatory: Earthquake Threat
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 17, 2000)
As Greenland's Seal Population Surges Its Fishermen Look to Revive the Hunt
(By JAMES BROOKE, Oct. 17, 2000)
Gazing Upon an Erased Treasure
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 17, 2000)
Farmers Cite Scarce Data in Corn Mixing
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 17, 2000)
Advertising: Struggling With New Ideas
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 17, 2000)
Mixed Prospects of Indonesia as Lenders Meet
(By WAYNE ARNOLD, Oct. 17, 2000)
Boo.com Prepares for a Rebirth
(By SUZANNE KAPNER, Oct. 17, 2000)
SPORTS: The Man Who Made the Mets
(By HARVEY ARATON, Oct. 17, 2000)
Steve Martin: An Arrow Out of the Head and Into a Shy Heroine's Heart
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 17, 2000)
MUSIC REVIEW: José van Dam: Melancholy, Wit and Glitter in a Civilized Way? But of Course
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, Oct. 17, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: Guinea-Bissau's Music Drives Its Industry: the Clubs
(By DAVID HECHT, Oct. 17, 2000)
THEATER REVIEW: Revelations About Greed, as Seen Through 160 Years of Dust
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 17, 2000)
BOOKS: Man's Fate, Through Dry but Sorrowful Irish Eyes
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 17, 2000)
Monday, October 16, 2000:
On This Day: October 16 (Noah Webster 10/16/1758-5/28/1843, Oscar Wilde 10/16/1854-11/30/1900,
David Ben-Gurion 10/16/1886-12/1/1973, William Douglas 10/16/1898-1/19/1980, Angela Lansbury 1925)
China Tests Atomic Bomb, Asks Summit Talk On Ban; Johnson Minimizes Peril
(By SEYMOUR TOPPING, Oct. 16, 1964)
Eugene O'Neill Dies of Pneumonia; Playwright, 65, Won Nobel Prize
[born 10/16/1888] (NY Times, November 28, 1953)
Vincent Canby, Prolific Film and Theater Critic for The Times, Is Dead at 76
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 16, 2000)
Reluctant Stars Turn Bull Run into a Texas Trot
(By ROSS E. MILLOY, Oct. 16, 2000)
A Camp Meeting Celebrates the Vision of a Hindu India
(By CELIA W. DUGGER, Oct. 16, 2000)
REVISIONS: Ladies Singing the Blues (and More), but Their Way
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, Oct. 16, 2000)
BOOKS: A Writer Wildly Tearing Up His Life to Feed His Art
(By JAMES SHAPIRO, Oct. 16, 2000)
TV REVIEW: Giving Today's Rockefellers a Dime for Their Thoughts
(By CARYN JAMES, Oct. 16, 2000)
A Primer on Fame From an Early Fashionista
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Oct. 16, 2000)
Women Mix It Up on TV With the X-and-O Gang
(By DOUGLAS CENTURY, Oct. 16, 2000)
FASHION: At Saint Laurent, Tom Ford Speaks With His Own Voice
(By CATHY HORYN, Oct. 16, 2000)
How Lucent Stumbled: Research Surpasses Marketing
(By SETH SCHIESEL, Oct. 16, 2000)
Fox Pursuing a Gentler Reality
(By BILL CARTER, Oct. 16, 2000)
Competitive Hysteria Drives Morning News Programs
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 16, 2000)
I.B.M. Invests to Profit From Latest Chips
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 16, 2000)
New Economy: Apple Dances With Nemesis Microsoft
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Oct. 16, 2000)
Using a Bit of 007 to Keep Spies in Check
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 16, 2000)
EBay Faces Suit on Sale of Fake Goods
(By LISA GUERNSEY, Oct. 16, 2000)
E-Commerce Report: Large Companies Spread Internet Retailing
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 16, 2000)
Why the Mind Shrivels for the Body Politic
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 16, 2000)
Patents: SongCatcher
(By SABRA CHARTRAND, Oct. 16, 2000)
Advertising: Top Speakers Talk Freely, at Last
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 16, 2000)
I.P.O. Company to Expand Into New Securities
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Oct. 16, 2000)
Sunday, October 15, 2000:
On This Day: October 15 (Virgil 10/15/70 BC-9/21/19 BC, Evangelista Torricelli 10/15/1608-10/25/1647,
Allan Ramsay 10/15/1686-1/7/1758,
Sir P.G. Wodehouse 10/15/1881-2/14/1975, Mervyn LeRoy 10/15/1900-9/13/1987,
John Kenneth Galbraith 1908, Lee Iacocca 1924)
Khrushchev Ousted From Top Posts; Brezhnev Gets Chief Party Position
(By HENRY TANNER, October 15, 1964)
German Philosopher Prof. Nietzsche Dead
[born 10/15/1844] (NY Times, August 26, 1900)
Daniel H. Lavezzo Jr., 83, Owner of Famed Saloon, Dies
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 15, 2000)
The Nobels: Dazzled by the Digital Light
(By GEORGE JOHNSON, Oct. 15, 2000)
TALL TALES: Gore's Tendency to Exaggerate
(By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Oct. 15, 2000)
IDEAS & TRENDS: A Shot Seen 'Round the World
(By ALAN SCHWARZ, Oct. 15, 2000)
A NOBEL IN THE FAMILY: My Brother, the Nobel Prize Winner: Now I Know What He Does
(By CHRIS CHASE, Oct. 15, 2000)
The End of the Discount Wars
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 15, 2000)
Hollywood's Aging Divas Make a Film About... Aging Divas
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Oct. 15, 2000)
Market Turbulence Does Little to Curb Investors' Optimism
(By ALEX BERENSON, Oct. 15, 2000)
Venture Capitalists, Venturing Beyond Capital
(By LYNNLEY BROWNING, Oct. 15, 2000)
Chat-Room Guru's Stature Drops With the Technology Sector
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 15, 2000)
Market Watch: Sometimes, Cheap Is No Bargain
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 15, 2000)
A Soft Stock and Absorbent Debt. What's a Towel Maker to Do?
(By KATHERYN HAYES TUCKER, Oct. 15, 2000)
INVESTING: Seven Road Maps for the Treacherous Market
(By DANNY HAKIM & RIVA D. ATLAS, Oct. 15, 2000)
Market Insight: Technology's Standouts, Overtaken by Change
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 15, 2000)
PORTFOLIOS: Seeing Earnings Reality, Belatedly
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Investing With Andrew C. Stephens: Artisan Mid-Cap Fund
(By BERNARD STAMLER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Latin America Loses Its Technology Gleam
(By ANTHONY DePALMA, Oct. 15, 2000)
Investing Diary: The Voting Record of the Stock Market
(By VIVIAN MARINO, Oct. 15, 2000)
A Deal Master Evolves, Gracefully
(By RIVA D. ATLAS, Oct. 15, 2000)
GRASS-ROOTS BUSINESS: Reviving Main Street, or Living in the Past?
