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 February 2002
(* denotes news of special interest)
Thursday, Feb. 28, 2002:
On This Day: February 28 (Michel de Montaigne 2/28/1533-9/23/1592, Gabriele Rossetti 2/28/1783-4/24/1854,
Sir John Tenniel 2/28/1820-2/25/1914, Geraldine Farrar 2/28/1882-3/11/1967,
Ben Hecht 2/28/1894-4/18/1964, Bugsy Siegel 2/28/1906-6/20/1947, Milton Caniff 2/28/1907-4/3/1988,
Stephen Spender 2/28/1909-7/16/1995, Vincente Minnelli 2/28/1910-7/25/1986,
Denis Parsons Burkitt 2/28/1911-3/23/1993, Zero Mostel 2/28/1915-9/8/1977,
Billie Bird 1908, Charles Durning 1923, Svetlana Alliluyeva 1926, Gavin MacLeod 1931,
Tommy Tune 1939, Mario Andretti 1940, Bubba Smith 1945, Bernadette Peters 1948,
John Turturro 1957, Rae Dawn Chong 1961)
4 U.S. Agents Killed in Texas Shootout With Cult (By Sam Howe Verhovek, February 28, 1993)
* Linus C. Pauling Dies at 93; Chemist and Voice for Peace
[2/28/1901-8/19/1994] (By RICHARD SEVERO, August 21, 1994)
Spike Milligan, 83, Ringleader of Zany Comedians, Dies
(By DAVID BINDER, Feb. 28, 2002)
Ellis Jones, One-Armed Football Star, Dies at 80
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Feb. 28, 2002)
* Irving Kupfermann, Professor of Biophysics and Psychiatry, 64, Dies
(By ERIC PACE, Feb. 28, 2002)
James R. Dolan, Circulation Manager, Dies at 74
(NY TIMES, Feb. 28, 2002)
ARTICLE
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ARTICLE
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ARTICLE
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WORLD: Arafat Says Saudi Plan Needs U.S. Backing
(By JAMES BENNET & SERGE SCHMEMANN, Feb. 28, 2002)
* Records Dispute Kissinger on His '71 Visit to China
(By ELAINE SCIOLINO, Feb. 28, 2002)
U.S. Seeks Source for Some bin Laden DNA
(NY TIMES, Feb. 28, 2002)
No Tears for Marks, Francs or Lire in Their Last Lawful Hours
(By EDMUND L. ANDREWS, Feb. 28, 2002)
Japan Says Its Whale Kill Will Double in the Pacific
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Feb. 28, 2002)
Arafat's Words: 'A Push From Outside'
(NY TIMES, Feb. 28, 2002)
ASIAN AREA: A Suspected Qaeda Member Is in Court Over Manila Bombings
(By RAYMOND BONNER, Feb. 28, 2002)
MUSIC: The Big Winners: Alicia Keys, U2 and 'O Brother'
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Feb. 28, 2002)
DANCE: PAUL TAYLOR DANCE COMPANY: No Escape for Swells on a Gritty Boulevard
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Feb. 28, 2002)
BOOKS: 'THE JOHN FANTE READER': A Truly Famous Unknown Writer
(By JANET MASLIN, Feb. 28, 2002)
* GARDENS: NATURE: Gardeners, Prepare Your Beds
(By ANNE RAVER, Feb. 28, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Feb. 28, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Feb. 28, 2002)
Wednesday, Feb. 27, 2002:
On This Day: February 27 (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 2/27/1807-3/24/1882, Ellen Terry 2/27/1847-7/21/1928,
Alice Hamilton 2/27/1869-9/22/1970, Lotte Lehmann 2/27/1888-8/26/1976, David Sarnoff 2/27/1891-12/12/1971,
Marino Marini 2/27/1901-8/6/1980, John Steinbeck 2/27/1902-12/20/1968, Peter DeVries 2/27/1910-9/28/1993,
Lawrence Durrell 2/27/1912-11/7/1990, Irwin Shaw 2/27/1913-5/16/1984, Joanne Woodward 1930,
Elizabeth Taylor 1932, Ralph Nader 1934, Barbara Babcock 1937, Howard Hesseman 1940,
Debra Monk 1949, Adam Baldwin 1962, Grant Show 1962, Chelsea Clinton 1980)
Bush Halts Offensive Combat; Kuwait Freed, Iraqis Crushed
(By Andrew Rosenthal, February 27, 1991)
Justice Hugo Black Dies at 85; Served on Court 34 Years
[2/27/1886-9/25/1971] (United Press International, September 25, 1971)
Patterson Ewen, Artist With Cosmological Bent, Dies at 76
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Feb. 27, 2002)
Thomas Losee Jr., 62, Publishing Executive, Dies
(NY TIMES, Feb. 27, 2002)
Sheldon B. Satin, 69, Cable TV Consultant, Dies
(NY TIMES, Feb. 27, 2002)
Elisabeth Luce Moore, Philanthropist, Dies at 98
(NY TIMES, Feb. 27, 2002)
MUSIC: To Be Alicia Keys: Young, Gifted and in Control
(By JON PARELES, Feb. 27, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Feb. 27, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Feb. 27, 2002)
ARTICLE
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Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2002:
On This Day: February 26 (Wenceslas 2/26/1361-8/16/1419, Victor Hugo 2/26/1802-5/22/1885,
William F. Cody 2/26/1846-1/10/1917, Herbert H. Dow 2/26/1866-10/15/1930,
Grover Cleveland Alexander 2/26/1887-11/4/1950, Margaret Leighton 2/26/1922-1/13/1976,
Mason Adams 1919, Tony Randall 1920, Betty Hutton 1921, Fats Domino 1928,
Robert Novak 1931, Johnny Cash 1932, Bill Duke 1943, Mitch Ryder 1945,
Michael Bolton 1953, Jennifer Grant 1966, Erykah Badu 1971)
Blast Hits Trade Center, Bomb Suspected; 5 Killed, Thousands Flee Smoke in Towers
(By Robert D. McFadden, February 26, 1993)
* John Harvey Kellogg Dies at 91; Health Expert & Founder of Breakfast Food
[2/26/1852-12/14/1943] (NY TIMES, December 16, 1943)
Gordon Matthews Dead at 65; Invented Corporate Voice Mail
(By ERIC PACE, Feb. 26, 2002)
Robert Strausz-Hupé, Envoy and Cold-War Stalwart, Dies
(By PAUL LEWIS, Feb. 26, 2002)
Jerrold J. Katz, 69, Linguistics Expert and CUNY Professor
(STUART LAVIETES, Feb. 26, 2002)
NATIONAL: Priest Denies Abuse and Refuses to Resign
(By PAM BELLUCK, Feb. 26, 2002)
Stuffing the Pillowcase With Soft Money
(By ADAM CLYMER, Feb. 26, 2002)
U.S. Says Short List of 'Suspects' Is Being Checked in Anthrax Case
(By JUDITH MILLER and WILLIAM J. BROAD, Feb. 26, 2002)
WORLD: U.S. Analysts Find No Sign bin Laden Had Nuclear Arms
(By THOM SHANKER, Feb. 26, 2002)
U.S. Is Negotiating the Hand Over of a Suspect in Reporter's Killing
(By DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 26, 2002)
Saudi's Idea Stirs Hope in Israel and Abroad
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Feb. 26, 2002)
Angolan Rebels in Disarray Without Leader
(By HENRI E. CAUVIN, Feb. 26, 2002)
ASIAN ARENA: Special Forces' Sweltering Paradise [Philippines]
(By RAYMOND BONNER, Feb. 26, 2002)
THE MILITARY: Top General Defends Raid in Which 16 Afghans Died
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 26, 2002)
* HEARTS AND MINDS: Bush Seals Fate of Office of Influence in Pentagon
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 26, 2002)
Annan Plans Talks With Iraq on Inspections Plan
(By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Feb. 26, 2002)
Tens of Thousands Believed Ill With Dengue Fever in Rio's State
(By LARRY ROHTER, Feb. 26, 2002)
ROME: U.S. Experts Investigating Possible Plot Against Embassy
(By MELINDA HENNEBERGER, Feb. 26, 2002)
NY REGION: Their Monument Now Destroyed, 1993 Victims Are Remembered
(By JIM DWYER, Feb. 26, 2002)
State Pulls Data From Internet in Attempt to Thwart Terrorists
(By JAMES C. McKINLEY Jr., Feb. 26, 2002)
Struggling College and Columbia Join Forces to Train Diplomats
(By KAREN W. ARENSON, Feb. 26, 2002)
* PUBLIC LIVES : Working Through the Pain to Honor a Brother's Life
(By ROBIN FINN, Feb. 26, 2002)
TUNNEL VISION: Student of the Subway Meets an Underground Everest
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Feb. 26, 2002)
On Path to Fame, Butler Takes a Detour
(By LENA WILLIAMS, Feb. 26, 2002)
SPORTS MEDIA: Picks, Pans and Nit-Picking for NBC
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Feb. 26, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Temporary Memorials at Ground Zero
(NY TIMES, Feb. 26, 2002)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: Preserving the West's Wild Horses
(By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Feb. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: The Power Perplex
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Feb. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: Devils and Evil Axes
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Feb. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: Why Blacks Support Vouchers
(By MICHAEL LEO OWENS, Feb. 26, 2002)
OP-ED: A Dog's Life
(By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN, Feb. 26, 2002)
LETTERS: College Tuition: Sky's the Limit
(By NINA HERNANDEZ, et. al., Feb. 26, 2002)
LETTERS: What Libraries Do
(By KITTY BURNS FLOREY, et. al., Feb. 26, 2002)
BUSINESS: Optimistic Reports by G.M. and Lowe's Push Shares Up
[Dow +178, Nasdaq +45] (By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Feb. 26, 2002)
MARKET PLACE: What's Good for the U.S. Is Good for G.M.
