But it’s not the one (most of) you really wanted. Still, the 42nd President of this here country, William Jefferson Clinton, will be making an appearance on campus tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. in Roone Arledge Auditorium, as part of events for World AIDS Day. The White House occupant will be part of a symposium entitled “Awareness, Access, Action – The Global and Domestic State of AIDS,” where he will be introduced by President Bollinger. The rest of the panel includes Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, Director of Mailman School’s International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs (ICAP), former Manhattan Borough President C. Virginia Fields, and the moderator, Stephen Lewis, Co-Director, AIDS-Free World
Oh, and tickets are, not surprisingly, already sold out, but a webcast will apparently be available at the ICAP website. Get your old impressions ready.
13 Comments
@Anonymous yeah…what IS with that tie??
@Gary Johnston Everybody has AIDS, AIDS, AIDSAIDS, AIDS!
@C. Hey Bwog – When does Prezbo actually light up the trees?
@Tree Lighting is from 6 to 7 tonight.
@hmm For an official portrait, that is a questionable tie.
@hey thanks! wow, columbia, thanks for letting us know and selling tickets to all the students! nice to know you’re always thinking of us.
@yeah Shame on Columbia for not catering exclusively to the undergraduate community, despite the AIDS event sponsored by the Public Health graduate school and it being more relevant to their academic mission. Those graduate school folks just shouldn’t be special.
@yeah funded no doubt by Columbia College donations
@were tickets ever available to columbia college students?
@Consider Revise World AIDS Day sounds terrifying!
@Tell that to city hall. http://www.flickr.com/photos/missvincci/3334097156/
@the one i really wanted was theodore roosevelt but i’ve heard good things about this guy too.
@Tell me about it ... This place is just a den of presidential disappointments – I keep signing up for these fireside chats hoping to talk New Deal policy and Lucy Mercer debauchery with that other Roosevelt, only to be gravely dissappointed by the same well-coiffed imposter.