(By JOEL KOTKIN, Oct. 15, 2000)
PRELUDES: Charting the Leading Edge of Cool
(By ABBY ELLIN, Oct. 15, 2000)
Big Banks May Not Be Better Online
(By PAUL SWEENEY, Oct. 15, 2000)
Business Diary: High Oil Prices Start to Exact a Toll on the Market
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Personal Business Diary: Against the Grain on A.T.M. Fees
(Bloomberg News, Oct. 15, 2000)
THE RIGHT THING: When Bribery Is Lost in Translation
(By JEFFREY L. SEGLIN, Oct. 15, 2000)
A Happy, Scary New Day for Design
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Oct. 15, 2000)
The Way We Spend Now
(By DAVID BROOKS, Oct. 15, 2000)
Why We Split
(By MANNY HOWARD, Oct. 15, 2000)
Why Living in a Rich Society Makes Us Feel Poor
(By ROBERT H. FRANK, Oct. 15, 2000)
Profiles in Splurging
(By RANDALL PATTERSON, Oct. 15, 2000)
How They Make a Fake [Colombian currency counterfeiters]
(By KIRK SEMPLE, Oct. 15, 2000)
How I Started a Dot-Com for Dogs
(By NINA MUNK, Oct. 15, 2000)
Cure It With Drugs
(By MAGGIE JONES, Oct. 15, 2000)
The Big Federal Freeze
(By MATTHEW MILLER , Oct. 15, 2000)
The War on Stink [halitosis]
(By AUSTIN BUNN, Oct. 15, 2000)
Where to Go When You're Broke [A.T.M.]
(By BRENDAN I. KOERNER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Saving Your Way Into Debt
(By GLENN H. THRUSH, Oct. 15, 2000)
STYLE Slide Show: The Price Is Out Of Sight
(Photographs By CLEO SULLIVAN, Oct. 15, 2000)
FOOD: A Chef of One's Own
(By MOLLY O'NEILL, Oct. 15, 2000)
COST OF BEING ALIVE: The Worrier
(By JOHN LELAND, Oct. 15, 2000)
COST OF BEING ALIVE: The Persister
(By JOHN FRIED, Oct. 15, 2000)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Investing Is the New Spending
(By JEFF TURRENTINE, Oct. 15, 2000)
ON LANGUAGE: blip (Financial parlance with good upside potential)
(BY WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 15, 2000)
QUESTIONS FOR IVANA TRUMP: She Stoops to Spend
(By AMY BARRETT, Oct. 15, 2000)
A Movie Mixes Sex and Politics, With a Feminist Twist
(By ELLEN WILLIS, Oct. 15, 2000)
Neil Simon: It's Great to Be a Playwright, but Oh, the Pain
(By MERVYN ROTHSTEIN, Oct. 15, 2000)
A Dancer Inciting Intellect as Well as Passion
(By CHRISTOPHER REARDON, Oct. 15, 2000)
Dance: Sort of Pals in a Kind of Pas de Deux
(By JULIE KAVANAGH, Oct. 15, 2000)
Theater: Answering a Calling to Make You Believe
(Dialogue: Eileen Atkins & Alan Bates, Oct. 15, 2000)
Pierre Boulez: The Master Who Put New Music in the Public Eye
(By PAUL GRIFFITH, Oct. 15, 2000)
Nature Painting That Looks Unnatural
(By ELIZABETH HAYT, Oct. 15, 2000)
The Power of TV Images Paid for by Politicians
(By JOSEPH HANANIA, Oct. 15, 2000)
Art and Objects of Past Presidents
(By RITA REIF, Oct. 15, 2000)
Matthew Ritchie: Mapping a World of Information
(By JEFFREY KASTNER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Palaces Tell a Tale of Two Empresses
(By SARAH FERRELL, Oct. 15, 2000)
Riches the Hapsburgs Sent to the Attic
(By MICHAEL Z. WISE, Oct. 15, 2000)
Vienna's Haunting 'Third Man' Theme
(By MICHAEL MEWSHAW, Oct. 15, 2000)
Slide Show: Vienna, Elegant and Intriguing
(NY Times, Oct. 15, 2000)
What's Doing in Paris
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, Oct. 15, 2000)
Cradle of a Political Dynasty
(By JILL KNIGHT WEINBERGER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Correspondent's Report: Boeing 777
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Oct. 15, 2000)
BOOKS: Living the Great American Novel
(By JOHN LEONARD, Oct. 15, 2000)
Featured Author: Saul Bellow
(NY Times, Oct. 15, 2000)
A Soul That Won't Heal [Nasdijj, "The Blood Runs Like a River Through My Dreams"]
(By TED CONOVER, Oct. 15, 2000)
In a Gray Area [Robert Sullivan, "A Whale Hunt"]
(By NATHANIEL PHILBRICK, Oct. 15, 2000)
'Half Lenin, Half Gandhi' [William J. Duiker, "Ho Chi Minh"]
(By FRANCES FITZGERALD, Oct. 15, 2000)
Chances Are, You're a Barbarian [Morris Berman, "Twilight of American Culture"]
(By ALEXANDER STAR, Oct. 15, 2000)
Green Horse Candidate ["The Ralph Nader Reader"]
(By ADAM CLYMER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Hyphenated Life [Paisley Rekdal, "The Night My Mother Met Bruce Lee"]
(By ANN MARLOWE, Oct. 15, 2000)
Rebel With Many Causes [Carole Klein, "Doris Lessing"]
(By MIRANDA SEYMOUR, Oct. 15, 2000)
Martha C. Nussbaum, "Women and Human Development"
(By ELLEN WILLIS, Oct. 15, 2000)
Helen DeWitt, "The Last Samurai"
(By MYLA GOLDBERG, Oct. 15, 2000)
Ted Koppel, "Off Camera"
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 15, 2000)
Jorge Luis Borges, "This Craft of Verse"
(By MICAELA KRAMER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Frances Wilson, "Literary Seductions"
(By LYNN KARPEN, Oct. 15, 2000)
Laura Chang, "Scientists at Work"
(By ERIC P. NASH, Oct. 15, 2000)
BOOKEND: William Maxwell: The Gentle Realist
(By DANIEL MENAKER, Oct. 15, 2000)
Saturday, October 14, 2000:
On This Day: October 14 (William Penn 10/14/1644-7/30/1718, Francis Lightfoot Lee 10/14/1784-9/29/1833,
Lillian Gish 10/14/1893-2/27/1993, e.e. cummings 10/14/1894-9/3/1962, Roger Moore 1927, Ralph Lauren 1939)
Martin Luther King Wins The Nobel Prize for Peace
(NY Times, October 14, 1964)
Dwight David Eisenhower: A Leader in War and Peace
[born 10/14/1890] (NY Times, March 29, 1969)
South Korean President Wins Nobel Peace Prize
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Oct. 14, 2000)
To the Party, Victor's Exile Invalidates China Nobel
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Oct. 14, 2000)
New Concerns Rise on Keeping Track of Modified Corn
(By KURT EICHENWALD, Oct. 14, 2000)
Case Illustrates Risks of Altered Food
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 14, 2000)
A Baseball Town, Again
(By ROGER KAHN, Oct. 14, 2000)
IDEAS: Marshall McLuhan Is Back From the Dustbin of History
(By ALEXANDER STILLE, Oct. 14, 2000)
IDEAS: Do Horror Films Filter the Horrors of History?