(By DANNY HAKIM, Feb. 26, 2002)
ADVERTISING: A Look at Commercials That Aired During the Olympics
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Feb. 26, 2002)
U.S. Agency's Computers Didn't Protect Indian Fund
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Feb. 26, 2002)
CORPORATE CULTURE: At Enron, Lavish Excess Often Came Before Success
(By Neela Banerjee, Feb. 26, 2002)
Profit at Lowe's Rose 55% in 4th Quarter
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 26, 2002)
ART: Parisian Artworks, Not Always by Parisians
(By JOHN RUSSELL, Feb. 26, 2002)
ARTS IN AMERICA: No Nightclub, Just Saxophones, Artfully Competing
(By BEN RATLIFF, Feb. 26, 2002)
BOOKS: 'THE DOCTOR'S HOUSE': Dysfunction in the Family, Times 3 [Ann Beattie]
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Feb. 26, 2002)
DANCE: A Crowd-Pleasing Potpourri of Cabaret and Ballet
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Feb. 26, 2002)
JAZZ: A Lincoln Center Tribute to Mingus, Based on the Trombone
(By BEN RATLIFF, Feb. 26, 2002)
MUSIC CRITIC: Closing the Gender Gap in Music Without Much Conviction
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Feb. 26, 2002)
OPERA: 'RASHOMON': Three Versions of a Death, Now With Music Added
(By JAMES R. OESTREICH, Feb. 26, 2002)
OPERA: 'RIGOLETTO': A Daughter of a Jester With Notes That Soar
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Feb. 26, 2002)
POP: CREED: When Getting Higher Is About Heaven, Not Drugs
(By JON PARELES, Feb. 26, 2002)
THEATER: 'CIRCUMFERENCE OF A SQUIRREL': Oh, What Woes a Squirrel Can Start
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Feb. 26, 2002)
TV: 'WATCHING ELLIE': There's a Lot of Elaine in This Star's New Sitcom
(By CARYN JAMES, Feb. 26, 2002)
SCIENCE: Debate Is Fueled on When Humans Became Human
(By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD, Feb. 26, 2002)
ANGANGUEO JOURNAL: In Forest Debris, the Odor of Dead Monarchs
(By CAROL KAESUK YOON, Feb. 26, 2002)
Climate Plan Is Criticized as Optimistic
(By ANDREW C. REVKIN, Feb. 26, 2002)
* Germans' Claim on Dark Matter Is Greeted With Skepticism
(By JAMES GLANZ, Feb. 26, 2002)
* Fight or Woo? Sex Scents for a Male Mouse
(By NICHOLAS WADE, Feb. 26, 2002)
* Signs of Great Floods, on Mars
(NY TIMES, Feb. 26, 2002)
OBSERVATORY: Underground Life Forms
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Feb. 26, 2002)
Letters: The American Way of Eating
(By BRIAN E. KAYE, et. al., Feb. 26, 2002)
HEALTH: In Many Delivery Rooms, a Routine Becomes Less Routine
(By LAURIE TARKAN, Feb. 26, 2002)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Helping Children Break Out of Their Silence
(By JOHN LANGONE, Feb. 26, 2002)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: A Candid Guidebook for Growing Up Male
(By JOHN LANGONE, Feb. 26, 2002)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Fighting Back Against Lymphatic Cancer
(By JANE E. BRODY, Feb. 26, 2002)
CASES: One by One, a Family Is Treated
(By DAVID HELLERSTEIN, Feb. 26, 2002)
Patterns: Light May Help Premature Babies Grow
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Feb. 26, 2002)
Perceptions: Image Is in the Eye of the Bank Account
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Feb. 26, 2002)
Therapies: Bench Presses for Older People's Brains
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Feb. 26, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Behavior: When 'R' Stands for Risky for Teenagers
(By ERIC NAGOURNEY, Feb. 26, 2002)
HEALTH: Many Americans With H.I.V. Don't Know It or Don't Seek Care
(By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, Feb. 26, 2002)
HEALTH: Seeking New Ways to Fight a Persistent Foe: Lice
(By LINDA VILLAROSA, Feb. 26, 2002)
Monday, Feb. 25, 2002:
On This Day: February 25 (Johann Philipp Krieger 2/25/1649-2/7/1725, Carlo Goldoni 2/25/1707-2/6/1793,
Pierre-Auguste Renoir 2/25/1841-12/3/1919, Benedetto Croce 2/25/1866-11/20/1952,
Enrico Caruso 2/25/1873-8/2/1921, Vyacheslav M. Molotov 2/25/1890-11/8/1986,
Dame Myra Hess 2/25/1890-11/25/1965, Marcel Paul Pagnol 2/25/1895-4/18/1974,
Anthony Burgess 2/25/1917-11/22/1993, Larry Gelbart 1928, Tommy Newsom 1929,
Tom Courtenay 1937, Bob Shieffer 1937, Diane Baker 1938, George Harrison 1943,
Sally Jessy Raphael 1943, Neil Jordan 1950, Veronica Webb 1965, Tea Leoni 1966)
Hiram R. Revels, First Colored Member Admitted to the Senate (NY TIMES, February 25, 1870)
Dulles Dies at 71; Formulated & Conducted U.S. Foreign Policy for More Than Six Years
[2/25/1888-5/24/1959] (NY TIMES, May 25, 1959)
Desmond Plunkett, Architect of Escape From Nazis, Dies at 86
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Feb. 25, 2002)
Samuel Terrien, 91, Authority on the Book of Job and Others
(By DANIEL J. WAKIN, Feb. 25, 2002)
Walter S. Orlinsky, 63, Baltimore Official
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 25, 2002)
Byrne Piven, Theater Workshop Founder, Dies at 72
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 25, 2002)
NATIONAL: Utah's Changes May Be as Fleeting as Olympic Glory
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Feb. 25, 2002)
Machine Age Clash Among Surfers [Half Moon Bay]
(NY TIMES, Feb. 25, 2002)
WHITE HOUSE LETTER: On Asian Trip, a Few Stumbles
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 25, 2002)
A Roundup of Wild Horses Stirs Up a Fight in the West
(By EVELYN NIEVES, Feb. 25, 2002)
WORLD: Israelis to Keep Arafat Confined, but Loosen Reins
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Feb. 25, 2002)
THE SUSPECTS: Death of Reporter Puts Focus on Pakistan's Intelligence Unit
(By DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 25, 2002)
HEARTS AND MINDS: Rumsfeld Says He May Drop New Office of Influence
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 25, 2002)
DIPLOMACY: In Tehran Visit, Karzai Appeals to Iran and U.S. to Make Up
(By NAZILA FATHI, Feb. 25, 2002)
BEIJING JOURNAL: Buicks, Starbucks and Fried Chicken. Still China?
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Feb. 25, 2002)
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Says a Suspect in Reporter's Killing Has Links to a Regional Web of Militants
(By DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 25, 2002)
Amid Riches, Angola's Poor Consider Their Future
(By HENRI E. CAUVIN, Feb. 25, 2002)
ASIAN ARENA: 'Yankee Don't Go' Is Message in Philippines Antiterror Rally
(By RAYMOND BONNER, Feb. 25, 2002)
NY REGION: One Thing's Almost Certain: He Wasn't at Gracie Mansion
(By MICHAEL COOPER, Feb. 25, 2002)
Families of '93 Bombing Victims Ask, What About Us?
(By MICHAEL COOPER, Feb. 25, 2002)
A Deposit Plan With No Return for Scavengers
(By KIRK JOHNSON, Feb. 25, 2002)
METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary
(By ENID NEMY, Feb. 25, 2002)
METRO MATTERS: Travel Books Are the Choice for New York
(By JOYCE PURNICK, Feb. 25, 2002)
OLYMPICS: Canada Completes a Quest With Hockey Gold
(By JOE LAPOINTE, Feb. 25, 2002)
OLYMPICS SPORTS: Canada's Win Caps Breathtaking Tournament
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Feb. 25, 2002)
OLYMPICS: A NATION CELEBRATES: Canadians Revel in Gold Medal Victory
(By CLIFFORD KRAUSS, Feb. 25, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Until the Next Olympiad
(NY TIMES, Feb. 25, 2002)
OP-ED: 'Masterly Inactivity'
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Feb. 25, 2002)
NOTES FROM TUSCALOOSA: Alabamians Go by an Outdated Book
(By DIANE ROBERTS, Feb. 25, 2002)
Hinduism's Political Resurgence
(By PANKAJ MISHRA, Feb. 25, 2002)
LETTERS: What to Do About Our Ailing Nursing Homes
(By CHARLES H. ROADMAN II, M.D., et. al., Feb. 25, 2002)
LETTERS: A Word That Offends [squaw]
(By CHRISTOPHER MOORE, Feb. 25, 2002)
* BUSINESS: 2 Companies Form Database to Pinpoint Human Genes
(By ANDREW POLLACK, Feb. 25, 2002)
Intel Introduces Chips for Servers Using Pentium 4 Technology
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Feb. 25, 2002)
I.B.M. Circuits Are Now Faster and Reduce Use of Power
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Feb. 25, 2002)
* Technology's Toxic Trash Is Sent to Poor Nations
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Feb. 25, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: Speak Clearly, Soldier, and Carry a Spare Battery
(By ANDREW ZIPERN, Feb. 25, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Brash Enron Chief, Brash Strategy
(By KURT EICHENWALD, Feb. 25, 2002)
* NEW ECONOMY: The Murky Debate Over an Internet Address Database
(By SUSAN STELLIN, Feb. 25, 2002)
* E-COMMERCE REPORT: Is Weblog Technology Here to Stay or Just Another Fad?
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Feb. 25, 2002)
* Online Group to Give Advice Regarding Copyrights
(By AMY HARMON, Feb. 25, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: Some Junk E-Mail Has a Poor Sense of Timing
(By DAVID F. GALLAGHER, Feb. 25, 2002)
NEWS MEDIA: In Style's World of Fashion
(By DAVID CARR, Feb. 25, 2002)
BOOKS: 'OUTLAW REPRESENTATION': Boomerang in Suppressing Gay Art
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Feb. 25, 2002)
CABARET: Two Artists With a 'Single Musical Mind'
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Feb. 25, 2002)
DANCE: SENSEDANCE: Flipping or Being Flipped, Worthy of Battle Pay
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Feb. 25, 2002)
JAZZ: CARNEGIE HALL JAZZ BAND: It May Be Moving Time, but the Band Plays On
(By BEN RATLIFF, Feb. 25, 2002)
MUSIC: Harmonic Friendship Invigorates an Evening [Nadja Salerno-Sonnenberg]
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Feb. 25, 2002)
MUSIC: Paradox of Beautiful Terror [Messiaen's "Quartet for the End of Time"]
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Feb. 25, 2002)
* THE POP LIFE: A Boxed Set in One File? Online Music Finds a Way
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Feb. 25, 2002)
THEATER: 'ALL OVER': Albee Hides Death Behind Curtains
(By BEN BRANTLEY, Feb. 25, 2002)
* WRITERS ON WRITING: Saluting All the King's Mentors
(By JAY PARINI, Feb. 25, 2002)
HEALTH: Operation on Fetus's Heart Valve Called a 'Science Fiction' Success
(By DENISE GRADY, Feb. 25, 2002)
Sunday, Feb. 24, 2002:
On This Day: February 24 (Giovanni Pico della Mirandola 2/24/1463-11/17/1494, Charles Le Brun 2/24/1619-2/12/1690,
Johann Clauberg 2/24/1622-1/31/1665, George Curtis 2/24/1824-8/31/1892, Winslow Homer 2/24/1836-9/29/1910,
Arrigo Boito 2/24/1842-6/10/1918, Honus Wagner 2/24/1874-12/6/1955, Mary Elloen Chase 2/24/1887-7/28/1973,
Henri Frankfort 2/24/1897-7/16/1954, Abe Vigoda 1921, Michel Legrand 1932, Zell Miller 1932, Renata Scotto 1935,
James Farentino 1938, Barry Bostwick 1945, Paula Zahn 1956)
President Andrew Johnson Impeached by House (NY TIMES, February 24, 1868)
Admiral Nimitz Dead at 80; Built Pacific Fleet That Fought Japan
[2/24/1885-2/20/1966] (United Press International, February 21, 1966)
* Chuck Jones, Animator of Bugs and Daffy, Dies at 89
(By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 24, 2002)
David Cogan, 'A Raisin in the Sun' Producer, Dies at 78
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
Sydney De Haan, 83, Creator of the Budget Package Tour
(By STUART LAVIETES, Feb. 24, 2002)
Alain Vanzo, 73, Famed Tenor Who Embodied French Lyricism
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Feb. 24, 2002)
Victor Caliandro, 58, Urban Designer
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 24, 2002)
NATIONAL: Crematory Owners' Family Asks Why
(By SARA RIMER, Feb. 24, 2002)
Bush Proposing to Shift Burden of Toxic Cleanups to Taxpayers
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Feb. 24, 2002)
WHITE HOUSE MEMO: Cheney Takes to the Open Road and Basks in a Warmer Spotlight
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 24, 2002)
* Web Site Helped Change Farm Policy
(By ELIZABETH BECKER, Feb. 24, 2002)
New Clues Suggest Bin Laden Is Alive on Afghan Border
(By DAVID E. SANGER with DEXTER FILKINS, Feb. 24, 2002)
MIDEAST ARENA: Warlord Web Thwarts Terror Fight in Yemen
(By SUSAN SACHS, Feb. 24, 2002)
PAKISTAN: Musharraf Opponents Criticize Handling of Kidnapping
(By DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 24, 2002)
A Billionaire Leads the Campaign to Keep Switzerland Apart
(By ELIZABETH OLSON, Feb. 24, 2002)
NY REGION: FOLLOWING UP: Tell-All Book on Trump Won't Be Telling at All
(By JOSEPH P. FRIED, Feb. 24, 2002)
* WORDS: Words of 9/11 Go From Coffee Shops to the Dictionaries
(By JANNY SCOTT, Feb. 24, 2002)
OLYMPICS: Riveting Sport and an Angry Backlash
(By BILL PENNINGTON, Feb. 24, 2002)
SPORTS: Skating Brought Perfection and Controversy
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Feb. 24, 2002)
Ohno's Move Backfires, Keeping Him Out of Finals
(By LIZ ROBBINS, Feb. 24, 2002)
Canada Seeks Redemption in Final [hockey]
(By JOE LAPOINTE, Feb. 24, 2002)
French Judge Says Pressure Was From Canada
(By SELENA ROBERTS & MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Feb. 24, 2002)
* INSIDE BASEBALL: Changing Birthdates: An Ancient Practice
(By MURRAY CHASS, Feb. 24, 2002)
MAILBOX: In Figure Skating, Beauty in Eye of Beholder
(By LEWIS WHITTINGTON, et. al., Feb. 24, 2002)
* EDITORIAL: Technology's Threats to Privacy
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
OP-ED: Coyote Rummy
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Feb. 24, 2002)
OP-ED: A Traveler to Saudi Arabia
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Feb. 24, 2002)
OP-ED: Credit and Credibility
(By LAWRENCE WHITE, Feb. 24, 2002)
OP-ED: New Rules of Political Rhetoric
(By MARK LILLA, Feb. 24, 2002)
BUSINESS: The Dividend Gains New Respect
(By VIRGINIA MUNGER KAHN, Feb. 24, 2002)
ECONOMIC VIEW: Consumers Have Saved The Day. Well, Maybe.
