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Columbia has agreed to pay $220 million to the federal government to settle its civil rights investigations and restore a “vast majority” of federal grants terminated in March by President Donald ...
News | Administration Barnard lays off 77 full-time staff members in collegewide ‘restructuring’ The college notified staff members that they were being laid off on Thursday morning, Barnard President ...
Cas Holloway will step down from his position as Columbia’s first chief operating officer at the end of July after a year and a half in the role, acting University President Claire Shipman, CC ’86, ...
News | Academics ‘There’s a lot of fear’: Faculty react to Columbia’s $200 million settlement with Trump administration Spectator spoke to nine faculty members about academic freedom, the federal ...
News | Student Life ‘Profound disappointment’: Columbia alumni express concern following settlement with Trump administration Once proud of their alma mater, some Columbia alumni find themselves ...
Columbia will make a series of sweeping changes intended to combat antisemitism amid its negotiations with the White House to restore $400 million in canceled federal funding, acting University ...
The administration gave Columbia 30 days to appeal—an opportunity the University did not take. Instead, Columbia’s leadership has accepted the narrative that antisemitism is a pervasive, unaddressed ...
Officials from Columbia and the White House met in Washington, D.C., on Thursday to discuss the terms of a deal that would restore most of the $400 million in canceled federal funding to the ...
News | Administration ‘Ending a period of considerable institutional uncertainty’: Shipman addresses $200 million settlement with Trump administration in email to Columbia community The University ...
Welcome back to Campus Speculations, the series where we ask Columbia affiliates their takes on all of the questions you’re dying to know the answers to. In this new episode of Campus Speculations, ...
Months after Cluely, the Columbia student start-up that enables AI to “cheat” in job interviews—and eventually “everything”—went viral, two other Columbia students have launched a tool that also ...
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