(By SHAILA K. DEWAN, Oct. 14, 2000)
Nasdaq Rebounds, With Surge of Almost 8%
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGERy, Oct. 14, 2000)
Customers, Buy.com Come to Terms on Lawsuit
(By CNET NEWS.COM, Oct. 14, 2000)
Highflying Asian Start-Up Returns Abruptly to Earth
(By MARK LANDLER, Oct. 14, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: Seeing the Tango Through the Filters of the Classical
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Oct. 14, 2000)
MUSIC REVIEW: A Poem Inspires Echoes of Jazz and Ice [Langston Hughes]
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 14, 2000)
OP-ART: Dear Mets Fan (Yogi Berra, Oct. 14, 2000, A-31) [not online]
Friday, October 13, 2000:
On This Day: October 13 (Molly Pitcher 10/13/1753-1/22/1832, Rudolf Virchow 10/13/1821-9/5/1902,
Yves Montand 10/13/1921-11/9/1991, Margaret Thatcher 1925)
Biggest Pacific Air Fleet Bombs Rabaul; Wrecks 177 Planes, 123 Ships
(By MILTON BRACKER, October 13, 1943)
Lenny Bruce, Uninhibited Comic, Found Dead in Hollywood Home
[born 10/13/1925] (NY Times, August 4, 1966)
Charles Hartshorne, Theologian, Is Dead; Proponent of an Activist God Was 103
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 13, 2000)
Sonja Bullaty, a Photographer of Lyricism, Dies at 76
(NY Times, Oct. 13, 2000)
Hendrik Casimir, 90, Theorist in Study of Quantum Mechanics, Dies
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 13, 2000)
Clues to Life May Come From Meteorite
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 13, 2000)
SEATTLE JOURNAL: In a Turbulent Year, a City Is Cheered by Baseball
(By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Oct. 13, 2000)
A Chinese-Born Writer Is Winner of the Nobel
(By SARAH LYALL, Oct. 13, 2000)
Nobel Peace Prize Awarded to South Korean for Unity Efforts
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Oct. 13, 2000)
17 U.S. Sailors Killed in Yemen Blast
(By JOHN F. BURNS with STEVEN LEE MYERS, Oct. 13, 2000)
Contest of Architects Yields a Gossamer Vision for The Times
(By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Oct. 13, 2000)
Architect's Works Maintain Ties to Builder's Art
(By JULIE V. IOVINE, Oct. 13, 2000)
Investor Flight From Stocks
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON & ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Oct. 13, 2000)
Floyd Norris: Washington Bets That a Bear Market Will Never Come
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 13, 2000)
Soros to Buy Control of Bluefly
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 13, 2000)
Times Co. Withdraws Plan for Online Unit's Stock Offering
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, Oct. 13, 2000)
Oasis for Programmers in Bali
(By WAYNE ARNOLD, Oct. 13, 2000)
WebMD Founders Step Aside
(By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Oct. 13, 2000)
Delivery Dot-Com to Shed Jobs and Become Courier
(By JAYSON BLAIR, Oct. 13, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Golden Mysteries From the Cowboys of the Steppes
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Oct. 13, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Portugal Shows Off the Treasures It Gathered in Africa
(By GRACE GLUECK, Oct. 13, 2000)
PHOTOGRAPHY REVIEW: A Goddess of Self-Love Who Did Not Sit Quietly
(By SARAH BOXER, Oct. 13, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Potpourri of Treats Defines Collector's Eye
(By GRACE GLUECK, Oct. 13, 2000)
Gliding in a Floating World, Life Is but a Dream
(By JANNY SCOTT, Oct. 13, 2000)
FASHION REVIEW / PARIS: Repressed Anguish as a Virtue
(By GINIA BELLAFANTE, Oct. 13, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Jimi Hendrix: A Haze as Ever Purple
(By ANN POWERS, Oct. 13, 2000)
NEXT WAVE FESTIVAL REVIEW: For a New Lucinda Childs, Less Minimalism Is More
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 13, 2000)
At the Movies: Martial Arts for Americans
(By RICK LYMAN, Oct. 13, 2000)
POP REVIEW: Surfing the Music Scene With Web Masters of Rock
(By ANN POWERS, Oct. 13, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Billy Elliot': Escaping a Miner's Life for a Career in Ballet
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 13, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Lost Souls': Where Evil Is Lurking, Having a Devil of a Time
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 13, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Dr. T and the Women': Such Fascinating Creatures
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 13, 2000)
BOOKS: A Tycoon's Meteoric Rise After Russia's Collapse
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Oct. 13, 2000)
On the Web, in the Heart: Google Search Results (Bruce Stockler, Oct. 13, 2000, A-31) [not online]
Thursday, October 12, 2000:
On This Day: October 12 (Johann Peter Melchior 10/12/1742-6/13/1825,
Ralph Vaughan Williams 10/12/1872-8/26/1958,
Saint Edith Stein 10/12/1891-8/9/1942, Lucian Pavarotti 1935)
Robert E. Lee Dies [Oct. 12, 1870] (NY Times, October 14, 1870)
Elmer Sperry Dies; Famous Inventor
[born 10/12/1860] (NY Times, June 17, 1930)
Biala, Whose Paintings Were Cryptic and Luscious, Dies at 97
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Oct. 12, 2000)
THE EXPERT VIEW: Wisconsin Professors See Shift to Bush in Round 2
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Oct. 12, 2000)
Chinese Novelist Wins Nobel Prize for Literature
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 12, 2000)
Nobel Winner Laments Poverty of Russian Science
(By MICHAEL WINES, Oct. 12, 2000)
For 4 Superstars, Art Is Now Imitating Life
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Oct. 12, 2000)
ARTS IN AMERICA: Weaving Memories of Mother, Talismanic and Tender
(By EDWARD M. GOMEZ, Oct. 12, 2000)
MAKING BOOKS: Women Who've Been There
(By MARTIN ARNOLD, Oct. 12, 2000)
BOOKS: Einstein the Ladies' Man And His Scientific Wife
(By MICHAEL FOWLER, Oct. 12, 2000)
National Book Award Finalists Announced
(By DOREEN CARVAJAL, Oct. 12, 2000)
SCREEN GRAB: Surf the Palace at Versailles. Donations Accepted
(By MICHAEL POLLAK, Oct. 12, 2000)
Dublin: Now Fair and Worldly
(By FLORENCE WILLIAMS, Oct. 12, 2000)
AT HOME WITH / WENDY EWALD: Life Through Childhood's Lens
(By WILLIAM L. HAMILTON, Oct. 12, 2000)
PERSONAL SHOPPER: The Return of a Modern Master [Jean-Michel Frank]
(By MARIANNE ROHRLICH, Oct. 12, 2000)
Garden Q.& A.: New York's Flying Geraniums
(By DORA GALITZKI, Oct. 12, 2000)
Market Place: Decline and Fall of Tech Stocks
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 12, 2000)
2 Americans Win the Nobel for Economics
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Oct. 12, 2000)
Enjoying the Spotlight While Building an Upstart in Telecommunications
(By LAURA M. HOLSON, Oct. 12, 2000)
CEO of Global Crossing Resigns
(By LAURA M. HOLSON, Oct. 12, 2000)
Earnings in Quarter Topped Estimates at Advanced Micro Devices
(NY Times, Oct. 12, 2000)
Gemstar Plans Push Into E-Books
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Oct. 12, 2000)
Advertising: Divorce Becoming More Common in Campaigns
(By PATRICIA WINTERS LAURO, Oct. 12, 2000)
With New Office Suite for the Mac Microsoft Does More Than Windows
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Oct. 12, 2000)
Cutting The Web Down to Size
(By LISA GUERNSEY, Oct. 12, 2000)
Mars and Venus, On the Net: Gender Stereotypes Prevail
(By ANNE EISENBERG, Oct. 12, 2000)
STATE OF THE ART: Digital Meets Chemical
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 12, 2000)
ONLINE SHOPPER: The Halloween Costume, Online
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Oct. 12, 2000)
E-Mail Mentoring
(By CATHERINE GREENMAN, Oct. 12, 2000)
WHAT'S NEXT: The Pop-Up Book Picks Up Magical Dimensions
(By ANNE EISENBERG, Oct. 12, 2000)
Hands That Hold Memory and Knowledge
(By SHELLY FREIERMAN, Oct. 12, 2000)
GAME THEORY: Simple Fun. Cynics, Beware.
