This week, SGA Rep Council heard from the team at Access Barnard, a new office supporting the first-generation/low-income, international, and Opportunity Programs student populations at Barnard.
On Friday, Events Editor Julia Tolda attended “Building Solidarities: Trans // Racial Architectures,” the first event in the series of virtual conversations focused on institutions and architecture.
Are you a rising senior looking for senior housing without the noise and hubbub of EC? Hogan might just be the perfect option for you!
This past Thursday, the Columbia School of Nursing’s Center for Research on People of Color (CRPC) hosted Dr. Amadou Gaye, the second speaker of their Anti-Racism Speaker Series, to discuss his research on the relationship between
Here are the foods and drinks, songs and sounds, films, books, clothes, places, and sensations that carried Bwog through the shortest, grayest month of the year.
Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine gets approved in the United States and an ancient chariot is discovered near Pompeii in today’s Bwoglines.
A few Bwog staffers met with the Compass team at Hewitt Food Hall for an in-person overview of the new additions to Barnard Dining. All attendees wore masks and distanced themselves from each other.
A basement lounge with A/C? A TV lounge? Its own gym? Yeah, 47 Claremont has it going on.
Want to decorate your dorm? Afraid of commitment? Halfway through the semester without doing anything for your room? You’ve come to the right place.
Journalists are coming under fire for promoting doom-and-gloom news about COVID-19 that may not be all that.
Want to live in a cute brownstone with your best friend and live our your “I’m a real New Yorker dreams”?
The building name Carlton Arms just sounds ~fancy~ and that’s proven by the private kitchens.
Although maybe every so often you forget that. In the last few weeks, many of our esteemed professors have published articles, perhaps to squeeze ’em in before the school year starts. Read on and tell us what we missed in the comments. Cris Beam, Creative Writing: Just Holding On Through The Curves (NYTimes) I didn’t give birth […]
If you read the Iliad, you know that people have been giving each other prizes for quite some time. Today the Pulitzer Prize Board announced its winners for 2011. While there is no Pulitzer category for archery, the Board decided that two books from notable Columbia professors hit the mark. Eric Foner, DeWitt Clinton Professor […]