(By LOUIS UCHITELLE, Feb. 24, 2002)
Enriched by Working Class, Wal-Mart Eyes BMW Crowd
(By CONSTANCE L. HAYS, Feb. 24, 2002)
Scrambling to Regain Its Cool [Gap]
(By LESLIE KAUFMAN, Feb. 24, 2002)
MARKET WATCH: Three-Decade-Old Echoes, Awakened by Enron
(By ALEX BERENSON, Feb. 24, 2002)
* BOOK VALUE: Finding the Wellspring of Corporate Creativity
(By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN, Feb. 24, 2002)
'It Takes a Lot of Courage to Do Something New'
(By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN, Feb. 24, 2002)
MARKET INSIGHT: One Rule Of Plastic: Recovery Has a Dark Side
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Feb. 24, 2002)
PORTFOLIOS: Gold Is Looking Better, but Just How Much Better?
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Feb. 24, 2002)
INVESTING WITH: John D. Enlund, Country Growth Fund
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
INVESTING DIARY: Fund Count Is Growing at a Much Slower Pace
(By JAN. M. ROSEN, Feb. 24, 2002)
* ON THE JOB: Help Wanted (And Unwanted)
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Feb. 24, 2002)
MIDSTREAM: I've Hit the Jackpot. So Now What?
(By JAMES SCHEMBARI, Feb. 24, 2002)
PERSONAL BUSINESS DIARY: Some Confusion Over 2001 Rebates
(By JAN. M. ROSEN, Feb. 24, 2002)
EXECUTIVE LIFE: Ideas (and Horseplay) Flourish at 39,000 Feet
(By WELD ROYAL, Feb. 24, 2002)
THE BOSS: Life in the Sales Foxhole
(By WILLIAM D. NOVELLI, Written with Eve Tahmincioglu, Feb. 24, 2002)
* ARTS: Ruins of an Old Christian Church on Lao-Tzu's Turf
(By LESLIE CAMHI, Feb. 24, 2002)
ART: Fighting With the Monsters That Fill Her Studio
[sculptor Ursula von Rydingsvard] (By AVIS BERMAN, Feb. 24, 2002)
ARCHITECTURE: A Lesson Abroad: Get Comfortable With Continuity
(By HERBERT MUSCHAMP, Feb. 24, 2002)
* DANCE: Paul Taylor: Loving America, and Voting With His Feet
(By TERRY TEACHOUT, Feb. 24, 2002)
* DANCE: Creating New Moves for the Ice
(By SUSAN REITER, Feb. 24, 2002)
* FILM: Filmmakers Linger to Look at Death's Aftermath
(By KRISTIN HOHENADEL, Feb. 24, 2002)
* FILM: A Sober Documentary About an Intoxicating Life [Baba Ram Dass]
(By MICHAEL ALMEREYDA, Feb. 24, 2002)
FILM: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man in Jail
(By PETER MARKS, Feb. 24, 2002)
FILM: Watching a Woman's Invention of Herself {Esther Kahn]
(By KENT JONES, Feb. 24, 2002)
MUSIC: Johnny Cash: An American Original Returns
(By ANTHONY DeCURTIS, Feb. 24, 2002)
MUSIC: Waylon Jennings, On'ry Artist
(By JOHN SCHULIAN, Feb. 24, 2002)
* MUSIC: Words to Express the Extraordinary ["Reading Lyrics"]
(By JOHANNA KELLER, Feb. 24, 2002)
MUSIC: More Tenors Where Those Three Came From?
(By MATTHEW GUREWITSCH, Feb. 24, 2002)
* THEATER: A Hollywood Maverick, but Also a Broadway Baby [Arthur Penn]
(By PETER MARKS, Feb. 24, 2002)
THEATER: Six Decades Later, Still the Great American Musical ["Oklahoma"]
(By ETHAN MORDDEN, Feb. 24, 2002)
Rita Gam: The Starlet Who Could
(By PETER MARKS, Feb. 24, 2002)
THEATER: Back to the Woods, With Darker Lyrics and a Dancing Cow
(By BERNARD WEINRAUBCLE, Feb. 24, 2002)
THEATER: Can the Same Old Song and Dance Be New Again?
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
THEATER: It's Sondheim's World but They Get a Shot at Reimagining It
(By ERIC SCHAEFFER, Feb. 24, 2002)
TV: As Doctors on TV, Women Still Battle the Old Clichés
(By PERRY GARFINKEL, Feb. 24, 2002)
TV: The Party Girl on Sitcoms, a Hot Item Getting Hotter
(By DAVID BLUM, Feb. 24, 2002)
* LETTERS: Shakespeare
(By CHRISTOPHER H. DAMS, Feb. 24, 2002)
GARDENS: CUTTINGS: How Growers Choose the Plants They Show
(By PATRICIA A. TAYLOR, Feb. 24, 2002)
STYLE: Breath Mints: A Hot War for America's Cool Mouths
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Feb. 24, 2002)
STYLE: Designers Weave New Spell Out of Timeless Fairy Tales
(By RUTH LA FERLA, Feb. 24, 2002)
A NIGHT OUT WITH ELAINE STRITCH: Solo but Certainly Not Alone
(By LINDA LEE, Feb. 24, 2002)
THE AGE OF DISSONANCE: Happy Birthday, to Me
(By BOB MORRIS, Feb. 24, 2002)
VOWS: Natalie Laughlin and Andrew Tanner
(By MARSHA FOTTLER, Feb. 24, 2002)
* TRAVEL: In the Yucatán Peninsula, 'Where the Sky Is Born'
(By JO BROYLES YOHAY, Feb. 24, 2002)
TRAVEL: The Parrots of the Pantanal
(By ROBERT O. PAXTON, Feb. 24, 2002)
TRAVEL: Belgrade Relishes Life at Peace
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Feb. 24, 2002)
TRAVEL: Amusement Parks' Ailing Attendance
(By JAMES STERNGOLD, Feb. 24, 2002)
* TRAVEL ESSAY: The Height of Folly [Mt. Shasta]
(By JAMES DANNENBERG, Feb. 24, 2002)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
* THE OLYMPICS: Who's In First?
(By DAVID LEONHARDT, Feb. 24, 2002)
PAPER CHASE: Whose History Is It, Anyway? The Public's or the Officials'?
(By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Feb. 24, 2002)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
* ON LANGUAGE: Acronymania
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Feb. 24, 2002)
ARTICLE
(By, Feb. 24, 2002)
Girls Just Want to Be Mean
(By MARGARET TALBOT, Feb. 24, 2002)
STYLE: Goodness Has Nothing to Do With It
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Feb. 24, 2002)
FASHION OF THE TIMES: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
* Destiny's Child [Oona O'Neill Chaplin]
(By JANE SCOVELL, Feb. 24, 2002)
* Fantasy Aisles [Barbra Streisand]
(By WILLIAM NORWICH, Feb. 24, 2002)
The Accidental Auteur
(By BRIAN D. LEITCH, Feb. 24, 2002)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 24, 2002)
* 'America's First Dynasty': Adams Family Value
(By JEFF SHESOL, Feb. 24, 2002)
* 'Salt': A History of Sodium Chloride
(By REGINA SCHRAMBLING, Feb. 24, 2002)
* 'Genes, Girls, and Gamow': Double Helix, Single Guy
(By BARBARA EHRENREICH, Feb. 24, 2002)
Books in Brief: 'Marlene Dietrich: Photographs and Memories'
(By CARINA CHOCANO, Feb. 24, 2002)
* SCIENCE: A British Wreck Could Hold Treasure
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Feb. 24, 2002)
Saturday, Feb. 23, 2002:
On This Day: February 23 (Samuel Pepys 2/23/1633-5/26/1703, George Frederick Handel 2/23/1685-4/14/1759,
George Watts 2/23/1817-7/1/1904, Cesar Ritz 2/23/1850-10/26/1918, Norman Lindsay 2/23/1879-10/29/1969,
Karl Jaspers 2/23/1881-2/26/1969, Victor Fleming 2/23/1883-1/6/1949, William Shirer 2/23/1904-12/28/1993,
Allan MacLeod Cormack 2/23/1924-5/7/1998, Peter Fonda 1940, Patricia Richardson 1951, Kristin Davis 1965)
Lasting Prevention of Polio Reported in Salk Vaccine Tests (By William L. Laurence, February 23, 1954)
* W. E. B. DuBois Dies in Ghana; Negro Leader and Author, 95
[2/23/1868-8/27/1963] (NY TIMES, August 28, 1963)
Chuck Jones, Bugs Bunny Animator, Dies at 89
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 23, 2002)
Jonas Savimbi, 67, Rebel of Charisma and Tenacity, Dies
(By MICHAEL T. KAUFMAN, Feb. 23, 2002)
John Thaw, 60, Played TV's Inspector Morse, Dies
(By WILLIAM H. HONAN, Feb. 23, 2002)
Matthew J. Culligan, Ex-Curtis Publishing President, Dies at 83
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Feb. 23, 2002)
Willie Thrower, First Black Quarterback, Dies at 71
(By FRANK LITSKY, Feb. 23, 2002)
Edwin H. May Jr., Former Congressman, Dies at 77
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 23, 2002)
Heinrich Schutz, 79, Art Dealer and Editor, Dies
(NY TIMES, Feb. 23, 2002)
Monte M. Williams, Times Reporter, Dies at 40
(NY TIMES, Feb. 23, 2002)
NATIONAL: Crematory Case Highlights Gaps in Oversight of Funeral Business
(By PAM BELLUCK & GREG WINTER, Feb. 23, 2002)
THE INVESTIGATION: Government Releases Little Information on Sept. 11 Crashes
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Feb. 23, 2002)
THE RELIGIOUS RIGHT: Islam Is Violent in Nature, Pat Robertson Says
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 23, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Health Posts: Expertise Meets Politics
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Feb. 23, 2002)
* BELIEFS: Separated by Distance and Mindset [American Catholicism]
(By PETER STEINFELS, Feb. 23, 2002)
A Holdout Polygamist, 88, Defies the Mormons
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Feb. 23, 2002)
In a Largely Latino City, 2 Governments Emerge [Santa Ana]
(By JAMES STERNGOLD, Feb. 23, 2002)
WORLD: Israelis Weighing Arafat's Release
(By JAMES BENNET, Feb. 23, 2002)
Suspect Says Reporter Was Slain in January as Part of Wider Plot
(By DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 23, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: U.S. and China Stay Positive, but Make Little Progress
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Feb. 23, 2002)
IN MEMORIAM: At a Kabul Cemetery, British Soldiers Honor the Victims of Wars Past
(By DEXTER FILKINS, Feb. 23, 2002)
Indian Town's Seed Grew Into the Taliban's Code
(By CELIA W. DUGGER, Feb. 23, 2002)
Angola Says Soldiers Have Killed Savimbi, Longtime Rebel Leader
(By RACHEL L. SWARNS & HENRI E. CAUVIN, Feb. 23, 2002)
THE ALLIES: Europe Seethes as the U.S. Flies Solo in World Affairs
(By STEVEN ERLANGER, Feb. 23, 2002)
NY REGION: Redeveloping Ground Zero: Questions Grow on Oversight
(By CHARLES V. BAGLI, Feb. 23, 2002)
Disaster Rewrites Museums' Guidebooks
(By GLENN COLLINS, Feb. 23, 2002)
N.Y.U. Gets a Rebuff From FEMA in Aid Quest
(By KAREN W. ARENSON, Feb. 23, 2002)
* OLYMPICS: For Hughes, Perfection Is a Standard
(By LIZ ROBBINS, Feb. 23, 2002)
FIGURE SKATING: At the Ice House, Sharing Hughes's Victory and Dream
(By DEAN E. MURPHY with ELISSA GOOTMAN, Feb. 23, 2002)
OLYMPICS: At Last, Judges Are Able to Explain
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Feb. 23, 2002)
OLYMPICS: Hughes's Gold Draws Russians' Ire
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Feb. 23, 2002)
OLYMPICS: From Putin on Down, Charges of Bias
(By MICHAEL WINES, Feb. 23, 2002)
OLYMPICS REFEREES: Russia Questions Officials From North America [hockey]
(By JOE LAPOINTE, Feb. 23, 2002)
OLYMPICS: U.S. and Canada Will Clash for Gold
(By JOE LAPOINTE, Feb. 23, 2002)
BUSINESS: Dow Jumps 133 as Big-Name Shares Stage a Late Rally
(By REUTERS, Feb. 23, 2002)
Agency Files Suit for Cheney Papers on Energy Policy
(By DON VAN NATTA Jr., Feb. 23, 2002)
Napster Wins One Round in Music Case
(By MATT RICHTEL, Feb. 23, 2002)
Roots Makes a Name at the Olympics
(By BERNARD SIMON, Feb. 23, 2002)
Swelling Linked to Experimental Drug [Alzheimer drug AN-1792]
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Feb. 23, 2002)
Frozen Foods Show Upturn in Taste and Sales
(By KATE MURPHY, Feb. 23, 2002)
Kmart to Spend $40 Million to Reshape Image
(NY TIMES, Feb. 23, 2002)
* ARTS: Penetrating the Mind by Metaphor [Coca-Cola]
(By EMILY EAKIN, Feb. 23, 2002)
* BOOKS: Historian Says Borrowing Was Wider Than Known [Doris Kearns Goodwin]
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Feb. 23, 2002)
CIRCUS: 'CIRQUE ORCHESTRA': Balancing a Little Old, a Little Nouveau
(By LAWRENCE VAN GELDER, Feb. 23, 2002)
DANCE: KEELY GARFIELD: Poking Fun at Social and Sibling Customs
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Feb. 23, 2002)
DANCE: JUILLIARD DANCE ENSEMBLE: 3 Premieres for a Juilliard Anniversary
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Feb. 23, 2002)
IDEAS: In Failed States, Can Democracy Come Too Soon?