(By CHARLES HEROLD, Oct. 12, 2000)
Moving Beyond Online Billboards
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 12, 2000)
Job Site Says, If You Pay Them, They Will Come (to Interview)
(By JOYCE COHEN, Oct. 12, 2000)
Playing Taps on the Cell Phone
(By LISA GUERNSEY, Oct. 12, 2000)
Site-Seeing: Metabrowsers
(NY Times, Oct. 12, 2000)
Q & A: Fighting Back Against Spam
(by J. D. BIERSDORFER, Oct. 12, 2000)
Wednesday, October 11, 2000:
On This Day: October 11 (Harlan Fisk Stone 10/11/1872-4/22/1946,
Francois Mauriac 10/11/1885-9/1/1970,
Charles Revson 10/11/1906-8/24/1975, Joseph W. Alsop Jr. 10/11/1910-8/28/1989, Jerome Robbins 10/11/1918-7/29/1998)
Astronauts Carry Out Early Maneuvers on 163-Orbit Journey
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 11, 1968)
Mrs. Roosevelt, First Lady 12 Years, Often Called 'World's Most Admired Woman'
[born 10/11/1884] (NY Times, November 8, 1962)
Sirimavo Bandaranaike of Sri Lanka Dies at 84; First Woman Premier
(By CELIA W. DUGGER, Oct. 11, 2000)
3 Men Vital to Internet Share Physics Prize
(By JAMES GLANZ, Oct. 11, 2000)
Chemistry Nobel Recognizes Work in Plastics
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 11, 2000)
In an Ad, Radio's 'Dr. Laura' Says She Regrets Hurting Gays
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Oct. 11, 2000)
CHANGSHA JOURNAL: Hunan Style Television: Spicy and Crowd Pleasing
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Oct. 11, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: It's Only Rock 'n' Roll, but the Chinese Like It Again
(By JONATHAN ANSFIELD, Oct. 11, 2000)
LESSONS: When Culture Affects How We Learn
(By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Oct. 11, 2000)
TELEVISION REVIEW: Divining Miss M, So Supremely Anxiety-Ridden
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 11, 2000)
Durst, a Collector of More Than Buildings
(By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Oct. 11, 2000)
BOOKS: 'A Kind of Saint' With Thin Patience for the Saintly [George Orwell]
(By RICHARD BERNSTEIN, Oct. 11, 2000)
MUSIC: 'Metamorphosen,' Literally [Strauss's "Study for 23 Solo Strings"]
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Oct. 11, 2000)
Pre-1975 Pill Tied to Breast Cancer in High-Risk Families
(By DENISE GRADY, Oct. 11, 2000)
Eating Well: Addressing the Confusion Over Dietary Supplements
(By MARIAN BURROS, Oct. 11, 2000)
Irish Poetry, Composed in the Kitchen
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Oct. 11, 2000)
Light, Fluffy: Believe It, It's Not Butter
(By MATT LEE and TED LEE, Oct. 11, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Attack of the Giant Sushi: A Knife Is the Only Defense
(By ERIC ASIMOV, Oct. 11, 2000)
Mysteries Grow on Trees and Bushes
(By MELISSA CLARK, Oct. 11, 2000)
The Minimalist: A Surprise Partner Helps Create a Juicy Duck
(By MARK BITTMAN, Oct. 11, 2000)
Technology Stocks Are Down Sharply on Earnings Fears
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 11, 2000)
Lucent Issues a Warning on Earnings
(By SIMON ROMERO, Oct. 11, 2000)
Yahoo Beats Earnings Estimates
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 11, 2000)
Sotheby's and Amazon to Share Site
(By CAROL VOGEL, Oct. 11, 2000)
Study on Polar Flights
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Oct. 11, 2000)
Caught in Headlights of the Biotech Debate
(By DAVID BARBOZA, Oct. 11, 2000)
Life's Work: Cringing at the Inevitable Question: "What Do You Do for a Living?"
(By LISA BELKIN, Oct. 11, 2000)
Tuesday, October 10, 2000:
On This Day: October 10 (Jean-Antoine Watteau 10/10/1684-7/18/1721,
Henry Cavendish 10/10/1731-2/24/1810, Benjamin West 10/10/1738-11/3/1820, Giuseppe Verdi 10/10/1813-1/27/1901,
Maurice Prendergast 10/10/1859-2/1/1924, Helen Hayes 10/10/1900-3/17/1993,
Alberto Giacometti 10/10/1901-1/11/1966)
Agnew Quits Vice Presidency And Admits Tax Evasion In '67 (By JAMES M. NAUGHTON, Oct. 10, 1973)
Thelonious Monk, Created Wry Jazz Melodies and New Harmonies
[born 10/10/1917] (By JOHN S. WILSON, February 18, 1982)
Willard Bascom, 83, Scientist and Leader in Deep-Sea Exploration
(By ERIC PACE, Oct. 10, 2000)
3 Share Nobel Prize in Medicine for Studies of the Brain
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 10, 2000)
LAHORE JOURNAL: A Jihad Leader Finds the U.S. Perplexingly Fickle
(By BARRY BEARAK, Oct. 10, 2000)
For Mrs. Clinton, One Topic on Voters' Minds Stays Taboo
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Oct. 10, 2000)
Break in Price War Gives Independent Bookstores a Chance for a Deep Breath
(By SHERRI DAY, Oct. 10, 2000)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Why the St. Louis Cardinals Could Be Trouble for the Yanks and Mets
(BY ROBERT B. SEMPLE Jr., Oct. 10, 2000)
Stock Picking's Newest Wave: Democracy
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 10, 2000)
I.B.M. Will Invest $5 Billion To Produce Newer Microchips
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Oct. 10, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Valentine Makes a Gutsy Choice
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 10, 2000)
Postseason Is Agreeing With Edmonds
(By CLIFTON BROWN, Oct. 10, 2000)
An Inner Eye That Sheds Light On Life's Mysteries
(By MEL GUSSOW, Oct. 10, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: Picassos, or Maybe Not Picassos, Surface in Turkey
(By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Oct. 10, 2000)
DANCE REVIEW: In Boston, A Reassertion of Strength Amid Change
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Oct. 10, 2000)
BOOKS: The Master of Equipoise, Diplomacy and Flirtation [Benjamin Franklin]
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 10, 2000)
A Prodigious Molecule and Its Growing Pains [Buckyball: C-60]
(By KENNETH CHANG, Oct. 10, 2000)
A CONVERSATION WITH / Dr. Paul R. Ehrlich:
On Human Nature, Genetics and the Evolution of Culture
(By NATALIE ANGIER, Oct. 10, 2000)
Record Ozone Hole Refuels Debate on Climate
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Oct. 10, 2000)
Unidentified Floating Objects: Not Quite Stars or Planets
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 10, 2000)
In Caribbean, Endangered Iguanas Get Their Day
(By MARK DERR, Oct. 10, 2000)
Observatory: Meteorite Mystery
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 10, 2000)
Deadly Infection Re-emerges as People Get Adventurous
(By ALICIA AULT, Oct. 10, 2000)
Teaching Teenagers a Subject Many Know All Too Well
(By SUSAN GILBERT, Oct. 10, 2000)
Cases: Diagnosing Without Thinking
(By ABIGAIL ZUGER, M.D., Oct. 10, 2000)
Setback for Antibiotics as Heart Treatment
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Oct. 10, 2000)
Personal Health: Syndrome X and Its Dubious Distinction
(By JANE E. BRODY, Oct. 10, 2000)
VITAL SIGNS: Patterns: Enduring Memories, in the Womb
(By John O'Neil, Oct. 10, 2000)
