The Columbia Secondary School leadership team announced on Thursday that Harlem’s KIPP STAR Middle School will relocate from 425 W. 123rd St. to a building on West 133rd Street that houses its ...
Columbia removed diversity, equity, and inclusion policy language from several of its websites following President Donald Trump’s Jan. 20 and Jan. 21 executive orders banning DEI policies at ...
Last Thursday, the Lenfest Center for the Arts screened writer and curator Legacy Russell’s video essay, “BLACK MEME,” and hosted a conversation between her and visiting professor C. Riley Snorton on ...
The Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons is pausing hiring and spending in response to federal funding cuts at the National Institutes of Health, James McKiernan, interim dean of the college, ...
Tucked away on the sixth floor of Butler Library lies an exploration of the past, present, and future of celestial navigation. “Celestial Navigation,” curated by Jeannie Rhyu, CC ’17, SoA ’26, opened ...
Thirty years ago, West Harlem tenants lost the Harlem Urban Development Corporation, one of the area’s most prominent advocates for housing equality. In its absence, a new organization of community ...
The battle over speech on our campus has taken a dangerous turn. This weaponization of deportation is the latest in a series of increasingly virulent online attacks on Columbia students. Although many ...
The Department of Education Office for Civil Rights released a letter on Friday declaring that federal law prohibits race-conscious programming for institutions receiving federal funding or financial ...
Interim University President Katrina Armstrong sent a Tuesday email to the Columbia community announcing that the President’s Advisory Committee on Institutional Voice has started the “challenging and ...
The class of 2028 is the first group of students admitted to Columbia following the overturning of race-conscious admissions in 2023, marking a significant shift in the University’s admissions ...
In the late 1920s, basketball was still a young sport, played in gymnasiums with wooden backboards and no shot clock. Amid the methodical pace of the game, George Gregory Jr., CC ’31, stood out—not ...
Founded during the 1964-65 academic year, the Society of Afro-American Students at Columbia aimed to provide the handful of Black students at Columbia with the opportunity to become involved in ...