Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 8:32am
With the primary season looming, ubiquitous “Students for...” political groups are abuzz with plans to attract student votes to the presidential candidates that they champion.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 8:29am
Support for Israel, long a topic of global political debates, has become a focal point of controversy within Columbia’s Pro-Israel community as well, with different groups of students organizing around varying views of how best to advocate for the country.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 8:19am
As controversial events and speakers have dominated the campus calendar in the last semester, political groups that are not affiliated with the University have maintained a near-constant presence on campus.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 8:16am
The College Democrats received confirmation Wednesday from the Democratic National Committee that they will be the first College Democrats chapter in the country to host DNC chairman Howard Dean.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 8:14am
“Packages go to either Memphis, Newark, or Indianapolis and then they bleed off into smaller splits,” FedEx operations manager Ginny Martinez explained above the humming drone of the trucks and conveyor belt at FedEx’s 48th Street facility.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 8:00am
Moments into Barnard orientation, Raemond Grosz, GS, knew he didn’t belong.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 7:56am
Pat Jones has an interesting perspective on keeping a lid on things.
“If you want to call me ‘The Hat Lady,’ that’s fine by me,” said Jones, second vice chair of Community Board 9 and sole nominee for chair next year.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 7:53am
A crumbling facade could cause the identity of the community within the Morningside Gardens Co-op to disintegrate as well, as the community faces the decision to sell their units at market price or watch their building fall apart.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 7:52am
With standardized course evaluations now available on CourseWorks, the University is one step closer to making evaluation results public to more of its students.
Fri, Dec 7, 2007, 6:04am
The New York Civil Liberties Union took the New York Police Department to federal court Thursday on behalf of Arun Wiita, a Columbia University graduate student of Indian descent who was detained by a police officer for taking photographs near a Manhattan subway station in July 2007.