VITAL SIGNS: Performance: The Power of Positive Carbo-Loading
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Oct. 10, 2000)
Scientists Say Aging May Result From Brain's Hormonal Signals
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 10, 2000)
Exercise Found Effective Against Depression
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 10, 2000)
Science Q&A: Chatty Chipmunks
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Oct. 10, 2000)
Monday, October 9, 2000:
On This Day: October 9 (King Charles X 10/9/1757-11/6/1836,
Camille Saint-Saens 10/9/1835-12/16/1921, Charles Walgreen 10/9/1873-12/11/1939,
Aimee Semple McPherson 10/9/1890-9/27/1944, Walter O'Malley 10/9/1903-8/9/1979)
Bolivia Confirms Guevara's Death; Body Displayed (By REUTERS, Oct. 9, 1967)
Bruce Catton, Civil War Historian, Is Dead at 78
[born 10/9/1899] (NY Times, August 29, 1978)
WRITERS ON WRITING: Starting With a Tree and Finally Getting to the Death of a Brother
(By WILLIAM SAROYAN, Oct. 9, 2000)
Joseph Weber Dies at 81; a Pioneer in Laser Theory
(By JAMES GLANZ, Oct. 9, 2000)
Mary Francis, Quiet Force Behind Dick Francis's Novels, Dies at 76
(By DOREEN CARVAJAL, Oct. 9, 2000)
Mystery Writer Says Wife Helped
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 9, 2000)
Nazi Code Machine Poses a New Enigma for the British
(By WARREN HOGE, Oct. 9, 2000)
Cloning Used in an Effort to Preserve Rare Species
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 9, 2000)
Harry Potter Faces Challenge in China
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Oct. 9, 2000)
BELEM JOURNAL: In Acts of Faith on Amazon, Middle Ages Live On
(By LARRY ROHTER, Oct. 9, 2000)
FILM FESTIVAL REVIEW: 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon':
Fans, Be Prepared for Heart and Feminism
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Oct. 9, 2000)
MUSIC REVIEW: Philip Glass Takes on a History of the Cosmos
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Oct. 9, 2000)
In a Little Kansas Town, a Feast for Buster Keaton Fans
(By SHIRLEY CHRISTIAN, Oct. 9, 2000)
90 Candles, and a Second Wind
(By ELIZABETH HAYT, Oct. 9, 2000)
SHOPPING WITH / GEENA DAVIS: When the Emmy Dress Just Won't Do
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Oct. 9, 2000)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: Luxury Sites Revamp Credit Plans
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 9, 2000)
NEW ECONOMY: Finding Middle Ground in a World Obsessed With the New
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 9, 2000)
ON BASEBALL: Regular-Season Stars Grow Dim in October
(By MURRAY CHASS, Oct. 9, 2000)
Another Playoff Failure for a Mystified Bonds
(By DAVE CALDWELL, Oct. 9, 2000)
Sunday, October 8, 2000:
On This Day: October 8 (John M. Hay 10/8/1838-7/1/1905, Juan Peron 10/8/1895-7/1/1974,
Frank Herbert 10/8/1920-2/11/1986, Jesse Jackson 1941, Chevy Chase 1943, Stephanie Zimbalist 1956)
Warsaw Outlaws Solidarity (By JOHN KIFNER, Oct. 8, 1982)
Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker Is Dead at 82
[born 10/8/1890] (NY Times, July 24, 1973)
Richard Farnsworth, Stunt Man and 2-Time Oscar Nominee, 80
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 8, 2000)
TRIBUTE: Trudeau, Bless Him, Made Canada Cool
(By RICK MARIN, Oct. 8, 2000)
CUTTINGS: Perennial Combinations That Add to Fall Colors
(By PATRICIA A. TAYLOR, Oct. 8, 2000)
WORD FOR WORD: Hoover vs. Hefner: The F.B.I.'s File on Playboy
(BY TIM KUNTZ, Oct. 8, 2000)
So You Can Buy Love After All
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 8, 2000)
Audiences Today Are Getting in on the Act
(By BRENDAN LEMON, Oct. 8, 2000)
Gossip! Divas! It's Theater On the Web
(By JESSE McKINLEY, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Star Everywhere Else, a Stranger at Home
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Master Returns to His Realm [Nagisa Oshima]
(By DAVID THOMSON, Oct. 8, 2000)
On the Proper Education of Actors (and Audiences)
(By MARY LOUISE PARKER & JOE MANTELLO, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Moment From the Past Recovers Its Sound
(By GODFREY CHESHIRE, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Show So Dumb, It's Smart
(By RICK MARIN, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Plain Home With a Sense of Place
(By JOSEPH HOROWITZ, Oct. 8, 2000)
The a Train Taken for a Ride?
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Techno Auteur Finds Rock-Like Success
(By JODY ROSEN, Oct. 8, 2000)
Where the Life Enters the Work
(By ELEANOR MUNRO, Oct. 8, 2000)
When the French Mediterranean Was Déclassé
(By JOHN RUSSELL, Oct. 8, 2000)
Where Else to Gaze When a Star Falls to Earth?
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 8, 2000)
Plain Jane Funds Take Center Stage
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 8, 2000)
Behind the Experts' Smoke, There's More Smoke
(By ALEX BERENSON, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Healthy Quarter for Bonds, So Why Are Investors Leaving?
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 8, 2000)
Vanguard Will Sell New Funds. That Doesn't Mean It Loves Them
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 8, 2000)
The Greatest Hits of the Index King
(By RICHARD TEITELBAUM, Oct. 8, 2000)
Ever the Foe of Market Guesswork (John C. Bogle interview)
(By RICHARD TEITELBAUM, Oct. 8, 2000)
So, Three Doctors Walk Into a Fund Company
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Oct. 8, 2000)
Betting on the Old Economy Puts Three Managers Ahead
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 8, 2000)
In Some Foreign Funds, a Way To Overcome the Strong Dollar
(By JAN M. ROSEN, Oct. 8, 2000)
STRATEGIES: As Investors Worry More About Their Tax Bills, Managers Should, Too
(By MARK HULBERT, Oct. 8, 2000)
In This Doctor-vs.-Nurse Debate, Long, Deep Breaths
(By DEAN SMITH, Oct. 8, 2000)
MY MONEY, MY LIFE: When Six Figures Add Up to Zero
(By LORI GOTTLIEB, Oct. 8, 2000)
BACKSLASH: Now That I Have Your Attention
(By MATT RICHTEL, Oct. 8, 2000)
More Funds Using Outside Managers
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 8, 2000)
A New Fund Banks on Technology
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 8, 2000)
Diary: Keep Working and Stay Healthy
(By Mickey Meece, Oct. 8, 2000)
MARKET WATCH: Options Seem to Be Coming Home to Roost
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 8, 2000)
Business Awaits Its Regulator-in-Chief
(By STEPHEN LABATON, Oct. 8, 2000)
The Software Doctor Is Out, but With a Healthy Wallet
(By ALLEN R. MYERSON, Oct. 8, 2000)
ECONOMIC VIEW: In a Productivity Surge, No Proof of a 'New Economy'
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Oct. 8, 2000)
Finding Funds Online
(By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Oct. 8, 2000)
MARKET INSIGHT: So, Who Wants Long Distance if Even AT&T Spurns It?