(By MICHAEL MASSING, Feb. 23, 2002)
IDEAS: Capturing for Generations the Agony of a Single Day
(By BARBARA STEWART, Feb. 23, 2002)
MUSIC: BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: Boston Gets a Sign of Levine's Impact
(By BERNARD HOLLAND, Feb. 23, 2002)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: Introspection and Turmoil in a Work of 1934 Germany
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Feb. 23, 2002)
THINK TANK: Challenging the History of a Slave Conspiracy
(By DINITA SMITH, Feb. 23, 2002)
TV: '10,000 BLACK MEN NAMED GEORGE': The Sleeping Car Porter Who Won the Last Round
(By RON WERTHEIMER, Feb. 23, 2002)
* SCIENCE: Scientists Doubting Discovery of New Dark Matter in Space
(By JAMES GLANZ, Feb. 23, 2002)
* SCIENCE: First Tower to Fall Was Hit at Higher Speed, Study Finds
(By ERIC LIPTON & JAMES GLANZy, Feb. 23, 2002)
Friday, Feb. 22, 2002:
On This Day: February 22 (Charles VII 2/22/1403-7/22/1461, George Washington 2/22/1732-12/14/1799,
Rembrandt Peale 2/22/1778-10/3/1860, Arthur Schopenhauer 2/22/1788-9/21/1860,
James Russell Lowell 2/22/1819-8/12/1891, Bill Klem 2/22/1874-9/16/1951,
David Dubinsky 2/22/1892-9/17/1982, Luis Bunuel 2/22/1900-7/29/1983,
Sean O'Faolain 2/22/1900-4/20/1991, Peter Hurd 2/22/1904-7/9/1984,
John Mills 1908, Marni Nixon 1930, Edward M. Kennedy 1932, Jonathan Demme 1944,
Hohn Ashton 1948, Julius Erving 1950, Julie Walters 1950, Michael Chang 1972)
U.S. Defeats Soviet Squad In Olympic Hockey by 4-3 (By Gerald Eskenazi, February 22, 1980)
* Edna St. V. Millay Found Dead At 58, Poet Succumbs of Heart Attack
[2/22/1892-10/19/1950] (NY TIMES, October 20, 1950)
Harold P. Furth, 72, Dies; Led Fusion Experiments
(By KENNETH CHANG, Feb. 22, 2002)
Edmar Mednis, 64, Chess Expert Famous for Once Beating Fischer
(By DYLAN LOEB McCLAIN, Feb. 22, 2002)
Peggy Durdin, 92, Reporter on Asia, Dies
(By ENID NEMY, Feb. 22, 2002)
Jack Barnaby, a Coach of Racket Sports at Harvard, Dies at 92
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Feb. 22, 2002)
Vesta Roy, 76, Governor of New Hampshire
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 22, 2002)
Lucille Lund, 89, 1930's Film Actress
(NY TIMES, Feb. 22, 2002)
Norman Davidson, 85, Major Figure in Advancing Genome Research
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 22, 2002)
A REPORTER'S LIFE: Daniel Pearl, 38, a Tenacious Newspaperman
(By SUSAN SAULNY, Feb. 22, 2002)
NATIONAL: CAPTIVES: Judge Denies Qaeda Captives a Day in Court
(By BARBARA WHITAKER, Feb. 22, 2002)
Harvard to Require Top Score to Earn Advanced Placement
(By TAMAR LEWIN, Feb. 22, 2002)
As College Endowments Slip, Tuition Increases Fill the Void
(By YILU ZHAO, Feb. 22, 2002)
WORLD: Bush Urges Freedom of Worship in China
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 22, 2002)
PACIFIC ARENA: G.I.'s Feared Dead in Crash in Philippines
(By JAMES DAO, Feb. 22, 2002)
ON PATROL: International Troops Help Bring Order to Kabul's Streets
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Feb. 22, 2002)
WORLD: U.S. Says Video Shows Reporter Killed by Captors
(By FELICITY BARRINGER with DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 22, 2002)
* OLYMPICS SPORTS: This Time It Was Hughes's Turn
(By GEORGE VECSEY, Feb. 22, 2002)
* OLYMPICS: Sarah Hughes Jumps Past 3 Rivals
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Feb. 22, 2002)
* OLYMPICS: GREAT NECK JOURNAL: Community Cheers on a Hometown Olympian
(By ELISSA GOOTMAN, Feb. 22, 2002)
OLYMPICS: The Math: How It All Added Up to a Hughes Gold
(NY TIMES, Feb. 22, 2002)
OLYMPICS: Russians Challenge Skating Results
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 22, 2002)
OLYMPICS: WOMEN'S HOCKEY: American Women Lose to Canada
(By LIZ ROBBINS, Feb. 22, 2002)
OLYMPICS: New Keys, Aisle 1; Olympians, Aisle 2
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Feb. 22, 2002)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: All of New York on the Same Page
(By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Feb. 22, 2002)
OP-ED: The W Scenario
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Feb. 22, 2002)
OP-ED: A Life of Balances
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Feb. 22, 2002)
OP-ED: How Mourners Were Betrayed
(By THOMAS LYNCH, Feb. 22, 2002)
OP-ED: The Care They Need
(By TIMOTHY SHRIVER, Feb. 22, 2002)
BUSINESS: Shares Are Lower as Nasdaq Scrapes a 4-Month Bottom
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Feb. 22, 2002)
End of Recession Is Seen, but Strength of Recovery Is Unclear
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Feb. 22, 2002)
* Not Wanted: '02 Graduates Seeking Jobs
(By LYNNLEY BROWNING, Feb. 22, 2002)
FLOYD NORRIS: Are Investors Too Worried About Cable?
(By FLOYD NORRIS, Feb. 22, 2002)
Computer Associates Stock Drops Sharply Once Again
(By ALEX BERENSON, Feb. 22, 2002)
ADVERTISING: Avon Is Using Real Women and Believable Promises
(By COURTNEY KANE, Feb. 22, 2002)
* ART: ORAZIO AND ARTEMISIA GENTILESCHI: Artistic Kin, So Different Yet So Alike
(By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN, Feb. 22, 2002)
ART: THE ARMORY SHOW: Grown Up and in Love With Color
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Feb. 22, 2002)
ART: For Those in Search of Calm, an Armory Full of Modernists
(By KEN JOHNSON, Feb. 22, 2002)
ART: View of the Other Matisse: Dealer, Patron and Son
(By GRACE GLUECK, Feb. 22, 2002)
INSIDE ART: A Family Similarity
(By CAROL VOGEL, Feb. 22, 2002)
ANTIQUES: Revisiting a Danish Modernist
(By WENDY MOONAN, Feb. 22, 2002)
BOOKS: 'THE CITY IN MIND': A Pessimist's Survey of the Heartbreak of City Planning
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Feb. 22, 2002)
FILM: WATCHING MOVIES WITH NICOLE KIDMAN: A Perfectionist's Pupil With a Major in Creepy
(By RICK LYMAN, Feb. 22, 2002)
FILM: 'QUEEN OF THE DAMNED': A Vampire Searches for Meaning to a Rock Beat
(By ELVIS MITCHELL, Feb. 22, 2002)
FILM: AT THE MOVIES: A Very Brief Apprenticeship ["Monsoon Wedding"]
(By DAVE KEHR, Feb. 22, 2002)
FILM: FAMILY FARE: Teenage Idol of Antiquity [King Tut]
(By LAUREL GRAEBER, Feb. 22, 2002)
* PHOTOGRAPHY: An Assembly of Skewed Images Dancing Out of a Dream State
(By MARGARETT LOKE, Feb. 22, 2002)
TV: 'THE ROSA PARKS STORY': A Not-So-Timid Woman Who Stayed in Her Seat
(By ANITA GATES, Feb. 22, 2002)
THE OUTSIDER: A Lonely Voice for the Wolf, Not Celebrating Its Eradication
(By JAMES GORMAN, Feb. 22, 2002)
HEALTH: Guidelines by U.S. Urge Mammograms at 40
(By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG, Feb. 22, 2002)
Thursday, Feb. 21, 2002:
On This Day: February 21 (Antonio Lopez Santa Anna 2/21/1794-6/21/1876,
John Henry Newman 2/21/1801-8/11/1890, Pierre Laffitte 2/21/1823-1/4/1903,
Leo Delibes 2/21/1836-1/16/1891, Constantin Brancusi 2/21/1876-3/16/1957,
Harry Stack Sullivan 2/21/1892-1/14/1949, Anais Nin 2/21/1903-1/14/1977,
Tom Yawkey 2/21/1903-7/9/1976, W. H. Auden 2/21/1907-9/29/1973,
Kelsey Grammer 1955, Mary Chapin Carpenter 1958, Christopher Atkins 1961,
William Baldwin 1963, Jennifer Love Hewitt 1979)
Malcolm X Shot to Death at Rally Here (By Theodore Jones, February 21, 1965)
* Andres Segovie Is Dead at 94; His Crusade Elevated Guitar
[2/21/1893-6/2/1987] (By DONAL HENAHAN, June 4, 1987)
Peter Voulkos, a Master of Expressive Ceramics, Dies at 78
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Feb. 21, 2002)
Günter Wand, 90, Conductor of the Romantic Repertory
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Feb. 21, 2002)
William D. Taylor, 93, Publisher of Boston Globe Over 2 Decades
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Feb. 21, 2002)
David Barry Dies at 58; Helped in AIDS Therapy
(NY TIMES, Feb. 21, 2002)
NATIONAL: Space Pioneer Glenn Recalls Old Glory [Glenn orbits earth]
(By WARREN E. LEARY, Feb. 21, 2002)
* A County Has a Word for It. Problem Is, It's 'Moose.'
