Perhaps it’s just the rain, but I tend to get a little misty in the fall. Sitting on the steps of Low Library, watching our campus, I find myself reflecting on the many conversations I’ve had recently ...
Football was back in action on Friday after suffering a heartbreaking loss against Penn at Homecoming. Looking to break their three-game losing streak, the Lions were on the prowl for a much-needed ...
As University President Minouche Shafik prepared to face Congress in a long-awaited hearing on antisemitism on Columbia’s campus on April 17, hundreds of Columbia students pitched tents on South Lawn, ...
Tracking students’ every move at protests using CCTV footage and Columbia ID swipes. Hiring private investigators—who, on at least two occasions, questioned students outside their residences—and ...
Editor’s note: This op-ed deals with topics of violence. In writing this, we do not wish to sow discord or deal a blow to the student movement as it exists—on the contrary, we hope to reclaim our ...
This is a developing story. Check back for updates. Updated on April 19 at 1:25 a.m. The New York Police Department arrested over 100 individuals after University President Minouche Shafik authorized ...
The University expelled Grant Miner, president of the Student Workers of Columbia-United Auto Workers, UAW announced in a Thursday news release. Miner is a Ph.D. student in the department of English ...
Over 100 faculty members from Barnard and Columbia gathered on Low Steps at 2 p.m. Monday for a “Rally to Support our Students and Reclaim our University.” “Barnard members of the AAUP are shocked and ...
A hacker who caused a dayslong IT outage at the University in June stole data from Columbia’s networks, the University wrote in a Tuesday statement. A University official told Spectator that it could ...
This admissions cycle, Columbia saw the first increase in early decision applicants in three years, rising almost 5 percent from the previous year. Columbia maintains its early decision policy, ...
Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine published an open letter on Monday demanding the University to “start verbally acknowledging Palestinian existence and humanity.” Twenty other Palestinian ...
After the University agreed to pay the federal government $200 million in a deal that restored federal funding and settled the University’s civil rights violations, some faculty members, students, and ...
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