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 8, 2000)
The week ahead: Seagate, Yahoo earnings
(By CECILY BARNES, CNET NEWS.COM, Oct. 8, 2000)
A Hidden Empire in Turkey
(By STEPHEN KINZER, Oct. 8, 2000)
Two Continents, Three Days
(By DOUGLAS FRANTZ, Oct. 8, 2000)
The Big Island's Royal Enclave [Kapoloa Falls, Hawaii]
(By JOCELYN FUJII, Oct. 8, 2000)
Sequoias and a Hotel, a Natural Fit in Yosemite
(By AMY HARMON, Oct. 8, 2000)
What's Doing in Tokyo
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Oct. 8, 2000)
Cyberscout: Bidding For a Trip Online
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 8, 2000)
Turning Miles Into Money
(By PHILIP SHENON, Oct. 8, 2000)
Meta-Midler (By LYNN HIRSCHBERG , Oct. 8, 2000)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Too Many Eyes On the Prize
(By JAMES GLANZ, Oct. 8, 2000)
FOOD: Buried Treasure: Truffles! They make pigs squeal and tough men swoon
(By JONATHAN REYNOLDS, Oct. 8, 2000)
ON LANGUAGE: to no avail
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 8, 2000)
WHAT THEY WERE THINKING: The White House Map Room, April 8, 1997
(Photograph By ROBERT MCNEELY Interviews By CATHERINE SAINT LOUIS, Oct. 8, 2000)
PHENOMENON: Crowning Miss Navajo
(By LISA JONES, Oct. 8, 2000)
THE ETHICIST: Recommendation Denied
(By RANDY COHEN, Oct. 8, 2000)
ALBUM: Portrait of a Failed Marriage
(By EMILY NUSSBAUM, Oct. 8, 2000)
APPEARANCES: Working It
(By MARY TANNEN, Photos by MATT JONES, Oct. 8, 2000)
A NIGHT OUT WITH / GORE VIDAL: Enter Characters and an Author
(By LINDA LEE, Oct. 8, 2000)
LIVES: After the Fire [On Forgiveness]
(By KATE WENNER, Oct. 8, 2000)
SHOPTALK: Be It Resolved: Presidential Debates
(Moderated By J.R. ROMANKO, Oct. 8, 2000)
Making 'It': Stephen King looks back on his career & offers tips for would-be authors
(By FREDERICK BUSCH, Oct. 8, 2000)
Life & Times: Stephen King [Reviews, Interviews, Articles]
(NY Times, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: Let Us Now Praise Famous Men: Meet the Beatles
(By MIM UDOVITCH, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: The Girl Who Would Be James [Cynthia Ozick "Quarrel & Quandary"]
(By JOHN SUTHERLAND, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: The Flight From Fortress Salinger [Margaret Salinger "Dream Catcher"]
(By RON ROSENBAUM, Oct. 8, 2000)
Featured Author: J. D. Salinger [New & Reviews] (NY Times, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: Bodies in Motion [Dennis Overbye "Einstein in Love"]
(By JIM HOLT, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: Up From Heathendom [Keith Hopkins "A World Full of Gods"]
(By ROBERT A. ODEN JR, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: When Philosophy Was King [Terry Pinkard "Hegel"]
(By PAUL MATTICK, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: Why Boys Will Be Boys [James Dabbs "Heroes, Rogues, and Lovers"]
(By DEREK BICKERTON, Oct. 8, 2000)
BOOKS: Operating System [Alan Deutschman "The Second Coming of Steve Jobs"]
(By JAMES PONIEWOZIK, Oct. 8, 2000)
Saturday, October 7, 2000:
On This Day: October 7 (James Witcomb Riley 10/7/1849-7/22/1916,
Niels Bohr 10/7/1885-11/18/1962, Henry Wallace 10/7/1888-11/18/1965, Desmond Tutu 1931)
Achille Lauro Ship Carrying 400 Hijacked (By JOHN TAGLIABUEL, Oct. 7, 1985)
Elijah Muhammad Dead; Black Muslim Leader, 77
[born 10/7/1897] (NY Times, February 26, 1975)
SHELF LIFE: Dine Like Rabelais (Till the Bill Comes)
(By EDWARD ROTHSTEIN, Oct. 7, 2000)
FILM FESTIVAL REVIEW: 'Views From the Avant-Garde':
Sparks of Lyrical Meditation Fly From the Cutting Edge
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 7, 2000)
Where Else to Gaze When a Star Falls to Earth?
(By DANNY HAKIM, Oct. 7, 2000)
Financial and Technology Stocks Send Markets Lower
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Oct. 7, 2000)
Friday, October 6, 2000:
On This Day: October 6 (Wenceslas III 10/6/1289-8/4/1306, Jenny Lind 10/6/1820-11/2/1887,
George Westinghouse 10/6/1846-3/12/1914, Le Corbusier 10/6/1887-8/27/1965,
Janet Gaynor 10/6/1906-9/14/1984, Carole Lombard 10/6/1908-1/16/1942)
Sadat Assassinated at Army Parade (By WILLIAM E. FARRELL, Oct. 6, 1981)
Helen Wills Moody, Dominant Champion Who Won 8 Wimbledon Titles, Dies at 92 [born 10/6/1905]
(By ROBIN FINN, January 3, 1998)
Michael Smith, 68; Won Chemistry Nobel
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Oct. 6, 2000)
Yugoslavs Claim Belgrade for New Leader as Police Step Aside
(By STEVEN ERLANGER, Oct. 6, 2000)
$58 Million Race Is On to Decode Mouse Genome by February
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Oct. 6, 2000)
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: The End? The Fall of the House of Poe
(By LOU REED, Oct. 6, 2000)
Speaking in Bar Code
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Oct. 6, 2000)
Priceline's WebHouse Club Abandoned as Investors Balk
(By SAUL HANSELL, Oct. 6, 2000)
Advertising: Promoting the Madame Tussaud's in Times Square
(By ALLISON FASS, Oct. 6, 2000)
Fraud Charges In Informix Case
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Oct. 6, 2000)
WATCHING MOVIES WITH / JANUSZ KAMINSKI: How He Found America
(By RICK LYMAN, Oct. 6, 2000)
NEXT WAVE FESTIVAL REVIEW: Searching for Welles as Welles Searched for Kane
(By BRUCE WEBER, Oct. 6, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'The Taste of Others': What's a Nice Girl Like You Doing With Him?