(By PAM BELLUCK, Feb. 21, 2002)
Dazed by Crematory Scandal, Undertakers' Trust Is Shaken
(By SARA RIMER, Feb. 21, 2002)
His Throat Slashed, Man Escapes Grave to Pursue Killers
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 21, 2002)
WORLD: U.S. and China Aim to Open Talks With North Korea
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 21, 2002)
C.I.A. Warns That Afghan Factions May Bring Chaos
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Feb. 21, 2002)
THE MISSING: Families Try to Trace Thousands of Missing Taliban, Many Forced to Fight
(By CARLOTTA GALL, Feb. 21, 2002)
China Is Treated More Gently Than North Korea for Same Sin
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Feb. 21, 2002)
Tibetan Monk Is Reported Freed by China Ahead of Bush's Visit
(By REUTERS, Feb. 21, 2002)
* OLYMPICS: Kwan Brings Momentum, but Cohen Has Her Own
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Feb. 21, 2002)
ON SKATING: Forget Technical Merit if Earrings Miss Mark
(By JERE LONGMAN, Feb. 21, 2002)
EDITORIAL: When the Mayor Goes Missing
(NY TIMES, Feb. 21, 2002)
OP-ED: The Flipped-Over Rock
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Feb. 21, 2002)
Chewing Up a Fragile Land
(By TERRY TEMPEST WILLIAMS, Feb. 21, 2002)
Will Israel Take a Chance?
(By HENRY SIEGMAN, Feb. 21, 2002)
BUSINESS: Shares Regain Some Recent Losses, With Dow Up 2%
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 21, 2002)
Inquiry Into a Link Between Global Crossing and a Dot-Com
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT with SIMON ROMERO, Feb. 21, 2002)
A New Tone, and Leader, at Time Inc.
(By DAVID CARR, Feb. 21, 2002)
ECONOMIC SCENE: Does a Bull Market and a Boom in 401(k)'s Mean Fat Pensions?
(By JEFF MADRICK, Feb. 21, 2002)
ARTS: A Grateful Artist Who Wants to Repay His Elephant Helpers
(By CAROL VOGEL, Feb. 21, 2002)
* ARTS IN AMERICA: From Ordinary Faces, Extraordinary Ads
(By BERNARD WEINRAUB, Feb. 21, 2002)
BOOKS: 'HELL TO PAY': Focusing on a Crime Story and the Bigger Picture
(By JANET MASLIN, Feb. 21, 2002)
DANCE: 'PURIM, THE CASTING OF FATE': Live Klezmer Punctuates This Modernist Megillah
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Feb. 21, 2002)
DANCE: MONTE/BROWN DANCE: Snapshots of a Company, Its Past and Its Present
(By JACK ANDERSON, Feb. 21, 2002)
GOSPEL: REV. HEZEKIAH WALKER: Stirring Souls With Sound and Vision
(By BEN RATLIFF, Feb. 21, 2002)
MUSIC: ALEXANDRE BOUZLOV: Amid the Byways, Sure of His Direction
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Feb. 21, 2002)
MUSIC: POMERIUM: Mary Tudor's Version of Old-Time Religion
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Feb. 21, 2002)
CIRCUITS: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 21, 2002)
Whistle-Blower Sites Mine Clues Amid Mountains of Suspicion
(By LISA GUERNSEY, Feb. 21, 2002)
Toyland Is Tough, Even for Robots
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Feb. 21, 2002)
STATE OF THE ART: Dialing, Without Fingers
(By DAVID POGUE, Feb. 21, 2002)
ONLINE SHOPPER: In Tender Pursuit of the Perfect Button
(By MICHELLE SLATALLA, Feb. 21, 2002)
* In Lean Times, E-Books Find a Friend: Libraries
(By LISA GUERNSEY, Feb. 21, 2002)
* BASICS: Save Your Own Life: Backing Up a PC
(By SUSAN STELLIN, Feb. 21, 2002)
SECURITY: For Treasured Information, a Lock, Key and Deadbolt
(By MARK GLASSMAN, Feb. 21, 2002)
HAND-HELDS: Like Russian Nesting Dolls, a New Organizer Gets Smaller
(By NEIL McManus, Feb. 21, 2002)
GAMING: Economist Finds Value and Fixed Books in Online World
(By LYNN HARRIS, Feb. 21, 2002)
INPUT: Digital Pen Frees the Hand Where the PC Can Follow
(By AARON DONOVAN, Feb. 21, 2002)
FROM THE DESK OF DAVID POGUE: Pinched Pennies and the Stranded User
(By DAVID POGUE, Feb. 21, 2002)
* Q & A: Setting Up a Web Site, Be It Fancy or No-Frills
(By J. D. BIERSDORFER, Feb. 21, 2002)
* SCIENCE: Searchers Say Rare Woodpecker Was Possibly Heard, if Not Seen
(By JAMES GORMAN, Feb. 21, 2002)
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2002:
On This Day: February 20 (Honore Daumier 2/20/1808-2/11/1879, Georges Bernanos 2/20/1888-7/5/1948,
Bill Tilden 2/20/1893-6/5/1953, Jimmy Yancey 2/20/1898-9/17/1951, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney 2/20/1899-12/13/1992,
Rene Dubos 2/20/1901-2/20/1982, Louis Kahn 2/20/1901-3/17/1974, Aleksey Kosygin 2/20/1904-12/18/1980,
Konstantin Sergeyev 2/20/1910-4/1992, Gloria Vanderbilt 1924, Robert Altman 1925, Sidney Poitier 1927,
Nancy Wilson 1937, Buffy Sainte-Marie 1941, Phil Esposito 1942, Mike Leigh 1943, Sandy Duncan 1946,
Peter Strauss 1947, Edward Albert 1951, Patricia Hearst 1954, Charles Barkley 1963, Cindy Crawford 1966, Andrew Shue 1967)
Glenn Orbits Earth 3 Times Safely (By Richard Witkin, February 20, 1962)
* Ansel Adams, Photographer, Is Dead at 82
[2/20/1902-2/11/1984] (By JOHN RUSSELL, April 24, 1984)
Virginia Hamilton, Writer for Children, Is Dead at 65
(By MARGALIT FOX, Feb. 20, 2002)
Walter Winterbottom, English Soccer Coach, Dies at 89
(By JACK BELL, Feb. 20, 2002)
John Alun Stevenson, 86, Theater Patron, Is Dead
(NY TIMES, Feb. 20, 2002)
Sylvia Rivera, 50, Figure in Birth of the Gay Liberation Movement
(By DAVID W. DUNLAP, Feb. 20, 2002)
* Matthew Lyon, 45, Historian of the Internet
(NY TIMES, Feb. 20, 2002)
NATIONAL: Justices to Review Copyright Extension
(By LINDA GREENHOUSE, Feb. 20, 2002)
Indictment in Dartmouth Case Outlines Robbery-Killing Plan
(By PAM BELLUCK, Feb. 20, 2002)
THE VICTIMS: 7 Families of Sept. 11 Sue bin Laden and Others for Billions
(NY TIMES, Feb. 20, 2002)
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Cheney Mixes Jokes With Tough Talk
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 20, 2002)
LESSONS: Apples, Oranges and Eighth Graders
(By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN, Feb. 20, 2002)
Practice of Students' Grading Papers Doesn't Violate Privacy Laws, Supreme Court Says
(By LINDA GREENHOUSE, Feb. 20, 2002)
WORLD: North Korea Safe From U.S. Attack, Bush Says in Seoul
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 20, 2002)
HEARTS AND MINDS: Bush Will Keep Wartime Office Promoting U.S.
(By ELIZABETH BECKER & JAMES DAO, Feb. 20, 2002)
Pakistan Cutting Its Spy Unit's Ties to Some Militants
(By DOUGLAS JEHL, Feb. 20, 2002)
Nepal Sends in the Army After Deadly Raids by Maoist Guerrillas
(By REUTERS, Feb. 20, 2002)
THE FIGHTING: Foe's Identity Still Unclear in a Skirmish Aided by U.S.
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Feb. 20, 2002)
Bush Plays Ball With Japanese Premier
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH & JAMES BROOKE, Feb. 20, 2002)
North Korea News Agency's Rose-Colored Glasses
(By JAMES BROOKE, Feb. 20, 2002)
* In Paris, Read All About It if You Can
(By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr., Feb. 20, 2002)
BERLIN JOURNAL: Germany's Cowpokes, Longing for the Big Sky
(By STEVEN ERLANGER, Feb. 20, 2002)
NY REGION: Can't Find the Mayor? Well, What's It to You?
(By JENNIFER STEINHAUER, Feb. 20, 2002)
At Spy Stores, Era of 9/11, Not 007
(By JACOB H. FRIES, Feb. 20, 2002)
BOLDFACE NAMES: She Said She Said [Barbara Walters & Diane Sawyer]
(By JAMES BARRON, Feb. 20, 2002)
NYC: Going for Yellow, as in Cab
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Feb. 20, 2002)
* SPORTS: FIGURE SKATING: Kwan Is Comfortably in First
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Feb. 20, 2002)
* SPORTS: An Inner Balance Helps the Leader
(By HARVEY ARATON, Feb. 20, 2002)
BOBSLED: Overlooked U.S. Duo Wins Gold in Bobsled
(By MIKE WISE, Feb. 20, 2002)
SECURITY: So Far, Safety Is Costly but Effective
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Feb. 20, 2002)
TECHNOLOGY: Viewers See Double, but It Isn't Their Eyes
(By RICHARD SANDOMIR, Feb. 20, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Managing the News
(NY TIMES, Feb. 20, 2002)
EDITORIAL OBSERVER: The Pursuit of Mental Perfection at the Salt Lake Olympics
(By VERLYN KLINKENBORG, Feb. 20, 2002)
OP-ED: The Saudi Challenge
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Feb. 20, 2002)
OP-ED: Office of Strategic Mendacity
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Feb. 20, 2002)
OP-ED: When Guilt Is Beyond Understanding
(By MORGAN CLOUD & GEORGE SHEPHERD, Feb. 20, 2002)
OP-ED: Across the Great Divide
(By DAN SAVAGE, Feb. 20, 2002)
LETTERS: No One-Book Town ["To Kill a Mockingbird"]
(By MICHAEL STRASSER, Feb. 20, 2002)
BUSINESS: Accounting Fears Continue to Drag the Market Down
[Dow -158, Nasdaq -55] (By SHERRI DAY, Feb. 20, 2002)
* Your Thumb Here: Newest ID of Choice at Store and on Job
(By PETER T. KILBORN, Feb. 20, 2002)
ADVERTISING: Times Somber, Ads Creep Back Inside the Box
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Feb. 20, 2002)
It's a Rare Scene: Movie Executive With 9 Lives [Mark Canton]
(By RICK LYMAN, Feb. 20, 2002)
CNN Names a Rising Star to Head Its U.S. Network [Teya Ryan]
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Feb. 20, 2002)
Cisco Is Said to Win a Huge I.B.M. Order
(By BLOOMBERG NEWS, Feb. 20, 2002)
* Internet Concerns Drop Plans to Merge on F.T.C.'s Opposition
[NetRatings & Jupiter Media Metrix] (By SAUL HANSELL, Feb. 20, 2002)
Goldman Sachs Moves to Tighten Stock Analysts' Independence
(By PATRICK McGEEHAN, Feb. 20, 2002)
ARTS IN AMERICA: A Voice That Bursts With Glory
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Feb. 20, 2002)
* BOOKS: 'THE SNOW GEESE': A Recovering Soul Takes Wing as It Migrates on Nature's Draft
(By RICHARD EDER, Feb. 20, 2002)
DANCE: 'HUMAN BEHAVIORS': Exploring the Psychology of Behavior
(By JACK ANDERSON, Feb. 20, 2002)
DANCE: RANDY JAMES DANCE WORKS: Tracing Complex Emotions, on a String
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Feb. 20, 2002)
MUSIC: An Extra's Unscripted Tumble From the Stage Is Roiling the Met
(By RALPH BLUMENTHAL, Feb. 20, 2002)
MUSIC: JUILLIARD ORCHESTRA: From the Young, Nothing Less Than Full Commitment
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Feb. 20, 2002)
MUSIC: NY PHILHARMONIC: Playing for the Maestro in a Show of Affection
(By PAUL GRIFFITHS, Feb. 20, 2002)
THEATER: 'FOUR': Getting Lucky Is Easy, but So Is Getting Lost
(By BEN BRANTLEY, Feb. 20, 2002)
THEATER: 'NATIVE SON': Chauffeur as Hero, Villain and Puzzle
(By ANITA GATES, Feb. 20, 2002)
FOOD: The New Paris, Where Chefs Come Out to Play [Recipe: Ravioli with Crab]
(By REGINA SCHRAMBLING, Feb. 20, 2002)
What if Versace Did Vegetables?
