Organization:Columbia University
Coat of arms | |
Latin: Universitas Columbiae | |
Former names | King's College (1754–1784) Columbia College (1784–1896)[1]:53–60 |
---|---|
Motto | In lumine Tuo videbimus lumen (Latin) |
Motto in English | In Thy light shall we see light[2] |
Type | Royal (1754–1776) Private research university (1776–present) |
Established | May 25, 1754 |
Academic affiliations |
|
Endowment | $14.35 billion (2021)[3] |
President | Lee Bollinger |
Provost | Mary Cunningham Boyce |
Academic staff | 4,370[4] |
Students | 33,413 (Fall 2019)[5] |
Undergraduates | 6,398 (Fall 2019)[n 1][5] |
Postgraduates | 24,412 (Fall 2019)[5] |
Location | , New York , United States [ ⚑ ] : 40°48′27″N 73°57′43″W / 40.8075°N 73.96194°W |
Campus | Urban, total 299 acres (1.21 km2) |
Newspaper | Columbia Daily Spectator |
|u}}rs | Columbia Blue & White[8] |
Nickname | Columbia Lions |
Sporting affiliations | NCAA Division I FCS – Ivy League EARC MAISA |
Mascot | Roar-ee the Lion |
Website | columbia |
Columbia University (also known as Columbia, and officially as Columbia University in the City of New York) is a private Ivy League research university in New York City . Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Church in Manhattan, Columbia is the oldest institution of higher education in New York and the fifth-oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. It is one of nine colonial colleges founded prior to the Declaration of Independence, seven of which belong to the Ivy League. Columbia is ranked among the top universities in the world by major education publications.[9][10][11]
Columbia was established by royal charter under George II of Great Britain. It was renamed Columbia College in 1784 following the American Revolution, and in 1787 was placed under a private board of trustees headed by former students Alexander Hamilton and John Jay. In 1896, the campus was moved to its current location in Morningside Heights and renamed Columbia University.
Columbia scientists and scholars have played a pivotal role in scientific breakthroughs including brain-computer interface; the laser and maser;[12][13] nuclear magnetic resonance;[14] the first nuclear pile; the first nuclear fission reaction in the Americas; the first evidence for plate tectonics and continental drift;[15][16][17] and much of the initial research and planning for the Manhattan Project during World War II. Columbia is organized into twenty schools, including four undergraduate schools and 16 graduate schools. The university's research efforts include the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory, the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and accelerator laboratories with Big Tech firms such as Amazon and IBM.[18][19] Columbia is a founding member of the Association of American Universities and was the first school in the United States to grant the MD degree.[20] With over 14.5 million volumes, Columbia University Library is the third-largest private research library in the United States.[21]
The university's endowment stands at $14.35 billion in 2021, among the largest of any academic institution. (As of October 2020), Columbia's alumni, faculty, and staff have included: seven Founding Fathers of the United States;[n 2] four U.S. presidents;[n 3] 29 foreign heads of state;[n 4] ten justices of the United States Supreme Court, one of whom currently serves; 100 Nobel laureates; 122 National Academy of Sciences members;[57] 53 living billionaires;[58] 22 Olympic medalists;[59] 33 Academy Award winners; and 125 Pulitzer Prize recipients.
History
Colonial period
Discussions regarding the founding of a college in the Province of New York began as early as 1704, at which time Colonel Lewis Morris wrote to the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts, the missionary arm of the Church of England, persuading the society that New York City was an ideal community in which to establish a college.[60] However, it was not until the founding of the College of New Jersey (renamed Princeton) across the Hudson River in New Jersey that the City of New York seriously considered founding a college.[60] In 1746, an act was passed by the general assembly of New York to raise funds for the foundation of a new college. In 1751, the assembly appointed a commission of ten New York residents, seven of whom were members of the Church of England, to direct the funds accrued by the state lottery towards the foundation of a college.[61]
Classes were initially held in July 1754 and were presided over by the college's first president, Dr. Samuel Johnson.[62]:8–10 Dr. Johnson was the only instructor of the college's first class, which consisted of a mere eight students. Instruction was held in a new schoolhouse adjoining Trinity Church, located on what is now lower Broadway in Manhattan.[63]:3 The college was officially founded on October 31, 1754, as King's College by royal charter of George II, making it the oldest institution of higher learning in the State of New York and the fifth oldest in the United States.[20]
In 1763, Dr. Johnson was succeeded in the presidency by Myles Cooper, a graduate of The Queen's College, Oxford, and an ardent Tory. In the charged political climate of the American Revolution, his chief opponent in discussions at the college was an undergraduate of the class of 1777, Alexander Hamilton.[63]:3 The Irish anatomist, Samuel Clossy, was appointed professor of natural philosophy in October 1765 and later the college's first professor of anatomy in 1767.[64] The American Revolutionary War broke out in 1776, and was catastrophic for the operation of King's College, which suspended instruction for eight years beginning in 1776 with the arrival of the Continental Army. The suspension continued through the military occupation of New York City by British troops until their departure in 1783. The college's library was looted and its sole building requisitioned for use as a military hospital first by American and then British forces.[65][66] Loyalists were forced to abandon their King's College in New York, but some led by Bishop Charles Inglis fled to Windsor, Nova Scotia, where they founded King's Collegiate School and the University of King's College.[67]
18th century
After the Revolution, the college turned to the State of New York in order to restore its vitality, promising to make whatever changes to the school's charter the state might demand.[62]:59 The legislature agreed to assist the college, and on May 1, 1784, it passed "an Act for granting certain privileges to the College heretofore called King's College".[62] The Act created a board of regents to oversee the resuscitation of King's College, and, in an effort to demonstrate its support for the new Republic, the legislature stipulated that "the College within the City of New York heretofore called King's College be forever hereafter called and known by the name of Columbia College",[62] a reference to Columbia, an alternative name for America. The Regents finally became aware of the college's defective constitution in February 1787 and appointed a revision committee, which was headed by John Jay and Alexander Hamilton. In April of that same year, a new charter was adopted for the college granted the power to a separate board of 24 trustees.[68]:65–70
On May 21, 1787, William Samuel Johnson, the son of Dr. Samuel Johnson, was unanimously elected president of Columbia College. Prior to serving at the university, Johnson had participated in the First Continental Congress and been chosen as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention.[69] For a period in the 1790s, with New York City as the federal and state capital and the country under successive Federalist governments, a revived Columbia thrived under the auspices of Federalists such as Hamilton and Jay. Both President George Washington and Vice President John Adams attended the college's commencement on May 6, 1789, as a tribute of honor to the many alumni of the school who had been involved in the American Revolution.[62]:74
19th century to present
In November 1813, the college agreed to incorporate its medical school with The College of Physicians and Surgeons, a new school created by the Regents of New York, forming Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.[68]:53–60 The college's enrollment, structure, and academics stagnated for the majority of the 19th century, with many of the college presidents doing little to change the way that the college functioned. In 1857, the college moved from the King's College campus at Park Place to a primarily Gothic Revival campus on 49th Street and Madison Avenue, where it remained for the next forty years. During the last half of the 19th century, under the leadership of President F.A.P. Barnard, the president that Barnard College is named after, the institution rapidly assumed the shape of a modern university. Barnard College was created in 1889 as a response to the university's refusal to accept women.[70] By this time, the college's investments in New York real estate became a primary source of steady income for the school, mainly owing to the city's expanding population.[63]:5–8 In 1896, university president Seth Low moved the campus from 49th Street to its present location, a more spacious campus in the developing neighborhood of Morningside Heights.[62][71] Under the leadership of Low's successor, Nicholas Murray Butler, who served for over four decades, Columbia rapidly became the nation's major institution for research, setting the "multiversity" model that later universities would adopt.[20] Prior to becoming the president of Columbia University, Butler founded Teachers College, as a school to prepare home economists and manual art teachers for the children of the poor, with philanthropist Grace Hoadley Dodge.[60] Teachers College is currently affiliated as the university's Graduate School of Education.[72]
Research into the atom by faculty members John R. Dunning, I. I. Rabi, Enrico Fermi and Polykarp Kusch placed Columbia's physics department in the international spotlight in the 1940s after the first nuclear pile was built to start what became the Manhattan Project.[73] In 1928, Seth Low Junior College was established by Columbia University in order to mitigate the number of Jewish applicants to Columbia College.[60][74] The college was closed in 1936 due to the adverse effects of the Great Depression and its students were subsequently taught at Morningside Heights, although they did not belong to any college but to the university at large.[75][76]
There was an evening school called University Extension, which taught night classes, for a fee, to anyone willing to attend. In 1947, the program was reorganized as an undergraduate college and designated the School of General Studies in response to the return of GIs after World War II.[77] In 1995, the School of General Studies was again reorganized as a full-fledged liberal arts college for non-traditional students (those who have had an academic break of one year or more, or are pursuing dual-degrees) and was fully integrated into Columbia's traditional undergraduate curriculum.[78] Within the same year, the Division of Special Programs—later the School of Continuing Education, and now the School of Professional Studies—was established to reprise the former role of University Extension.[79] While the School of Professional Studies only offered non-degree programs for lifelong learners and high school students in its earliest stages, it now offers degree programs in a diverse range of professional and inter-disciplinary fields.[80]
In the aftermath of World War II, the discipline of international relations became a major scholarly focus of the university, and in response, the School of International and Public Affairs was founded in 1946, drawing upon the resources of the faculties of political science, economics, and history.[81]
During the 1960s Columbia experienced large-scale student activism, which reached a climax in the spring of 1968 when hundreds of students occupied buildings on campus. The incident forced the resignation of Columbia's president, Grayson Kirk, and the establishment of the University Senate.[82][83]
Though several schools within the university had admitted women for years, Columbia College first admitted women in the fall of 1983, after a decade of failed negotiations with Barnard College, the all-female institution affiliated with the university, to merge the two schools.[84] Barnard College still remains affiliated with Columbia, and all Barnard graduates are issued diplomas signed by the presidents of Columbia University and Barnard College.[85]
