Barnard released its early decision acceptances for the class of 2030 on Saturday evening, but, like with the class of 2029, did not provide applicant numbers or an acceptance rate. Barnard announced ...
Columbia College and the School of Engineering and Applied Science received 5,497 early decision applications for the class of 2030, according to Columbia Undergraduate Admissions, marking a 6.4 ...
Columbia College donors, alumni, trustees, and administrators gathered in the Low Library Rotunda on Nov. 20 to award Andrew Barth, CC ’83, Business ’85, the 2025 Alexander Hamilton Medal at the 77th ...
University Provost Angela Olinto spoke about the future of research at universities at a Dec. 2 Columbia World Projects event amid uncertainty surrounding federal funding and the rise of artificial ...
Football faced off against Dartmouth, ranked No. 22 in the Football Championship Subdivision, for its Homecoming matchup on Saturday, eventually falling just short, 24-21. The Big Green (6-0, 3-0 Ivy) ...
Jonathan Lederer, CC ’26, reported being punched in the face and his twin brother, David Lederer, SEAS ’26, reported having the brothers’ shared Israeli flag stolen at a protest on Monday, according ...
This is a developing story. Check back for updates. Updated on April 19 at 1:25 a.m. The New York Police Department arrested over 100 individuals after University President Minouche Shafik authorized ...
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 ...
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 ...
When President Donald Trump’s administration sent Columbia a list of demands in March amid negotiations over canceled federal funding, one of the requested changes focused on reshaping the way 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 ...
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 ...