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 ...
Women’s basketball traveled to Cambridge, Massachusetts, to face Harvard on Saturday, looking to bounce back from its shocking conference-opening loss to Cornell last week. Up against the Crimson for ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Dozens of protesters occupied Hamilton Hall at approximately 12:30 a.m. on April 30, demanding full University divestment from companies with ties to Israel. The protesters renamed Hamilton “Hind’s ...
Columbia’s Task Force on Antisemitism issued its second report on Aug. 30—publishing dozens of student testimonies, recommending several updates to the University’s antidiscrimination training and ...
Columbia is considering expanding undergraduate enrollment in Columbia College and the School of Engineering and Applied Science by up to 20 percent, according to an Oct. 31 email to faculty from the ...
Editor's Note: This op-ed was dictated by Mahmoud Khalil, SIPA ’24. Spectator verified this with his Attorney Amy Greer and conducted its regular editing process. Khalil is currently detained at the ...
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 ...
Editor’s note: This is an abbreviated version of a previous article that provided live updates during the congressional hearing. Read the live updates here. WASHINGTON—University President Minouche ...