News

Marilyne Njuraita, a social work student, hopes to use her degree to support underserved groups in her hometown of Nairobi.

Plus, Michael Zheng (CC'26) takes home Columbia's first national tennis singles title of the NCAA Championships era. 

In this collection, “We’re Alone,” the Columbia professor traces a loose arc from childhood to the pandemic and recent events in Haiti.

Interim President Armstrong writes to the Columbia community about "what it means for our community to actively embody our mission and principles at this turbulent time."

Columbia men's tennis junior and three-time All-American Michael Zheng (CC'26) is leaving Waco with the NCAA singles title.

Lions top Cornell, 17-9, to earn a share of their first Ivy League Championship since 1961.

A study found that, after vaccination, the immune system stockpiles cells for long-term immunity in tissues around the body.

Columbia’s Dian Yang designs CRISPR-based molecular recorders to pinpoint when and how cells metastasize.

In his new book, “In Search of an Open Mind,” Columbia’s president emeritus offers a collection of his speeches, articles, and opinion columns. 

From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.

Ivan Corwin is using math to show that outlier particles do not follow Einstein’s theory. And he’s collaborating with his brother.

Rivka Galchen uses her scientific knowledge in her writing and her teaching.

Luiza Diniz Vilanova (CC’24) is among 32 Americans chosen for the prestigious scholarship.

Columbia Law School faculty discuss legal implications of the outcome of the presidential election.

The Visualizing Science Symposium brought together scientists and artists to explore how the fields illuminate each other.