Women’s basketball suffered a shocking 67-60 loss to Cornell on Saturday. The Lions’ loss in their Ivy League opener puts their title defense in a precarious position. Prior to the game, the Lions ...
Men’s and women’s squash both dropped their matchups against Princeton on Sunday, continuing a mixed stretch to start the conference season. With both teams currently sitting in sixth in the standings ...
The University’s presidential search committee has extended its deadline to announce the next University president less than a month before its original Jan. 1, 2026, deadline, according to a Monday ...
Columbia is looking for a new president—again. The board of trustees announced the University’s search for its next president over six months ago, seeking to put an end to the near constant turnover ...
Hours into a pro-Palestinian sit-in Wednesday outside Barnard Dean Leslie Grinage’s office in protest of the reported expulsion of two Barnard students, a faculty mediator approached the group with ...
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, ...
One recent evening, I made a mistake that many had made before me: I tried taking the 2 train to Columbia and got off at 116th Street—and Lenox Avenue. I stepped out into the fresh Harlem night and, ...
“Erratic, unprofessional, uncivil, and unethical” behavior. Routine surveillance of Columbia employees using video cameras and building swipes, “without justification or provocation.” At least one ...
Barnard released regular decisions for the class of 2028 on Wednesday, admitting 7 percent of 11,832 applicants. The college’s acceptance rate remains similar to last year’s record-low acceptance rate ...
In a March 21 email to the Columbia community, former interim University President Katrina Armstrong announced that the University had sent a document detailing a list of planned administrative ...
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 ...
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 ...