Nadia Majid

Lawsuit Brings Reparations Issue to Higher Education

In a class action suit filed on March 26 in the U.S.

More Students Drawn to Sorority Life this Fall

With a record 115 new recruits this year, up from 90 last year and
101 the year before, Columbia's four pan-Hellenic sororities are
experiencing a large increase in interest.

Anthropology Celebrates Harris Legacy

Years after he left the department, the influence of long-time
anthropology professor Marvin Harris, who died last month, is still
being felt.

Terrorist Attacks Could Make Consumers Vulnerable to Fraud

The response from individuals hoping to donate everything from blood to food supplies has been overwhelming since the World Trade Center attack on Sept. 11.

Bush Nominates Economics Chair as Adviser

Columbia's presence on the Bush administration's economic team may double if the president's decision to nominate Economics Department Chairman Richard Clarida as assistant secretary of the Treasur

107th 'Varsity' Team Tries Reality Theme

Add a 14-year-old super-genius, a boy home-schooled in Wisconsin, a girl desperately trying to fit in, a snobby New York prep school girl, and what are the results?

Prof.'s Findings About Parkinson's Published

Researchers from the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and the University of Colorado reported in the March 8 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine that transplantation

Jazz Center Takes Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Medium

Last summer, South Lawn overflowed with over 9,000 people waiting to hear Max Roach and Cecil Taylor perform together for the first time in over 20 years as part of the Bell Atlantic Jazz Festival.

A Literary Collection of Morningside Lives

In February 2000, 14 strangers were brought together for the first time. They are students, professors, children, and workers.

CU Venue Joins City Arts Scene

When George Steel was appointed executive director of the Kathryn Bache Miller Theatre three years ago, he opened the curtain on a new sound.