During the late 20th century, the university underwent significant academic, structural, and administrative changes as it developed into a major research university. For much of the 19th century, the university consisted of decentralized and separate faculties specializing in Political Science, Philosophy, and Pure Science. In 1979, these faculties were merged into the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.[86] In 1991, the faculties of Columbia College, the School of General Studies, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the School of the Arts, and the School of Professional Studies were merged into the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, leading to the academic integration and centralized governance of these schools. In 2010, the School of International and Public Affairs, which was previously a part of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, became an independent faculty.[87]
Campus
Morningside Heights
The majority of Columbia's graduate and undergraduate studies are conducted in Morningside Heights on Seth Low's late-19th century vision of a university campus where all disciplines could be taught at one location. The campus was designed along Beaux-Arts planning principles by the architects McKim, Mead & White. Columbia's main campus occupies more than six city blocks, or 32 acres (13 ha), in Morningside Heights, New York City, a neighborhood that contains a number of academic institutions. The university owns over 7,800 apartments in Morningside Heights, housing faculty, graduate students, and staff. Almost two dozen undergraduate dormitories (purpose-built or converted) are located on campus or in Morningside Heights. Columbia University has an extensive tunnel system, more than a century old, with the oldest portions predating the present campus. Some of these remain accessible to the public, while others have been cordoned off.[88]
The Nicholas Murray Butler Library, known simply as Butler Library, is the largest single library in the Columbia University Library System, and is one of the largest buildings on the campus. Proposed as "South Hall" by the university's former president Nicholas Murray Butler as expansion plans for Low Memorial Library stalled, the new library was funded by Edward Harkness, benefactor of Yale's residential college system, and designed by his favorite architect, James Gamble Rogers. It was completed in 1934 and renamed for Butler in 1946. The library design is neo-classical in style. Its facade features a row of columns in the Ionic order above which are inscribed the names of great writers, philosophers, and thinkers, most of whom are read by students engaged in the Core Curriculum of Columbia College.[89] (As of 2019), Columbia's library system includes over 14.5 million volumes, making it the eighth largest library system and fifth largest collegiate library system in the United States.[21]
Several buildings on the Morningside Heights campus are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Low Memorial Library, a National Historic Landmark and the centerpiece of the campus, is listed for its architectural significance. Philosophy Hall is listed as the site of the invention of FM radio.[90] Also listed is Pupin Hall, another National Historic Landmark, which houses the physics and astronomy departments. Here the first experiments on the fission of uranium were conducted by Enrico Fermi. The uranium atom was split there ten days after the world's first atom-splitting in Copenhagen, Denmark.[91][92] Other buildings listed include Casa Italiana, the Delta Psi, Alpha Chapter building of St. Anthony Hall, Earl Hall, and the buildings of the affiliated Union Theological Seminary.[93][94][95][96]
A statue by sculptor Daniel Chester French called Alma Mater is centered on the front steps of Low Memorial Library. McKim, Mead & White invited French to build the sculpture in order to harmonize with the larger composition of the court and library in the center of the campus. Draped in an academic gown, the female figure of Alma Mater wears a crown of laurels and sits on a throne. The scroll-like arms of the throne end in lamps, representing sapientia and doctrina. A book signifying knowledge, balances on her lap, and an owl, the attribute of wisdom, is hidden in the folds of her gown. Her right hand holds a scepter composed of four sprays of wheat, terminating with a crown of King's College which refers to Columbia's origin as a royal charter institution in 1754. A local actress named Mary Lawton was said to have posed for parts of the sculpture. The statue was dedicated on September 23, 1903, as a gift of Mr. & Mrs. Robert Goelet, and was originally covered in golden leaf. During the Columbia University protests of 1968 a bomb damaged the sculpture, but it has since been repaired.[97] The small hidden owl on the sculpture is also the subject of many Columbia legends, the main legend being that the first student in the freshmen class to find the hidden owl on the statue will be valedictorian, and that any subsequent Columbia male who finds it will marry a Barnard student, given that Barnard is a women's college.[98][99]
"The Steps", alternatively known as "Low Steps" or the "Urban Beach", are a popular meeting area for Columbia students. The term refers to the long series of granite steps leading from the lower part of campus (South Field) to its upper terrace. With a design inspired by the City Beautiful movement, the steps of Low Library provides Columbia University and Barnard College students, faculty, and staff with a comfortable outdoor platform and space for informal gatherings, events, and ceremonies. McKim's classical facade epitomizes late 19th-century new-classical designs, with its columns and portico marking the entrance to an important structure.[100]
Other campuses
In April 2007, the university purchased more than two-thirds of a 17 acres (6.9 ha) site for a new campus in Manhattanville, an industrial neighborhood to the north of the Morningside Heights campus. Stretching from 125th Street to 133rd Street, Columbia Manhattanville houses buildings for Columbia's Business School, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia School of the Arts, and the Jerome L. Greene Center for Mind, Brain, and Behavior, where research will occur on neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.[101][102] The $7 billion expansion plan included demolishing all buildings, except three that are historically significant (the Studebaker Building, Prentis Hall, and the Nash Building), eliminating the existing light industry and storage warehouses, and relocating tenants in 132 apartments. Replacing these buildings created 6.8 million square feet (630,000 m2) of space for the university. Community activist groups in West Harlem fought the expansion for reasons ranging from property protection and fair exchange for land, to residents' rights.[103][104] Subsequent public hearings drew neighborhood opposition. (As of December 2008), the State of New York's Empire State Development Corporation approved use of eminent domain, which, through declaration of Manhattanville's "blighted" status, gives governmental bodies the right to appropriate private property for public use.[105] On May 20, 2009, the New York State Public Authorities Control Board approved the Manhanttanville expansion plan.[106]
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital is affiliated with the medical schools of both Columbia University and Cornell University. According to U.S. News & World Report's "2020–21 Best Hospitals Honor Roll and Medical Specialties Rankings", it is ranked fourth overall and second among university hospitals.[107] Columbia's medical school has a strategic partnership with New York State Psychiatric Institute, and is affiliated with 19 other hospitals in the U.S. and four hospitals overseas. Health-related schools are located at the Columbia University Medical Center, a 20-acre (8.1 ha) campus located in the neighborhood of Washington Heights, fifty blocks uptown. Other teaching hospitals affiliated with Columbia through the NewYork-Presbyterian network include the Payne Whitney Clinic in Manhattan, and the Payne Whitney Westchester, a psychiatric institute located in White Plains, New York.[108] On the northern tip of Manhattan island (in the neighborhood of Inwood), Columbia owns the 26-acre (11 ha) Baker Field, which includes the Lawrence A. Wien Stadium as well as facilities for field sports, outdoor track, and tennis. There is a third campus on the west bank of the Hudson River, the 157-acre (64 ha) Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and Earth Institute in Palisades, New York. A fourth is the 60-acre (24 ha) Nevis Laboratories in Irvington, New York for the study of particle and motion physics. A satellite site in Paris, France holds classes at Reid Hall.[20]
Sustainability
In 2006, the university established the Office of Environmental Stewardship to initiate, coordinate and implement programs to reduce the university's environmental footprint. The U.S. Green Building Council selected the university's Manhattanville plan for the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Neighborhood Design pilot program. The plan commits to incorporating smart growth, new urbanism and "green" building design principles.[109] Columbia is one of the 2030 Challenge Partners, a group of nine universities in the city of New York that have pledged to reduce their greenhouse emissions by 30% within the next ten years. Columbia University adopts LEED standards for all new construction and major renovations. The university requires a minimum of Silver, but through its design and review process seeks to achieve higher levels. This is especially challenging for lab and research buildings with their intensive energy use; however, the university also uses lab design guidelines that seek to maximize energy efficiency while protecting the safety of researchers.[110]
Every Thursday and Sunday of the month, Columbia hosts a greenmarket where local farmers can sell their produce to residents of the city. In addition, from April to November Hodgson's farm, a local New York gardening center, joins the market bringing a large selection of plants and blooming flowers. The market is one of the many operated at different points throughout the city by the non-profit group GrowNYC.[111] Dining services at Columbia spends 36 percent of its food budget on local products, in addition to serving sustainably harvested seafood and fair trade coffee on campus.[112] Columbia has been rated "B+" by the 2011 College Sustainability Report Card for its environmental and sustainability initiatives.[113]
According to the A. W. Kuchler U.S. potential natural vegetation types, Columbia University would have a dominant vegetation type of Appalachian Oak (104) with a dominant vegetation form of Eastern Hardwood Forest (25).[114]
Transportation
Columbia Transportation is the bus service of the university, operated by Academy Bus Lines. The buses are open to all Columbia faculty, students, Dodge Fitness Center members, and anyone else who holds a Columbia ID card. In addition, all TSC students can ride the buses.[115]
Academics
Undergraduate admissions and financial aid
Columbia University received 60,551 applications for the class of 2025 (entering 2021) and a total of around 2,218 were admitted to the two schools for an overall acceptance rate of 3.66%.[116] Columbia is a racially diverse school, with approximately 52% of all students identifying themselves as persons of color. Additionally, 50% of all undergraduates received grants from Columbia. The average grant size awarded to these students is $46,516.[117] In 2015–2016, annual undergraduate tuition at Columbia was $50,526 with a total cost of attendance of $65,860 (including room and board).[118]
Annual gifts, fund-raising, and an increase in spending from the university's endowment have allowed Columbia to extend generous financial aid packages to qualifying students. On April 11, 2007, Columbia University announced a $400 million donation from media billionaire alumnus John Kluge to be used exclusively for undergraduate financial aid. The donation is among the largest single gifts to higher education.[119] (As of 2008), undergraduates from families with incomes as high as $60,000 a year will have the projected cost of attending the university, including room, board, and academic fees, fully paid for by the university. That same year, the university ended loans for incoming and then-current students who were on financial aid, replacing loans that were traditionally part of aid packages with grants from the university. However, this does not apply to international students, transfer students, visiting students, or students in the School of General Studies.[120] In the fall of 2010, admission to Columbia's undergraduate colleges Columbia College and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science (also known as SEAS or Columbia Engineering) began accepting the Common Application. The policy change made Columbia one of the last major academic institutions and the last Ivy League university to switch to the Common Application.[121]
