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September 2005


Leisure

Homage through assassination, Liz Taylor & soup

For many, the name Andy Warhol instantly brings to mind New York, Marilyn Monroe and Campbell’s soup cans, but but as the recently opened exhibit at the Corcoran gallery demonstrates, his work spanned a much wider range of ideas and emotions.

Editorials

Keep the customer satisfied

Compared with previous years, the lines at the dining hall certainly seem long.

Editorials

A loud but nonsensical protest

Anti-war activists had an unprecedented opportunity to speak with a unified voice in favor of a clear and responsible plan for Iraq. Instead, the Sept. 24 anti-war march became a fragmented and unclear call for the immediate and reckless withdrawal of troops from Iraq.

Editorials

A sense of security

The results of a recently released survey show that Georgetown students do not feel safe outside of the Healy gates or along Prospect Street. So far, Georgetown administrators have done an excellent job at addressing this issue, and they deserve recognition.

Leisure

Corpse Bride not stiff at all

Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride exhibits the masterful blend of fun and macabre that we’ve come to expect from this director.

Leisure

Low pudge fudge

You Taste Like A Burger – a biweekly column about eating leisurely

Leisure

Well-lighted Wood

Everything is Illuminated doesn’t make any pretense of conventionality in its approach to that most clich? topic in modern art: the Holocaust.

Voices

Don’t wait ’til next year

Being a baseball fan through good times and bad