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 6, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Before Night Falls': Retracing a Poet's Journey to Despair
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Oct. 6, 2000)
FILM REVIEW: 'Cyberworld': A High-Tech Workout for Your Eyeballs
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 6, 2000)
PHOTOGRAPHY REVIEW: Edward Steichen: Elegant Family Man
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Oct. 6, 2000)
Inside Art: A Landscape That Grows Art
(By CAROL VOGEL, Oct. 6, 2000)
ART REVIEW: Seeking a Constant in the Many Styles of Lee Krasner
(By KEN JOHNSON, Oct. 6, 2000)
ART REVIEW: 'Year One,' a Conceit for the Millennium
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Oct. 6, 2000)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Even in the Harshest Conditions, Precious Life Somehow Prevails
(By MARGARETT LOKE, Oct. 6, 2000)
PHOTOGRAPHY: Showcasing Life's Sorrows and Humans' Ways of Bearing Them
(By VICKI GOLDBERG, Oct. 6, 2000)
BOOKS: Where the Apple Doesn't Fall Far From the Tree
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Oct. 6, 2000)
Thursday, October 5, 2000:
On This Day: October 5 (Jonathan Edwards 10/5/1703-3/22/1758, Denis Diderot 10/5/1713-7/31/1784,
Chester Allen Arthur 10/5/1829-11/18/1886, Louis Jean Lumiere 10/5/1864-6/6/1948,
Robert H. Goddard 10/5/1882-8/10/1945, Joshua Logan 10/5/1908-7/12/1988, Vaclav Havel 1936)
Truman Calls On Nation To Forego Meat Tuesdays, Poultry, Eggs Thursdays
(NY Times, Oct. 5, 1947)
Ray A. Kroc dies at 81; Built McDonald's Chain [born 10/5/1902] (By ERIC PACE, January 15, 1984)
Robert Allen, Whose Songs Were Sung by an Array of Stars, Dies at 73
(NY Times, Oct. 5, 2000)
MOSCOW JOURNAL: So the News Is Ho-Hum. The Show's Spectacular
(By MICHAEL WINES, Oct. 5, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: Stepping Past the Wolves on Jesus' Path Toward Death
(By JOHN ROCKWELL, Oct. 5, 2000)
THE POP LIFE: Iran's Shadowy Tape Man, Spreading What's Forbidden
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Oct. 5, 2000)
BOOKS: How to Write (If You're Stephen King)
(By JANET MASLIN, Oct. 5, 2000)
HUMAN NATURE: Moving Heaven With Earth
(By ANNE RAVER, Oct. 5, 2000)
CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK: Interior City: Hotel As the New Cosmopolis
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Oct. 5, 2000)
AT HOME WITH / THE FISHER FAMILY: Anyone Not a Doctor in the House?
(By ALEX WITCHEL, Oct. 5, 2000)
MARKET PLACE: Grim Telecommunications View
(By ALEX BERENSON, Oct. 5, 2000)
Questions on Wired Schools
(By BONNIE ROTHMAN MORRIS, Oct. 5, 2000)
Debate Over School Computers
(By KATIE HAFNER, Oct. 5, 2000)
STATE OF THE ART: Windows Without Wincing
(By J. D. BIERSDORFERS, Oct. 5, 2000)
Coffins, Urns and Funeral Services Are Going Online
(By EDWARD WONG, Oct. 5, 2000)
3-D Space as New Frontier
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Oct. 5, 2000)
MP3 Jukebox Tries to Replace Just About Everything
(By MICHEL MARRIOTT, Oct. 5, 2000)
REVIEW: From Pong to Today's Multibillion-Dollar Industry
(By CHARLES HEROLD, Oct. 5, 2000)
Tech-Shy TV Producer Extends Hit Shows to Web
(By SUSAN KARLIN, Oct. 5, 2000)
Pilgrims Have Landed On World Wide Web
(By SHELLY FREIERMAN, Oct. 5, 2000)
Q & A: Arming a Computer Against Trojan Horses
(By BONNIE ROTHMAN MORRIS, Oct. 5, 2000)
Wednesday, October 4, 2000:
On This Day: October 4 (Louis X 10/4/1289-6/5/1316, Lord Richard Cromwell 10/4/1626-7/12/1712,
Jean Francois Millet 10/4/1814-1/20/1875, Rutherford B. Hayes 10/4/1822-1/17/1893,
Frederic Remington 10/4/1861-12/26/1909, Damon Runyon 10/4/1884-12/10/1946, Charlton Heston 1924, Anne Rice 1941)
Soviet Fires Satellite into Space: It is Circling the Globe at 18,000 MPH
(By WILLIAM J. JORDEN, Oct. 4, 1957)
Buster Keaton, 70, Dies on Coast; Poker-Faced Comedian of Films [born 10/4/1895] (ASSOCIATED PRESS, September 27, 1960)
Love Finds a Way in Iran: 'Temporary Marriage'
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Oct. 4, 2000)
BEIJING JOURNAL: China's Little Gladiators, Fearsome in the Ring
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Oct. 4, 2000)
A Biblical Patriarch's Tomb Becomes a Battleground
(By DEBORAH SONTAG, Oct. 4, 2000)
Little Anxiety Over China Web Rules
(By CRAIG S. SMITH, Oct. 4, 2000)
CYBERTIMES EDUCATION: Virtual College Fairs for Students
(By REBECCA S. WEINER, Oct. 4, 2000)
Baby Conceived to Provide Cell Transplant for His Dying Sister
(By DENISE GRADY, Oct. 4, 2000)
OP-ED: An Online Peek at Your Politics
(By FRED BERNSTEIN, Oct. 4, 2000)
MANAGEMENT: What Women Need to Know About Starting Up
(By ELLEN ALMER, Oct. 4, 2000)
Disney to Deter Children From Some Areas of Its Web Sites
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 4, 2000)
Mailer Tells a Lot. Not All, but a Lot
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Oct. 4, 2000)
ARTS ABROAD: American Bard in Paris Stokes Poetic Home Fires
(By ALAN RIDING, Oct. 4, 2000)
Philip Glass and Friends Wrap Everything Into a Symphony
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Oct. 4, 2000)
Folk Museum Gets Works of a Self-Taught Artist
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Oct. 4, 2000)
FILM: 'Yi Yi': Of Taiwan's Bourgeoisie and Its Affecting Charms
(By A. O. SCOTT, Oct. 4, 2000)
BOOKS: Rising Out of Dust, a Glimmer of Hope
(By RICHARD EDER, Oct. 4, 2000)
The Faint Taste of a Lost Harvest: Native Chestnuts
(By MATT LEE and TED LEE, Oct. 4, 2000)
The Dearest Eggs Since Fabergé, Iranian Caviar Returns
(By FLORENCE FABRICANT, Oct. 4, 2000)
Tuesday, October 3, 2000:
On This Day: October 3 (George Bancroft 10/3/1800-1/17/1891,
Eleonora Duse 10/3/1858-4/21/1924, Pierre Bonnard 10/3/1867-1/23/1947, Thomas C. Wolfe 10/3/1900-9/15/1938, Gore Vidal 1925)
Two Germanys Unite After 45 Years With Jubilation and a Vow of Peace
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Oct. 3, 1967)
Emily Post Is Dead Here at 86; Writer was Arbiter of Etiquette [born 10/3/1873] (NY Times, September 27, 1960)
DRESDEN JOURNAL: An Uneasy Celebration, as Germans Take Stock
(By ROGER COHEN, Oct. 3, 2000)
When Black America Triumphed in France [Josephine Baker]
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, Oct. 3, 2000)
MARKET PLACE: Stock Volatility Declines, but So Do Prices
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Oct. 3, 2000)