Scholarships are also given to undergraduate students by the admissions committee. Designations include John W. Kluge Scholars, John Jay Scholars, C. Prescott Davis Scholars, Global Scholars, Egleston Scholars, and Science Research Fellows. Named scholars are selected by the admission committee from first-year applicants. According to Columbia, the first four designated scholars "distinguish themselves for their remarkable academic and personal achievements, dynamism, intellectual curiosity, the originality and independence of their thinking, and the diversity that stems from their different cultures and their varied educational experiences".[122]
In 1919, Columbia established a student application process characterized by The New York Times as "the first modern college application". The application required a photograph of the applicant, the maiden name of the applicant's mother, and the applicant's religious background.[123]
Organization
Columbia Graduate/Professional Schools[124] | |
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College/school | Year founded |
College of Physicians and Surgeons | 1767 |
College of Dental Medicine | 1852 |
Columbia Law School | 1858 |
Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science | 1864 |
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences | 1880 |
Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation | 1881 |
Teachers College, Columbia University (affiliate) | 1887 |
Columbia University School of Nursing | 1892 |
Columbia University School of Social Work | 1898 |
Graduate School of Journalism | 1912 |
Columbia Business School | 1916 |
Mailman School of Public Health | 1922 |
School of International and Public Affairs | 1946 |
School of the Arts | 1965 |
School of Professional Studies | 1995 |
Columbia Climate School | 2021 |
Columbia Undergraduate Schools[125] | |
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College/school | Year founded |
Columbia College, Columbia University | 1754 |
Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science | 1864 |
Barnard College, Columbia University (affiliate) | 1889 |
Columbia University School of General Studies | 1947 |
Columbia University is an independent, privately supported, nonsectarian institution of higher education. Its official corporate name is "The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York". The university's first charter was granted in 1754 by King George II; however, its modern charter was first enacted in 1787 and last amended in 1810 by the New York State Legislature. The university is governed by 24 trustees, customarily including the president, who serves ex officio. The trustees themselves are responsible for choosing their successors. Six of the 24 are nominated from a pool of candidates recommended by the Columbia Alumni Association. Another six are nominated by the board in consultation with the executive committee of the University Senate. The remaining 12, including the president, are nominated by the trustees themselves through their internal processes. The term of office for trustees is six years. Generally, they serve for no more than two consecutive terms. The trustees appoint the president and other senior administrative officers of the university, and review and confirm faculty appointments as required. They determine the university's financial and investment policies, authorize the budget, supervise the endowment, direct the management of the university's real estate and other assets, and otherwise oversee the administration and management of the university.[126]
The University Senate was established by the trustees after a university-wide referendum in 1969. It succeeded to the powers of the University Council, which was created in 1890 as a body of faculty, deans, and other administrators to regulate inter-Faculty affairs and consider issues of university-wide concern. The University Senate is a unicameral body consisting of 107 members drawn from all constituencies of the university. These include the president of the university, the provost, the deans of Columbia College and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, all of whom serve ex officio, and five additional representatives, appointed by the president, from the university's administration. The president serves as the Senate's presiding officer. The Senate is charged with reviewing the educational policies, physical development, budget, and external relations of the university. It oversees the welfare and academic freedom of the faculty and the welfare of students.[127][128][129]
The president of Columbia University, who is selected by the trustees in consultation with the executive committee of the University Senate and who serves at the trustees' pleasure, is the chief executive officer of the university. Assisting the president in administering the university are the provost, the senior executive vice president, the executive vice president for health and biomedical sciences, several other vice presidents, the general counsel, the secretary of the university, and the deans of the faculties, all of whom are appointed by the trustees on the nomination of the president and serve at their pleasure.[126] Lee C. Bollinger became the 19th president of Columbia University on June 1, 2002. As president of the University of Michigan, he played a leading role in the twin Supreme Court cases Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger, which upheld the use of student diversity as a compelling justification for affirmative action in higher education.[130]
Columbia has four official undergraduate colleges: Columbia College, the liberal arts college offering the Bachelor of Arts degree; the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science (also known as SEAS or Columbia Engineering), the engineering and applied science school offering the Bachelor of Science degree; the School of General Studies, the liberal arts college offering the Bachelor of Arts degree to non-traditional students undertaking full- or part-time study; and Barnard College.[131][132] Barnard College is a women's liberal arts college and an academic affiliate in which students receive a Bachelor of Arts degree from Columbia University. Their degrees are signed by the presidents of Columbia University and Barnard College.[133][134] Barnard students are also eligible to cross-register classes that are available through the Barnard Catalogue and alumnae can join the Columbia Alumni Association.[135]
Joint degree programs are available through Union Theological Seminary, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America,[136] as well as through the Juilliard School.[137][138] Teachers College and Barnard College are faculties of the university; both colleges' presidents are deans under the university governance structure.[139] The Columbia University Senate includes faculty and student representatives from Teachers College and Barnard College who serve two-year terms; all senators are accorded full voting privileges regarding matters impacting the entire university. Teachers College is an affiliated, financially independent graduate school with their own Board of Trustees.[128][129] Pursuant to an affiliation agreement, Columbia is given the authority to confer "appropriate degrees and diplomas" to the graduates of Teachers College. The degrees are signed by presidents of Teachers College and Columbia University.[140][141][139] Columbia's General Studies school also has joint undergraduate programs available through University College London,[142] Sciences Po,[143] City University of Hong Kong,[144] Trinity College Dublin,[145] and the Juilliard School.[146]
The university also has several Columbia Global Centers, in Amman, Beijing, Istanbul, Mumbai , Nairobi, Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Santiago, and Tunis.[147]
International partnerships
Columbia students can study abroad for a semester or a year at partner institutions such as Sciences Po,[148] École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS), École normale supérieure (ENS), Panthéon-Sorbonne University, King's College London, London School of Economics, and the University of Warwick. Select students can study at either the University of Oxford or the University of Cambridge for a year if approved by both Columbia and either Oxford or Cambridge.[149]
Rankings
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Columbia University is ranked 2nd overall among U.S. national universities and 6th globally for 2021 by U.S. News & World Report.[161] QS University Rankings listed Columbia as 5th in the United States.[162] Ranked 15th among U.S. colleges for 2020 by The Wall Street Journal and Times Higher Education, in recent years it has been ranked as high as 2nd.[163] Individual colleges and schools were also nationally ranked by U.S. News & World Report for its 2021 edition. Columbia Law School was ranked 4th, the Mailman School of Public Health 4th, the School of Social Work tied for 3rd, Columbia Business School 8th, the College of Physicians and Surgeons tied for 6th for research (and tied for 31st for primary care), the School of Nursing tied for 11th in the master's program and tied for 1st in the doctorate nursing program, and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science (graduate) was ranked tied for 14th.[164]
In 2021, Columbia was ranked 7th in the world (6th in the United States) by Academic Ranking of World Universities, 6th in the world by U.S. News & World Report, 19th in the world by QS World University Rankings, and 11th globally by Times Higher Education World University Rankings.[165] It was ranked in the first tier of American research universities, along with Harvard, MIT, and Stanford, in the 2019 report from the Center for Measuring University Performance.[166]
Columbia's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation was ranked the 2nd most admired graduate program by Architectural Record in 2020.[167]
In 2015, Columbia University was ranked the first in the state by average professor salaries.[168] In 2011, the Mines ParisTech: Professional Ranking of World Universities ranked Columbia 3rd best university for forming CEOs in the US and 12th worldwide.
Research
Columbia is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity".[170] Columbia was the first North American site where the uranium atom was split. The College of Physicians and Surgeons played a central role in developing the modern understanding of neuroscience with the publication of Principles of Neural Science, described by historian of science Katja Huenther as the "neuroscience 'bible' ".[171] The book was written by a team of Columbia researchers that included Nobel Prize winner Eric Kandel, James H. Schwartz, and Thomas Jessell. Columbia was the birthplace of FM radio and the laser.[172] The first brain-computer interface capable of translating brain signals into speech was developed by neuroengineers at Columbia.[173][174][175] The MPEG-2 algorithm of transmitting high quality audio and video over limited bandwidth was developed by Dimitris Anastassiou, a Columbia professor of electrical engineering. Biologist Martin Chalfie was the first to introduce the use of Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) in labeling cells in intact organisms.[176] Other inventions and products related to Columbia include Sequential Lateral Solidification (SLS) technology for making LCDs, System Management Arts (SMARTS), Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) (which is used for audio, video, chat, instant messaging and whiteboarding), pharmacopeia, Macromodel (software for computational chemistry), a new and better recipe for glass concrete, Blue LEDs, and Beamprop (used in photonics).[177]
Columbia scientists have been credited with about 175 new inventions in the health sciences each year.[177] More than 30 pharmaceutical products based on discoveries and inventions made at Columbia reached the market. These include Remicade (for arthritis), Reopro (for blood clot complications), Xalatan (for glaucoma), Benefix, Latanoprost (a glaucoma treatment), shoulder prosthesis, homocysteine (testing for cardiovascular disease), and Zolinza (for cancer therapy).[178] Columbia Technology Ventures (formerly Science and Technology Ventures), (As of 2008), manages some 600 patents and more than 250 active license agreements.[178] Patent-related deals earned Columbia more than $230 million in the 2006 fiscal year, according to the university, more than any university in the world.[179] Columbia owns many unique research facilities, such as the Columbia Institute for Tele-Information dedicated to telecommunications and the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which is an astronomical observatory affiliated with NASA.