(By RICHARD W. LANGER, Feb. 20, 2002)
THE CHEF: Pheasant, Gift-Wrapped [roasted pheasant]
(By KURT GUTENBRUNNER, Feb. 20, 2002)
THE MINIMALIST: Warmer-Up From Japan {Japanese-style beef stew]
(By MARK BITTMAN, Feb. 20, 2002)
RESTAURANTS: Bistro, Party and Favorite Haunt of the Proprietor
(By WILLIAM GRIMES, Feb. 20, 2002)
Male Bastion, 108, Saved by a Chef Named Lydia [Lobster Savannah]
(By R. W. APPLE Jr., Feb. 20, 2002)
New York Outside, and Rio in the Kitchen [2 recipes]
(By ELAINE LOUIE, Feb. 20, 2002)
HEALTH: TRACKING THE DISEASE: Report Notes Swift Course of Inhalational Anthrax
(By DENISE GRADY, Feb. 20, 2002)
Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2002:
On This Day: February 19 (Nicolaus Copernicus 2/19/1473-5/24/1543, David Garrick 2/19/1717-1/20/1779,
Luigi Boccherini 1/19/1743-5/28/1805, Elie Ducommun 2/19/1833-12/7/1906, Svante Arrhenius 2/19/1859-10/2/1927,
Merle Oberon 2/19/1911-11/23/1979, Eddie Arcaro 2/19/1916-11/14/1997, Carson McCullers 2/19/1917-9/29/1967,
John Frankenheimer 1930, Smokey Robinson 1940, Bobby Rogers 1940, Prince Andrew 1960)
U. S. Marines Storm Ashore on Iwo Island (ASSOCIATED PRESS, February 19, 1945)
Stan Kenton, Band Leader, Dies AT 67; Was Center of Jazz Controversies
[2/19/1912-8/25/1979] (By JOHN S. WILSON, August 27, 1979)
* Howard K. Smith, Courtly, Outspoken Voice of Radio and Television, Is Dead at 87
(By RICHARD GOLDSTEIN, Feb. 19, 2002)
NATIONAL: Trial in Case of Drowned Children Opens
(By JIM YARDLEY, Feb. 19, 2002)
AIRPORT JOURNAL: Underwireless, but Wishing for Wings
(By SARA RIMER, Feb. 19, 2002)
War on Terrorism Stirs Hatred of U.S., Farrakhan Says
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 19, 2002)
Georgia Crematory Operator Faces 11 More Charges
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 19, 2002)
WORLD: Pentagon Readies Efforts to Sway Sentiment Abroad
(By JAMES DAO & ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 19, 2002)
In a Shift, U.S. Uses Airstrikes to Help Kabul
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Feb. 19, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: No Security for Sharon
(By JAMES BENNET, Feb. 19, 2002)
* SEOUL JOURNAL: Love Will Find a Way. In Korea, It's the Drive-In.
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Feb. 19, 2002)
U.S.-China Tensions Ease as Bush Visit Approaches
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Feb. 19, 2002)
Bush Affirms U.S. Role in Asia in New 'Pacific Century'
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 19, 2002)
Russia Says Sub Was Not Sunk by a Collision
(By SABRINA TAVERNISE, Feb. 19, 2002)
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Cheney Reinforces Bush's Stand Against Terrorism
(By ERIC SCHMITT, Feb. 19, 2002)
Lesson in Hands-On Charity: Giving Away Cash Isn't Easy
(By DAVID BARSTOW, Feb. 19, 2002)
Educated, Experienced and Out of Unemployment Checks
(By LESLIE EATON, Feb. 19, 2002)
Want a Fight? Pick One Book for All New Yorkers
(By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK, Feb. 19, 2002)
* BOLDFACE NAMES: Longevity and Landscapes [Hannah Kohn, 100]
(NY TIMES, Feb. 19, 2002)
PUBLIC LIVES: A Quiet Retirement? He'd Rather Kiss a Fish [Henry Stern]
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Feb. 19, 2002)
TUNNEL VISION: Treading Water Daily, and Holding Their Noses
(By RANDY KENNEDY, Feb. 19, 2002)
SPORTS: Skating Group Proposes New Judging System
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Feb. 19, 2002)
* NEWS ANALYSIS: Drama and Scandal Make the Olympics
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Feb. 19, 2002)
OLYMPICS: ICE DANCING: Gold Goes to French Pair [Slide Show]
(By LIZ ROBBINS, Feb. 19, 2002)
SPORTS MEDIA: NBC Has Biggest Part in Story
(By RICHARD SANDOMI, Feb. 19, 2002)
OP-ED: The Wrong War
(By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, Feb. 19, 2002)
OP-ED: Workers Held Hostage
(By PAUL KRUGMAN, Feb. 19, 2002)
China, the Uncertain Ally
(By ROSS TERRILL, Feb. 19, 2002)
A Town in Kansas, a Tale of Cheating
(By BARBARA JOYCE, et. al., Feb. 19, 2002)
BUSINESS: World Stock Markets Are Mixed
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 19, 2002)
Congress to Investigate Wall St.'s Ties With Enron
(By LESLIE WAYNE, Feb. 19, 2002)
Arcane System Let Currency Trader Hide Losses
(By JONATHAN FUERBRINGER, Feb. 19, 2002)
ADVERTISING: Twenty Questions About Marketing
(By STUART ELLIOTT, Feb. 19, 2002)
COMMERCE: Olympic Boom Leaves Visitors Feeling Busted
(By MICHAEL JANOFSKY, Feb. 19, 2002)
* ARTS ABROAD: Chinese Retreat Yields Handiwork Fit for an Emperor
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Feb. 19, 2002)
* BOOKS: 'THE BUREAU AND THE MOLE': A Spy Saw the F.B.I. as Dear Old Dad
(By MICHIKO KAKUTANI, Feb. 19, 2002)
DANCE: NEW YORK CITY BALLET: Using Russian Pictures to Tell a Bible Story
(By JENNIFER DUNNING, Feb. 19, 2002)
JAZZ: The Spiritual Serenity of Coltrane and the Scream
(By BEN RATLIFF, Feb. 19, 2002)
JAZZ: CASSANDRA WILSON: Seeming So Nonchalant Can Be Harder Than It Looks
(By BEN RATLIFF, Feb. 19, 2002)
MUSIC: MUNICH PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA: Clarity and Atmospherics, Courtesy of Levine
(By ANTHONY TOMMASINI, Feb. 19, 2002)
MUSIC: Steinways Be Warned, a Frenchman Is on the Rampage [Iannis Xenakis]
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Feb. 19, 2002)
POP: Falling in Love With Love, and With Rodgers and Hart
(By STEPHEN HOLDEN, Feb. 19, 2002)
THEATER: 'TO YOU, THE BIRDIE!': Racine's Pale Queen, Struggling With Racket Sports
(By BEN BRANTLEY, Feb. 19, 2002)
TV: 'RALPH ELLISON': A Novel's Invisible Ending
(By JULIE SALAMON, Feb. 19, 2002)
* SCIENCE: Hubble to See Stars in Different Light
(By WARREN E. LEARY, Feb. 19, 2002)
New York's Newest Night Owls
(By JOHN B. FORBES, Feb. 19, 2002)
* When Chips for Bartering Fall From the Sky [museum meteorite trade]
(By KENNETH CHANG, Feb. 19, 2002)
* Learning Lessons From Wads of Paper
(By KENNETH CHANG, Feb. 19, 2002)
* Miraculous Survival Story Is Illuminated After 253 Years in Dark
[Copley's "Watson and the Shark"] (By WILLIAM H. HONAN, Feb. 19, 2002)
Building a Better Refrigerator, With Magnets
(By KENNETH CHANG, Feb. 19, 2002)
OBSERVATORY: A Warmer Split-Second [global warming lengthens the day]
(By HENRY FOUNTAIN, Feb. 19, 2002)
SCIENCE Q & A: Animal Sexuality
(By C. CLAIBORNE RAY, Feb. 19, 2002)
SCIENCE Letters: Tour de Dental Competition
(By ELIAS DAVIS, et. al., Feb. 19, 2002)
* HEALTH: Hijacking the Brain Circuits With a Nickel Slot Machine
(By SANDRA BLAKESLEE, Feb. 19, 2002)
* A CONVERSATION WITH Dr. Marion Nestle: An `Eat More' Message For a Fattened America
(By MARY DUENWALD, Feb. 19, 2002)
More Drama Added to Politics of Transplants [Film "John Q."]
(By JEFF STRYKER, Feb. 19, 2002)
BOOKS ON HEALTH: Divergent Views of Surviving in the E.R. Maze [emergency room]
(By JOHN LANGONE, Feb. 19, 2002)
At Risk: Catching Kidney Disease in Early Stages
(NY TIMES, Feb. 19, 2002)
Patterns: Cough Syrup Is Usually No Sure Cure
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Feb. 19, 2002)
Safety: Grim Statistics on Older Motorcyclists
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Feb. 19, 2002)
Nutrition: But What Did the Cow Have for Lunch?
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Feb. 19, 2002)
VITAL SIGNS: Behavior: When Babies Evaluate Parents' Actions
(By JOHN O'NEIL, Feb. 19, 2002)
* PERSONAL HEALTH: Strong Bones, With and Without Drugs
(By JANE E. BRODY, Feb. 19, 2002)
CASES: Pulling Back The Curtain Of Smoke
(By HUBERT B. HERRING, Feb. 19, 2002)
Monday, Feb. 18, 2002:
On This Day: February 18 (Mary Tudor 2/18/1516-11/17/1558, Alessandro Volta 2/18/1745-3/5/1827,
Ramakrishna 2/18/1836-8/16/1886, Max Klinger 2/18/1857-7/5/1920, Charles M. Schwab 2/18/1862-9/18/1939,
Wendell Willkie 2/18/1892-10/8/1944, George Gipp 2/18/1895-12/14/1920, Enzo Ferrari 2/18/1898-8/14/1988,
Sir Arthur Bryant 2/18/1899-1/2/1985, Wallace Stegner 2/18/1909-4/13/1993, Jack Palance 1921,
Helen Gurley Brown 1922, George Kennedy 1925, John Warner 1927, Toni Morrison 1931, Milos Forman 1932,
Yoko Ono 1933, John Hughes 1950, Cybill Shepherd 1950, Juice Newton 1952, John Travolta 1954,
Vanna White 1957, Matt Dillon 1968, Molly Ringwald 1968)
The Inauguration of the President of the Southern Confederacy
(NY TIMES, February 18, 1861)
Louis C. Tiffany, Noted Artist, Dies at 84 [2/18/1848-1/17/1933] (NY TIMES, January 18, 1933)
John W. Gardner, 89, Founder of Common Cause and Adviser to Presidents, Dies
(By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Feb. 18, 2002)
* Ani Pachen, Warrior Nun in Tibet Jail 21 Years, Dies ["not reached enlightenment"]
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Feb. 18, 2002)
John E. Bebout, 98, Expert on State Constitutions
(By ERIC PACE, Feb. 18, 2002)
Nick Brignola, Saxophonist Who Performed With Top Artists, Dies at 65
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 18, 2002)
Alain Vanzo, 73, French Tenor With Restrained, Lyrical Style
(By ANNE MIDGETTE, Feb. 18, 2002)
Kenneth Armitage, 85, Sculptor With a Lighthearted Approach
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Feb. 18, 2002)
Stewart Hitch, Painter Who Merged Styles, Dies at 61
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Feb. 18, 2002)
* NATIONAL: 9 of 10 Nursing Homes Lack Adequate Staff, Study Finds
(By ROBERT PEAR, Feb. 18, 2002)
Though Not Linked to Terrorism, Many Detainees Cannot Go Home
(By CHRISTOPHER DREW with JUDITH MILLER, Feb. 18, 2002)
WHITE HOUSE LETTER: Novelist in Chief of Staff's Clothing
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 18, 2002)
Sex Change Complicates Battle Over Child Custody
(By DANA CANEDY, Feb. 18, 2002)
More Corpses Are Discovered Near Crematory
(By DAVID FIRESTONE & MICHAEL MOSS, Feb. 18, 2002)
Enron Pursued Plan to Forge Close Ties to Gore Campaign
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Feb. 18, 2002)
POLITICAL MEMO: Democrats Start Early on the Presidential Trail
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Feb. 18, 2002)
* PATENTS: Patent Models' Strange Odyssey
(By TERESA RIORDAN, Feb. 18, 2002)
In Luckenbach, Tex., Fans Remember Waylon Jennings
(By ROSS E. MILLOY, Feb. 18, 2002)
WORLD: U.S. Plans to Act More Rigorously in Hostage Cases
(By JUDITH MILLER, Feb. 18, 2002)
THE MILITARY: U.S. Team to Start Helping Afghans Build New Army
(By THOM SHANKER, Feb. 18, 2002)
Bush, on Tokyo Visit, Calls Koizumi 'a Great Reformer'
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 18, 2002)
DIZIN JOURNAL: Iranian Skiers No Longer Descending a Slippery Slope to Decadence
(By NEIL MacFARQUHAR, Feb. 18, 2002)
* Cayman Woman Paints Visions; the World Sees Art
(By DAVID GONZALEZ, Feb. 18, 2002)
Britain Tests Drugs Based on Marijuana
(By Reuters, Feb. 18, 2002)
* NY REGION: METROPOLITAN DIARY: Dear Diary [Poem: Turning points]
(By ENID NEMY, Feb. 18, 2002)
METRO MATTERS: Tuition, Out of State and Beyond
(By JOYCE PURNICK, Feb. 18, 2002)
EDITORIAL: Reviving Korean Diplomacy
(NY TIMES, Feb. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: The Great Unwatched
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Feb. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: Why Europe Is Wary of War in Iraq
(By MICHAEL NAUMAN, Feb. 18, 2002)
OP-ED: Taking the Fifth Too Often
(By AKHIL REED AMAR, Feb. 18, 2002)
* LETTERS: Teaching, for the Right Reasons
(By GABRIELLE DAHMS, et. al., Feb. 18, 2002)
BUSINESS: MTV Ponders College Network
(By JIM RUTENBERG, Feb. 18, 2002)
* NEW ECONOMY: Protecting Intellectual Property
(By SARAH MILSTEIN, Feb. 18, 2002)
New Riddle for Xbox: Will It Play in Japan?
