At the Columbia Plasma Physics Lab, researchers are tackling one of the most pressing challenges in creating clean energy: making nuclear fusion a viable power source. Unlike nuclear fission—the type ...
Barnard released admission decisions for the class of 2029 on Wednesday, but in a break from tradition, did not announce its acceptance rate or number of applicants. Last year, Barnard accepted 7 ...
Claire Shipman, CC ’86, SIPA ’94, has replaced Katrina Armstrong as acting University president, board of trustees chair David Greenwald, Law ’83, announced in a Friday evening email. Shipman served ...
Columbia College and the School of Engineering and Applied Science admitted 4.29 percent of applicants for the class of 2029, accepting 2,557 students from a pool of 59,616 applications. The schools ...
Barnard President Laura Rosenbury sent a Monday email to the Barnard community about Columbia’s Friday leadership transition, after Katrina Armstrong announced she would be stepping down as interim ...
U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian, Law ’04, of the Southern District of New York held a hearing on Tuesday over whether to extend a March 20 order blocking Columbia and Barnard from sharing student ...
Donning a beige jacket, red sweater, and square-rimmed orange sunglasses, Leo Jergovic, CC ’25, stared into the unexpectedly bright sunset outside the Joe Coffee near the Journalism School. Although ...
The letter that the University submitted in response to the Trump administration’s demands fails to rise to the gravity of the authoritarian moment we are experiencing. A federal administration with ...
Over 50 demonstrators gathered at the Sundial and outside Columbia’s 116th Street and Broadway gates on Monday as part of an “informational picket” organized by Student Workers of Columbia-United Auto ...
For the third time in two years, Columbia has a new University president. Katrina Armstrong stepped down from her post as interim University president effective immediately and will be returning to ...
We’ve all been there: trapped in Butler for hours, the fluorescent lights making you question your every life choice. The stress is creeping in, and you know you need a break, but where do you go?
Former American Civil Liberties Union President Nadine Strossen headlined a March 6 panel titled “Protest, Free Speech, and Censorship” at Columbia, discussing hate speech, the First Amendment, and ...
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