Military and veteran enrollment
Columbia is a long-standing participant of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs Yellow Ribbon Program, allowing eligible veterans to pursue a Columbia undergraduate degree regardless of socioeconomic status for over 70 years.[180] As a part of the Eisenhower Leader Development Program (ELDP) in partnership with the United States Military Academy at West Point, Columbia is the only school in the Ivy League to offer a graduate degree program in organizational psychology to aid military officers in tactical decision making and strategic management.[181]
Awards
Several prestigious awards are administered by Columbia University, most notably the Pulitzer Prize and the Bancroft Prize in history.[182][183] Other prizes, which are awarded by the Graduate School of Journalism, include the Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award, the National Magazine Awards, the Maria Moors Cabot Prizes, the John Chancellor Award, and the Lukas Prizes, which include the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize and Mark Lynton History Prize.[184] The university also administers the Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize, which is considered an important precursor to the Nobel Prize, 51 of its 101 recipients having gone on to win either a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine or Nobel Prize in Chemistry as of October 2018; the W. Alden Spencer Award; the Vetlesen Prize, which is known as the Nobel Prize of geology; the Japan-U.S. Friendship Commission Prize for the Translation of Japanese Literature, the oldest such award; the Edwin Howard Armstrong award; the Calderone Prize in public health; and the Ditson Conductor's Award.[185][186][187][188][189][190][191]
Student life
Students
Undergraduate | Postgraduate | |
---|---|---|
Asian/Pacific Islander | 16.6% | 11.6% |
Black | 6.7% | 4.5% |
Hispanic | 14.0% | 6.2% |
American Indian/Alaskan Native | 0.4% | 0.1% |
Two or more races | 5.7% | 2.0% |
White | 33.9% | 29.5% |
Non-residents | 18.3% | 40.7% |
Unknown | 4.4% | 5.5% |
In 2020, Columbia University's student population was 31,455 (8,842 students in undergraduate programs and 22,613 in postgraduate programs), with 45% of the student population identifying themselves as a minority.[192] Twenty-six percent of students at Columbia have family incomes below $60,000. 16% of students at Columbia receive Federal Pell Grants,[194] which mostly go to students whose family incomes are below $40,000. Seventeen percent of students are the first member of their family to attend a four-year college.[195]
On-campus housing is guaranteed for all four years as an undergraduate. Columbia College and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science (also known as SEAS or Columbia Engineering) share housing in the on-campus residence halls. First-year students usually live in one of the large residence halls situated around South Lawn: Carman Hall, Furnald Hall, Hartley Hall, John Jay Hall, or Wallach Hall (originally Livingston Hall). Upperclassmen participate in a room selection process, wherein students can pick to live in a mix of either corridor- or apartment-style housing with their friends. The Columbia University School of General Studies, Barnard College and graduate schools have their own apartment-style housing in the surrounding neighborhood.[196]
Columbia University is home to many fraternities, sororities, and co-educational Greek organizations. Approximately 10–15% of undergraduate students are associated with Greek life.[197] Many Barnard women also join Columbia sororities. There has been a Greek presence on campus since the establishment in 1836 of the Delta chapter of Alpha Delta Phi.[198] The InterGreek Council is the self-governing student organization that provides guidelines and support to its member organizations within each of the three councils at Columbia, the Interfraternity Council, Panhellenic Council, and Multicultural Greek Council. The three council presidents bring their affiliated chapters together once a month to meet as one Greek community. The InterGreek Council meetings provide opportunity for member organizations to learn from each other, work together and advocate for community needs.[199]
Publications
The Columbia Daily Spectator is the nation's second-oldest continuously operating daily student newspaper;[200] and The Blue and White,[201] a monthly literary magazine established in 1890, discusses campus life and local politics in print and on its daily blog, dubbed Bwog. The Morningside Post is a student-run multimedia news publication. Its content: student-written investigative news, international affairs analysis, opinion, and satire.
Political publications include The Current, a journal of politics, culture and Jewish Affairs;[202] the Columbia Political Review, the multi-partisan political magazine of the Columbia Political Union;[203] and AdHoc, which denotes itself as the "progressive" campus magazine and deals largely with local political issues and arts events.[204]
Columbia Magazine is the alumni magazine of Columbia, serving all 340,000+ of the university's alumni. Arts and literary publications include The Columbia Review, the nation's oldest college literary magazine;[205] Columbia, a nationally regarded literary journal; the Columbia Journal of Literary Criticism;[206] and The Mobius Strip, an online arts and literary magazine.[207] Inside New York is an annual guidebook to New York City, written, edited, and published by Columbia undergraduates. Through a distribution agreement with Columbia University Press, the book is sold at major retailers and independent bookstores.[208]
Columbia is home to numerous undergraduate academic publications. The Columbia Undergraduate Science Journal prints original science research in its two annual publications.[209] The Journal of Politics & Society is a journal of undergraduate research in the social sciences;[210] Publius is an undergraduate journal of politics established in 2008 and published biannually;[211] the Columbia East Asia Review allows undergraduates throughout the world to publish original work on China, Japan, Korea, Tibet, and Vietnam and is supported by the Weatherhead East Asian Institute;[212] The Birch is an undergraduate journal of Eastern European and Eurasian culture that is the first national student-run journal of its kind;[213] the Columbia Economics Review is the undergraduate economic journal on research and policy supported by the Columbia Economics Department; and the Columbia Science Review is a science magazine that prints general interest articles and faculty profiles.[214]
Humor publications on Columbia's campus include The Fed, a triweekly satire and investigative newspaper, and the Jester of Columbia.[215][216] Other publications include The Columbian, the undergraduate colleges' annually published yearbook;[217] the Gadfly, a biannual journal of popular philosophy produced by undergraduates;[218] and Rhapsody in Blue, an undergraduate urban studies magazine.[219] Professional journals published by academic departments at Columbia University include Current Musicology and The Journal of Philosophy.[220][221] During the spring semester, graduate students in the Journalism School publish The Bronx Beat, a bi-weekly newspaper covering the South Bronx.
Founded in 1961 under the auspices of Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, the Columbia Journalism Review (CJR) examines day-to-day press performance as well as the forces that affect that performance. The magazine is published six times a year.[222]
Broadcasting
Columbia is home to two pioneers in undergraduate campus radio broadcasting, WKCR-FM and CTV. Many undergraduates are also involved with Barnard's radio station, WBAR. WKCR, the student run radio station that broadcasts to the Tri-state area, claims to be the oldest FM radio station in the world, owing to the university's affiliation with Major Edwin Armstrong. The station went operational on July 18, 1939, from a 400-foot antenna tower in Alpine, New Jersey, broadcasting the first FM transmission in the world. Initially, WKCR was not a radio station, but an organization concerned with the technology of radio communications. As membership grew, however, the nascent club turned its efforts to broadcasting. Armstrong helped the students in their early efforts, donating a microphone and turntables when they designed their first makeshift studio in a dorm room.[223] The station has its studios on the second floor of Alfred Lerner Hall on the Morningside campus with its main transmitter tower at 4 Times Square in Midtown Manhattan. Columbia Television (CTV) is the nation's second oldest student television station and the home of CTV News, a weekly live news program produced by undergraduate students.[224][225]
Debate and Model UN
The Philolexian Society is a literary and debating club founded in 1802, making it the oldest student group at Columbia, as well as the third oldest collegiate literary society in the country.[226] The society annually administers the Joyce Kilmer Memorial Bad Poetry Contest.[227] The Columbia Parliamentary Debate Team competes in tournaments around the country as part of the American Parliamentary Debate Association, and hosts both high school and college tournaments on Columbia's campus, as well as public debates on issues affecting the university.[228]
The Columbia International Relations Council and Association (CIRCA), oversees Columbia's Model United Nations activities. CIRCA hosts college and high school Model UN conferences, hosts speakers influential in international politics to speak on campus, and trains students from underprivileged schools in New York in Model UN.[229]
Technology and entrepreneurship
Columbia is a top supplier of young engineering entrepreneurs for New York City. Over the past 20 years, graduates of Columbia established over 100 technology companies.[230]
The Columbia University Organization of Rising Entrepreneurs (CORE) was founded in 1999. The student-run group aims to foster entrepreneurship on campus. Each year CORE hosts dozens of events, including talks, #StartupColumbia, a conference and venture competition for $250,000, and Ignite@CU, a weekend for undergrads interested in design, engineering, and entrepreneurship. Notable speakers include Peter Thiel, Jack Dorsey,[231] Alexis Ohanian, Drew Houston, and Mark Cuban. As of 2006, CORE had awarded graduate and undergraduate students over $100,000 in seed capital.
CampusNetwork, an on-campus social networking site called Campus Network that preceded Facebook, was created and popularized by Columbia engineering student Adam Goldberg in 2003. Mark Zuckerberg later asked Goldberg to join him in Palo Alto to work on Facebook, but Goldberg declined the offer.[232] The Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science offers a minor in Technical Entrepreneurship through its Center for Technology, Innovation, and Community Engagement. SEAS' entrepreneurship activities focus on community building initiatives in New York and worldwide, made possible through partners such as Microsoft Corporation.[233]
On June 14, 2010, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg launched the NYC Media Lab to promote innovations in New York's media industry. Situated at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, the lab is a consortium of Columbia University, New York University, and New York City Economic Development Corporation acting to connect companies with universities in new technology research. The Lab is modeled after similar ones at MIT and Stanford, and was established with a $250,000 grant from the New York City Economic Development Corporation.[234]
Athletics
- [235] A member institution of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in Division I FCS, Columbia fields varsity teams in 29 sports and is a member of the Ivy League. The football Lions play home games at the 17,000-seat Robert K. Kraft Field at Lawrence A. Wien Stadium. The Baker Athletics Complex also includes facilities for baseball, softball, soccer, lacrosse, field hockey, tennis, track, and rowing, as well as the new Campbell Sports Center, which opened in January 2013. The basketball, fencing, swimming & diving, volleyball, and wrestling programs are based at the Dodge Physical Fitness Center on the main campus.
