Every day, Madeline Wyatt, GS ’24, moves through a part of Columbia that most students do not know exists. While her peers attend class in Lewisohn and Havemeyer Halls, Wyatt guides her wheelchair ...
Columbia University Apartheid Divest protested the annual Tree Lighting ceremony for the second year in a row on Thursday night, calling the event a “distraction by design” from the University. After ...
Premilla Nadasen, the Ann Whitney Olin professor of history at Barnard, announced in a Dec. 17 email obtained by Spectator that she will be resigning from her position as director of the Barnard ...
Columbia University Apartheid Divest held an “NYC all out for Palestine” protest on Monday —the last day of class for the fall semester—beginning at the main Barnard gates and later marching around ...
Kathryn Lampo, SEAS ’25, was named a 2025 Marshall Scholar on Monday. Through the scholarship, she will begin a Master of Science by Research in Engineering Science at the University of Oxford after ...
From posting Instagram photo dumps at the end of the semester to checking Sidechat while procrastinating for finals, social media is a fact of life for virtually everyone at Columbia. The virtual ...
Barnard’s outstanding debt, including fixed-rate bonds, finance leases, and operating leases, stood at approximately $226.3 million as of June 30, 2023, according to the S&P report. In fiscal year ...
Tucked into a quiet corner of Upper Manhattan is one of Harlem’s last informal jazz parlors. It’s a setting you might not expect: a small living room decked with family photographs, magazine clippings ...
Last spring, amid a faith crisis in journalism, I found the Tow Center. I had heard about national media outlets shoving microphones in students’ faces during protests, mass layoffs at news ...