(By CHRIS GAITHER, Feb. 18, 2002)
Brash Owner of Rolling Stone Struggles to Remake Us Weekly
(By DAVID CARR, Feb. 18, 2002)
Fine-Tuning for Privacy, Hong Kong Plans Digital ID
(By MARK LANDLER, Feb. 18, 2002)
Qualcomm Uses Internet to Aid Extended Family
(By KAREN J. BANNAN, Feb. 18, 2002)
E-COMMERCE REPORT: Arbitration Panel to Rule on Internet Radio Royalties
(By BOB TEDESCHI, Feb. 18, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: Maker of Crowd Scanner Is on the Defensive Again
(By BARNABY J. FEDER, Feb. 18, 2002)
COMPRESSED DATA: Slashdot's Editor Proves Even Nerds Fall in Love
(By ANDREW ZIPERN, Feb. 18, 2002)
THE NEWS MEDIA: Sports Reporting: Rules on Rumors
(By FELICITY BARRINGER, Feb. 18, 2002)
* ARTS ONLINE: Getting Tangible Dollars for an Intangible Creation
(By MATTHEW MIRAPAUL, Feb. 18, 2002)
* ART: Elusive Heroine of the Baroque [Artemisia Gentileschi]
(By CELESTINE BOHLEN, Feb. 18, 2002)
DANCE: The Kirov and Balanchine: A Work in Progress
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Feb. 18, 2002)
MUSIC: Nearly 80, Composer Lukas Foss is Still Restless
(By ALLAN KOZINN, Feb. 18, 2002)
MUSIC: Record Labels' Answer to Napster Still Has Artists Feeling Bypassed
(By NEIL STRAUSS, Feb. 18, 2002)
THEATER: 'BEA ARTHUR ON BROADWAY': A Ceremony Lacking All Innocence
(By BEN BRANTLEY, Feb. 18, 2002)
* THEATER: 'LAPIS BLUE BLOOD RED': Will the Real Artemisia Please Stand Up?
(By NEIL GENZLINGER, Feb. 18, 2002)
* THEATER: Anne Hathaway: An A for Aplomb On Stage
(By JESSE McKINLEY, Feb. 18, 2002)
TV: 'INSIDE HATE ROCK': On Rock's Fringe, Music With a Heart Full of Hatred
(By JULIE SALAMON, Feb. 18, 2002)
TV: Plot Twists Paid Off for 'Friends'
(By BILL CARTER, Feb. 18, 2002)
Sunday, Feb. 17, 2002:
On This Day: February 17 (Arcangelo Corelli 2/17/1653-1/8/1713, Gustavo Adolfo Becquer 2/17/1836-12/22/1870,
A. Montgomery Ward 2/17/1844-12/7/1913, Andrew B. Paterson 2/17/1864-2/5/1941, Andre Maginot 2/17/1877-1/7/1932,
H. L. Hunt 2/17/1904-7/19/1980, Hans Morgenthau 2/17/1904-7/19/1980, Red Barber 2/17/1914-1/5/1990,
Huey Newton 2/17/1942-8/22/1989, Kathleen Freeman 1919, Margaret Truman Daniel 1924, Hal Holbrook 1925,
Alan Bates 1934, Jim Brown 1936, Mary Ann Mobley 1939, Rene Russo 1954, Michael Jordan 1963,
Michael Bay 1964, Michelle Forbes 1967, Jerry O'Connell 1974)
* President Nixon Leaves on Trip to China (By Tad Szulc, February 17, 1972)
* Thomas J. Watson Sr. Is Dead; I.B.M. Board Chairman Was 82 [2/17/1874-6/19/1956] (NY TIMES, June 20, 1956)
* HEALTH: Mysterious Rash Reported at Schools in 7 States
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 17, 2002)
R. M. Hare, British Philosopher, Dies at 82; Looked for Logic in Morals
(By MARGALIT FOX, Feb. 17, 2002)
* Dr. Arnold Zachary Pfeffer, 86; Linked Psychiatric Disciplines, Dies
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Feb. 17, 2002)
Richard Lawrence Jr., Dies at 93; Led Park Agency
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
Guy Stockwell Actor, 68, Is Dead
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 17, 2002)
Wendell L. Marshall, Ellington Bassist, Dies at 81
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
NATIONAL: U.S. Tightening Rules on Keeping Scientific Secrets
(By WILLIAM J. BROAD, Feb. 17, 2002)
Scores of Bodies Strewn at Site of Crematory
(By ROBERT D. McFADDEN, Feb. 17, 2002)
* LAS VEGAS JOURNAL: Endless Vows on Valentine's Weekend
(By EVELYN NIEVES, Feb. 17, 2002)
* Texan Launders Dirty Money Legally
(By JIM YARDLEY, Feb. 17, 2002)
F.T.C. Takes Purported Psychic to Court ["free call" costs $60+]
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 17, 2002)
THE INQUIRIES: Hearings on Sept. 11 Lapse to Test Ties of 2 Leaders
(By CARL HULSE, Feb. 17, 2002)
Boston Priests' Sex Scandal Causes Ripples Across U.S.
(By LAURIE GOODSTEIN, Feb. 17, 2002)
WORLD: Bush to Encounter a Much Less Formidable Japan
(By JAMES BROOKE, Feb. 17, 2002)
WHITE HOUSE MEMO: Allies Hear Sour Notes in 'Axis of Evil' Chorus
(By DAVID E. SANGER, Feb. 17, 2002)
More Arrests Made in Slaying of Afghan Minister
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 17, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: The Milosevic Defense: A Coldly Pointed Finger
(By IAN FISHER, Feb. 17, 2002)
India Says Man in Attack on U.S. Site Has Terror Tie
(By CELIA W. DUGGER, Feb. 17, 2002)
NY REGION: $20 Billion? Sure, Maybe, and Not So Fast
(By RAYMOND HERNANDEZ, Feb. 17, 2002)
After a Mess or Two, a Star Chef Starts Over
(By ADAM NAGOURNEY, Feb. 17, 2002)
OUR TOWNS: A Genuine Calder Was Here, at the Mall? (Psst, What's a Calder?)
(By DAVID M. HALBFINGER, Feb. 17, 2002)
EDITORIAL: The World's First Cloned Kitty
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
* OP-ED: Attack of the Calico Clones
(By MAUREEN DOWD, Feb. 17, 2002)
OP-ED: An Intriguing Signal From the Saudi Crown Prince
(By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, Feb. 17, 2002)
OP-ED: A Corporate Fear of Too Much Truth
(By WARREN BENNIS, Feb. 17, 2002)
OP-ED: A Blueprint for a New Beginning in the Mideast/A>
(By JEROME M. SEGAL, Feb. 17, 2002)
* LETTERS: Uneasy Times: A Buddhist Lens
(By JAMES SHAHEEN, Feb. 17, 2002)
* LETTERS: Heisenberg's Protégé
(By JOHN S. FRIEDMAN & ERIC NADLER, Feb. 17, 2002)
BUSINESS: Hot Dogs, Apple Pie and Toyota
(By DANNY HAKIM with MICHELINE MAYNARD, Feb. 17, 2002)
Big Returns, Minus the Pleasantries [Lampert's hedge fund]
(By GERALDINE FABRIKANT, Feb. 17, 2002)
* MARKET WATCH: Watchdog? Lap Dog? Why Have to Guess?
(By GRETCHEN MORGENSON, Feb. 17, 2002)
* MARKET INSIGHT: The Future Beckons to Biotech's Faithful
(By KENNETH N. GILPIN, Feb. 17, 2002)
* The Fiber Optic Fantasy Slips Away
(By SIMON ROMERO & SETH SCHIESEL, Feb. 17, 2002)
* STRATEGIES: When It Comes to Diversifying, the More the Merrier
(By MARK HULBERT, Feb. 17, 2002)
INVESTING WITH: Sandor Cseh, Dreyfus International Value Fund
(By CAROLE GOULD, Feb. 17, 2002)
Travel History for Sale, at Very Modern Prices
(By ALAN COWELL, Feb. 17, 2002)
PRELUDES: Hi, Old Friend. Help Me Get a Job Like Yours.
(By ABBY ELLIN, Feb. 17, 2002)
* MONEY AND MEDICINE: Bedside Visits, on the Telephone
(By MILT FREUDENHEIM, Feb. 17, 2002)
TAXES: Know More, Pay Less: A Step-by-Step Guide to the 1040
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
TAX TIPS: In Filing, One Size Does Not Fit All
(By JAN M. ROSEN, Feb. 17, 2002)
Software Helps You File, and Even Holds Your Hand
(By JAN M. ROSEN, Feb. 17, 2002)
For Careful Investors, Some Breaks on Capital Gains
(By ROBERT D. HERSHEY Jr., Feb. 17, 2002)
A Crucial Record on Contributions to I.R.A.'s
(By CHARLES DELAFUENTE, Feb. 17, 2002)
* ART: A Revolution in African Art
(By HOLLAND COTTER, Feb. 17, 2002)
ART: 'THE SHORT CENTURY': A Show That Dares to Span a Continent
(By ROBERTA SMITH, Feb. 17, 2002)
* DANCE: Inspired by Dance, a Circus Is Writing the Poetry of Flight
(By MATTHEW GUREWITSCH, Feb. 17, 2002)
DANCE: Abstract Ballets That Repay Many Viewings
(By ANNA KISSELGOFF, Feb. 17, 2002)
* FILM: When Neo-Realism Collided With Reality [De Sica's "Umberto D"]
(By PETER BRUNETTE, Feb. 17, 2002)
FILM: Debra Winger Is Back From a Long Break, but on Her Own Terms
(By DANA KENNEDY, Feb. 17, 2002)
FILM: Of a Big Punjabi Family, by a Big Punjabi Family
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 17, 2002)
FILM: Chekhovian Angst Amid Real Trees
(By PETER MARKS, Feb. 17, 2002)
MUSIC: A Pop Idol's Survival: Now She's Taking On America [Kylie Minogue]
(By J. D. CONSIDINE, Feb. 17, 2002)
* MUSIC: How Singers Fall in Love With Songs
(By BARRY SINGER, Feb. 17, 2002)
* THEATER: Anne Bancroft Finds Her Own Way Back
(By PETER MARKS, Feb. 17, 2002)
THEATER: Albee All Over, or a Wealth of One
(By MEL GUSSOW, Feb. 17, 2002)
THEATER: Getting Past a Character's External to the Despair Inside
(By DON SHEWEY, Feb. 17, 2002)
* TV: Where Have You Gone, Jerry, When We Need You?