Former students include Baseball Hall of Famers Lou Gehrig and Eddie Collins, football Hall of Famer Sid Luckman, Marcellus Wiley, and world champion women's weightlifter Karyn Marshall.[236][237] On May 17, 1939, fledgling NBC broadcast a doubleheader between the Columbia Lions and the Princeton Tigers at Columbia's Baker Field, making it the first televised regular athletic event in history.[238][239]
Columbia University athletics has a long history, with many accomplishments in athletic fields. In 1870, Columbia played against Rutgers University in the second intercollegiate rugby football game in the history of the sport. Eight years later, Columbia crew won the famed Henley Royal Regatta in the first-ever defeat for an English crew rowing in English waters. In 1900, Olympian and Columbia College student Maxie Long set the first official world record in the 400 meters with a time of 47.8 seconds. In 1983, Columbia men's soccer went 18–0 and was ranked first in the nation, but lost to Indiana 1–0 in double overtime in the NCAA championship game; nevertheless, the team went further toward the NCAA title than any Ivy League soccer team in history.[240] The football program unfortunately is best known for its record of futility set during the 1980s: between 1983 and 1988, the team lost 44 games in a row, which is still the record for the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision. The streak was broken on October 8, 1988, with a 16–13 victory over arch-rival Princeton University. That was the Lions' first victory at Wien Stadium, which had been opened during the losing streak and was already four years old.[241] A new tradition has developed with the Liberty Cup. The Liberty Cup is awarded annually to the winner of the football game between Fordham and Columbia Universities, two of the only three NCAA Division I football teams in New York City.[242]
World Leaders Forum
Established in 2003 by university president Lee C. Bollinger, the World Leaders Forum at Columbia University provides the opportunity for undergraduate and graduate students alike to listen to world leaders in government, religion, industry, finance, and academia. The World Leaders Forum is a year-around event series that strives to provide a platform for uninhibited speech among nations and cultures, while educating students about problems and progress around the globe.[243]
Past forum speakers include former president of the United States Bill Clinton, the prime minister of India Atal Bihari Vajpayee, former president of Ghana John Agyekum Kufuor, president of Afghanistan Hamid Karzai, prime minister of Russia Vladimir Putin, president of the Republic of Mozambique Joaquim Alberto Chissano, president of the Republic of Bolivia Carlos Diego Mesa Gisbert, president of the Republic of Romania Ion Iliescu, president of the Republic of Latvia Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, the first female president of Finland Tarja Halonen, President Yudhoyono of Indonesia, President Pervez Musharraf of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, Iraq President Jalal Talabani, the 14th Dalai Lama, president of the Islamic Republic of Iran Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, financier George Soros, Mayor of New York City Michael R. Bloomberg, President Václav Klaus of the Czech Republic, President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of Argentina, former Secretary-General of the United Nations Kofi Annan, and Al Gore.[244]
Other
The Columbia University Orchestra was founded by composer Edward MacDowell in 1896, and is the oldest continually operating university orchestra in the United States. Undergraduate student composers at Columbia may choose to become involved with Columbia New Music, which sponsors concerts of music written by undergraduate students from all of Columbia's schools.[245] The Notes and Keys, the oldest a cappella group at Columbia, was founded in 1909.[246] There are a number of performing arts groups at Columbia dedicated to producing student theater, including the Columbia Players, King's Crown Shakespeare Troupe (KCST), Columbia Musical Theater Society (CMTS), NOMADS (New and Original Material Authored and Directed by Students), LateNite Theatre, Columbia University Performing Arts League (CUPAL), Black Theatre Ensemble (BTE), sketch comedy group Chowdah, and improvisational troupes Alfred and Fruit Paunch.[247]
The Columbia Queer Alliance is the central Columbia student organization that represents the bisexual, lesbian, gay, transgender, and questioning student population. It is the oldest gay student organization in the world, founded as the Student Homophile League in 1967 by students including lifelong activist Stephen Donaldson.[248][249]
Columbia University campus military groups include the U.S. Military Veterans of Columbia University and Advocates for Columbia ROTC. In the 2005–06 academic year, the Columbia Military Society, Columbia's student group for ROTC cadets and Marine officer candidates, was renamed the Hamilton Society for "students who aspire to serve their nation through the military in the tradition of Alexander Hamilton".[250]
The largest student service organization at Columbia is Community Impact (CI). Founded in 1981, CI provides food, clothing, shelter, education, job training, and companionship for residents in its surrounding communities. CI consists of about 950 Columbia University student volunteers participating in 25 community service programs, which serve more than 8,000 people each year.[251]
Columbia has several secret societies, including St. Anthony Hall, which was founded at the university in 1847, and two senior societies, the Nacoms and Sachems.[252][253]
Traditions
Orgo Night
In one of the school's longest-lasting traditions, begun in 1975, at midnight before the Organic Chemistry exam—often the first day of final exams—the Columbia University Marching Band invaded and briefly occupied the main undergraduate reading room in Butler Library to distract and entertain studying students with some forty-five minutes of raucous jokes and music, beginning and ending with the singing of the school's fight song, "Roar, Lion, Roar".[254] After the main show before a crowd that routinely began filling the room well before the announced midnight start time, the Band led a procession to several campus locations, including the residential quadrangle of Barnard College for more music and temporary relief from the stress of last-minute studying.
In December 2016, following several years of complaints from students who said that some Orgo Night scripts and advertising posters were offensive to minority groups,[255] as well as a The New York Times article on the Band's crass treatment of sexual assault on campus,[256] University administrators banned the Marching Band from performing its Orgo Night show in the traditional Butler Library location. Protests and allegations of censorship[257] followed, but University President Lee Bollinger said that complaints and publicity about the shows had "nothing to do with" the prohibition.[258] The Band instead performed—at midnight, as usual—outside the main entrance of Butler Library.
The Band's official alumni organization, the Columbia University Band Alumni Association, registered protests with the administration,[259] and an ad hoc group of alumni writing under the name "A. Hamiltonius" published a series of pamphlets addressing their dissatisfaction with the ban,[260] but at the end of the spring 2017 semester the university administration held firm,[261] prompting the Marching Band to again stage its show outside the building. For Orgo Night December 2017, Band members quietly infiltrated the library with their musical instruments during the evening and popped up at midnight to perform the show inside despite the ban.[262] Prior to the spring 2018 exam period, the administration warned the group's leaders against a repeat and restated the injunction, warning of sanctions; the Band again staged its Orgo Night show in front of the library.[263]
Tree Lighting and Yule Log ceremonies
The campus Tree Lighting ceremony was inaugurated in 1998. It celebrates the illumination of the medium-sized trees lining College Walk in front of Kent Hall and Hamilton Hall on the east end and Dodge Hall and Pulitzer Hall on the west, just before finals week in early December. The lights remain on until February 28. Students meet at the sun-dial for free hot chocolate, performances by a cappella groups, and speeches by the university president and a guest.[264]
Immediately following the College Walk festivities is one of Columbia's older holiday traditions, the lighting of the Yule Log. The Christmas ceremony dates to a period prior to the American Revolutionary War, but lapsed before being revived by President Nicholas Murray Butler in 1910. A troop of students dressed as Continental Army soldiers carry the eponymous log from the sun-dial to the lounge of John Jay Hall, where it is lit amid the singing of seasonal carols. The Christmas ceremony is accompanied by a reading of A Visit From St. Nicholas by Clement Clarke Moore and Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus by Francis Pharcellus Church.[265]
The Varsity Show
The Varsity Show is an annual musical written by and for students and was established in 1894, making it one of Columbia's oldest traditions. Past writers and directors have included Columbians Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein, Lorenz Hart, I.A.L. Diamond, Herman Wouk and Eric Garcetti. The show has one of the largest operating budgets of all university events.[266]
Notable people
Alumni
The university has graduated many notable alumni, including five Founding Fathers of the United States, an author of the United States Constitution and a member of the Committee of Five. Three United States presidents have attended Columbia,[267] as well as ten Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States, including three Chief Justices. (As of 2011), 125 Pulitzer Prize winners and 39 Oscar winners have attended Columbia.[268] (As of 2006), there were 101 National Academy members who were alumni.[269]
In a 2016 ranking of universities worldwide with respect to living graduates who are billionaires, Columbia ranked second, after Harvard.[270][271]
Former U.S. Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt attended the law school. Other political figures educated at Columbia include former U.S President Barack Obama,[272] Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Ruth Bader Ginsburg,[273] former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright,[274] former chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank Alan Greenspan,[275] U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, and U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli Jr.[276] The university has also educated 29 foreign heads of state, including president of Georgia Mikheil Saakashvili, president of East Timor Jose Ramos Horta, president of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves and other historical figures such as Wellington Koo, Radovan Karadžić, Gaston Eyskens, and T. V. Soong. The author of India's constitution Dr. B. R. Ambedkar was also an alumnus of Columbia.[277]