U.S. Selects a New Encryption Technique
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 3, 2000)
Nasdaq Continues to Slide, Falling 7 of Last 8 Sessions;
Dow Edges Up in Face of Technology Slump
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 3, 2000)
Xerox Predicts a Loss
(By CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCH, Oct. 3, 2000)
A Rule of Thumb That Unscrambles the Brain
(By SANDRA BLAKESLEE, Oct. 3, 2000)
The Birth, Death and Rebirth of a Novel Disease-Fighting Tool
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Oct. 3, 2000)
Dazzling Tomb Found in Syria Leaves Archaeologists Puzzled
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Oct. 3, 2000)
More Options, and Decisions, for Men With Prostate Cancer
(By DAVID KIRBY, Oct. 3, 2000)
VITAL SIGNS: Prognosis: Early Warnings on Diabetes Dangers
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Oct. 3, 2000)
Personal Health: For the Vaccine-Wary, a Lesson in History
(By JANE E. BRODY, Oct. 3, 2000)
Science Q&A: Freezing Water
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Oct. 3, 2000)
Monday, October 2, 2000:
On This Day: October 2 (Richard III 10/2/1452-8/22/1485, Paul Von Hindenburg 10/2/1847-8/2/1934,
Sir William Ramsay 10/2/1852-7/23/1916,
Cordell Hull 10/2/1871-7/23/1955, Wallace Stevens 10/2/1879-8/2/1955, Groucho Marx 10/2/1890-8/19/1977,
Graham Greene 10/2/1904-4/3/1991, Maury Wills 1927, Annie Leibovitz 1949)
President Johnson Sees Thurgood Marshall Take Supreme Court Seat (By FRED P. GRAHAM, Oct. 2, 1967)
Mohandas K. Gandhi: The Indian Leader at Home and Abroad [born 10/2/1869] (NY Times, January 31, 1948)
Mary Shepard Dies at 90; 'Mary Poppins' Illustrator
(By EDEN ROSS LIPSON, Oct. 2, 2000)
3 Sea Turtles Released Into Pacific, Messengers of Own Destiny
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Oct. 2, 2000)
E-Signatures Become Valid
(By JOHN SCHWARTZ, Oct. 2, 2000)
Oprah: Strutting Her Stuff on Newsstands Coast to Coast
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Oct. 2, 2000)
Investment Banks Rebound in 3rd Quarter
(By RIVA D. ATLAS, Oct. 2, 2000)
Advertising: ABC to Bring Logo Into Prominence With a New Campaign
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Oct. 2, 2000)
E-COMMERCE: Divining the Nature of Business
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Oct. 2, 2000)
NEW ECONOMY: Enlisting Congress on Technology
(By AMY HARMON, Oct. 2, 2000)
Nursing Homes: We Can Do More
(Letters to the Editor, Oct. 2, 2000)
Sunday, October 1, 2000:
On This Day: October 1 (Henry III 10/1/1207-11/16/1272, Annie Besant 10/1/1847-9/20/1933,
Paul Abraham Dukas 10/1/1865-5/17/1935, William Boeing 10/1/1881-9/28/1956,
Otto R. Frisch 10/1/1904-9/22/1979, Jimmy Carter 1924, Daniel J. Boorstin 1914,
James Whitmore 1921, Julie Andrews 1935, Rod Carew 1945)
Maris Hits 61st Homer in Final Game (By JON DREB, Oct. 1, 1961)
Vladimir Horowitz, Titan of the Piano, Dies [born 10/1/1903] (By BERNARD HOLLAND, November 6, 1989)
Fay Alexander, Circus and Movie Daredevil, Dies at 75
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Oct. 1, 2000)
The Complete Fall/Winter Cruise Directory
(By VERNON KIDD, Oct. 1, 2000)
Where to Get Information: Listings & contact information for major cruise lines
(By JANNY SCOTT, Oct. 1, 2000)
A Matter of Degree? Not for Consultants
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Oct. 1, 2000)
MARKET WATCH: Taking a Chance on Takeover Candidates
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Oct. 1, 2000)
Genentech: Survivor Strutting Its Stuff
(By LAWRENCE M. FISHER, Oct. 1, 2000)
Roche: Drug Giant Stubbing Its Toes
(By JOHN TAGLIABUE, Oct. 1, 2000)
Ray Lane: A Much Calmer Life After Oracle
(By WILLIAM SANTIAGO, Oct. 1, 2000)
In the Oakland A's, Some Lessons for Silicon Valley
(By RANDALL LANE, Oct. 1, 2000)
License Plates for the Digital Highway
(By MICKEY MEECE, Oct. 1, 2000)
STRATEGIES: In the Data Mine, There Is Seldom a Pot of Gold
(By MARK HULBERT, Oct. 1, 2000)
MARKET INSIGHT: Openness Can Be a Two-Way Street
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Oct. 1, 2000)
Funds Watch: From a Web Site, a Way to Measure Risk
(Robert D. Hershey Jr., Oct. 1, 2000)
Investing With: Jean-Pierre Conreur
(By CAROLE GOULD, Oct. 1, 2000)
Diary: Ready, or Often Not, to Provide Elder Care
(Joan M. O'Neill, Oct. 1, 2000)
MONEY & MEDICINE: Beware of Fuzzy Insurance Argot
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Oct. 1, 2000)
Stretching Sound to Help the Mind See
(By WALTER MURCH, Oct. 1, 2000)
Thoughts on the Perfect Play in Rome's Colosseum
(By ESTELLE PARSONS, Oct. 1, 2000)
Hanging a Portrait of Welles in a `Citizen Kane' Frame
(By JONATHAN MANDELL, Oct. 1, 2000)
The Lasting Allure of `All About Eve'
(By MEL GUSSOW, Oct. 1, 2000)
A Poet of Middle-Class Life, Played Out in Taiwan
(By GODFREY CHESHIRE, Oct. 1, 2000)
Picking Up a Path Trod by Sibelius and Even Haydn
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Oct. 1, 2000)
A Star Mezzo Role Finds a Mezzo Star to Sing It
(By DAVID MERMELSTEIN, Oct. 1, 2000)
In Japan, Pathfinders Romancing The Camera
(By VICKI GOLDBERG, Oct. 1, 2000)
The Favorite Word in His Vocabulary Is Undermine
(By AMEI WALLACH, Oct. 1, 2000)
This Smile Warmed Martha's Heart
(By RITA REIF, Oct. 1, 2000)
TV SPECIAL: Telling America's Story Through America's Music
(By PETER WATROUS, Oct. 1, 2000)
TV SPECIAL: A Family That Tried to Be Both Rich and Good
(By JULIE SALAMON, Oct. 1, 2000)
TV SPECIAL: Yes, She's a Vampire Slayer. No, Her Show Isn't Kid Stuff
(By STEVE VINEBERG, Oct. 1, 2000)
IDEAS & TRENDS: A Slight Judeo-Christian Warming Trend
(By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Oct. 1, 2000)
LIGHTS, CAMERA: It's Not Only What You Say, but How
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Oct. 1, 2000)
ON LANGUAGE: Left Coast (By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Oct. 1, 2000)
THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Female Troubles (By PETER D. KRAMER, Oct. 1, 2000)
The Post-Rock Band (By GERALD MARZORATI, Oct. 1, 2000)
FOOD: Love Me Tender (By MOLLY O'NEILL, Oct. 1, 2000)
LIVES: Enlightenment Thinking (By NATALIE ANGIER, Oct. 1, 2000)
BOOKS: Jonathan Rosen: The Talmud and the Internet (By Frank Kermode, Oct. 1, 2000)
God, Man and Whale: Stanley Kunitz's collected poems (By ROBERT CAMPBELL, Oct. 1, 2000)
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