(By SUSAN ORR BRAUDY, Feb. 17, 2002)
TV: Amid a Long Drought, a Flowering of Talent
(By HAL HINSON, Feb. 17, 2002)
TRAVEL: A Faded City Brightens in Nicaragua
(By STEPHEN KINZER, Feb. 17, 2002)
CHOICE TABLES: In Geneva, Good Eating From Fondue to Foie Gras
(By JACQUELINE FRIEDRICH, Feb. 17, 2002)
TRAVEL ESSAY: Going the Extra Mile for the Exotic
(By DEBBIE SEAMAN, Feb. 17, 2002)
LETTERS: Spins on Vegas; Visiting Istanbul; A Deli in Montreal
(By A. G. MUSSO, et. al., Feb. 17, 2002)
* Q & A: Gothic Cathedrals in France [Knight Templars]
(By FLORENCE STICKNEY, Feb. 17, 2002)
STYLE: Are High-Tech Beauty Treatments Safe?
(By ELIZABETH HAYT, Feb. 17, 2002)
STYLE: Olympic Partying: Salt Lake's Streets Won't Roll Up
(By KATE ZERNIKE, Feb. 17, 2002)
MIRROR, MIRROR: Never Grow Up: A Toys 'R' Us Designer
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
VIEW: The Trends That Just Blew In
(By KATE BETTS, Feb. 17, 2002)
ON THE STREET: The Fedora Revival
(Photographs by BILL CUNNINGHAM, Feb. 17, 2002)
VOWS: Susan Fragnoli and David Sands
(By LOIS SMITH BRADY, Feb. 17, 2002)
WEEK IN REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
AFTER SADDAM: Now What?
(By TODD S. PURDUM, Feb. 17, 2002)
Why a Business Scandal Became a National Spectacle
(By RICHARD W. STEVENSON, Feb. 17, 2002)
* CORRESPONDENCE: Urban Glory [Bombay, India]
(By SOMINI SENGUPTA, Feb. 17, 2002)
* A QUESTION FOR AFGHANISTAN: Who's the Proxy Here?
(By JOHN KIFNER, Feb. 17, 2002)
* Comets, Asteroids and Other Invaders From Outer Space
(By ANTHONY RAMIREZ, Feb. 17, 2002)
WAR CRIMES: At The Hague, It's a Leader on Trial, Not a People
(By BARBARA CROSSETTE, Feb. 17, 2002)
* On Television, Funny Is Money
(By BILL CARTER, Feb. 17, 2002)
Facing a Sin Of the Fathers
(By DANIEL J. WAKIN, Feb. 17, 2002)
STAR POWER: We're Ready for Their Close-Ups
(By A. O. SCOTT, Feb. 17, 2002)
Is Planned Obsolescence Obsolete?
(By JOHN MARKOFF, Feb. 17, 2002)
Where No Air Is Too Rare
(By JOE SHARKEY, Feb. 17, 2002)
MONEY TALKS: Don't Discount The Fat Cats Yet
(By RICHARD L. BERKE, Feb. 17, 2002)
Taking Enron Scraps to Auction
(By TOM ZELLER, Feb. 17, 2002)
* And Maybe Stalin Was a Kulak? [forged Hitler passport]
(By SAM ROBERTS, Feb. 17, 2002)
Front Lines [Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan]
(By ANDREA KANNAPELL, Feb. 17, 2002)
SUNDAY MAGAZINE: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
* ON LANGUAGE: S.O.U. [State Of the Union]
(By WILLIAM SAFIRE, Feb. 17, 2002)
* THE WAY WE LIVE NOW: Nothing Personal [Can anybody get into Harvard?]
(By BRUCE HEADLAM, Feb. 17, 2002)
QUESTIONS FOR ROBIN WILLIAMS: Manic Attack
(By MONICA CORCORAN, Feb. 17, 2002)
THE ETHICIST: Snowy Profits
(By RANDY COHEN, Feb. 17, 2002)
PROCESS: Wanted: Poster With a Bit of Goat
(By LIZ WELCH, Feb. 17, 2002)
To Wait or to Flee [Abdulgan, Afghanistan]
(By MICHAEL FINKEL, Feb. 17, 2002)
Into Thin Air [United Airlines]
(By ROGER LOWENSTEIN, Feb. 17, 2002)
* Remembrance of Flings Past [Edith Templeton]
(By MARIA RUSSO, Feb. 17, 2002)
Gary Condit Is Still Running
(By FRANK BRUNI, Feb. 17, 2002)
STYLE: Vanishing Acts [Slide Show: Rachel Weisz]
(By NEIL LABUTE, Feb. 17, 2002)
FOOD DIARY: Local Hero
(By AMANDA HESSER, Feb. 17, 2002)
LIVES: Unplanned Legacy
(By PHILIP HIGGS, Feb. 17, 2002)
BOOK REVIEW: Contents
(NY TIMES, Feb. 17, 2002)
'The Sisters': The Mitfords' Tale Remains Compelling
(By ROBERT GOTTLIEB, Feb. 17, 2002)
Wen Ho Lee's Life Under Suspicion
(By JOSEPH E. PERSICO, Feb. 17, 2002)
POEM: Harm's Woods
(By NATHANIEL BELLOWS, Feb. 17, 2002)
CRIME: Threatened by a Psychopathic Rumplestiltskin
(By MARILYN STASIO, Feb. 17, 2002)
'The Chastening': When the I.M.F. Took a Shelling
(By ADRIAN WOOLDRIDGE, Feb. 17, 2002)
* 'The Future of Life': E. O. Wilson Issues a Call to Arms
(By JON TURNEY, Feb. 17, 2002)
* 'Secret Agents': New, Improved Germs
(By DEREK BICKERTON, Feb. 17, 2002)
* ON WRITERS AND WRITING: Literary Pentimento
(By MARGO JEFFERSON, Feb. 17, 2002)
HEALTH: Estimates of Mentally Ill Too High, Study Says
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 17, 2002)
* HEALTH: Mysterious Rash Reported at Schools in 7 States
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 17, 2002)
Saturday, Feb. 16, 2002:
On This Day: February 16 (Giambattista Bodoni 2/16/1740-11/29/1813, Nikolay Leskov 2/16/1831-3/5/1895,
Henry Adams 2/16/1838-3/27/1918, Robert Flaherty 2/16/1884-7/23/1951, Edgar Bergen 2/16/1903,
Patty Andrews 1920, John Schlesinger 1926, LeVar Burton 1957, John McEnroe 1959)
* Tut-ankh-Amen's Inner Tomb is Opened Revealing Undreamed of Splendors,
Still Untouched After 3,400 Years
(NY TIMES, February 16, 1923)
Katharine Cornell Is Dead at 81 [2/16/1893-6/9/1974] (By ALDEN WHITMAN, June 10, 1974)
General Ke Pauk, Former Khmer Rouge Military Chief, Dies at 68
(By REUTERS, Feb. 16, 2002)
* Theresa Bernstein, an Ash Can School Artist, Dies at 111
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Feb. 16, 2002)
* Rosemary Woodruff, 66, Wife and Fellow Fugitive of Leary, Is Dead
(By DOUGLAS MARTIN, Feb. 16, 2002)
Bunny Allen, 95, Hunter; Found Fame in East Africa
(By ALAN COWELL, Feb. 16, 2002)
Elisabeth Mann Borgese, 83, Writer and Defender of the Oceans
(By WOLFGANG SAXON, Feb. 16, 2002)
NATIONAL: Bury the Nation's Nuclear Waste in Nevada, Bush Says
(By MATTHEW L. WALD, Feb. 16, 2002)
Changes in World Economy on Raw Materials May Doom Many Towns
(By PETER T. KILBORN, Feb. 16, 2002)
THE AMERICAN PRISONER: Trial for Lindh Is Set for a Date Near Sept. 11
(By KATHARINE Q. SEELYE, Feb. 16, 2002)
Denver Zoo Is Investigated for Bear Fights, Including a Fatal One
(NY TIMES, Feb. 16, 2002)
VOLUNTEERS: Bush Is Giving Peace Corps an Aid Mission in Afghanistan
(By ELISABETH BUMILLER, Feb. 16, 2002)
Letters Show Bush and Lay Shared Much
(By JIM YARDLEY, Feb. 16, 2002)
With Aryans Gone, Town Seeks New Life
(By SAM HOWE VERHOVEK, Feb. 16, 2002)
State Pageants at War With Miss America Organization
(By ALEX KUCZYNSKI, Feb. 16, 2002)
* RELIGION JOURNAL: Colleges Are Scrambling for Muslim Chaplains
(By ERIC GOLDSCHEIDER, Feb. 16, 2002)
WORLD: Afghan Leader Blames Officials in Killing of Aide
(By JOHN F. BURNS, Feb. 16, 2002)
In Rural China, Mental Hospitals Await Some Who Rock the Boat
(By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL, Feb. 16, 2002)
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Cheney Rejects Criticism by Allies Over Stand on Iraq
(By MICHAEL R. GORDON, Feb. 16, 2002)
Milosevic Vows a Parade of Witnesses, Including Clinton
(By IAN FISHER & MARLISE SIMONS, Feb. 16, 2002)
JOURNALISTS: Pakistan Seeks Accomplice in Kidnapping of a Reporter
(ASSOCIATED PRESS, Feb. 16, 2002)
* For Margaret, Cremation, as She Wished
(By ALAN COWELL, Feb. 16, 2002)
THE FIGHTING: U.S. Troops Reinforcing Safety of Base in Kandahar
(By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS, Feb. 16, 2002)
Bush Has Much to Finesse in Trip to Japan and Korea
(By HOWARD W. FRENCH, Feb. 16, 2002)
China Expels 53 Foreign Falun Gong Followers
(By ERIK ECKHOLM, Feb. 16, 2002)
* THE SATURDAY PROFILE: Oh, This Shark Has Missing Teeth, Dear [Billiard champ Efren Reyes]
(By SETH MYDANS, Feb. 16, 2002)
NY REGION: Some Affected by 9/11 Are Hard to Reach
(By DAVID W. CHEN, Feb. 16, 2002)
Family Hopes Bush Trip to China Frees Relative
(By ANDREW JACOBS, Feb. 16, 2002)
* REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK: Giuliani Shows Milder Side to Star-Struck Londoners
(By SARAH LYALL, Feb. 16, 2002)
College President Is Accused of Impersonating a Police Officer
[stopped driver for speeding] (NY TIMES, Feb. 16, 2002)
Holder of Trade Center Lease Settles With Two Insurers
(By JONATHAN D. GLATER, Feb. 16, 2002)
NYC: Nature Calls, but New York Is Out of Order
(By CLYDE HABERMAN, Feb. 16, 2002)
SPORTS: Canadian Skaters Awarded Share of Olympic Gold
(By SELENA ROBERTS, Feb. 16, 2002)
SPORTS: Time for Other Athletes to Grab Spotlight
(By HARVEY ARATON, Feb. 16, 2002)
NEWS ANALYSIS: Controlling the Damage
(By JERE LONGMAN, Feb. 16, 2002)
THE I.O.C.: Rulings Tarnished Games for Some
(By FRANK LITSKY, Feb. 16, 2002)
Russians Angered by I.O.C. Decision
(By SERGE SCHMEMANN, Feb. 16, 2002)
FIGURE SKATING: French Need No Help to Take Early Lead
(NY TIMES, Feb. 16, 2002)
LUGE: Doubles Luge Earns U.S. Respect
(By CHARLIE LeDUFF, Feb. 16, 2002)
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