Alumni of Columbia have occupied top positions in Wall Street and the rest of the business world. Notable members of the Astor family[278][279] attended Columbia, while other business graduates include investor Warren Buffett,[280] former CEO of PBS and NBC Larry Grossman,[281] chairman of Wal-Mart S. Robson Walton,[282] Bain Capital Co-Managing Partner, Jonathan Lavine,[283][284] Thomson Reuters CEO Tom Glocer,[285][286] and AllianceBernstein Chairman and CEO Lewis A. Sanders.[287] CEO's of top Fortune 500 companies include James P. Gorman of Morgan Stanley,[288] Robert J. Stevens of Lockheed Martin,[289] Philippe Dauman of Viacom,[290] Robert Bakish of ViacomCBS,[291][292] Ursula Burns of Xerox,[293] Devin Wenig of EBay,[294] Vikram Pandit of Citigroup,[295] Ralph Izzo of Public Service Enterprise Group,[296][297] Gail Koziara Boudreaux of Anthem,[298] and Frank Blake of The Home Depot.[299] Notable labor organizer and women's educator Louise Leonard McLaren received her degree of Master of Arts from Columbia.[300]
In science and technology, Columbia alumni include: founder of IBM Herman Hollerith;[301] inventor of FM radio Edwin Armstrong;[302] Francis Mechner; integral in development of the nuclear submarine Hyman Rickover;[303] founder of Google China Kai-Fu Lee;[304] scientists Stephen Jay Gould,[305] Robert Millikan,[306] Helium–neon laser inventor Ali Javan and Mihajlo Pupin;[307] chief-engineer of the New York City Subway, William Barclay Parsons;[308] philosophers Irwin Edman[309] and Robert Nozick;[310] economist Milton Friedman;[311] psychologist Harriet Babcock;[312] and sociologists Lewis A. Coser and Rose Laub Coser.[313][314]
Many Columbia alumni have gone on to renowned careers in the arts, including composers Richard Rodgers,[315] Oscar Hammerstein II,[316] Lorenz Hart,[317] and Art Garfunkel;[318] and painter Georgia O'Keeffe.[319] Five United States Poet Laureates received their degrees from Columbia. Columbia alumni have made an indelible mark in the field of American poetry and literature, with such people as Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg, pioneers of the Beat Generation;[320] and Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, seminal figures in the Harlem Renaissance,[321][322] all having attended the university. Other notable writers who attended Columbia include authors Isaac Asimov,[323] J.D. Salinger,[324] Upton Sinclair,[325] Ursula K. Le Guin,[326] Danielle Valore Evans,[327] and Hunter S. Thompson.[328]
University alumni have also been very prominent in the film industry, with 33 alumni and former students winning a combined 43 Academy Awards ((As of 2011)).[268] Some notable Columbia alumni that have gone on to work in film include directors Sidney Lumet (12 Angry Men)[329] and Kathryn Bigelow (The Hurt Locker),[330] screenwriters Howard Koch (Casablanca)[331] and Joseph L. Mankiewicz (All About Eve),[332] and actors James Cagney[333] and Ed Harris.[334]
Barack Obama: 44th President of the United States; United States Senator from Illinois; Nobel laureate — Columbia College
Theodore Roosevelt: 26th President of the United States; Nobel laureate – Columbia Law School
B. R. Ambedkar: Founding Father of India; architect of the Constitution of India; First Minister of Law and Justice — Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Isidor Isaac Rabi: Nobel Laureate; discovered nuclear magnetic resonance — Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Julian S. Schwinger: Nobel laureate; pioneer of quantum field theory — Columbia College, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Milton Friedman: Nobel laureate, leading member of the Chicago school of economics — Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Simon Kuznets: Nobel laureate; invented concept of GDP; Milton Friedman's doctoral advisor — School of General Studies, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Warren Buffett: CEO of Berkshire Hathaway; one of the world's wealthiest people — Columbia Business School
Herman Hollerith: inventor; co-founder of IBM – School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Allen Ginsberg: poet; founder of the Beat Generation — Columbia College
Isaac Asimov: science fiction writer; biochemist — School of General Studies, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Amelia Earhart: first female aviator to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean — School of General Studies
Faculty
As of 2021, Columbia employs 4,381 faculty, including 70 members of the National Academy of Sciences,[335] 178 members of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,[336] and 65 members of the National Academy of Medicine.[337] In total, the Columbia faculty has included 52 Nobel laureates, 12 National Medal of Science recipients,[338] and 32 National Academy of Engineering members.[339]
Columbia University faculty played particularly important roles during World War II and the creation of the New Deal under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who attended Columbia Law School. The three core members of Roosevelt's Brain Trust: Adolf A. Berle, Raymond Moley, and Rexford Tugwell, were law professors at Columbia.[340] The Statistical Research Group, which used statistics to analyze military problems during World War II, was composed of Columbia researchers and faculty including George Stigler and Milton Friedman.[341] Columbia faculty and researchers, including Enrico Fermi, Leo Szilard, Eugene T. Booth, John R. Dunning, George B. Pegram, Walter Zinn, Chien-Shiung Wu, Francis G. Slack, Harold Urey, Herbert L. Anderson, and Isidor Isaac Rabi, also played a significant role during the early phases of the Manhattan Project.[342]
Following the rise of Nazi Germany, the exiled Institute for Social Research at Goethe University Frankfurt would affiliate itself with Columbia from 1934 to 1950.[343] It was during this period that thinkers including Theodor Adorno, Max Horkheimer, and Herbert Marcuse wrote and published some of the most seminal works of the Frankfurt School, including Reason and Revolution, Dialectic of Enlightenment, and Eclipse of Reason.[344]
Notable figures that have served as the president of Columbia University include 34th President of the United States Dwight D. Eisenhower, 4th Vice President of the United States George Clinton, Founding Father and U.S. Senator from Connecticut William Samuel Johnson, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Nicholas Murray Butler, and First Amendment scholar Lee Bollinger.[28]
See also
Note: This topic belongs to "New York City " portal
- Columbia Glacier, a glacier in Alaska, U.S., named for Columbia University
- Columbia MM, a text-based mail client developed at Columbia University
- Columbia Non-neutral Torus, a small stellarator at the Columbia University Plasma Physics Laboratory
- Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center, an album of electronic music released in 1961
- Columbia Revolt, a black-and-white 1968 documentary film
- Columbia Scholastic Press Association
- Columbia School of Linguistics
- Columbia Spelling Board, a historic etymological organization
- Columbia University Partnership for International Development
- Columbia Encyclopedia
- Mount Columbia, a mountain in Colorado, U.S., named for Columbia University
- Nutellagate, a controversy surrounding high Nutella consumption at Columbia University
- The Strawberry Statement, a non-fiction account of the 1968 protests
- Columbia University in popular culture
Notes
- ↑ This figure does not include the Columbia University School of General Studies, which, though it is technically an undergraduate school of the university, is generally not counted as such when calculating student body size and admission rates.[6][7] Including General Studies students, the university overall would have an undergraduate enrollment of 9,001 students for 2019.
- ↑ Founding Fathers include five alumni: Alexander Hamilton,[22] John Jay,[23] Robert R. Livingston,[24] Egbert Benson,[25] and Gouverneur Morris.[26] Additionally, Founding Fathers George Clinton[27] and William Samuel Johnson[28] served as presidents of the university.
- ↑ Three presidents have attended Columbia: Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Barack Obama. Dwight D. Eisenhower served as the president of the university from 1948 to 1953.
- ↑ Alumni who served as foreign heads of state include: Muhammad Fadhel al-Jamali,[29] Kassim al-Rimawi,[30] Giuliano Amato,[31] Hafizullah Amin,[32] Nahas Angula,[33] Marek Belka,[34] Fernando Henrique Cardoso,[35] Chen Gongbo,[36] Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz,[37] Gaston Eyskens,[38] Mark Eyskens,[39] Ashraf Ghani,[40] Jose Ramos Horta,[41] Toomas Hendrik Ilves,[42] Wellington Koo,[43] Lee Huan,[44] Benjamin Mkapa,[45] Mohammad Musa Shafiq,[46] Nwafor Orizu,[47] Mikhail Saakashvili,[48] Juan Bautista Sacasa,[49] Salim Ahmed Salim,[50] Ernesto Samper,[51] T. V. Soong,[52] Sun Fo,[53] C. R. Swart,[54] Tang Shaoyi,[55] Abdul Zahir,[51] and Zhou Ziqi.[56]
References
- ↑ Moore, Nathanal Fischer (1846). A Historical Sketch of Columbia. New York, New York: Columbia University Press.
- ↑ Psalms 36:9
- ↑ As of June 30, 2021."Consolidated Financial Statements; June 30, 2021 and 2020". Columbia University. October 20, 2021. p. 25. https://www.finance.columbia.edu/sites/default/files/content/Finance%20Documents/Financial%20Reports/Columbia%20Consolidated%20Financials%20and%20Footnotes%20FY21%20FINAL.pdf.
- ↑ "Full-time Faculty Distribution by School/Division, Fall 2009–2019". Columbia University. https://provost.columbia.edu/sites/default/files/content/Institutional%20Research/Statistical%20Abstract/opir_faculty_history.pdf.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 "Fall Headcount Enrollment by School, 2009–2018". Columbia University Office of Provost. May 23, 2019. https://provost.columbia.edu/sites/default/files/content/Institutional%20Research/Statistical%20Abstract/opir_enrollment_history.pdf.
- ↑ "Columbia University". 2020. https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/columbia-university-2707#:~:text=Columbia%20University%20is%20a%20private,campus%20size%20is%2036%20acres..
- ↑ "How many students attend Columbia? | Columbia Undergraduate Admissions". https://undergrad.admissions.columbia.edu/ask/faq/question/2512.
- ↑ "Colors | Identity Guidelines". https://visualidentity.columbia.edu/content/colors-1.
- ↑ "National University Rankings". https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/national-universities.
- ↑ "Academic Ranking of World Universities". http://www.shanghairanking.com/ARWU2018.html.
