Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 2:07am
Columbia’s once nationally symbolic and controversial LGBTQ lounge is more accessible to the entire student body than ever before.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 2:03am
In the first semester since Columbia College revised its pass/fail policy, 1.8 percent more of the student body chose to use the option than did last year.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 2:00am
While most people enjoyed warm feasts this past Thanksgiving, local soup kitchens and food pantries struggled to provide the little that they could for needy New Yorkers, due to decreased federal funding for emergency food aid.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:57am
As many students caught up with friends and family for last week’s annual turkey binge, some of their peers remained on campus for Thanksgiving.
For the Thanksgiving holiday students have just one day off—less than for Election Day weekend—which made some people stay on campus.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:46am
Since Princeton’s 2001 debut as the first private university to eliminate loans in favor of grants, many institutions have followed suit.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:44am
Tucked away deep in a corner of Low Library, out of sight of most Columbians, the King’s College Room is a treasure trove of some of this University’s most prized documents, portraits, and valued objects from its earliest history.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:40am
The New York City Planning Commission will vote on Columbia’s proposal to rezone Manhattanville and Community Board 9’s plan for the area’s future at a meeting today.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:37am
At a school that prides itself on outreach to both the local and global communities, humanitarian groups have often faced a crunch for funds. Columbia’s overcomplicated system of allocating money to organizations has left many aid groups without the resources they need.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:17am
When viewing Tara Donovan’s installation pieces, it can be hard to tell exactly what you are looking at. At first, that is.
Mon, Nov 26, 2007, 1:11am
Who could ever forget Dorothy’s ruby slippers? All Wizard of Oz fans know them. The truly diehard ones—myself included—went so far as to buy the Payless Shoes version. Yet, as any bookworm knows, in the original books by L. Frank Baum, Dorothy wore the witch’s silver slippers.