- ↑ "Best Global Universities Rankings". October 30, 2018. https://www.usnews.com/education/best-global-universities/rankings.
- ↑ Nykolaiszyn, J. M. (2009-06-01). "Curating Oral Histories: From Interview to Archive". Oral History Review 36 (2): 302–304. doi:10.1093/ohr/ohp054. ISSN 0094-0798.
- ↑ Taylor, Nick (2000). Laser : the inventor, the Nobel laureate, and the thirty-year patent war. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-684-83515-0. OCLC 44594104.
- ↑ "Isidor Isaac Rabi" (in en). https://www.aps.org/programs/outreach/history/historicsites/rabi.cfm.
- ↑ N. D. Opdyke, et al., "Paleomagnetic study of Antarctic deep-sea cores", Science 154(1966): 349–357.
- ↑ Heirtzler, J. R., et al., "Marine magnetic anomalies, geomagnetic field reversals, and motions of the ocean floor and continents", Journal of Geophysical Research, 73(1968): 2119–2136.
- ↑ Pitman, W. and M. Talwani, "Sea-floor spreading in the North Atlantic", GSA Bulletin, 83(1972): 619–646.
- ↑ "Columbia Engineering and Amazon Announce Creation of New York AI Research Center" (in en). 2020-09-21. https://www.engineering.columbia.edu/news/columbia-engineering-and-amazon-announce-creation-new-york-ai-research-center.
- ↑ "Columbia University and IBM Establish New Center to Accelerate Innovation in Blockchain and Data Transparency | Columbia Engineering". https://engineering.columbia.edu/press-releases/columbia-ibm-center-blockchain-data-transparency.
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 20.2 20.3 "A Brief History of Columbia". Columbia University. 2011. http://www.columbia.edu/content/history.html.
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- ↑ "A Brief Biography of John Jay". The Papers of John Jay. Columbia University. 2002. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/digital/jay/biography.html.
- ↑ Dangerfield, George (1960). Chancellor Robert R. Livingston of New York, 1746–1813. New York, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co. https://archive.org/details/chancellorrobert00dang.
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- ↑ Reilly, Thomas (1997). Science and Football III. Taylor & Francis. pp. 46–47. ISBN 978-0-419-22160-9.
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- ↑ "Honorary Degree Recipients". Columbia University. p. 8. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/secretary/pdf_and_word/Honorary_Degree_Recipients_1945-2010.pdf.
- ↑ "Gaston Eyskens Dies at Age 82; Led Six Governments in Belgium" (in en-US). The New York Times. 1988-01-05. ISSN 0362-4331. https://www.nytimes.com/1988/01/05/obituaries/gaston-eyskens-dies-at-age-82-led-six-governments-in-belgium.html.
- ↑ "Ashraf Ghani: departing Afghan president who failed to make peace with Taliban". Thomson Reuters. August 15, 2021. https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/ashraf-ghani-departing-afghan-president-who-failed-make-peace-with-taliban-2021-08-15/.
- ↑ Alyssa Smith (October 7, 2010). "State Building Challenges in Timor Leste". Columbia Communique. http://columbiacommunique.org/?p=829.
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- ↑ "CHARLES SWART DIES; SOUTH AFRICAN WAS FIRST STATE PRESIDENT" (in en-US). The New York Times. AP. 1982-07-18. ISSN 0362-4331. https://www.nytimes.com/1982/07/18/obituaries/charles-swart-dies-south-african-was-first-state-president.html.
- ↑ Reilly, Taylor (1997). Science and Football III. Taylor and Francis. p. 348. ISBN 978-0-419-22160-9.
- ↑ Gerth, Karl (2004). China made: Consumer Culture and the creation of the nation. Harvard University. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-674-01654-5.
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- ↑ Kathleen Elkins. "More billionaires went to Harvard than to Stanford, MIT and Yale combined". CNBC. https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/18/the-universities-that-produce-the-most-billionaires.html.
- ↑ "The Columbia University Athletes Who Have Medaled at the Olympics Over the Years" (in en). https://news.columbia.edu/news/columbia-university-athletes-who-have-medaled-olympics-over-years.
- ↑ 60.0 60.1 60.2 60.3 McCaughey, Robert (2003). Stand, Columbia : A History of Columbia University in the City of New York. New York, New York: Columbia University Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-231-13008-0.
- ↑ Keppel, Fredrick Paul (1914). Columbia. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 26. https://archive.org/details/columbia01keppgoog.
- ↑ 62.0 62.1 62.2 62.3 62.4 62.5 Matthews, Brander; John Pine; Harry Peck; Munroe Smith (1904). A History of Columbia University: 1754–1904. London, England: Macmillan Company. https://archive.org/details/ahistorycolumbi02unkngoog.
- ↑ 63.0 63.1 63.2 Butler, Nicholas Murray (1912). An Official Guide to Columbia University. New York, New York: Columbia University Press.
- ↑ Stookey, Byron (1964). "SAMUEL CLOSSY, A. B., M. D , F. R. C. P. OF IRELAND: First Professor of Anatomy, King's College (Columbia), New York". Bulletin of the History of Medicine 38 (2): 153–167. ISSN 0007-5140. https://www.jstor.org/stable/44451190. Retrieved 15 October 2020.
- ↑ Schecter, Barnet (2002). The Battle for New York: The City at the Heart of the American Revolution. Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1374-2. https://archive.org/details/battlefornewyork00sche.
- ↑ McCullough, David (2005). 1776. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2671-4.
- ↑ No. 12910. August 7, 1787. p. 373. https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/12910/page/373
- ↑ 68.0 68.1 Moore, Nathanal Fischer (1846). A Historical Sketch of Columbia. New York, New York: Columbia University Press.
- ↑ Groce, C. G. (1937). William Samuel Johnson: A Maker of the Constitution. New York, New York: Columbia University Press.
- ↑ McCaughey, Robert (December 10, 2003). "Leading American University Producers of PhDs, 1861–1900". Stand, Columbia – A History of Columbia University. Columbia University Press. http://beatl.barnard.columbia.edu/stand_columbia/phdleaders1861-1900.html.
- ↑ Hewitt, Abram S (1965). "Liberty, Learning, and Property : Dedication of the New Buildings of Columbia University, Morningside Heights, May 2, 1896". in Nevins, Allan (in en). Selected writings, with Introduction by Nicholas Murray Butler. Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press. pp. 315–337. OCLC 264897. http://www.digifind-it.com/njhistoricalportal/data/ringwood//Selected%20Writings%20of%20Abram%20S.%20Hewitt.pdf#page=328. "the time has come for a new and nobler civilization," ... when ... "the wealth which has accumulated in this city by the joint association of its people, and to which every human being contributes by his industry, shall come to be regarded as a sacred trust to be administered in the public interest for works of beneficence to all."
- ↑ "History – Columbia University in the City of New York". http://www.columbia.edu/content/history.html.
- ↑ Broad, William J. (October 30, 2007). "Why They Called It the Manhattan Project". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/30/science/30manh.html.
- ↑ "Columbia Daily Spectator 3 April 1928 — Columbia Spectator". http://spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu/cgi-bin/columbia?a=d&d=cs19280403-01.2.7.
- ↑ Asimov, I. (1979) In Memory Yet Green, Avon Books, pp. 156–157, 159–160, 240
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- ↑ "School of General Studies: History". Columbia School of General Studies. http://www.gs.columbia.edu/gs-history.
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- ↑ "University Senate". http://senate.columbia.edu/archives/resolutions_archives/resolutions/01-02/CEres.htm.
- ↑ "History – Columbia University School of Professional Studies". http://sps.columbia.edu/about/history.
- ↑ "History – Columbia University in the City of New York". http://www.columbia.edu/newcuhome/content/history.html.
- ↑ Kurlansky, Mark (2005). 1968: The Year That Rocked The World. New York, New York: Random House. pp. 194–199. ISBN 978-0-345-45582-6. https://archive.org/details/196800mark/page/194.
- ↑ Bradley, Stefan (2009). Harlem vs. Columbia University: Black Student Power in the Late 1960s. New York, New York: University of Illinois. pp. 5–19, 164–191. ISBN 978-0-252-03452-7.
- ↑ Reception honors anniversary of CC coeducation | Columbia Daily Spectator. Columbiaspectator.com. Retrieved on September 7, 2013.
- ↑ "Our Partnership with Columbia University | Barnard College". https://barnard.edu/boldly-barnard/columbia-university.
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- ↑ "History – Faculty of Arts and Sciences". http://fas.columbia.edu/home/about-faculty-arts-and-sciences/history.
- ↑ "Unearthing the Underground" (in en-US). http://features.columbiaspectator.com/eye/2016/04/13/unearthing-the-underground/.
- ↑ "Butler Library: Self-Guided Tour". Columbia University. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/img/assets/5295/SelfGuided.pdf.
- ↑ Robert D. Colburn (July 2002) National Historic Landmark Nomination: Philosophy Hall, National Park Service and Accompanying 13 photos, exterior and interior, from c.1922–2001
- ↑ Carolyn Pitts (1987). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Low Memorial Library, Columbia". National Park Service. https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NHLS/87002599_text.
- ↑ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination: Pupin Physics Laboratories, Columbia University—Accompanying photos". National Park Service. 1983. https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/NHLS/66000550_photos.
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- ↑ "Earl Hall at Columbia University Listed on National Register of Historic Places" (in en-US). https://www.nyclgbtsites.org/2018/03/14/earl-hall-at-columbia-university-listed-on-national-register-of-historic-places/.
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- ↑ Smithsonian American Art Museum's Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture. "Alma Mater (sculpture)". The Smithsonian Institution. http://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?profile=all&source=~!siartinventories&uri=full=3100001~!20526~!0#focus.
- ↑ Meredith Foster (February 11, 2011). "The Myth of the College Sweetheart". The Eye. Columbia Spectator. http://eye.columbiaspectator.com/article/2011/02/10/myth-college-sweetheart.
- ↑ "What Is the Mace? A Guide to Columbia's Icons". Columbia University Record. May 19, 1999. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/newrec/2423/tmpl/story.4.html.
- ↑ Richard P. Dober. "The Steps at Low Library". Dober, Lidsky, Craig and Associates, Inc.. http://dlmplanners.org/notes/pdf/The%20Steps%20at%20Low%20Library.pdf.
- ↑ Columbia, Manhatanville. "Manhattanville Columbia". https://manhattanville.columbia.edu/.
- ↑ "Manhattanville in West Harlem". http://manhattanville.columbia.edu/.
- ↑ Williams, Timothy (November 20, 2006). "In West Harlem Land Dispute, It's Columbia vs. Residents". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/20/nyregion/20columbia.html.
- ↑ Williams, Timothy (September 21, 2008). "2 Gas Stations, and a Family's Resolve, Confront Columbia Expansion Plan". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/21/nyregion/21gas.html.
- ↑ Astor, Maggie; Kim Kirschenbaum (December 18, 2008). "M'ville Expansion Clears Last Major Hurdle, State Approves Eminent Domain". Columbia Spectator. http://www.columbiaspectator.com/2008/12/18/mville-expansion-clears-last-major-hurdle-state-approves-eminent-domain.
- ↑ "Columbia Manhattanville Project". Press Release. May 20, 2009. http://www.empire.state.ny.us/columbia/.
- ↑ Harder, Ben (July 28, 2020). "2020-21 Best Hospitals Honor Roll and Medical Specialties Rankings". https://health.usnews.com/health-care/best-hospitals/articles/best-hospitals-honor-roll-and-overview.
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- ↑ "Projects: Green Buildings". Columbia Environmental Stewardship. http://environment.columbia.edu/green-buildings.
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- ↑ "Columbia University Green Report Card". The College Sustainability Report Card. http://www.greenreportcard.org/report-card-2011/schools/columbia-university.
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- ↑ "Columbia acceptance rate drops to record low 3.7 percent after 51 percent spike in applications". http://columbiaspectator.com/news/2021/04/07/columbia-acceptance-rate-drops-to-record-low-37-percent-after-51-percent-spike-in-applications/.
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- ↑ "JTS Joint Program" (in en). https://gs.columbia.edu/jts-joint-program.
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- ↑ "Joint Bachelor's Degree Program between City University of Hong Kong and Columbia University". https://gs.columbia.edu/cityu-hk.
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- ↑ Redden, Elizabeth (4 April 2018). "Columbia, Trinity College Dublin start new dual B.A. program" (in en). https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2018/04/04/columbia-trinity-college-dublin-start-new-dual-ba-program.
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- ↑ Lombardi, John V.; Abbey, Craig W.; Craig, Diane D. (2020). "The Top American Research Universities: 2019 Annual Report". https://mup.umass.edu/sites/default/files/annual_report_2019.pdf.
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- ↑ BRIAN TUMULTY (April 13, 2015). "Half of N.Y. colleges pay profs less than $100K". Ithaca Journal. http://www.ithacajournal.com/story/news/local/2015/04/13/new-york-professor-pay/25683261/.
- ↑ "Havemeyer Hall". October 9, 1998. https://www.acs.org/content/dam/acsorg/education/whatischemistry/landmarks/havemeyerhall/havemeyer-hall-at-columbia-university-commemorative-booklet.pdf.
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- ↑ Guenther, Katja (2015). Localization and Its Discontents: A Genealogy of Psychoanalysis and the Neuro Disciplines. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 155. ISBN 978-0-226-28820-8.
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- ↑ "Columbia Researchers Developed Technology That Can Translate Brain Activity Into Words" (in en). http://fortune.com/2019/01/30/columbia-ai-speech-synthesizer-translate-thoughts/.
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- ↑ Reedy, Katie (November 28, 2006). "Patents Bring in the Cash to Columbia". Columbia Spectator. http://columbiaspectator.com/2006/11/28/patents-bring-cash-columbia.
- ↑ "U.S. Military Veterans". https://gs.columbia.edu/military-veterans.
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- ↑ Topping, Seymour (2008). "History of The Pulitzer Prizes". The Pulitzer Prizes. Columbia University. https://www.pulitzer.org/historyofprizes. Updated 2013 by Sig Gissler.
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- ↑ "Prizes". 2021. https://journalism.columbia.edu/prizes.
- ↑ "The Louisa Gross Horwitz Prize" (in en). 2018-06-14. https://www.cuimc.columbia.edu/research/louisa-gross-horwitz-prize.
- ↑ "40th Annual W. Alden Spencer Lecture and Award". 2018-08-01. https://zuckermaninstitute.columbia.edu/40th-annual-w-alden-spencer-lecture-and-award.
- ↑ "The Vetlesen Prize | Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory". https://www.ldeo.columbia.edu/the-vetlesen-prize.
- ↑ "Donald Keene Center of Japanese Culture". http://www.keenecenter.org/translation_prize.html.
- ↑ "Edwin Howard Armstrong Memorial Award. Columbia University Electrical Engineering Department. | Scholars@Duke". https://scholars.duke.edu/display/awdrec38466.
- ↑ "ASPPH | Columbia Calling for Nominees: The Frank A. Calderone Prize in Public Health — Deadline June 30th". https://www.aspph.org/columbia-calling-for-nominees-the-frank-a-calderone-prize-in-public-health-deadline-june-30th/.
- ↑ "Columbia Receives Trust to Aid Music". The New York Times: p. 31. 1940-05-16. https://www.nytimes.com/1940/05/16/archives/columbia-receives-trust-to-aid-music-mrs-charles-h-ditson-widow-of.html.
- ↑ 192.0 192.1 Columbia University (January 12, 2021). "Headcount Enrollment by School, Race/Ethnicity, and Citizenship, Fall 2020". https://opir.columbia.edu/sites/default/files/content/Statistical%20Abstract/opir_enrollment_ethnicity.pdf.
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- ↑ "AdHoc". http://www.adhocmag.com.
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- ↑ "Inside New York". http://www.insidenewyork.com/about.
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- ↑ "Current Musicology". http://music.columbia.edu/%7Ecurmus/.
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- ↑ Jaynes, Gregory (December 5, 1987). "No, Not a Curse But a Jersey Prize For Worst Verse". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/1987/12/05/nyregion/about-new-york-no-not-a-curse-but-a-jersey-prize-for-worst-verse.html.
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- ↑ Kathleen, Mary (June 7, 2010). "Mecca on the Hudson?". The Deal. http://www.thedeal.com/newsweekly/2010/june-7-2010/vc-mecca-on-the-hudson.php#bottom.
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- ↑ Cormier, Amanda (October 7, 2010). "Columbia's Web 3.0". The Eye. http://eye.columbiaspectator.com/article/2010/10/07/columbias-web-30.
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- ↑ "About the World Leaders Forum". http://www.worldleaders.columbia.edu/president-lee-c-bollingers-statement-about-world-leaders-forum.
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- ↑ Taylor, Kate (May 9, 2015). "This Year, Columbia Event Finds Joke Fodder in Sexual Assault Debate". The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/09/nyregion/columbia-bands-traditional-show-includes-jokes-about-sexual-assault-debate.html.
- ↑ "University denies marching band access to Butler Library for Orgo Night – Columbia Daily Spectator". http://columbiaspectator.com/news/2016/12/13/marching-band-denied-access-butler-library-orgo-night.
- ↑ "Bollinger defends University's decision to ban Orgo Night from Butler – Columbia Daily Spectator". http://columbiaspectator.com/news/2016/12/15/bollinger-defends-universitys-decision-ban-orgo-night-butler.
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- ↑ Piper, Greg (December 21, 2017). "How Columbia's politically incorrect marching band outwitted the administration's censorship attempt". The College Fix. https://www.thecollegefix.com/post/40269/.
- ↑ 1 Comments (2018-05-03). "Orgo Night Spring 2018 Liveblog – Bwog". Bwog.com. http://bwog.com/2018/05/03/orgo-night-spring-2018-liveblog/.
- ↑ Jason Hollander. "Holiday Season Ushered In With Tree-Lighting Ceremony". Columbia University News. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/99/12/treeLighting.html.
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- ↑ "Directory" (in en-US). https://nam.edu/directory/.
- ↑ "The President's National Medal of Science: Recipient Search Results | NSF - National Science Foundation". https://www.nsf.gov/od/nms/results.jsp.
- ↑ "Members Directory". https://nae.edu/20412/MemberDirectory.
- ↑ "Brain Trust | United States history" (in en). https://www.britannica.com/topic/Brain-Trust.
- ↑ "CHAPTER 35 – The Statistical Research Group of World War II – The Flaw of Averages: Why We Underestimate Risk in the Face of Uncertainty [Book"] (in en). https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/the-flaw-of/9780470488126/sava_9780470488126_oeb_c35_r1.html.
- ↑ "Columbia University" (in en). https://www.manhattanprojectvoices.org/location/columbia-university.
- ↑ "Frankfurt School | History, Features, & Facts" (in en). https://www.britannica.com/topic/Frankfurt-School.
- ↑ Corradetti, Claudio. "Frankfurt School and Critical Theory | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy" (in en-US). https://iep.utm.edu/frankfur/.
Further reading
- Robert A. McCaughey: Stand, Columbia: A History of Columbia University in the City of New York, 1754–2004, Columbia University Press, 2003, ISBN:0-231-13008-2
- Living Legacies at Columbia, ed. by Wm Theodore De Bary, Columbia University Press, 2006, ISBN:0-231-13884-9
External links
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